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Cliff Sutter

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Full name
  
Clifford Samuel Sutter

Wimbledon
  
3R (1933)

Highest ranking
  
No.

US Open
  
SF (1932)

Education
  
Tulane University

Wimbledon
  
4R (1933)

Role
  
Tennis player

Country (sports)
  
United States

Name
  
Cliff Sutter


Plays
  
Right-handed (one-handed backhand)

Died
  
May 24, 2000, Barnstable, Massachusetts, United States

Clifford Samuel Sutter (August 31, 1910 – May 24, 2000) was an American tennis player.

Contents

Personal life

Clifford Sutter was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, to Fred W. Sutter, who died December 17, 1943 and resided at 5526 Loyola Avenue, New Orleans.

Fred W. Sutter was a bakery owner who, with the help of neighbors with whom he wished to play tennis, built his own grass tennis court on two vacant lots adjacent to Sutter's property on Loyola (formerly Franklin) Avenue in New Orleans, and Fred W. Sutter's sons Eddie, Cliff and Ernie grew up from early childhood playing on that court. Cliff Sutter became the only male New Orleanian to play the main draw singles at Wimbledon, in 1933, where he beat Germany's Baron Gottfried von Cramm (who would later win the French Championship twice, 1934 & '36, reach the Wimbledon final twice, 1935 & '36, and the U.S. final once, 1937). Cliff's younger brother Ernie, who like Cliff won the Intercollegiate singles twice in the 1930s, was severely wounded while serving in the U.S. Army in North Africa in 1943 during WWII, curtailing his tennis career. Ernie became a top lawyer with Shell Oil Co. after the war and eventually made a tennis comeback, winning the U.S. Veterans' Doubles Championship at the Longwood Cricket Club in Boston with his brother Cliff in 1961.

Tennis career

Sutter played his collegiate tennis at Tulane University, where he won the NCAA singles championship in 1930 and 1932. In 1931, he won the singles championship and was a doubles finalist at the Tri-State Tennis Tournament (current Cincinnati Masters), defeating Bruce Barnes in the singles final. He also won the doubles title in Cincinnati in 1930 with his long-time tennis partner Maurice "Dukey" Bayon.

At the U.S. National Championships, Sutter reached the semifinals in 1932 which he lost in five sets to World no. 1 and eventual champion Ellsworth Vines. He reached the quarterfinals in 1930, 1933 and 1934.

Sutter was ranked World No. 5 for 1932 by A. Wallis Myers of The Daily Telegraph.

His brother Ernie was also a tennis player. Ernie won the NCAA singles for Tulane twice, 1936-37, reached the quarterfinals in singles in Cincinnati in 1934, and once beat Bobby Riggs on clay in the River Oaks tournament in Houston, shortly before Riggs would win Wimbledon in 1939.

In 1991 Sutter was inducted into the USTA Eastern Tennis Hall of Fame.

References

Cliff Sutter Wikipedia