Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Victor Voss

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Country (sports)
  
German Empire

Turned pro
  
1893 (amateur tour)


Retired
  
1900

Name
  
Victor Voss

Victor Voss

Full name
  
Victor Eugen Felix Graf Vos-Schonau

Born
  
31 March 1868 Schorssow, North German Confederation (
1868-03-31
)

Died
  
9 August 1936(1936-08-09) (aged 68) Waren, Third Reich

Victor voss talks about being drafted and life before war


Count Victor Eugen Felix Voss-Schönau ( [ˈviktɔʁ ˈvɔs]; 31 March 1868 – 9 August 1936) was a German count and tennis player in the late 19th century.

Contents

Victor Voss Torrington mourns loss of retired English teacher Victor Voss The

Biography

Count Victor Voss was born on the family estate at Schorssow in today Northeastern Germany to the Hungarian countess Elise Szapáry. At the beginning of the 1890s, he learned to play tennis with the help of an American coach, winning the German championships three times in a row from 1894 to 1896, which were restricted to German and Austrian citizens at the time. In 1896, he was finalist at the Baden-Baden tournament which he lost to Reginald Doherty.

In 1897 he hired a coach named Burke and began to play in tournaments at the Riviera in winter. He reached the final at Nice in 1897 and Monte Carlo in 1898, but lost to Reginald and his brother Laurence Doherty, respectively.

In 1899, Voss traveled to the United Kingdom in order to take part in tournaments there. At the Irish Open, he lost his second round match against Frank Riseley in five sets. At Chiswick Park he lost against George Greville. He reached the final at Nice once again in this year, but lost to Laurie Doherty without having the slightest chance 0–6, 0–6, 0–6.

Voss usually played at the tennis facilities at Heiligendamm, where he frequently met with Russian Duchess Anastasia Mikhailovna and countess Clara von der Schulenburg. He used to wrap a wet towel around his forehead while playing, as he said it would prevent his glasses from fogging.

A. Wallis Myers wrote about Voss: "He has a good forehand ground stroke and volleys well, but his service, though hard, is easy to take, he smashes only moderately, and his ground stroke is poor."

After losing to George Hillyard in the semifinals of the 1900 German championships, Voss retired from playing tennis tournaments. He now focused on his two other hobbies, auto racing and clay pigeon shooting. In 1911, he married a divorced Italian woman at New York. In 1928, he married Clara von der Schulenburg at Berlin-Grunewald. Despite his two marriages, Voss had 2 children Paula and Hans-Alexander with Francesca Ricci (His first wife). He died reclusively in his house at Waren in 1936.

References

Victor Voss Wikipedia