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Welby Van Horn

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Country (sports)
  
United States

Name
  
Welby Horn

Highest ranking
  
No.

Wembley Pro
  
F (1950)

Retired
  
1951

US Pro
  
W (1945)

Turned pro
  
1938

US Open
  
F (1939)

Role
  
Tennis player


Welby Van Horn wwwtennisindustrymagcom20081006VanHornjpg

Born
  
September 8, 1920 Los Angeles, California (
1920-09-08
)

Plays
  
Right-handed (one-handed backhand)

Died
  
September 17, 2014, West Palm Beach, Florida, United States

155 welby van horn a pearl of wisdom


Sidney Welby Van Horn (September 8, 1920 - September 17, 2014) was a retired American professional tennis player who later went on to have a career as a major tennis coach.

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As a 19-year-old player, Van Horn reached the finals of the 1939 U.S. Nationals only to lose to Bobby Riggs in just 56 minutes (6–4, 6–2, 6–4). One of the high points of his career was a crushing defeat (6–0, 6–2, 6–1) of the great Bill Tilden at a match between U.S. and British Empire service teams at Wimbledon in July 1945, supposedly the worst drubbing of Tilden's career — Tilden, however, was 52 years old at the time while Van Horn was 25. Van Horn also won the United States Pro Championship in 1945. He was ranked as high as World No. 5 in the professional ranks (the Professional Players Association, instated by Bill Tilden) in 1946. Gordon Lowe ranked Van Horn as World No. 9 for 1939 in his amateur rankings.

He lived briefly in Atlanta, Ga., where he had been hired as Head Tennis Professional at the Piedmont Driving Club. In 1951, he moved to Puerto Rico as a coach at the Caribe Hilton Swim and Tennis Club, where he worked with many promising juniors, the most notable being Charlie Pasarell who was ranked No.1 in the U.S. in 1967 who he continued to coach on the main tour, another notable junior was Manuel Diaz, later to become a star on the University of Georgia tennis team and UGA coach.

His career as a coach spawned institutions such as the Welby Van Horn Tennis Academy in Boca Raton, Florida, and Welby Van Horn Tennis programs in a number of locations.

References

Welby Van Horn Wikipedia


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