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Bill Tilden

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American tennis player (1893–1953)

Bill Tilden
Tilden in the 1920s
Full nameWilliam Tatem Tilden Jr.
Country (sports) United States
Born(1893-02-10)February 10, 1893
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US
DiedJune 5, 1953(1953-06-05) (aged 60)
Los Angeles, California, US
Height6 ft1+12 in (1.87 m)
Turned pro1931 (amateur from 1912)
Retired1946
PlaysRight-handed (one-handed backhand)
Int. Tennis HoF1959(member page)
Singles
Career record1726–506 (77.3%)
Career titles138
Highest rankingNo.1 (1920,A. Wallis Myers)[1]
Grand Slam singles results
French OpenF (1927,1930)
WimbledonW (1920,1921,1930)
US OpenW (1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1929)
Other tournaments
WHCCW (1921)
Professional majors
US ProW (1931,1935)
Wembley ProF (1935,1937)
French ProW (1934)
Doubles
Grand Slam doubles results
WimbledonW (1927)
US OpenW (1918, 1921, 1922, 1923, 1927)
Grand Slam mixed doubles results
French OpenW (1930)
US OpenW (1913, 1914, 1922, 1923)
Team competitions
Davis CupW (1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926)

William Tatem Tilden II (February 10, 1893 – June 5, 1953), nicknamed "Big Bill", was an Americantennis player. He was theworld No. 1 amateur for six consecutive years, from 1920 to 1925, and was ranked as the world No. 1 professional by Ray Bowers in 1931 and 1932 andEllsworth Vines in 1933. Tilden won 14 Major singles titles, including 10Grand Slam events, oneWorld Hard Court Championships and threeprofessional majors. He was the first American man to winWimbledon, first claiming the title in1920. He also won a joint-record sevenU.S. Championships titles (shared withRichard Sears andBill Larned).

Tilden dominated the world of international tennis in the first half of the 1920s, and during his 20-year amateur period from 1911 to 1930, won 138 of 192 tournaments he contested. He owns a number of all-time tennis achievements, including the career match-winning record and the career winning percentage at the U.S. Championships. At the1929 U.S. National Championships, Tilden became the first player to reach ten finals at the same Grand Slam event. Tilden, who was frequently at odds with the rigidUnited States Lawn Tennis Association about his amateur status and income derived from newspaper articles, won his last Grand Slam event in 1930 at Wimbledon at the age of 37. He turned professional at the end of that year and toured with other professionals for the next 15 years.

Personal life

[edit]

William Tatem Tilden Jr.[a] was born on February 10, 1893, inGermantown, Philadelphia into a wealthy family bereaved by the death of three older siblings. His father was William Tatem Tilden, a wool merchant and local politician; and his mother, Selina Hey, was a pianist.[3] His semi-invalid mother, who suffered fromBright's disease, died when he was 18; and, even though his father was still alive and maintained a large house staffed with servants, Bill was sent a few houses away to live with a maiden aunt. The loss at 22 of his father and an older brotherHerbert marked him deeply. After several months of deep depression and, with encouragement from his aunt, tennis, which he had taken up at age six or seven at the family summer house in theCatskill Mountains ofUpstate New York,[4][3] became his primary means of recovery. According to his biographer,Frank Deford, because of his early family losses, Tilden spent all of his adult life attempting to create a father-son relationship with a long succession of ball boys and youthful tennis protégés, of whomVinnie Richards was the most noted. In spite of his worldwide travels, Tilden lived at his aunt's house until 1941, when he was 48 years old.

Tilden was initially home-schooled by his overprotective mother and a team of private tutors; but, in 1908, he went toGermantown Academy.[5] In October 1910 he entered theUniversity of Pennsylvania, where he joinedDelta Kappa Epsilon, and enrolled atPeirce College but did not graduate.[6][7]

Early and amateur tennis career

[edit]
Tilden (left) withJames Anderson at the1922 International Lawn Tennis Challenge
Suzanne Lenglen (1899–1938) and Bill Tilden (1893–1953)

Tilden went to the prep schoolGermantown Academy where he wasn't known for his tennis nor was he eventually good enough to play on his college team. The shy, self-absorbed, sometimes arrogant young man dropped out of the University of Pennsylvania and in 1910 began to practice his game against a backboard, and he also became a dedicated student of the game.[8] The following year he won his first tournaments; the junior singles and doubles title of Germantown.[9] In just three years, he worked his way up the ranks. His first national title was winning the mixed doubles championships withMary Browne in 1913 and they successfully defended the title in 1914.

From 1914 to 1917, Tilden won the Philadelphia championship.[9] Prior to 1920, he had won a number of Canadian doubles titles,[citation needed] but at the U.S. National Championships in 1918 and 1919 he lost the singles final toRobert Lindley Murray and"Little Bill" Johnston, respectively in straight sets. He won six consecutive U.S. singles championships from 1920 to 1925 and seven in total, making him the co-record holder withRichard Sears andBill Larned.[10][11] In the winter of 1919–1920, he moved to Rhode Island, where, on an indoor court, he devoted himself to remodeling his relatively ineffectivebackhand into a much more effective one. With this change, he became the world No. 1 tennis player and the first male American to win the Wimbledon singles championship. In the mid-1920s, Tilden came into conflict with the USLTA regarding alleged violations of the amateur rule, specifically relating to the monetary compensation he received for writing tennis articles.[12]

In the late 1920s, the greatFrench players known as the "Four Musketeers" finally wrested the Davis Cup away from Tilden and theUnited States, as well as his domination of the singles titles atWimbledon andForest Hills. In 1928, he won the men's singles in theOjai Tennis Tournament.[13] Tilden had long been at odds with the rigid amateur directors of theUnited States Lawn Tennis Association about his income derived from newspaper articles about tennis.[14] He won his last major championship at Wimbledon in 1930 at the age of 37, but was no longer able to win titles at will.

Professional tennis career

[edit]

On December 31, 1930, in need of money, he turned professional and joined the fledgling pro tour, which had begun only in 1927. For the next 15 years, he and a handful of other professionals such asHans Nüsslein andKarel Koželuh barnstormed across the United States and Europe in a series of one-night stands, with Tilden still the player that people primarily paid to see. Tilden beat Koželuh 50–17 on the 1931 tour. Even with greats such asEllsworth Vines,Fred Perry, andDon Budge as his opponents, all of them current or recentworld No. 1 players, it was often Tilden who ensured the box-office receipts—and who could still hold his own against the much younger players for a first set or even an occasional match. Tilden was ranked world No. 1 pro by Ray Bowers in 1931[15] and 1932[16] and Ellsworth Vines in 1933.[17]

Tilden thought he reached the apogee of his whole career in 1934 at 41 years old; nevertheless, that year he was dominated in the pro ranks byEllsworth Vines.American Lawn Tennis reported that Vines had an edge of 11–9 in the first phase of their tour from January 10 through February 16 and that Vines led Tilden by 19 matches after the second phase of their tour, played from March 21 through May 17. Tilden had won 17 times for the entire year, per an Associated Press report,[18] so a probable win–loss record at tour's end was 36–17 in Vines' favor. Both players then met at least 6 times during the rest of the year (Ray Bowers has listed 5 tournament matches and 1 one-night program), all lost by Tilden.

In May 1931 he won the inauguralU.S. National Indoor Professional Championships,[19] held at the Penn Athletic Club, Philadelphia against Vincent Richards. Later in July that year Tilden won his firstU.S. Pro title, beating Vincent Richards in the final in straight sets at the Forest Hill Stadium in New York.[20] Tilden also won the French Pro title in 1934. In 1935, he took his second US Pro title beating Kozeluh in the final.[21] The same season he was beaten in the final of thePacific Southwest Indoor Professional Championships in November byLester Stoefen.[22] By the late 1930s, Tilden was in his mid 40s and past his prime, but he was capable of playing excellent tennis in patches. Tilden lost easily toDon Budge in the 1941 World Series. Budge said of Tilden "Bill could invariably manage to keep things close for a while. It was seldom, however, that he could extend me to the end, and I swamped him on the whole tour".[23]

In 1945, the 52-year-old Tilden and his long-time doubles partnerVinnie Richards won the professional doubles championship—they had won the United States amateur title 27 years earlier in 1918.

After playing the pro tournament circuit in 1946, the 53-year-old Tilden served a jail term. He returned to pro tennis briefly in 1948, playing a short series of matches against Wayne Sabin.[24] Tilden's final farewell came in 1951. He faced George Lyttleton Rogers in a tour in April and May.[25] Tilden lost in the quarterfinals toFrank Kovacs at the Cleveland tournament in June 1951. Tilden was 58 years old.[26] It had been 35 years earlier, in 1916, that he had made his singles debut at the US (Amateur) championships.

Davis Cup coach

[edit]

Tilden coachedGermany's tennis team in the 1937Davis Cup. In the inter-zone finals, the U.S. team won after the deciding singles clash betweenGottfried von Cramm andDon Budge, a match which has been called "The Greatest Tennis Match Ever Played".[27]

Place in sports history

[edit]

Tilden is considered by some to be the greatest tennis player of all time.[28]

Bill Tilden in 1919

Allison Danzig, the main tennis writer forThe New York Times from 1923 through 1968, and the editor ofThe Fireside Book of Tennis, called Tilden the greatest tennis player he had ever seen. "He could run like a deer," Danzig once toldCBS Sports. An extended Danzigencomium to Tilden's tennis appears in the July 11, 1946 issue ofThe Times, in which he reports on a 1920s-evoking performance in the first two sets of a five-set loss by the 53-year-old Tilden toWayne Sabin, at the 1946 Professional Championship at Forest Hills.[29]

In 1975, Don Budge ranked his top five players of all time and rated Tilden number four behind Vines, Kramer and Perry.[30]

In his 1979 autobiography,Jack Kramer, the long-time tennis promoter and great player, included Tilden in his list of the six greatest players of all time.[b] Kramer began playing tennis with Tilden at age 15 at theLos Angeles Tennis Club (LATC).

In 1983, Fred Perry ranked the greatest male players of all time and put them in to two categories, before World War 2 and after. Perry ranked Tilden number one in the pre-World War 2 list.[31]

In the early years of the 21st century,Sidney Wood compiled his list of the Greatest Players of All Time (later published posthumously in a memoir "The Wimbledon final that never was and other tennis tales from a bygone era"). Wood first entered Wimbledon in 1927 and won the title in 1931. "From that time on, through to the late 1970s (doubles only towards the end), I was privileged to compete against virtually every top player in the world" said Wood. Wood ranked Tilden number three, behind Budge and Kramer.[32]

Tilden was one of the most famous athletes in the world for many years.[citation needed] During his lifetime he was a flamboyant character who was never out of the public eye, acting in both movies and plays, as well as playing tennis. He also had two arrests for sexual misconduct with teenage boys in the late 1940s; these led to incarcerations in the Los Angeles area. After his convictions he was shunned in public. Philadelphia'sGermantown Cricket Club, his home court, revoked his membership and took down his portrait.[33] Tilden's criminal record has cast a long shadow: in March 2016, a proposal to honor him with a historical marker at the club was voted down by the state of Pennsylvania panel charged with evaluating nominations.[34] In 1950, in spite of his legal record and public disgrace, an Associated Press poll named Tilden the greatest tennis player of the half-century by a wider margin than that given to any athlete in any other sport (310 out of 391 votes).[35] He was inducted into theInternational Tennis Hall of Fame in 1959.

Bill Tilden at the 1921World Hard Court Championships in Paris

In the United States' sports-mad decade of theRoaring Twenties, Tilden was one of the six dominant figures of the "Golden Age of Sport", along withBabe Ruth,Howie Morenz,Red Grange,Bobby Jones, andJack Dempsey.[36]

Sexuality and morals charges

[edit]

Tilden was arrested in November 1946 on Sunset Boulevard by the Beverly Hills police and charged with a misdemeanor ("contributing to the delinquency of a minor") for soliciting an underage boy, a 14-year-old boy with whom he was having sex in a moving vehicle. He was sentenced to a year in prison, but served7+12 months. His five-year parole conditions were so strict they virtually erased all his income from private lessons.[37] He was arrested again in January 1949 after picking up a 16-year-old hitchhiker who remained anonymous until years later when he filed a lawsuit claiming he had suffered severe mental, physical, and emotional damage from the encounter. The judge sentenced Tilden to a year on probation violation and let the punishment for the charge run concurrently. Tilden served 10 months.

In both cases, he apparently sincerely believed that his celebrity and his longtime friendship with Hollywood names such asCharlie Chaplin were enough to keep him from jail.[37] After his incarceration, he was increasingly shunned by the tennis and Hollywood world.[37] He was unable to give lessons at most clubs and even on public courts, he had fewer clients. At one point, he was invited to play at a prestigious professional tournament being held at theBeverly Wilshire Hotel; at the last moment, he was told that he could not participate.[38] Chaplin allowed Tilden to use his private court for lessons to help him after the run of legal and financial problems.[39]

According to contemporaryGeorge Lott, a player and later tennis coach at DePaul University, and authoritative biographer Frank Deford, Tilden never made advances to players, whether other adults or his pupils. Art Anderson of Burbank, who took lessons from Tilden from the age of 11 and remained a lifelong loyal friend, reported that Tilden never made advances toward him.[40] "Bill had all the rumors floating around about his sexuality," Jack Kramer said.[41]

Tilden in the 1920s

Death

[edit]

Tilden had been born to wealth, and he earned large sums of money during his long career, particularly in his early years on the pro tour; he spent it lavishly, keeping a suite at theAlgonquin Hotel in New York City. Much of his income went toward financing Broadway shows that he wrote, produced, and starred in.[42] The latter part of his life was spent quietly and away from his family, occasionally participating in celebrity tennis matches. He was preparing to leave for theUnited States Professional Championship tournament in Cleveland, Ohio in 1953 when he died from heart complications at age 60. Tilden is buried inIvy Hill Cemetery in Philadelphia.[43]

Tilden was inducted into theInternational Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island in 1959.

Career statistics

[edit]
Main article:Bill Tilden career statistics

Bud Collins states that, as an amateur (1912–1930), Tilden won 138 of 192 tournaments, lost 28 finals and had a 907–62 match record, a 93.6% winning percentage.[44] Although he never played at theAustralian Championships, Tilden was the first male tennis player to win four consecutive Grand Slam titles. In 1921, theAustralian Championships were held after the U.S. National Championships. He joined professional tennis in 1931, making him then ineligible to compete in Grand Slam tournaments. He owns a number of all-time tennis achievements, including an amateur career match-winning record of 93.6%.[45]

Tilden's career winning percentage at theUS National Championships was 90.7%, which ranks him first ahead ofRoger Federer,Fred Perry andPete Sampras, and also a 42-match win streak from 1920 to 1926 is ahead of Roger Federer andIvan Lendl. His 95-match winning streak from 1924 to 1925 is ahead ofDon Budge andRoy Emerson, and his best win–loss single season coming in 1925 at 98.73%, 78–1, places him ahead ofJohn McEnroe andJimmy Connors.[46] He, Roger Federer,Rafael Nadal andNovak Djokovic are the only players to reach 10 finals at a single Grand Slam event. At theWimbledon Championships, he recorded a career 91.2% match record, ranking him 3rd all-time behindBjörn Borg andDon Budge.[47]

Performance timeline

[edit]
Key
W F SFQF#RRRQ#DNQANH
(W) winner; (F) finalist; (SF) semifinalist; (QF) quarterfinalist; (#R) rounds 4, 3, 2, 1; (RR) round-robin stage; (Q#) qualification round; (DNQ) did not qualify; (A) absent; (NH) not held; (SR) strike rate (events won / competed); (W–L) win–loss record.

Events with a challenge round: (WC) won; (CR) lost the challenge round; (FA) all comers' finalist.

SRW–LWin %
Grand Slam tournamentsAmateur career10 / 23114–1389.76
191019111912191319141915191619171918191919201921192219231924192519261927192819291930
AustralianAAAAAANot heldAAAAAAAAAAAA0 / 00–0N/A
FrenchOnly for French playersNot heldOnly for French playersAAFASFF0 / 314–382.35
WimbledonAAAAANot heldAWCWCAAAAASFSFSFW3 / 631–391.18
U.S.AAAAAA1R3RFFWWWWWWQFFAWSF7 / 1469–790.79
Pro Slam tournamentsProfessional career3 / 1937–1867.27
193119321933193419351936193719381939194019411942194319441945194619471948194919501951
U.S. ProWSFAAWAAASFSFQFAQFNHSF1RAAAAQFA2 / 1019–870.37
French ProAANHWSFASFFSFNot held1 / 510–471.43
Wembley ProNot held3rdFNHFNH3rdNot heldAAA0 / 48–657.14
Total:13 / 42151–3182.97

Records

[edit]

All-time records

[edit]
TournamentSinceRecord accomplishedPlayers matchedRef.
Grand Slam187751 consecutive match wins, all Majors (1920–26)Stands alone
187742 match win streak at a single Grand Slam tournament US Champs (1920–26)Stands alone[48]
U.S. Championships18817 titles overallRichard Sears
William Larned
[49]
188110 finals overallNovak Djokovic[50][49]
18818 consecutive finals (1918–25)Ivan Lendl[51][49]
188191.02% (71–7) match win percentage overallStands alone[52]
188142 match win streak (1920–26)Stands alone[53]
188116 combined singles, doubles, mixed doubles titles overall (1913–29)Stands alone[54]
All tournaments187798 career match win streak (1924–25)Stands alone[55]
1877(71–1) single season match streak (1925)Stands alone[56]
187719 consecutive titles won (1924–25)Anthony Wilding
187752 consecutive finals reached (1922–26)Stands alone
1877Most appearances in a final of theDavis Cup: 11 with a record of 21–7 in singles (1920–30)Stands alone
187743 consecutive clay court finals reached (1922–29)Stands alone
187723 consecutive grass court finals reached (1921–26)Stands alone
187788.29% (445–49) grass court match winning percentageStands alone[57]
1877479 career bagels scoredStands alone[58]
1877106 career double bagels scoredStands alone[59]
187711 career triple bagels scoredStands alone[60]
187710 consecutive years with a match winning percentage of 90%+ (1918-1927)Stands alone[61]
187711 years overall with a match winning percentage of 90%+ (1918-1930)Stands alone[61]
187716 years overall with a match winning percentage of 80%+ (1914-1933)Stands alone[61]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^From birth he was known as William Tatem Tilden Jr. to distinguish him from his father, but he disliked being called "Junior", and preferred to be known as William Tilden II.[2]
  2. ^Writing in 1979, Kramer considered the best ever to have been eitherDon Budge (for consistent play) orEllsworth Vines (at the height of his game). The next four best were, chronologically, Tilden,Fred Perry,Bobby Riggs, andPancho Gonzales. After these six came the "second echelon" ofRod Laver,Lew Hoad,Ken Rosewall,Gottfried von Cramm,Ted Schroeder,Jack Crawford,Pancho Segura,Frank Sedgman,Tony Trabert,John Newcombe,Arthur Ashe,Stan Smith,Björn Borg, andJimmy Connors. He felt unable to rankHenri Cochet andRené Lacoste accurately, but felt they were among the very best.

References

[edit]
  1. ^United States Lawn Tennis Association (1972).Official Encyclopedia of Tennis (First Edition), p. 423.
  2. ^Robertson, Orlo (February 27, 1931)."Close up of Bill Tilden".The Brownsville Herald. Brownsville, TX.AP. p. 10.
  3. ^abPhelps, Frank V. (2000)."Tilden, Bill (1893-1953), tennis player".American National Biography.doi:10.1093/anb/9780198606697.article.1900219. RetrievedApril 2, 2021.
  4. ^Deford (1976), p. 19
  5. ^Hornblum (2018), pp. 16–17
  6. ^Hornblum (2018), p. 28
  7. ^Fassl, Carl (1990).Peirce means Business. Philadelphia: Peirce Junior College. p. 82.ISBN 9780685332207.
  8. ^Schickel, Richard (1975).The World of Tennis. New York: Random House. p. 59.ISBN 0-394-49940-9.
  9. ^ab"American tennis stars begin battle for overseas honors on Parisian courts tomorrow".Prescott Evening Courier. May 27, 1921. p. 5 – viaGoogle News Archive.
  10. ^"Tilden Retains His National Net Title"(PDF).The New York Times. September 20, 1921.
  11. ^Larry Schwartz."Tilden won with style".ESPN.
  12. ^Stephan Wallis Merrihew (October 1, 1924)."The Amateur at Bay".The Atlantic.
  13. ^Steve Pratt (April 27, 2000)."The 'Jai Life".The Los Angeles Times.
  14. ^Kamakshi Tandon (July 1, 2013)."It all changed in 1973 for the ATP".ESPN.
  15. ^Bowers, Ray."History of the Pro Tennis Wars, Chapter 3: Tilden's Year of Triumph: 1931".Archived from the original on June 15, 2002 – via tennisserver.com.
  16. ^Bowers, Ray."History of the Pro Tennis Wars Chapter IV: Tilden and Nusslein, 1932-1933".Archived from the original on October 27, 2002 – via tennisserver.com.
  17. ^"Vines steps out to name ten best tennis players in world".The Cincinnati Enquirer. November 5, 1933. p. 32 – via Newspapers.com.
  18. ^Stahr, John (June 3, 1934). "Big Bill Tilden, Prodigy Picker, Clips Coupons On Vines Venture".The Index-Journal (Greenwood, SC).
  19. ^"begin Play In Pro Tennis Tournament".El Paso Herald-Post. El Paso, Texas: newspapers.com. December 27, 1933. p. 6. RetrievedJanuary 24, 2024.
  20. ^"Tilden beats Richards in straight sets and wins Pro Tennis Championship".The Philadelphia Inquirer. July 13, 1931. p. 13 – via Newspapers.com.
  21. ^The Akron Beacon Journal, September 16, 1935
  22. ^""Big Bill" UPSET IN NET FINAL".The Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, California: newspapers.com. November 28, 1935. p. 24. RetrievedJanuary 19, 2024.
  23. ^Don Budge, A Tennis Memoir, 1969
  24. ^The Los Angeles Times, April 3, 1948
  25. ^The Miami News, April 11, 1951
  26. ^Tyler Morning Telegraph, June 15, 1951
  27. ^"Germany vs. the US in 1937: The "greatest tennis match ever played" | DW | 05.07.2009".DW.COM.
  28. ^"Top 10 Men's Tennis Players of All Time". Sports Illustrated. RetrievedFebruary 29, 2016.
  29. ^Danzig, Allison (July 11, 1946)."Sabin Rally Halts Tilden In Five Sets; 'Big Bill' Eliminated From Pro Tennis Tourney".The New York Times. RetrievedApril 26, 2010.
  30. ^"The South Bend Tribune, 10 August 1975".newspapers.com. August 10, 1975.
  31. ^"The Miami Herald, 25 April 1983".newspapers.com. April 25, 1983.
  32. ^"World Tennis Magazine, December 16, 2011".worldtennismagazine.com. December 16, 2011.
  33. ^Richard Schickel, p. 77
  34. ^"Bill Tilden: A US tennis hero, but with a morals clause". Yahoo! News. Associated Press. April 28, 2016. Archived fromthe original on June 2, 2016. RetrievedMay 18, 2016.
  35. ^Fisher, Marshall Jon (2009).A Terrible Splendor : Three Extraordinary Men, a World Poised for War, and the Greatest Tennis Match Ever Played (1st ed.). New York: Crown Publishers. p. 255.ISBN 978-0307393944.
  36. ^Ron Borges."Tilden brought theatrics to tennis".ESPN. RetrievedNovember 13, 2011.
  37. ^abcSam Kashner, pages 47–59.
  38. ^Deford (1976), pp198–207.
  39. ^Joyce Milton, page 447.
  40. ^""Big Bill Tilden Remembered: Burbank Man Keeps Memory Alive". Originally published inDaily News (LA). 2.12. 1996". Archived fromthe original on January 16, 2019. RetrievedSeptember 28, 2009.
  41. ^Karen Crouse (August 30, 2009)."Bill Tilden: A Tennis Star Defeated Only by Himself".The New York Times.
  42. ^"William T. Tilden II – Broadway Cast & Staff | IBDB".www.ibdb.com.
  43. ^Wilson, Scott (August 19, 2016).Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons (Third ed.). Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc. p. 747.ISBN 978-0-7864-7992-4. RetrievedJuly 5, 2022.
  44. ^Collins, Bud (2010).The Bud Collins History of Tennis (2nd ed.). [New York]: New Chapter Press. pp. 650–651.ISBN 978-0942257700.
  45. ^"Tilden, William "Big Bill" (1893–1953)".GLBTQ Encyclopedia. 2002. Archived fromthe original on May 14, 2010. RetrievedMay 28, 2010.
  46. ^"Hall of Famers: Inductee: Bill Tilden".www.tennisfame.com. International Tennis Hall of Fame. RetrievedOctober 12, 2015.
  47. ^Tilden, William (Bill)."Players Archive/ Match Record".2014. Wimbledon.Com. RetrievedJanuary 29, 2014.
  48. ^"US Open Singles Records"(PDF). usopen.org. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on January 21, 2015. RetrievedSeptember 11, 2018.
  49. ^abc"Singles Records".USOpen.org.USTA. RetrievedAugust 19, 2017.
  50. ^"2017 US Open Spotlight: French Open champion Rafael Nadal".USOpen.org.USTA. RetrievedAugust 19, 2017.
  51. ^Montella, Paul (September 9, 2014)."AP Sportlight".sandiegouniontribune.com. RetrievedAugust 19, 2017.
  52. ^Tilden, Bill."Records History".2013. US Open.Org. Archived fromthe original on February 2, 2014. RetrievedAugust 19, 2017.
  53. ^"Bill Tilden:Inductee".International Tennis Hall of Fame. ITHF 2017. RetrievedAugust 19, 2017.
  54. ^"Record Holders Most Championship Titles".www.usopen.org.USTA. Archived fromthe original on March 4, 2016. RetrievedOctober 29, 2015.
  55. ^Clarey, Christopher (May 22, 2011)."Djokovic Hones a Masterful Winning Streak".The New York Times. RetrievedAugust 19, 2017.
  56. ^"Bill Tilden:Inductee".International Tennis Hall of Fame. ITHF 2017. RetrievedAugust 19, 2017.
  57. ^"Tennis Base: Wins highest % grass".
  58. ^"Record: Most Career Bagels Scored".thetennisbase.com. Tennismem SAL. 2018. RetrievedSeptember 5, 2018.
  59. ^"Record: Most Career Double Bagels Scored".thetennisbase.com. TennismemSAL. 2018. RetrievedSeptember 5, 2018.
  60. ^"Record: Most Career Triple Bagels Scored".thetennisbase.com. Tennismem SAL. 2018. RetrievedSeptember 5, 2018.
  61. ^abc"Bill Tilden: Career match record-year-on-year-results 1912-1951".thetennisbase.com. The Tennis Base. RetrievedSeptember 5, 2018.

Sources

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