1947 Wimbledon Championships – Boys' Singles

Kurt Nielsen defeated Sven Davidson in the final, 8–6, 6–1, 9–7 to win the inaugural Boys' Singles tennis title at the 1947 Wimbledon Championships.[1]

Boys' Singles
1947 Wimbledon Championships
Champion Kurt Nielsen
Runner-up Sven Davidson
Final score8–6, 6–1, 9–7

Draw

Key

Final

Final
Kurt Nielsen 8 6 9
Sven Davidson 6 1 7

Group A

  Nielsen Mortlet Nys Balestra Becka RR
W–L
Set
W–L
Game
W–L
Standings
Kurt Nielsen 6–3 6–3 5–4 5–4 4–0 4–0 22–14 1
Mortlet 3–6 3–6 5–4 4–5 1–3 1–3 15–21 4
Francis Nys 3–6 6–3 6–3 2–7 2–2 2–2 17–19 3
Erwin Balestra 4–5 4–5 3–6 1–8 0–4 0–4 12–24 5
Jaromir Becka 4–5 5–4 7–2 8–1 3–1 3–1 24–12 2

Group B

  Davidson Roberts Lathouwers Rudd Huguson RR
W–L
Set
W–L
Game
W–L
Standings
Sven Davidson 5–4 8–1 7–2 5–4 4–0 4–0 25–11 1
Paddy Roberts 4–5 9–0 9–0 6–3 3–1 3–1 28–8 2
Lathouwers 1–8 0–9 2–7 2–7 0–4 0–4 5–31 5
JE Rudd 2–7 0–9 7–2 5–4 2–2 2–2 14–22 3
Huguson 4–5 2–6 7–2 4–5 1–3 1–3 18–18 4

The nationality of JE Rudd is unknown.

gollark: It seems like you're (implicitly?) doing that weird motte-and-bailey thing where you go "by some strained technical definition, you are part of your parent's body" and then go "since you're now obviously part of their body, they get authority over you".
gollark: You're arguing a different thing to "it's literally them", then.
gollark: And is a separate independent entity which can exist without them (well, not without the mother, but when it's born).
gollark: I don't think the body thing makes much sense anyway, inasmuch as the genetic material in the fetus doesn't actually match exactly what either parent has but is some mixed-up combination of them.
gollark: That's a legal/ethical distinction rather than a scientific one.

References

  1. "Boys' Singles Finals 1947-2017". wimbledon.com. Wimbledon Championships. Retrieved 13 August 2017.
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