Dale Collings

Dale Collings (born 16 December 1955) is a former professional tennis player from Australia.

Dale Collings
Country (sports) Australia
Born (1955-12-16) 16 December 1955
Southport, Queensland,
Australia
PlaysRight-handed
Singles
Career record23–42
Career titles0
Highest rankingNo. 101 (26 Dec 1979)
Grand Slam Singles results
Australian Open3R (1978, 1982)
Wimbledon2R (1976)
US Open1R (1978)
Doubles
Career record26–42
Career titles0
Grand Slam Doubles results
Australian Open2R (1980, 1981, 1982)
Wimbledon3R (1978)
US Open1R (1978)

Career

Collings, who was known for his fast serves, won the Wimbledon Plate in 1978.[1] He twice made the third round of the Australian Open, in 1978 and 1982.[2] The Australian also reached the third round of the men's doubles at the 1978 Wimbledon Championships (with Keith Hancock) and mixed doubles at the 1981 Wimbledon Championships (with Karen Gulley).[3]

He was a quarter-finalist at the Sydney Indoor tournament in 1979, beating Ken Rosewall and Geoff Masters along the way.[2] He made another quarter-final in Adelaide that year and reached the semi-finals at Brisbane in 1980.[2]

With partner Dick Crealy, Collings was a doubles runner-up at the Perth Grand Prix event in 1980.[2] He made doubles semi-finals at Auckland in 1977, Cleveland in 1979, Adelaide in 1979, the Sydney Outdoor in 1979 and again at Auckland in 1980.[2]

Grand Prix career finals

Doubles: 1 (0–1)

Result No. Date Tournament Surface Partner Opponents Score
Loss 1. 1980 Perth, Australia Grass Dick Crealy Syd Ball
Cliff Letcher
3–6, 4–6
gollark: Anyway, to ensure reminder delivery, I should make it try:- original reminder channel- other channels on server if the original is unavailable/deleted- DMing user- DMing a random person who also set a reminder
gollark: Columns are declared in order *too*, but that really shouldn't be relied in like the python API does.
gollark: In SQLite they do actually, there's an INTEGER PRIMARY KEY rowid column unless you disable that explicitly.
gollark: Which is still HIGHLY dodecahedral and dependent on columns' order.
gollark: I'm not actually entirely sure, but it would involve a bunch of meddling with a "cursor", and you would have to get each column by index instead of name.

References


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