Don Black (tennis)

Donald L. M. Black (2 December 1927 – 19 October 2000) was a Rhodesian tennis player.

Donald Black
Country (sports) Southern Rhodesia
Born(1927-12-02)2 December 1927
Hartley, Southern Rhodesia
Died19 October 2000(2000-10-19) (aged 72)
Zimbabwe
Singles
Grand Slam Singles results
French Open2R (1956)
Wimbledon3R (1953, 1956)

Early life

Black was born in Hartley (now Chegutu), to an English mother and Scottish father.[1]

Career

Black made his Wimbledon debut in 1953 and defeated Czeslaw Spychala in the opening round.[2] He came from two sets down to beat John Horn in the second round and was then eliminated from the tournament by Belgium's Jacques Brichant.[2] Another Belgian, Jacques Peten, beat Black in the first round of the 1954 Wimbledon Championships.[2] Black reached the third round of Wimbledon again in 1956, with wins over Gerald Oakley and Oliver Prenn, the latter in five sets.[2] He had four match points against Australian Ashley Cooper in the third round but lost the final set 7–9.[2][3] The following year he returned to Wimbledon for what would be the final time and he lost in the first round, to Emilio Martinez.[2]

The Rhodesian also competed twice at the French Championships.[2] In 1956 he won his first round match against Ecuador's Wladimir Lerque, in five sets, then lost to fourth seed Art Larsen.[2] He lost in the opening round of the 1963 French Championships to Abe Segal.[2]

Family

Black, who worked as a high school teacher after leaving tennis, was the father of Byron, Cara and Wayne Black, all professional tennis players. He coached them himself on the four grass courts and one hard court that he had built in the backyard of his 22-acre avocado farm.[4] The siblings would win a total of 13 Grand Slam doubles titles.

Death

Black died on 19 October 2000, following complications from surgery. He had been suffering bowel cancer.[5]

gollark: Anyway, despite being economically bad (unless you can give special things not available on the open market), you may object that gifting is still good because it forms social bonds.
gollark: Well, if it would actually be better for them than the equivalent money try and convince them so.
gollark: Recommend them it, as I said.
gollark: Unless you want to constrain the other person's choices (see: gift cards) in which case bee you.
gollark: It is generally considered good for the costs of gifts between you to equalise over time. So to skip transaction costs you should simply not exchange money and recommend products to each other periodically.

References

  1. New York Times, "One Family Still at Home in Zimbabwe", 9 August 2002, Harvey Araton
  2. Tennis Archive Profile Archived January 24, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  3. Byrom, Glen; McDermott, Dave; Streak, Brian (1980). Rhodesian Sports Profiles, 1907–1979. Books of Zimbabwe. ISBN 0-86920-218-9.
  4. New York Times, "Tennis Is Part Of Farmer's Charmed Life", 4 February 2000
  5. All Africa.com: Hamba Kahle, Don Black
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