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Athletes - Pancho Segura |
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| Pancho Segura, born Francisco Olegario Segura (June 20, 1921) was a leading tennis player of the 1940s and 1950s, both as an amateur and as a professional. He was born in Guayaquil, Ecuador, but moved to the United States in the late 1930s and is a citizen of both countries. He is a man of short stature, no more than 5'6" (1.68 m), with badly bowed legs from the rickets that he suffered as a child. But he compensated for these disadvantages with extremely fast footwork and a devastating two-handed forehand that his frequent adversary and the future tennis impresario Jack Kramer once called "The greatest single shot ever produced in tennis". By the time he was 17 Segura had won a number of titles in Latin America and was offered a tennis scholarship at the University of Miami. He won the Intercollegiates for three straight years, in 1943, 1944, and 1945, and was also the number 3-ranked American player during those years. He won the U.S. Indoors in 1946 and U.S. Clay Courts in 1944 but was never able to win the national championship at Forest Hills, although he reached the semi-finals a number of times. Long before Open Tennis, Segura turned professional in 1947 and was an immediate crowd-pleaser with his winning smile, infectiously humorous manner, and unorthodox but deadly game. Although he was overshadowed as a player by Kramer and Pancho Gonzales in his professional career, he won many matches against the greatest players in the world and was particularly brilliant in the annual United States Pro Championship. He won the title three years in a row from 1950 through 1952, beating Gonzales twice. He also lost in the finals four times, losing to Gonzales three times and once to Butch Buchholz in 1962 when he was 41 years old. After retiring from the Tour, he became a teaching professional for many years in Southern California and is widely credited with helping form the young Jimmy Connors. He was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island, in 1984.
[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Pancho Segura ] Some related entries: Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, 2003 | Alex Smith | Doug Flach | Yutaka Fukumoto | Lindsey Hunter | Bill Anderson | Jeff Parke | Quinton Ross | Swede Savage | La'Keshia Frett | Don Nehlen This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Pancho Segura; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | Searches on eBay |
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