The Newcombe Medal, awarded to the country's
best player each year, stands as a perennial tribute to the man
with the handlebar moustache who won Wimbledon three times and
was the last in a golden era of Australian men's champions.
With a thumping serve and fierce forehand, Newcombe won the
Australian Open and U.S. Open twice along with 17 Grand Slam
doubles titles in the 1960s and 70s.
He also helped Australia win five Davis Cups.
But the man nicknamed "Newk" is much more than the breadth of
his trophy cabinet to a country not short on sporting success.
To many Australians he remains the essence of what a sportsman
should be: ultra-competitive, classy, and partial to a cold beer
after a hard slog on court.
Emerging from the shadows of compatriots Roy Emerson and Fred
Stolle, a clean-shaven Newcombe started slowly in the
sepia-toned amateur era but burst into the spotlight by winning
Wimbledon in 1967 in the year of its first colour broadcast.
Months later he had his second major when he beat Clark Graebner
at the 1967 U.S. Nationals.
A telegenic champion, Newcombe was courted by professional
promoters and became part of the "Handsome Eight", the original
eight players on the World Championship Tennis circuit in 1968.
That cost him a chance to go for a third successive Wimbledon
title in 1972 when organisers banned WCT players and he joined
the top men's players' boycott of the tournament the following
year.
Distracted by multiple business interests, Newcombe's world
number one ranking was taken by Jimmy Connors in 1974, setting
up a grudge match with the young American in the final of the
1975 Australian Open.
In blazing heat, a 30-year-old Newcombe downed Connors in four
sets on the Kooyong grass to clinch his seventh and final Grand
Slam singles crown, possibly his hardest-earned career triumph.
(Editing by Peter Rutherford)
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