Word: mcloughlin
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...only one player has actually got his hands on a U. S. Men's Singles Cup. That was William Tatem Tilden, who did it twice, once in 1922, again in 1925, and holds one leg on the present trophy. If Perry succeeds next week where McLoughlin,* Williams, Johnston, Lacoste and Vines failed, he will be the first foreign player who has ever won possession of a U. S. Singles trophy. Moreover, he will have done so against a field which includes, except for Australia's Crawford, Germany's von Cramm and England's Bunny Austin...
...John T. McLoughlin '36, New York City; John J. McCue, Jr. '36, W. Orange, N. J.; Richard M. Powell '35, Haddonfield, N. J.; Horace B. B. Robinson ocC, Montclair, N. J.; Benson Rosenberg '37, Elizabeth, N. J.; Vincent J. Rossi '37, Utica, N. Y; Robert D. Sard '35, New York City; Maurice Sapienza '37, Irvington, N. J.; Francis A. Wendell '37, New York City; John R. Westervelt '37, Maplewood, N. J.; Donald T. Wood '37, New York City; William W. Young '37, Patchogue...
...will go back to Americawhen we take it there on our way to Australia." If Vines and Crawford play each other in the final at Forest Hills, the match will be like another between a hard-serving Californian and a steady Australian-when Brookes played Maurice McLoughlin in the Davis Cup matches at Forest Hills in 1914 and lost, after one of the longest first sets on record, 15-17, 3-6, 3-6. Since Tilden's retirement to professional tennis and Cochet's unmistakable decline, tennis has had no completely preeminent player. Favorites to prevent...
...Fields. Jr. of New York City, Richard W. Gilder of New York City, William M. Higgins, Jr. of New York City, Henry M. Hoyt of New York City, Andrew Kacmarcyk of Long Island City, Hubert D, Kernan, Jr. of Utica, Henry C. Knowiton of New York City, John T. McLoughlin of New York City, Henry V, Poor, Jr. of New York City, Arthur M. Sherwood, 3rd of New York City, Ross H. Smith of Rochester, John A. Strauss of New York City, Paul M. Sturges of Stone Ridge, Julian N. Trivers of Scarsdale, Richard E. Voland of New Rochelle, Robert...
...haired Maurice McLoughlin was obviously a "comet." Sad, sly little Henri Cochet, with rings under his eyes, is a "wizard." Tilden, tall, thin, dramatic, made an almost funnypaper contrast with William Johnston, short, thin, efficient: they were "Big Bill" and "Little Bill." Last week the galleries at Wimbledon, after watching some tennis as great as Wimbledon ever saw, felt around for a nickname for its exponent, a lanky, lazy-looking California boy who had come over to play in his first "world championship...