Tennis Hall of Famer Mervyn Rose dies at 87
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) Mervyn Rose, who won two Grand Slam singles titles and two Davis Cups before going into coaching and working with stars including Billie Jean King and Margaret Court, has died. He was 87.
Tennis Australia issued a statement late Monday confirming the death of Rose, a feisty left-hander who won the Australian Open in 1954 and the French Open in 1958 before turning pro.
Rose also won men's doubles titles at the Australian and U.S. Opens and at Wimbledon, reached the semifinals in singles at all four majors and peaked at a career-high ranking of No. 3.
He was represented Australia in Davis Cup between 1950 and `57, and was part of the team which beat the United States for the titles in '51 and '57.
Tennis Australia paid tribute to Rose as a player and coach, saying he ''effortlessly made the transition to coaching (and) worked with some of the greats.''
Rose was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 2001.
HEADLINES
- Rublev wins Madrid Open for 1st time after rallying vs. Auger-Aliassime
- Badosa and Tsitsipas end their relationship 'amicably'
- Sinner to miss Italian Open with hip injury: 'I'm very upset'
- Alcaraz sitting out Italian Open with right forearm injury
- Medvedev retires with injury during Madrid Open quarterfinal