René Lacoste, born on 2 July 1904, in Paris,
France, was a French tennis player who was a leading
competitor in the late 1920s. As one of the powerful Four Musketeers (the
others were Jean Borotra, Henri Cochet, and Jacques Brugnon), he helped France
win its first Davis Cup in 1927, starting its six-year domination of the
cup. Later on, he was better known for his successful sportswear company.
Lacoste, who was nicknamed “the crocodile,” won the Wimbledon singles in 1925 and 1928, the French singles in 1925, 1927, and 1929, and became the first foreigner to win the U.S. championship twice (1926–27). With Borotra, he won the British doubles in 1925 and the French doubles in 1924, 1925, and 1929.
A methodical player, Lacoste
would study every aspect of tennis before a match, and he would wait for an
opponent to weaken. His best-known game was perhaps the 1927 U.S. championship,
in which he drove Bill Tilden to exhaustion in the two-hour final. After
winning the 1929 French championship, Lacoste retired. Decades later, sport
shirts and other items of apparel with his “crocodile” emblem (although
somehow changed to an alligator) became popular throughout the world. He and
his fellow “musketeers” were elected to the International Tennis Hall of Fame
in 1976.
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