Country (sports) | Hungary |
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Born |
Szepesszombat, Austria-Hungary (present-day Spišská Sobota as part of Poprad, Slovakia) |
25 January 1891
Died | 26 April 1937 Budapest, Hungary |
(aged 46)
Turned pro | 1910 (amateur tour) |
Retired | 1933 |
Plays | Right-handed (1-handed backhand) |
Singles | |
Career titles | 312 (1931) |
Highest ranking | No. 10 (1929, Bill Tilden) |
Grand Slam Singles results | |
French Open | QF (1926, 1929) |
Wimbledon | QF (1929) |
Other tournaments | |
WHCC | QF (1913, 1914) |
Olympic Games | 4R (1924) |
Doubles | |
Grand Slam Doubles results | |
French Open | QF (1926, 1929) |
Wimbledon | SF (1925, 1926) |
Other doubles tournaments | |
WHCC | SF (1914) |
Olympic Games | 2R (1912) |
Mixed doubles | |
Grand Slam Mixed Doubles results | |
Wimbledon | QF (1926, 1927) |
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Table Tennis | ||
Representing Hungary | ||
World Table Tennis Championships | ||
London 1926 | Doubles | |
London 1926 | Team |
Béla von Kehrling (Hungarian: Kehrling Béla; pronounced [ˈkeːrlinɡ ˈbeːla]; 25 January 1891 – 26 April 1937) was a Hungarian tennis, table tennis, and football player but eventually a winter sportsman familiar with ice-hockey and occasionally competing in bobsleigh. He competed at the 1912 Summer Olympics and the 1924 Summer Olympics.
Just like Fred Perry, he played both tennis and table tennis professionally. In 1926 he played in the first table tennis World Championships final in London with Zoltán Mechlovits in doubles but lost to Roland Jacobi (who won the singles title) and Dániel Pécsi. He was also featured in the Hungarian team that won gold in team competition. Originally he wasn't part of the national team. While the Hungarians unanimously swept all of the medals after Roland Jacobi's singles and doubles success he suddenly been reported of the death of his father thus he decided to travel home. The substitute player was Béla von Kehrling who had to beat Munio Pillinger of Austria to have the team medal as well. He did so and completed the flawless victory for Hungary. In the end he took two medals in the table tennis world championships, one gold and one silver.
In 1924 he won the German Tennis Championships (now called German Open Hamburg). The following year he was back in the finals but then lost against Otto Froitzheim. The same year he won Hungarian Tennis Championships (which he did 13 times altogether counting only the singles). In July 1933 Von Kehrling won the doubles and mixed doubles title at the Dutch Championships.
"Züricher Sport" newspaper ranked Kehrling as No. 10 in the European Top 10 rankings in 1931.
In conjunction with his sports activity he was the vice-president of the Hungarian Tennis Association and the editor-in-chief of its official magazine the bimonthly Tennisz és Golf (Tennis and Golf).