Full name | John Thomas Godfray Hope Doeg |
---|---|
Country (sports) | United States |
Born |
Guaymas, Sonora, Mexico |
December 7, 1908
Died | April 27, 1978 Redding, CA, United States |
(aged 69)
Height | 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) |
Turned pro | 1927 (amateur tour) |
Retired | 1940 |
Plays | Left-handed (one-handed backhand) |
Int. Tennis HoF | 1962 (member page) |
Singles | |
Highest ranking | No. 4 (1930) |
Grand Slam Singles results | |
Wimbledon | SF (1930) |
US Open | W (1930) |
Doubles | |
Grand Slam Doubles results | |
Wimbledon | F (1930) |
US Open | W (1929, 1930) |
John Thomas Godfray Hope Doeg (December 7, 1908 – April 27, 1978) was a male tennis player from the United States.
In August 1929 Doeg won the singles title at the Seabright Invitational defeating Richard Norris Williams in three straight sets. About a year later he fulfilled his promise and won his first and only major singles tournament, the 1930 U.S. National Championships at Forrest Hills, defeating Frank Shields in the final in four sets. He proceeded to reach a career-high singles world ranking of No. 4 in the same year.
In 1962 he was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame.
Doeg was the son of tennis player Violet Sutton and the nephew of Wimbledon and U.S. National singles tennis champion May Sutton. Born in Mexico, he became a U.S. citizen in 1933.
Although his name is not well known today Doeg in his heyday was often considered among the premier servers in tennis history:
We are able, thanks to [Henri Cochet]'s conclusions, to study the deliveries of three great servers of the past few years—Tilden, Vines and Doeg. Opinions will vary as to their comparative effectiveness as well as some of their other qualities. Certainly no one will deny that in their services the three players named possessed assets of tremendous value. It would be of great interest to obtain opinions of the varying degree of game winning value possessed by each.
There was this difference between the three men: Doeg’s service was his chief weapon, and once he had broken through an opponent he was thought to be certain of winning that set. With Tilden and Vines the service was only one of many weapons, and it was employed intermittently and sometimes kept in reserve for time of need.
Don Budge in his book Budge on Tennis would later echo the same sentiment:
McLoughlin was a terror in storming the net behind his service, and Doeg's left-handed service, one of the two or three best of all time, was so demoralizing that it constituted a mental hazard for his opponent. The latter was always harried with the thought that if he ever lost his own service, the set was gone, so seldom was anyone able to break through Doeg's. The story goes that in a Davis Cup test doubles match between Doeg and George Lott, and Tilden and Frank Hunter in 1928, Hunter, in the right court, never was able to return Doeg's service safely once in an entire set that went to 12-10, so cleverly did Doeg place it and so sharp a break did it take from the corner.