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Max Decugis

Max Decugis
Max Decugis 001.jpg
Max Decugis standing near a tent in 1913
Full name Maxime Omer Mathieu Decugis
Country (sports)  France
Born (1882-09-24)24 September 1882
Paris, France
Died 6 September 1978(1978-09-06) (aged 95)
Biot, France
Singles
Career record 241–64 (79.02%)
Career titles 41
Highest ranking No. 6 (1910, Karoly Mazak)
Grand Slam Singles results
French Open 1R (1925)
Wimbledon SF (1911, 1912)
US Open 1R (1925)
Other tournaments
WHCC SF (1913, 1914)
WCCC F (1919)
Doubles
Grand Slam Doubles results
Wimbledon W (1911)
Other doubles tournaments
WHCC W (1914)
WCCC W (1913)
Mixed doubles
Other mixed doubles tournaments
WHCC W (1912, 1913, 1914, 1921)
WCCC W (1913, 1919)
Team competitions
Davis Cup F (1904)

Maxime "Max" Omer Mathieu Decugis or Décugis (French pronunciation: ​[maksim dɔkyʒiz/dekyʒiz]; 24 September 1882 – 6 September 1978) was a male tennis player from France who held the French Championships/French Open record of winning the tournament eight times (a French club members only tournament before 1925), a feat that was surpassed by Rafael Nadal in 2014. He also won three Olympic medals at the 1900 Summer Olympics (Paris) and the 1920 Summer Olympics (Antwerp), his only gold medal coming in the mixed doubles partnering French legend Suzanne Lenglen.

Decugis' father was a merchant at Les Halles, the company's name was Omer Décugis et fils, however the accent mark on the é is missing from Max Decugis' birth certificate, and appears inconsistently in later English-speaking sources such as the Ayres' Almanacks edited by Arthur Wallis Myers, but apparently never in any French-speaking sources. The origin of the family name Décugis, spelled with accented é in an 1842 source, is "from Cuges-les-Pins."

In 1905 he married Marie Flameng, the daughter of painter François Flameng, in Paris. After the death of Marie in 1969, Max married Suzanne Louise Duval in October.

Max Decugis won the French Championships in 1903, 1904, 1907, 1908, 1909, 1912, 1913, and 1914 (also 14 times in doubles and seven times in mixed). The interruption of World War I denied Décugis the opportunity to defend his 1914 title. Décugis was also a four-time runner-up, having lost the final in 1902, 1906, 1920, and 1923. He won the International German Championship in 1901 and 1902.

In major tournaments, Decugis reached the semi-finals of both the 1911 and 1912 Wimbledon Championships and the 1913 and 1914 World Hard Court Championships (WHCC) and the final of the World Covered Court Championship (WCCC) in 1919. He won the mixed doubles title at the WHCC on four occasions (1912, 1913, 1914, 1921) and at the WCCC on two (1913, 1919).


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Wikipedia

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