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Eric Clifford Drysdale (born 26 May 1941) is a South African former tennis player. After a career as a highly ranked professional player in the 1960s and early 1970s, he became a tennis announcer. After a career as a highly ranked professional player in the 1960s and early 1970s, he became a tennis announcer.
In 1967 she married tennis player Cliff Drysdale in London. She had another tennis playing relation at this time in Valerie Koortzen, a Wimbledon quarter-finalist, who was her sister-in-law during her marriage to Gordon Forbes. [5] Drysdale settled in Texas, working as a teaching pro at Lakeway World of Resorts. Around 1982 she separated from ...
Lucius manages to lose the Roundheads in a cavernous entrance of a quarried chalk cliff face. In the next scene Lady Panthea Vyne (Lysette Anthony) is tricked into marriage by a lecherous older tax collector Drysdale who had been seeking her hand in marriage. He promises to intercede and save her brother Lord Richard who, he tells her, is about ...
Cliff Drysdale (born 1941), former professional tennis player and current tennis announcer; Denise Drysdale (born 1947), Australian entertainer; Don Drysdale (1936–1993), pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers, member of the Baseball Hall of Fame; Dougal Drysdale, Professor Emeritus in Fire Safety Engineering at The University of Edinburgh
Donald L. Dell (born June 17, 1938) is an American sports attorney, writer, commentator, and former tennis player. Dell was the first sports agent in professional tennis, and represented Arthur Ashe, Stan Smith, Jimmy Connors, and Ivan Lendl during the golden age of pro tennis (1975 to 1985).
Cliff Drysdale Marty Riessen: 7: 6: Robert Kreiss Sashi Menon: 5 2 8 Cliff Drysdale Marty Riessen: 6: 3 6: Woody Blocher Dick R. Bohrnstedt: 4 2 Tom Gorman Bob Lutz: 4 6: 3 Tom Gorman Bob Lutz: 6: 6: 8 Cliff Drysdale Marty Riessen: 6: 3 7: Ray Moore Onny Parun: 6: 6: 3 Charlie Pasarell Roscoe Tanner: 3 6: 6 Ramiro Benavides Joaquín Loyo-Mayo ...
After graduating from the Cliff Drysdale Tennis Academy in the United States, she played professionally for a few years on the Women's Tennis Association circuit. [4] When she was twenty one years old, she retired and moved back to England, coaching tennis at the Harbour Club and the Queen's Club.
In 1988, a panel consisting of Bud Collins, Cliff Drysdale, and Butch Buchholz ranked their top five male tennis players of all time. Drysdale listed Budge number three behind Laver and Borg. Buchholz and Collins did not include Budge on their lists. [94]