Wilberforce Eaves
Full name | Wilberforce Vaughan Eaves | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Country (sports) | Great Britain | |||||||||||
Born | Melbourne, VIC, Australia | 10 December 1867|||||||||||
Died | 10 February 1920 London, England | (aged 52)|||||||||||
Plays | Right-handed (one-handed backhand) | |||||||||||
Singles | ||||||||||||
Career record | 341–96 (78.3%)[1] | |||||||||||
Career titles | 39[1] | |||||||||||
Grand Slam singles results | ||||||||||||
Wimbledon | F (1895AC, 1896AC, 1897AC) | |||||||||||
US Open | F (1897Ch) | |||||||||||
Medal record
|
Wilberforce Vaughan Eaves MBE (10 December 1867 – 10 February 1920) was an Australian-born tennis player from the United Kingdom.[2] At the 1908 London Olympics he won a bronze medal in the Men's Singles tournament.[3]
Biography
[edit]Eaves was born in Melbourne, Australia, son of William and Eunice Eaves of St Kilda, Victoria.[4]
He reached the Men's Singles All-Comers' final at the Wimbledon Championships in 1895 and lost against Wilfred Baddeley despite having had a match point in the third set. In 1897, he became the first non-American to reach the final in the U.S. National Singles Championships. He lost the final in five sets to American Robert Wrenn.[5] He was particularly successful on clay courts at the Dinard International tournament in Brittany, France organized by the Dinard Lawn Tennis Club where he won that title ten times between (1894-1896) and (1902-1909).[6][7]
Eaves won the Welsh Championships in 1895 and the Irish Championships in 1897, defeating Wilfred Baddeley in a five-set final. He became the Scottish singles champion in 1901 and won the British Covered Court Championships, played on wooden courts at Queen's Club in London three consecutive times from 1897 until 1899.[8] He won against seven-time tournament champion Ernest Lewis and Wimbledon champions Laurence Doherty and Harold Mahony in the respective finals.
Qualified as a doctor of medicine, he served as a civil surgeon in the Boer War, and took a temporary commission in the Royal Army Medical Corps in the first week of World War I, on 10 August 1914, being promoted to Captain after a year's service.[9] He was later awarded a MBE for his services and died in London, where he is buried in Greenwich Cemetery.[4]
Grand Slam finals
[edit]Singles (1 runner-up)
[edit]Result | Year | Championship | Surface | Opponent | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Loss | 1897 | U.S. Championships | Grass | Robert Wrenn | 6–4, 6–8, 3–6, 6–2, 2–6 |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b "Wilberforce Eaves: Career match record". thetennisbase.com. Tennis Base. Retrieved 19 October 2017.
- ^ "Wilberforce Eaves". Olympedia. Retrieved 12 April 2021.
- ^ "Wilberforce Eaves Olympic Results". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 27 January 2014.
- ^ a b Captain Wilberforce Vaughan Eaves CWGC casualty record.
- ^ Collins, Bud (2010). The Bud Collins History of Tennis (2nd ed.). [New York]: New Chapter Press. pp. 415, 455, 688. ISBN 978-0942257700.
- ^ Baily's Magazine of Sports & Pastimes. London: Baily bros. 1920. p. 139.
- ^ Nieuwland, Alex. "Tournament – Dinard". www.tennisarchives.com. Tennis Archives. Retrieved 9 August 2022.
- ^ "Obituary". British Medical Journal. 1 (3086): 276. 21 February 1920. PMC 2337269.
- ^ "Commemorative Roll - Wilberforce Vaughan Eaves". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 3 June 2012.
External links
[edit]- 1867 births
- 1920 deaths
- 19th-century English sportsmen
- 19th-century male tennis players
- British Army personnel of World War I
- British male tennis players
- British people of Australian descent
- Members of the Order of the British Empire
- Olympic bronze medallists for Great Britain
- Olympic medalists in tennis
- Olympic tennis players for Great Britain
- Royal Army Medical Corps officers
- Tennis players from Melbourne
- Tennis players at the 1908 Summer Olympics
- Medalists at the 1908 Summer Olympics
- Australian emigrants to the United Kingdom