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When Goran Ivanisevic won the Gentlemen's Singles
title in 2001, he joined an exclusive club of left
hand-handed champions at the All England Club.
Left-handers make up about ten per cent of the world's
population but when it comes to tennis - or at least
becoming champions of Wimbledon - the percentage is
even lower. Only eight left-handed players, six men
and two women, have ever won a Wimbledon singles title
and it is only in recent years through the repeat
skills of such as Martina Navratilova and John McEnroe
that the total of singles titles annexed reached 24.
Wimbledon had been going for 30 years before, in 1907,
The Championships welcomed their first leftie as a
winner. He was an Australian, Norman Brookes, who
also became the first man from overseas to capture
the trophy. Born in 1877, the year of Wimbledon's
inaugural competition, Brookes became champion at
29.
He was the first of the great Australian tennis players,
possessed of what was styled "a devilish, swerving
serve" which earned him the nickname The Wizard.
Brookes had already competed in the 1905 Wimbledon,
losing in the Challenge Round to the five-time champion,
Laurie Doherty, before returning two years later to
defeat the same opponent by walkover after playing
through the field to reach the Challenge Round.
Wimbledon did not see Brookes again until 1914, when
once more he became the champion in the last event
before the First World War. After serving as a captain
in the British army, Brookes defended his title in
the first post-war tournament and lost to a fellow-Australian,
Gerald Patterson. In 1924, aged 46, Brookes was still
competing at Wimbledon, good enough to reach the fourth
round.
Forty years passed before Wimbledon welcomed another
left-hander into the winners' circle. He was Jaroslav
Drobny, the Czech who fled his homeland's Communist
regime and was competing on an Egyptian passport when
he won Wimbledon at the 11th attempt.
Having played his first Wimbledon in 1938, the bespectacled
Drobny had reached the semi-finals three times and
been runner-up twice (1949 and 1952). Such failures
had made Drobny, who represented Czechoslovakia at
ice hockey in the 1948 Winter Olympics, highly popular
with the British public, so his 1954 victory over
Ken Rosewall in a four-set 58-game classic was hailed
virtually as a home triumph for Britain.
Drobny, who was to become a British citizen five years
later, was, like Brookes, a late blossomer. He was
32 when Wimbledon success came his way, having already
lifted the French title in successive seasons, 1951-52.
Eight years on, in 1960, Wimbledon fell to another
of the talented Australian brigade, Neale Fraser,
whose swinging, kicking serve was so similar to Drobny's.
Even Fraser, who went on to win the US title later
the same year, conceded he was lucky to reach Wimbledon's
final after saving five match points in a marathon
quarter-final against the American, Earl Buchholz.
However, there was nothing lucky about his success
in the final, where he beat his compatriot, the up-and-coming
Rod Laver, in four sets. Fraser went on to succeed
the legendary Harry Hopman as Australia's Davis Cup
captain, a post he held for 23 years.
It was Laver who became the fourth of the left-handed
champions by winning the next two Wimbledons, 1961
and 1962, before turning professional and then returning,
after tennis went open in 1968, to win that year and
in 1969. In two of those four years, '62 and '69,
the Rockhampton Rocket won all four Grand Slams to
set the mark as the game's best-ever male competitor.
In 1969 Laver shared the title honours with the first
left-handed woman winner, Britain's Ann Jones, who
became - and who remains - the only British left-handed
singles champion, man or woman.
Mrs Jones, who first made her sporting name as Ann
Haydon in table tennis as a five-time finalist in
the world championships, was 30 and competing in her
14th Wimbledon when fortune finally smiled on her,
though she won the title the hardest way conceivable,
by defeating the sports top two women, Margaret Court
and Billie Jean King, in the semi-finals and final.
Suddenly, left-handers were now more in evidence as
champions of Wimbledon. Jimmy Connors, aged 21 and
competing in his third Wimbledon, dropped only six
games in routing Ken Rosewall in the 1974 final. Then
in 1982, playing for the 11th time, he won it again.
Connors' second title was sandwiched between the loud
and laudable successes of John McEnroe in 1981, 1983
and 1984, and for three of those years in the early
Eighties, 1982 to 1984, there was a left-handed woman
champion, too.
Martina Navratilova, on her way to becoming the finest-ever
female tennis champion, had embarked in 1978 on a
magnificent spell in which she fell in love with the
Wimbledon tournament and won its singles crown eight
times in ten years.
Then, just to show it was not all over after defeats
by Steffi Graf in the 1988 and 1989 finals, she won
a ninth Wimbledon in 1990.
For a while, after those heady years, the era of the
left-hander was in decline. Then, after 11 years without
a title for that ten per cent of the world's population,
along came Goran Ivanisevic and his wild card in 2001
to prove that the lefties still sometimes rule.
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