|
Boris Becker will be long remembered for his astonishing
victory in 1985 when he won the Gentlemen's Singles
Championship as an unseeded seventeen-year old. However,
his first Championships began with the most painful
of starts. In 1984, during the fourth set of his third
round match with Bill Scanlon, he had to be carried
from the court with a severe ankle injury that kept
him off court for three months.
When he recovered, Becker quickly re-established himself.
The German was a quarter-finalist in his next Grand
Slam event at the Australian Open, won the Young Masters
in January 1985, and at the age of 17 was clearly
promising much. His powerful game, based on a colossal
serve, a shuddering overhead and formidable ground
strokes was obviously going to pay rich dividends
on grass. Yet in the French Open in 1985 he defeated
the American Vitas Gerulaitis in the first round,
a victory which showed he deserved respect wherever
he chose to play.
Despite winning the title at Queen's Club prior to
the 1985 Championships, Becker went into the draw
unseeded because he was ranked just 20th in the world
at the time. This did not reflect his abilities that
summer and there was no question that he deserved
a seeded place above quite a number of those who were
afforded that ranking. The only solution was for Becker
to go out and prove it himself in a field headed by
John McEnroe as top seed and the Czech Ivan Lendl
in second place.
Bad weather affected the first week to such an extent
that only one match - won by Lendl - was completed
on the first day and by the sixth day just five men
and four women had advanced to the last 16. When Becker
came to that stage, he played a seed for the second
time in the shape of sixteenth seed, Tim Mayotte of
the USA. The German had already beaten the seventh
placed Swede Joakim Nystrom in the second round but
it had been an immense struggle and Becker came through
9-7 in the fifth set after Nystrom had served for
the match.
Mayotte, equally, gave him a demanding contest, leading
by two sets to one and holding two match points in
the fourth set tie break. In the third set, Becker
had twisted an ankle and contemplated retiring but,
after treatment, was able to play on and he won in
five sets. Becker did not have to go the full distance
again.
The quarter-final saw Becker beat the French left
hander Henri Leconte in four sets and in the Semi-Final
he needed another four sets to beat another Swede
Anders Jarryd. In the other half of the draw, McEnroe
was dismissed in the quarter finals by Kevin Curren
of the USA, the eighth seed. It would be the the first
time since 1978 McEnroe did not appear anywhere on
the roll of champions and did not play in a final.
Curren kept up the pressure to beat another former
champion Jimmy Connors for the loss of only five games
in the semi-final and so the final was produced--Curren,
27, against the 17 year-old Becker.
Boris Becker defeated the South-African born Curren
in the same way he beat other players on the way to
the Final. His powerful serve, his mid-air volleys,
and his tireless chasing all underled the ambition
of the German teenager. He was too quick, too strong
for Curren and won 6-3 6-7 7-6 6-4. His victory meant
that a catalogue of records had been established.
First, Becker was the youngest champion at 17 years,
227 days. Secondly, he was the first German winner,
and thirdly he was the first unseeded player to win.
Becker had played 292 games in his seven matches and
four times had played four set matches and twice had
five set contests. The fact that Becker had dropped
eight sets on the way had been equalled only once
before by Ted Schroeder in 1949.
Wimbledon had gone to an amazing finale--indeed two
days before the finish there was a memorable thunderstorm
in which one and a half inches of rain fell in 20
minutes. But the total attendance was the highest
ever at 397, 983.
The Becker of 1985, standing 6 ft 1 ½ inches and weighing
173lbs. , was to go on to retain the Wimbledon title
in 1986 and win again in 1989. He was runner up on
four other occasions and played for the 15th and final
time in 1999 to complete a career record at the All
England Club of 71 matches won and 12 lost.
|