Jimmy connors tennis player biography books
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The Outsider: My Autobiography
Jimmy Connors took the tennis world by storm like no player in the history of the game. A shaggy-haired working-class kid from the wrong side of the tracks, he was prepared to battle for every point, to shout and scream until he was heard, and he didn't care whom he upset in doing so. He was brash, he was a brat. He was a crowd-pleaser, a revolutionary. And he won more tournaments - an astonishing - than any other man in history, including eight Grand Slam singles titles.
Only now is Connors ready to set the record straight on what really happened on and off the court. The rivalry with John McEnroe, that frequently threatened to turn violent, with Bjorn Borg, and Ivan Lendl. His romance with Chris Evert, which made them the sweethearts of the sport. The escapades with his partner in brott, Ilie Nastase. The deep roots of the fierce determination that made him the best player on the planet.
This is no genteel memoir of a pelare of the tennis
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Jimmy Connors
American tennis player (born )
For other people with similar names, see James Connors and Jimmy Connor (disambiguation).
Connors in | |
| Fullname | James Scott Connors |
|---|---|
| Country(sports) | United States |
| Residence | Santa Barbara, California, U.S. |
| Born | () September 2, (age72) Belleville, Illinois, U.S. |
| Height | 5ft 10in (m)[1] |
| Turnedpro | |
| Retired | |
| Plays | Left-handed (two-handed backhand) |
| Coach | Gloria Connors Pancho Segura |
| Prize money | $8,, |
| Int. Tennis HoF | (member page) |
| Careerrecord | –[a] (%) |
| Careertitles | (1st in the Open Era) |
| Highestranking | No. 1 (July 29, ) |
| AustralianOpen | W () |
| FrenchOpen | SF (, , , ) |
| Wimbledon | W (, ) |
| US Open | W (, , , , ) |
| TourFinals | W () |
| GrandSlamCup | 1R () |
| WCTFinals | W (, ) |
| Careerrecord | –78 (%)[a] |
| Careertitles | 16 |
| AustralianOpen | 3R () |
| FrenchOpen | F () |
| Wimbl • The Outsider: A MemoirApril 6,
More than any athlete, other than possibly boxers, tennis players seem to define themselves within the contours of individual will and personality. A lot of tennis greats have written bios in recent years, and each of them seems to have this seminal moment early in their lives that encapsulates how the player sees himself and how he approached the game. Often it takes the form of a tension between the player and the gentility of the greater tennis world. For John McEnroe, it was getting on the subway in New York and commuting to the tony private school where he learned to play, of the tension between his father's working class Irish roots and these rik kids he was now hanging with. For Andre Agassi, it was the image of standing there and watching his dad, a champion boxer back in Iran, beat the living crap out of someone in front of his son. For Jimmy Connors, it was an even more harrowing image: Standing on a public tennis court in East St. Louis a
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