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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jack_KramerJack Kramer - Wikipedia

    John Albert Kramer (August 1, 1921 – September 12, 2009) was an American tennis player of the 1940s and 1950s, and a pioneer promoter who helped drive the sport towards professionalism at the elite level.

  2. Jul 20, 1998 · Jack Kramer was an American champion tennis player who became a successful promoter of professional tennis. Kramer was selected to represent the United States in the 1939 Davis Cup doubles against Australia.

  3. You’d be hard pressed to find anyone – male or female – who has had a greater impact on tennis than Jack Kramer. At 6-foot-2, Kramer ushered in an era of a pounding and hard-driving serve and volley game that became the rage in tennis, and led him to a No. 1 world ranking in 1946.

  4. Sep 14, 2009 · Jack Kramer, the Wimbledon and two-time United States singles champion whose promotion of the professional tennis tour in the 1950s led the way toward the sport’s Open era, died Saturday in Los...

  5. Jun 27, 2022 · Seventy-five years ago, Jack Kramer won his first and only Wimbledon title, using it as a springboard to a pro-career template many players would follow.

  6. Sep 30, 2010 · John Albert Kramer, better known as Jack Kramer, did more than play a mean game of tennis. He initiated a style of play more reminiscent of the serve and volley of John McEnroe than ...

  7. Arguably the most multi-faceted man tennis has ever known, Kramer contributed to the sport on virtually every conceivable level, demonstrating high intelligence on and off the court, becoming a...

  8. Sep 17, 2014 · Kramer, who died Saturday at his home in L.A., won the Wimbledon singles title in 1947 and had victories in many other Grand Slam events. He ran the L.A. men's pro tennis...

  9. Jan 1, 2001 · Official tennis player profile of Jack Kramer on the ATP Tour. Featuring news, bio, rankings, playing activity, coach, stats, win-loss, points breakdown, videos, and more.

  10. Sep 14, 2009 · Jack Kramer, who died Saturday, was a player, a champion, an innovator, a promoter, an executive, a labor leader. And, commentator Frank Deford says, the single most significant figure in the ...