Gottfried von Cramm
{{Short description|German tennis player (1909–1976)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2022}}
{{Infobox tennis biography
|name = Gottfried von Cramm
|image = Bundesarchiv Bild 102-13555, Davis-Pokal, Gottfried von Cramm und Rogers.jpg
|caption = Gottfried von Cramm (left) and George Lyttleton Rogers of Ireland in 1932
|fullname = Gottfried Alexander Maximilian Walter Kurt Freiherr von Cramm
|country = {{Flag|Weimar Republic}} (until 1933)
{{Flag|Nazi Germany}} (1933–1945)
{{FRG}} (from 1949)
|birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1909|07|07}}
|birth_place = Nettlingen, German Empire
|death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|1976|11|08|1909|07|07}}
|death_place = Cairo, Egypt
|height = {{height|m=1.83}}
|college =
|turnedpro = 1931 (amateur tour)
|retired = 1952
|plays = Right-handed (one-handed backhand)
|careerprizemoney =
|tennishofyear = 1977
|tennishofid = baron-gottfried-von-cramm
|website =
|highestsinglesranking = No. 1 (1937, ITHF)[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ZmMpAAAAIBAJ&sjid=JMcEAAAAIBAJ&pg=1933,6548193&dq=world%27s-first-10+tennis&hl=en "Budge Seeded First in All-England"], Daytona Beach Morning Journal, 17 June 1937.{{cite web|title=Baron Gottfried von Cramm|url=https://www.tennisfame.com/hall-of-famers/inductees/baron-gottfried-von-cramm/|website=www.tennisfame.com|publisher=International Tennis Hall of Fame}}
|currentsinglesranking =
|AustralianOpenresult = SF (1938)
|FrenchOpenresult = W (1934, 1936)
|Wimbledonresult = F (1935, 1936, 1937)
|USOpenresult = F (1937)
|Othertournaments =
|MastersCupresult =
|WTAChampionshipsresult =
|Olympicsresult =
|doublesrecord =
|doublestitles =
|highestdoublesranking =
|currentdoublesranking =
|grandslamsdoublesresults =
|AustralianOpenDoublesresult = F (1938)
|FrenchOpenDoublesresult = W (1937)
|WimbledonDoublesresult = SF (1933, 1937)
|USOpenDoublesresult = W (1937)
|OthertournamentsDoubles =
|MastersCupDoublesresult =
|OlympicsDoublesresult =
|Mixed =
|mixedrecord =
|mixedtitles =
|AustralianOpenMixedresult =
|FrenchOpenMixedresult =
|WimbledonMixedresult = W (1933)
|USOpenMixedresult =
}}
Gottfried Alexander Maximilian Walter Kurt Freiherr{{Ref label|Freiherr|A|A}}{{cite magazine|title=Baron of the Court|url=https://www.si.com/vault/1993/07/05/128862/baron-of-the-court-baron-gottfried-von-cramm-the-german-tennis-star-of-the-hitler-era-was-a-sportsman-without-peer|magazine=Sports Illustrated|author=Ron Fimrite|date=5 July 1993|volume=79|issue=1|pages=56–69}} von Cramm ({{IPA|de|ˈɡɔtfʁiːt fɔn ˈkʁam|lang|De-Gottfried von Cramm.ogg}}; 7 July 1909 – 8 November 1976) was a German tennis player who won the French Championships twice, becoming the first non American, British, Australian or French player to win a singles Grand Slam title at the 1934 French Championships,{{cite web | url=https://www.tennis-academies.com/europe/germany | title=Tennis in German }} and reached the final of a Grand Slam singles tournament on five other occasions. He was ranked number 2 in the world in 1934 and 1936, and number 1 in the world in 1937.{{cite journal|author=J. Brooks Fenno, Jr.|page=36|journal=The Literary Digest|date=20 October 1934|title=Ten at the Top in Tennis|publisher=Funk & Wagnalls|location=New York City, United States}}{{cite news|title=Wallis Myers' Rankings|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=s-tjAAAAIBAJ&dq=wallis-myers&pg=3693%2C2769776|work=The Age|date=24 September 1936|page=6|via=Google News Archive}} He was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1977, which states that he is "most remembered for a gallant effort in defeat against Don Budge in the 1937 Interzone Final at Wimbledon".
Von Cramm had difficulties with the Nazi regime, which attempted to exploit his appearance and skill as a symbol of Aryan supremacy, but he refused to identify with Nazism. He was jailed briefly in 1938 for a homosexual affair.
Von Cramm figured briefly in the gossip columns as the sixth husband of Barbara Hutton, the Woolworth heiress.
Birth and childhood
File:Schloss_Nettlingen_Seite.jpg
Member of an ancient German nobility, the third of the seven sons of Baron Burchard von Cramm (1874-1936), by his marriage to Countess Jutta von Steinberg (1888–1972), Cramm was born at the family estate, Schloss Nettlingen in Lower Saxony, Germany and grew up in Schloss Brüggen in Hildesheim, which his mother Jutta inherited in 1911.
A younger brother, Wilhelm-Ernst Freiherr von Cramm (1917–1996), was a German officer who was highly decorated during the Second World War, and who after the war was leader of the German Party, a conservative German political party.
Through the mutual ancestry from the House of Cramm, Gottfied was related to the Dutch royal house, in particular through Bernhard, Prince of the Netherlands who was his third cousin.{{cite web | url=https://www.genealogics.org/relationship.php?altprimarypersonID=I00007181&savedpersonID=&secondpersonID=I00072845&maxrels=1&disallowspouses=1&generations=8&tree=LEO&primarypersonID=I00007181 | title=Relationship Calculator: Genealogics }}
Tennis career
Von Cramm began playing tennis around the age of ten after his right hand had recovered from an accident. That accident, which resulted in him losing the top joint of his index finger on his right hand, was the result of a horse who took more than just the sugar cube offered to him by the young von Cramm.{{Cite journal |last=Merrihew |first=Stephen Wallis |date=February 20, 1938 |title=Von Cramm's Life Story: He tells it for the Sydney Daily Telegraph and it is laid bare before the ALT Readers |journal=American Lawn Tennis |volume=XXXI |issue=14 |pages=26}}
In 1932, Cramm earned a place in the German Davis Cup team and won the first of four straight German national tennis championships.{{cite news|title=Abschluss der Deutschen Tennis-Meisterschaften|url=http://www.theeuropeanlibrary.org/tel4/newspapers/issue/3000117648922?hp=1&count=10&page=9|work=Hamburger Nachrichten|date=15 August 1932|language=de|via=European Library}} During this time he also teamed up with Hilde Krahwinkel to win the 1933 mixed doubles title at Wimbledon. Noted for his gentlemanly conduct and fair play, he gained the admiration and respect of his fellow tennis players. He earned his first individual Grand Slam title in 1934, winning the French Championships at Roland Garros. His victory made him a national hero in his native Germany; however, it was by chance that he won just after Adolf Hitler had come to power. The handsome, blond Gottfried von Cramm fitted perfectly the Aryan race image of a Nazi ideology that put pressure on all German athletes to be superior. However, Cramm steadfastly refused to be a tool for Nazi propaganda. Germany effectively lost its 1935 Davis Cup Interzone Final against the US when Cramm refused to take a match point in the deciding game, by notifying the umpire that the ball had tipped his racket, and thus calling a point against himself, although no one had witnessed the error.Paul Fein, Tennis Confidential: Today's Greatest Players, Matches, and Controversies, Brassey's, 2003 p. 144.
For three straight years Cramm was the men's singles runner-up at the Wimbledon Championships, losing in the final to England's Fred Perry in 1935 and again in 1936. The following year he was runner-up to American Don Budge, both at Wimbledon and at the U.S. National Championships. In 1935, he was beaten in the Roland Garros final by Perry, but turned the tables the following year and defeated his rival, gaining his second French championship.
In addition to his Grand Slam play, Gottfried von Cramm is recalled for his deciding match against Don Budge during the 1937 Davis Cup. He was ahead 4–1 in the final set when Budge launched a comeback, eventually winning 8–6 in a match considered by many as the greatest battle in the annals of Davis Cup play and one of the pre-eminent matches in all of tennis history. In a later interview, Budge said that Cramm had received a phone call from Hitler minutes before the match started and had come out pale and serious and had played each point as though his life depended on winning.[http://www.authentichistory.com/1930-1939/04-roadtowar/19370720_Don_Budge_on_Davis_Cup_SF_Win_Over_Von_Cramm_c1970.html "Don Budge Describes his 1937 Davis Cup Semi-final Match Against Baron Gottfried von Cramm"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110707191102/http://www.authentichistory.com/1930-1939/04-roadtowar/19370720_Don_Budge_on_Davis_Cup_SF_Win_Over_Von_Cramm_c1970.html |date=7 July 2011 }} Ted Tinling, who served as the Player Liaison for the All England Club, recalled in his memoir that as he was in the process of ushering Budge and von Cramm out to Centre Court, they were interrupted by a long-distance call for von Cramm, and that following the call, von Cramm turned to him and Budge and said, 'Excuse me, gentlemen, it was Hitler. He wanted to wish me good luck.'{{Cite book |last=Tinling |first=Ted |title=Sixty Years in Tennis |publisher=Sidgwick & Jackson |year=1983 |isbn=0-283-98963-7 |location=London |pages=113}} Others say that Budge believed a tale invented by Teddy Tinling that Hitler had telephoned Cramm before the match.{{cite book |last=Fisher |first=Marshall Jon |title=A Terrible Splendor: Three Extraordinary Men, a World Poised for War, and the Greatest Tennis Match Ever Played |year=2009 |publisher=Three Rivers Press |isbn=978-0307393951}}
For his successful tennis career, he was decorated by the President of the Federal Republic of Germany with the Silver Laurel Leaf, Germany's highest sports award.Sportbericht der Bundesregierung vom 29. 9. 1973 an den Bundestag - Drucksache 7/1040 - Seite 62 Verleihung des Silbernen Lorbeerblattes...
Imprisonment for same-sex affair
Despite his enormous popularity with the public, on 5 March 1938, von Cramm was arrested by the German government and tried on the charge of a homosexual relationship with Manasse Herbst, a young Galician Jewish actor and singer, who had appeared in the 1926 silent film Der Sohn des Hannibal. After being hospitalized for a nervous collapse after his arrest, on 14 March von Cramm was sentenced to one year's imprisonment{{cite magazine |title=People, May 23, 1938 |url=https://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,882967,00.html |date=23 May 1938 |magazine=Time |access-date=4 March 2021}} Cramm admitted the relationship, which had lasted from 1931 until 1934 and had begun shortly before he married his first wife. He was additionally charged with sending money to Herbst, who had moved to Palestine in 1936. According to a report on the trial in The New York Times of 15 May 1938, the judge stated that "Baron von Cramm had alleged that his wife, during their honeymoon, had become intimate with a French athlete. The court held that this experience had unsettled the young tennis star and had resulted in his seeking a perverse compensation for an unhappy married life."{{cite news |title=Cramm Sentenced to a Year in Prison; He Was Blackmail Victim |date=15 May 1938 |newspaper=The New York Times |page=6 }} Although Cramm had confessed to an affair with Herbst once he was arrested, he later changed his confession to one of "mutual masturbation", and his lawyer was able to convince the judge that Cramm had been forced into sending money to Herbst because Herbst was a "sneaky Jew".{{cite book|last=Fisher|first=Marshall Jon|title=A Terrible Splendor|url=https://archive.org/details/terriblesplendor00fish|url-access=registration|year=2009|publisher=Crown|location=New York|isbn=9780307393944}}
Cramm's international tennis friends were outraged at his treatment. Don Budge collected the signatures of high-profile athletes and sent a protest letter to Hitler. His friend King Gustaf V of Sweden also pressured the German government to have him released. Cramm was released on parole after six months, and in May 1939 returned to competitive tennis. Cramm competed at the Queen's Club Championships in London, where he won the event by beating American Bobby Riggs 6–0, 6–1. Officials at Wimbledon reportedly refused to let him play in their tournament, using the excuse that he was a convicted criminal and therefore unfit.
Connections to the German resistance
Cramm refused to become a party member of the NSDAP during the entire period of the National Socialist regime, although Hermann Göring, who was a member of the same tennis club, tried to persuade him several times. Because Cramm never mentioned Hitler during speeches on international trips, watched films critical of the regime, and privately spoke disparagingly of the National Socialists, he increasingly aroused the displeasure of the Nazis.
Von Cramm showed solidarity with the active resistance to Hitler in the last years of the war, using his travels as a tennis coach to Sweden to pass on confidential messages from the 20 July conspirators.{{Cite web |last=Fritsche |first=Andreas |title=Harter Aufschlag 1938 |url=https://www.nd-aktuell.de/artikel/1171700.antifaschismus-harter-aufschlag.html |access-date=2023-07-27 |website=nd-aktuell.de |language=de}} After the failed assassination attempt, he expressed his desire to join another attempt.{{Cite news |title=Porträt einer Tennislegende: Gottfried von Cramm: Sein Platz war die Welt |language=de-DE |work=Der Tagesspiegel Online |url=https://www.tagesspiegel.de/gesellschaft/gottfried-von-cramm-sein-platz-war-die-welt-5512342.html |access-date=2023-07-27 |issn=1865-2263}} Since the resistance never reorganised after the 20 July plot, he never got the chance to turn his words into deeds.
Wartime service and postwar career
In May 1940, some months after the outbreak of the Second World War, Cramm was conscripted into military service as a member of the Hermann Goering Division.{{cite web|title=Von Cramm, German Tennis Star Of 1930's, Dies in Car Crash at 66|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1976/11/10/archives/von-cramm-german-tennis-star-of-1930s-dies-in-car-crash-at-66.html?|website=The New York Times|date=10 November 1976}} He saw action on the Eastern Front and was awarded the Iron Cross. Despite his noble background, Cramm was enlisted as a private soldier until being given a company to command. His company faced harsh conditions on the Eastern Front, and Cramm was flown out suffering from frostbite, with much of his company dead. Because of his previous conviction, he was dismissed from military service in 1942.{{cite web |last=Kernchen |first=Roland |title=Gottfried von Cramm - Weltspitzensportler und Freund Wispensteins |trans-title=Gottfried von Cramm - World-class Athlete and Friend of the Wispenstein Community |url=http://www.wispenstein.de/seiten/gottfried_von_cramm.htm |website=Homepage of the Wispenstein Community |language=de |access-date=31 August 2015 |archive-date=21 June 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180621221306/http://www.wispenstein.de/seiten/gottfried_von_cramm.htm |url-status=dead }}
While the war robbed Cramm of some of his best years as a tennis player, he won the German national championship in 1948 and again in 1949, when he was 40 years old. He went on playing Davis Cup tennis until retiring after the 1953 season and still holds the record for the most wins by any German team member.
Following his retirement from active competition, Cramm served as an administrator in the German Tennis Federation. He was instrumental in reviving the Lawn Tennis Club Rot-Weiss in Berlin following World War II, and later served as its Chairman and President (1958-death).{{Cite web |title=Der Club |url=https://www.rot-weiss-berlin.de/lttc-rot-weiss/der-club/chronik |url-status=dead |access-date=August 18, 2022 |website=LTTC Rot-Weiss |archive-date=27 December 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191227185851/https://www.rot-weiss-berlin.de/lttc-rot-weiss/der-club/chronik }} Von Cramm became successful in business as a cotton importer. In addition, he managed the landed estate he had inherited from his father in Wispenstein, in Lower Saxony.
Marriages
Gottfried von Cramm married twice:
- Baroness Elisabeth Lisa von Dobeneck (1912–1975), a daughter of Robert, Baron von Dobeneck (died in 1926) and his wife, the former Maria Hagen (1889–1943), a granddaughter of the Jewish banker {{ill|Louis Hagen|de}}.{{cite web|url=http://www.izb.fraunhofer.de/erinnerungen/ |title=Fraunhofer IZB: Seite nicht gefunden |author=Fraunhofer SCAI Marketing und Kommunikation |work=fraunhofer.de |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070609132759/http://www.izb.fraunhofer.de/erinnerungen/ |archive-date=9 June 2007 }} They married on 1 September 1930 and divorced in 1937.{{cite magazine|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,770858-3,00.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070930152917/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,770858-3,00.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=30 September 2007|title=Sport: Champions at Forest Hills|date=13 September 1937|magazine=Time}} Lisa von Cramm later married the German ice-hockey star Gustav Jaenecke.
- Barbara Hutton, an American socialite and an heiress to the Woolworth five-and-dime fortune. The couple married in 1955 and divorced in 1959. He had married her in order to "help her through substance abuse and depression but was unable to help her in the end."
Death
While on a business trip, Cramm and his driver were killed in an automobile accident near Cairo, Egypt, in 1976, when the baron's car collided with a truck. Two roads were named in his honor, the Gottfried-von-Cramm-Weg in Berlin-Wilmersdorf, where the Rot-Weiss Tennis Club is located, and a similarly named road in the small town of Merzig.
Gottfried von Cramm was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island, in 1977.
In his 1979 autobiography, Jack Kramer, the long-time tennis promoter and a great player, included Gottfried von Cramm in his list of the 21 greatest players of all time.{{Ref label|KramerRanking|B}} Cramm was the subject of a radio play, titled Playing for His Life, first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in June 2011. The play focused on the 1937 Interzone Davis Cup final and on Cramm's personal life.[http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b012078f Playing for his life], Afternoon drama, BBC Radio 4, 24 June 2011. Retrieved 4 February 2014. Cramm's story is featured at some length in the 2023 Netflix documentary Eldorado – everything the Nazis hate.{{cite web |title=Eldorado – everything the Nazis hate |url=https://about.netflix.com/en/news/eldorado-everything-the-nazis-hate |date=29 May 2023 |website=Netflix |access-date=29 January 2024}}
Grand Slam finals
=Singles (2 titles, 5 runners-up)=
class='sortable wikitable'
!Result !Year !style="width:180px"|Championship !style="width:50px"|Surface !style="width:160px"|Opponent !style="width:170px" class="unsortable"|Score | |||||
style="background:#ebc2af"
| style="background:#98FB98"|Win | 1934 | French Championships | Clay | {{flagicon|AUS}} Jack Crawford | 6–4, 7–9, 3–6, 7–5, 6–3 |
style="background:#ebc2af"
| style="background:#FFA07A"|Loss | 1935 | French Championships | Clay | {{flagicon|GBR}} Fred Perry | 3–6, 6–3, 1–6, 3–6 |
style="background:#ccffcc"
| style="background:#FFA07A"|Loss | 1935 | Wimbledon | Grass | {{flagicon|GBR}} Fred Perry | 2–6, 4–6, 4–6 |
style="background:#ebc2af"
| style="background:#98FB98"|Win | 1936 | French Championship | Clay | {{flagicon|GBR}} Fred Perry | 6–0, 2–6, 6–2, 2–6, 6–0 |
style="background:#ccffcc"
| style="background:#FFA07A"|Loss | 1936 | Wimbledon | Grass | {{flagicon|GBR}} Fred Perry | 1–6, 1–6, 0–6 |
style="background:#ccffcc"
| style="background:#FFA07A"|Loss | 1937 | Wimbledon | Grass | {{flagicon|USA|1912}} Don Budge | 3–6, 4–6, 2–6 |
style="background:#ccccff"
| style="background:#FFA07A"|Loss | 1937 | U.S. Championships | Grass | {{flagicon|USA|1912}} Don Budge | 1–6, 9–7, 1–6, 6–3, 1–6 |
= Doubles (2 titles, 1 runner-up) =
class='sortable wikitable' | ||||||
Result
!Year !style="width:180px"|Championship !style="width:50px"|Surface !style="width:160px"|Partner !style="width:160px"|Opponents !style="width:140px" class="unsortable"|Score | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
style="background:#ebc2af"
|style="background:#98FB98"|Win | 1937 | French Championships | Clay | {{flagicon|GER|Nazi}} Henner Henkel | {{flagicon|RSA|1928}} Vernon Kirby {{flagicon|RSA|1928}} Norman Farquharson | 6–4, 7–5, 3–6, 6–1 |
style="background:#ccccff"
|style="background:#98FB98"|Win | 1937 | U.S. Championships | Grass | {{flagicon|GER|Nazi}} Henner Henkel | {{flagicon|USA|1912}} Don Budge {{flagicon|USA|1912}} Gene Mako | 6–4, 7–5, 6–4 |
style="background:#ffffcc"
| style="background:#FFA07A"|Loss | 1938 | Australian Championships | Grass | {{flagicon|GER|Nazi}} Henner Henkel | {{flagicon|AUS}} John Bromwich {{flagicon|AUS}} Adrian Quist | 5–7, 4–6, 0–6 |
=Mixed doubles (1 title)=
class='sortable wikitable' | ||||||
Result
!Year !style="width:180px"|Championship !style="width:50px"|Surface !style="width:160px"|Partner !style="width:160px"|Opponents !style="width:140px" class="unsortable"|Score | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
style="background:#ccffcc"
|style="background:#98FB98"|Win | 1933 | Wimbledon Championships | Grass | {{flagicon|GER|1933}} Hilde Krahwinkel | {{flagicon|GBR}} Mary Heeley {{flagicon|RSA|1928}} Norman Farquharson | 7–5, 8–6 |
Grand Slam singles performance timeline
{{Performance key|short=yes|active=no}}
class="wikitable nowrap" style=font-size:90%;text-align:center |
bgcolor="#efefef"
| align="left" style="width:90px;" | Tournament ! 1931 !! 1932 !! 1933 !! 1934 !! 1935 !! 1936 !! 1937 !! 1938 !! 1939 ! 1940 !! 1941 !! 1942 !! 1943 !! 1944 !! 1945 !! 1946 !! 1947 !! 1948 !! 1949 !! 1950 !! 1951 !! 1952 ! style="width:45px;" | SR ! style="width:45px;" | W–L ! style="width:45px;" | Win % |
align="left" style="background:#EFEFEF;" | Australia
| A | A | A | A | A | A | A | style="background:yellow;" |SF | A | A | style=color:#767676|NH | style=color:#767676|NH | style=color:#767676|NH | style=color:#767676|NH | style=color:#767676|NH | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | style="background:#EFEFEF;" | 0 / 1 | style="background:#EFEFEF;" | 3–1 | style="background:#EFEFEF;" | 75.0 |
align="left" style="background:#EFEFEF;" |France
| style="background:#afeeee;" |4R | style="background:#afeeee;" |2R | A | style="background:#00ff00;" |W | style="background:#D8BFD8;" |F | style="background:#00ff00;" |W | A | A | A | style=color:#767676|NH | style=color:#767676|NH | style=color:#767676|NH | style=color:#767676|NH | style=color:#767676|NH | style=color:#767676|NH | A | A | A | A | A | A | style="background:#afeeee;" |1R | style="background:#EFEFEF;" | 2 / 6 | style="background:#EFEFEF;" | 21–4 | style="background:#EFEFEF;" | 84.0 |
align="left" style="background:#EFEFEF;" |Wimbledon
| style="background:#afeeee;" |4R | style="background:#afeeee;" |2R | style="background:#afeeee;" |3R | style="background:#afeeee;" |4R | style="background:#D8BFD8;" |F | style="background:#D8BFD8;" |F | style="background:#D8BFD8;" |F | A | A | style=color:#767676|NH | style=color:#767676|NH | style=color:#767676|NH | style=color:#767676|NH | style=color:#767676|NH | style=color:#767676|NH | A | A | A | A | A | style="background:#afeeee;" |1R | A | style="background:#EFEFEF;" | 0 / 8 | style="background:#EFEFEF;" | 27–8 | style="background:#EFEFEF;" | 77.1 |
align="left" style="background:#EFEFEF;" |United States
| A | A | A | A | A | A | style="background:#D8BFD8;" |F | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | style="background:#EFEFEF;" | 0 / 1 | style="background:#EFEFEF;" | 5–1 | style="background:#EFEFEF;" | 83.3 |
style="background:#EFEFEF;" |
Notes
:{{note label|Freiherr|A|A}}{{German title|Freiherr}}
:{{note label|KramerRanking|B}}Writing in 1979, Kramer considered the best ever to have been either Don Budge (for consistent play) or Ellsworth Vines (at the height of his game). The next four best were, chronologically, Bill Tilden, Fred Perry, Bobby Riggs and Pancho Gonzales. After these six came the "second echelon" of Rod Laver, Lew Hoad, Ken Rosewall, Gottfried von Cramm, Ted Schroeder, Jack Crawford, Pancho Segura, Frank Sedgman, Tony Trabert, John Newcombe, Arthur Ashe, Stan Smith, Björn Borg and Jimmy Connors. He felt unable to rank Henri Cochet and René Lacoste accurately but felt they were among the very best.
References
{{reflist}}
Further reading
- Fisher, Marshall Jon (2009). A Terrible Splendor: Three Extraordinary Men, a World Poised for War and the Greatest Tennis Match Ever Played. {{ISBN|978-0-307-39394-4}}
- Simkin, John (6 July 2018). [http://spartacus-educational.com/spartacus-blogURL112.htm "Why was the anti-Nazi German, Gottfried von Cramm, banned from taking part at Wimbledon in 1939?"]. Spartacus Educational. Retrieved 23 July 2018
- {{cite book |last1=Nordalm |first1=Jens |title=Der schöne Deutsche: Das Leben des Gottfried von Cramm |date=2021 |publisher=Rowohlt E-Book |isbn=978-3-644-00819-9 |language=de}}
External links
{{commons category}}
- {{Tennis Hall of Fame}}
- {{ATP}}
- {{ITF profile}}
- {{Davis Cup player}}
- [http://gottfried-von-cramm.de/ Official page] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170919082549/http://gottfried-von-cramm.de/ |date=19 September 2017 }}
- {{PM20|FID=pe/003533}}
{{s-start}}
{{s-ach|aw}}
{{succession box|before=Incumbent|title=German Sportsman of the Year|years=1947–1948|after={{flagicon|GER}} Georg Meier}}
{{s-end}}
{{French Open men's singles champions}}
{{French Open men's doubles champions}}
{{Wimbledon mixed doubles champions}}
{{U.S. National Championships Men's doubles champions}}
{{International Tennis Hall of Fame members}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cramm, Gottfried Von}}
Category:French Championships (tennis) champions
Category:German male tennis players
Category:Grand Slam (tennis) champions in men's doubles
Category:Grand Slam (tennis) champions in men's singles
Category:Grand Slam (tennis) champions in mixed doubles
Category:International Tennis Hall of Fame inductees
Category:Recipients of the Silver Laurel Leaf
Category:German bisexual sportspeople
Category:People convicted under Germany's Paragraph 175
Category:People prosecuted under anti-homosexuality laws
Category:People from Hildesheim (district)
Category:Persecution of homosexuals in Nazi Germany
Category:Recipients of the Iron Cross (1939)
Category:Road incident deaths in Egypt
Category:United States National champions (tennis)
Category:West German male tennis players
Category:Wimbledon champions (pre-Open Era)