Friday, May 24, 2024

Sports74 Gold: Boxing, Tennis, and Golf

Three more sports have legends to be made and stories to be told.

BOXING

Muhammad Ali (216 1/2 pounds, 32 years old) is once again world heavyweight champion after knocking out George Foreman (220 pounds, 26 years old) in the eighth round at Kinshasa, Zaire, in the early morning local time Oct. 30. Ali, a 4-to-1 underdog, uses the "rope-a-dope" strategy, wherein he lies on the ropes and takes blows, bringing Foreman to keep punching and get tired. He wins the championship and $5 million. The "Rumble in the Jungle" is Don King's first big promotion, and it's the Fight of the Year as selected by The Ring magazine, which names Ali Fighter of the Year.

Before all that, Foreman (224 3/4 pounds, 25 years old) defends his title March 26 at Caracas, Venezuela, with a two-round TKO against Ken Norton (212 1/4 pounds, 30 years old).

Ali's second match against Joe Frazier, Jan. 28 in New York, ends in 12 rounds with Ali winning by unanimous decision.

The AP and UPI both name Ali Male Athlete of the Year. Sports Illustrated names him Sportsman of the Year, and he also wins the Hickok Belt (a pro sports award given annually from 1950 to 1976). The Sporting News, however, chooses baseball stolen bases king Lou Brock.

Roberto Duran is in the process of setting a lightweight title defenses record. Among his 12 from 1972 to 1979 are an eleventh-round knockout delivered to Esteban de Jesus March 16 and a first-round kayo on Masataka Takayama Dec. 21.

Carlos Monzon is in the middle of a record-setting run of 14 title defenses as a middleweight (1970-1977) as he defeats welterweight champion Jose Napoles in the sixth round Feb. 9 and knocks out Tony Mundine in the seventh round Oct. 4. Monzon's wife had shot him in '73.

The middleweight title is actually disputed; Monzon is recognized by the WBA, Rodrigo Valdez by the WBC. Also disputed is Duran's lightweight title; Guts Ishimatsu is the WBC's lightweight champ after an April 11 victory over Rodolfo Gonzalez.

Besides Ali and Napoles (who has held his title since 1971), junior middleweight champion Oscar Albarado is the only undisputed titleholder at the end of the year, having gained both belts from Koichi Wajima in a June 4 bout.

Among bantamweights, Soo-hwan Hong defeats Arnold Taylor for the WBA title in a July 3 fight, the win being the result of a unanimous decision after 15 rounds. Hong defends that championship Dec. 28 against Fernando Cabanela and wins by a split decision (the Japanese and Korean judges rule in his favor, the Philippine judge in Cabanela's).

The WBA featherweight title changes hands several times. Ernesto Marcel retires after he wins his Feb. 16 fight in a unanimous decision over Alexis Arguello. Ruben Olivares knocks out Zensuke Utagawa for the belt July 9 but goes down for the count against Arguello Nov. 23. This is the first of three weight classes in which Arguello will be a champion.

In amateur boxing, Leon Spinks wins the AAU championship in the 178-pound class, and his brother, Michael Spinks, wins the Golden Gloves in the 156-pound class. Ray Leonard is the AAU and Golden Gloves winner in the 139.

TENNIS

The best of the men is Jimmy Connors, who has won three of the four majors. This is one of ten times so far that one man has won three or more Grand Slam singles titles. As a participant in the 16-team league known as World Team Tennis, Connors is locked out of the French Open and other tournaments on the European continent.

The French Open champion is 18-year-old Bjorn Borg, with his first of six titles at Roland Garros and his first of eleven Grand Slam titles.

Chris Evert wins the French Open and the title at Wimbledon, and these are the first of what will be 18 Grand Slam singles titles. At one point winning 56 consecutive matches and setting a record that will stand for a decade, Evert is the AP Female Athlete of the Year.

Evonne Goolagong wins the Australian Open, while Billie Jean King, with a narrow victory over Goolagong, adds a fourth U.S. Open title.

Connors and Evert winning their respective titles at Wimbledon is noteworthy because the two are engaged at the time, although the planned November wedding does not come to fruition.

Connors is the annual men's No. 1 for the first of five times. His first time as the weekly No. 1 is July 29, and he will stay there for 160 weeks straight. The last time Ilie Nastase is in the top spot is the week of June 2 (40 weeks total), while John Newcombe's eight-week reign starts June 9 and ends when Connors takes over.

In the women's rankings, King is the women's No. 1 for the last of five times.

The power couple sits atop the money leaderboard. At the end of the year, Connors just beats out Guillermo Vilas and Newcombe with $281,309. Evert sets a record by winning $261,460.

India refuses to play South Africa at the Davis Cup final. The international team trophy is ultimately won by default.

Australia wins the Federation Cup, the women's equivalent of the Davis Cup, by defeating the United States in the final.

Vilas defeats Nastase at the final of the Tennis Masters Cup. Goolagong beats Evert at the WTA Championship.

Newcombe now has three singles titles and six doubles titles at Wimbledon. The doubles championship with Tony Roche this year is the fifth and last for the pair. By 1976, Newcombe and Roche will have a record 16 titles in Grand Slam doubles competition.

Goolagong and Peggy Michel win women's doubles in Australia and England, Evert and Olga Morozova in France, King and Rosemary Casals in the U.S.

While Evert's star is rising, another star is born. Martina Navratilova wins her first singles title in Orlando, and she also gets her first taste of Grand Slam glory in French Open mixed doubles, which she and Ivan Molina of Colombia win.

At the Italian Open, Borg wins the men's singles competition, while Evert defeats Navratilova in the women's singles final.

In World Team Tennis, the championship goes to the Denver Racquets, who win the final over the Philadelphia Freedoms. The season MVP is Philadelphia's King, winner of four Virginia Slims events over the year. The playoff MVP is Denver's Andrew Pattison, who in 1974 wins International Championship Tennis events in Monte Carlo and Johannesburg.

The collegiate champion team is Stanford, whose own John Whitlinger is the individual champ.

This is the U.S. Open's last year on grass; there will be clay at Forest Hills in '75 and a hard court at Flushing Meadows in '78.

GOLF

For one year, Johnny Miller, who wins the Bing Crosby National Pro-Am, is the top golfer in America instead of Jack Nicklaus. He is the money leader with over $350,000, interrupting what would have been a six-year streak for Nicklaus. Miller also interrupts what would have been a five-year streak of PGA Tour Player of the Year awards for Nicklaus.

Miller's victories include the Crosby at Pebble Beach, the Heritage Classic at Harbour Town, the Westchester Classic at Westchester C.C., and the World Open at Pinehurst.

Gary Player wins the Masters (which he had also won in 1961) and the Open Championship, the latter at Royal Lytham & St. Annes.

Hale Irwin wins the U.S. Open at Winged Foot. This is his first major victory.

Lee Trevino wins the PGA Championship at Tanglewood. He also finishes the season with his fourth and last Vardon Trophy for best scoring average.

Nicklaus finishes one stroke behind Trevino at the PGA Championship, an event the Golden Bear had won in '73. Although he doesn't win a major, he has a busy year. Nicklaus finishes first at the Hawaiian Open, wins the inaugural Tournament Players Championship, is in the first class for the World Golf Hall of Fame, gets Golf My Way published, and opens Muirfield Village Golf Club.

Sam Snead, 61, takes third place at the PGA Championship.

Bobby Nichols wins the Canadian Open.

Peter Oosterhuis, who finishes second to Player by four strokes at the Open, is the money leader on the European Tour, with the French Open and Italian Open as two of his wins. However, his loss in a playoff at Pensacola Country Club makes a major headline.

By winning the Monsanto Open at Pensacola, Lee Elder becomes the first African-American to gain automatic invitation to the Masters.

Deane Beman is the first PGA Tour commissioner.

Jerry Pate wins the U.S. Amateur. He will finish at the top of the leaderboard when the '76 U.S. Open is held.

Future professional Curtis Strange of Wake Forest wins the NCAA individual title and the Western Amateur.

Trevor Homer wins the Amateur Championship of the U.K. for the second time in three years.

JoAnne Carner is the LPGA Tour money leader with a record total of $87,094 and the winner of the Vare Trophy (female counterpart to the Vardon Trophy). Sandra Haynie, however, wins the U.S. Women's Open and the LPGA Championship. After a playoff with Haynie and Jane Blalock, it is Jo Ann Prentice who wins the Dinah Shore tournament.

In women's amateur golf, Cynthia Hill is the U.S. champion, and the American team defends the Curtis Cup by defeating the British team 13-5.

Nancy Lopez wins the U.S. Girls' Junior Amateur tournament.

The PGA Hall of Fame (whose last new inductees will be honored in 1982) adds to its ranks Julius Boros and Cary Middlecoff.

On Sept. 25 at the U.S. National Seniors Open Championship in Las Vegas, 64-year-old Mike Austin sets a record by driving a ball 515 yards. The 35-mph tailwind helps.

These are all good sports, but for some around the world, there's only one true sport. A wide variety of soccer stuff, starting with the biggest event of all, is the subject of the next installment, coming June 14.

[EDITS 7:07-7:22 a.m. EDT: A few edits so fewer last words are dangling on their own lines on mobile view.]

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