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Francisco Contreras Serrano (16 June 1934 – 12 July 2022),[1] also known as Pancho Contreras, was a Mexican tennis player. He both played for and captained the Mexico Davis Cup team.

Francisco Contreras
Full nameFrancisco Contreras Serrano
Country (sports) Mexico
Born16 June 1934
Mexico City, Mexico
Died12 July 2022(2022-07-12) (aged 88)
PlaysRight-handed
Singles
Grand Slam singles results
French Open4R (1957)
Wimbledon2R (1957, 1958, 1960)
US Open4R (1956)
Medal record
Pan American Games
1963 São PauloMixed doubles
1959 ChicagoMixed doubles
1959 ChicagoMen's doubles
1963 São PauloMen's singles
Central American and Caribbean Games
1959 CaracasMen's doubles
1959 CaracasMen's singles

Biography


Born in Mexico City in 1934, Contreras completed his studies in California, attending Modesto Junior College.[2] Along with his Modesto teammate Joaquín Reyes, he went on to play college tennis for the University of Southern California and the pair combined to win the 1955 NCAA doubles championships. He won the NCAA doubles championship again in 1956, this time partnering Peruvian player Alex Olmedo.[3]

Contreras reached the round of 16 at both the 1956 US National Championships and the 1957 French Championships. At the 1958 Wimbledon Championships he partnered with Rosie Reyes to make the semi-finals of the mixed doubles. He won a men's doubles gold medal at the 1959 Central American and Caribbean Games and was a mixed doubles gold medalist at 1963 Pan American Games, partnering Yola Ramírez.[4]


Davis Cup


Contreras debuted for Mexico's Davis Cup team in 1953 and played his 12th and final tie during Mexico's historic run to the 1962 Davis Cup final.[5] He was team captain for Mexico in the 1962 campaign, which included a win over the United States. In order to rest players he featured in two dead rubber singles matches, against Yugoslavia and India, en route to the final.[6] In the final against Australia in Brisbane he remained on the sidelines, as the home side were victorious 5–0.[7]


See also



References


  1. Murió Francisco “Pancho” Contreras, leyenda del tenis mexicano (in Spanish)
  2. "Playing the field". Montreal Gazette. 14 July 1953.
  3. "Olmedo of SC in NCAA Net Win; UCLA Nabs Team". San Bernardino Sun. 1 July 1956.
  4. "Those Cubans Again Topple U.S., Nine, 3–1". New York Daily News. 27 April 1963.
  5. "Can Mexico Take Davis Cup? Contreras, for One, Thinks So (Published 1964)". The New York Times. 31 July 1964.
  6. "Mexico Wins Cup Challenge". The Canberra Times. 6 December 1962. p. 44. Retrieved 18 November 2020 via National Library of Australia.
  7. "Pancho Contreras y el día que Octavio Paz ayudó al equipo de Copa Davis". Más Latina 96.5 (in Spanish). 27 July 2020.



На других языках


- [en] Francisco Contreras (tennis)

[es] Francisco Contreras Serrano

Francisco Contreras Serrano (Ciudad de México, México, 16 de junio de 1934) o simplemente Pancho Contreras es un ex tenista mexicano. Participó con el equipo mexicano de Copa Davis junto con Mario Llamas desde que se disputó la edición de 1956, en la cual llegaron hasta la final de la Zona Américas, donde cayeron a manos de Estados Unidos. Llamas y Contreras solo pudieron obtener un punto en la final, que fue el juego de dobles, venciendo en cinco mangas a la pareja conformada por Sam Giammalva y Barry MacKay. Poco a poco el equipo mexicano fue mejorando, hasta que todo empezaba a pintar mejor, cuando Rafael Osuna y Antonio Palafox llegaron a las filas del combinado.



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