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USA tennis players at the Olympic games
taylor dent to play at the Olympic
games
LIKE FATHER, LIKE COUSIN Taylor Dent enters the Olympic
Games with one of the most accomplished family sports pedigrees among all
athletes competing in the same Olympic Games as his cousin U.S. beach
volleyball star Misty May.
Dent's father, Phil, was one of Australia's tennis greats in the 1970s,
reaching the Australian Open singles final in 1974, losing to Jimmy Connors.
He also was a French Open semifinalist in 1977 and a Wimbledon
quarterfinalist in 1977. In 1976, he and Billie Jean King won the mixed
doubles title at the US Open. While tennis was not an Olympic sport when
Phil competed, he did represent Australia for eight years as a member of the
Davis Cup team, helping the Aussies win the 1977 Davis Cup title. Dent's
mother, Betty Ann Stuart, was also an accomplished player having reached the
round of 16 at Wimbledon and reaching the women's doubles final at the US
Open in 1977 with Renee Richards. Taylor's half-brother, Brett Hansen-Dent,
was also an NCAA singles finalist for USC and played briefly on the
professional tour.
May is a member of the U.S. Beach Volleyball Team, after having represented
the U.S. in that competition at the Sydney Games. May's father Butch
(Taylor's uncle) was a member of the 1968 U.S. Olympic volleyball team, who
was a teammate of 1996 Olympic gold medallist Lindsay Davenport's father
Wink.
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Dent's first ATP singles win in 2002 at Newport, R.I., site of the
International Tennis Hall of Fame, was coincidentally historic as it put
Taylor and his father Phil, into the tennis history books as the only
father-son combination to win ATP singles titles in their careers.
BROTHERS IN ARMS Identical twins Bob and Mike Bryan become the second set
of brothers to represent the United States in Olympic tennis joining Arthur
and Joseph Wear the great, great uncles of President George W. Bush who
participated and won bronze medals at the 1904 Olympic Games in St. Louis,
Mo. The Wears, however, did not compete with each other - Joseph partnered
Allen West, while Arthur paired with Clarence Gamble.
The Bryans have enjoyed success at nearly every level of tennis in their
careers, with the Olympic Games their final hurdle. As junior players, Bob
and Mike combined to win well over 100 junior doubles championships.
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In 1996, they became the first doubles team in 50 years to
win the prestigious USTA Boys' 18 Doubles Championships in Kalamazoo, Mich.,
while also winning the junior doubles title at the US Open. In college, they
played two years for Stanford University, where in 1998 they won the NCAA
doubles title. (Bob won the NCAA triple crown, claiming the singles title
and being part of the NCAA championship winning team).
The brothers' NCAA doubles crown was the first won by brothers since Robert
and Tom Falkenburg won the 1946 doubles title for USC. One year after
turning professional, the Bryans represented the United States for the first
time at the Pan American Games in Winnipeg, Canada, earning a bronze medal
in men's doubles. In 2001, the Bryans won their first career ATP doubles
title in Memphis and went on to win 10 more ATP doubles titles entering the
2003 French Open Championships in 2003. At the famed Roland Garros venue,
the Bryans made tennis history, winning their first Grand Slam men’s doubles
crown and becoming the winningest all-brother doubles team in the Open era
with their 11th doubles crown one better than another set of identical
twins Tim and Tom Gullikson. After reaching their second career Grand Slam
doubles title at the 2003 US Open, the Bryans were named to the U.S. Davis
Cup team for the first time in their careers, becoming the first set of
brothers to play on the same Davis Cup team in 100 years – George and Robert
Wrenn being the only other set of brothers to turn the trick back in 1903.
Unlike the Wrenns, the Bryan twins were victorious in Cup play, winning a
crucial match against Karol Beck and Dominik Hrbaty to help the United
States defeat Slokavia 3-2 in the Davis Cup World Group Playoff Round in
Bratislava, Slovakia.
Mother, Kathy (nee Blake) was a former player on the women’s circuit, who
reached the doubles semifinals at Wimbledon. Father, Wayne is a lawyer,
musician and tennis instructor who is very involved with the ATP Tours
Smash Tennis Program. Wayne went to high school with Carl Wilson - the
youngest of the Beach Boys. The Bryans graduated from Rio Mesa H.S. in
Oxnard in 1996 and, like most twins, played many tricks on teachers with one
brother attending class on before of the other. The Bryans play in a rock
band led by their father Wayne. Bob plays the keyboards while Mike plays the
drums. The band has played at several special events on the tennis tour and
plan to record music professionally. The Bryans are also spokespeople for
the USTA's Junior Team Tennis program.
MARDY FISH – A GREAT CATCH - Mardy Fish's tennis abilities have been a
subject in the media since the age of two. It was at that age when young
Mardy was the subject of a local newscast on WCCO in Minneapolis, Minn., for
being the “best two-year-old tennis player in the world as young Mardy was
able to hit the ball over the net from the baseline a rare feat for any
two-year-old.
This article is in five parts. This is part four.
Part 1 The United States Olympic tennis team –
consisting of six men and four women - will “go for the gold” in
men’s and
women’s singles and doubles at the Olympic Games.
Part 2
GOLD MEDALS DEFENSES IN MODERN OLYMPIC TENNIS ERA (since 1988)
Part 3 Venus
and Serena Williams continued the Gibson legacy by becoming the 1st
black women to win Grand Slam tournaments titles.
Part 5 Martina
Navratilova continued her assault on tennis history in 2003, winning the
mixed doubles titles at the Australian Open and Wimbledon to become the
oldest player in the history of the sport to win a Grand Slam tournament
title.
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