The International Tennis Federation (ITF) designates a World Champion each year based on performances throughout the year, emphasising the Grand Slam tournaments,[1] and also considering team events such as the Davis Cup and Fed Cup.[2] Men's and women's singles champions were first named in 1978; the title is now also awarded for doubles, wheelchair, and junior players.[3] It is sometimes named the "ITF Player of the Year" award, alluding to similar other year-end awards in tennis.[4]

Rules and procedures

The ITF's constitution states that no tennis tournament can be designated the "World Championships" without unanimous consent of the ITF Council.[5] There is currently no such tournament. The constitution also states:[6]

The ITF may award the title of World Champion to players who, in the opinion of the Board of Directors, are the most outstanding players in any one-year. The names of players who have been awarded this title shall be listed in the Roll of Honour.

It also states:[1]

Official Tennis Championships [i.e. the Grand Slam events] shall be the decisive factor in the determination of the ITF World Champions for each year.

The boys' and girls' singles and doubles titles prior to 2003 were awarded based on world ranking. Since then singles and doubles rankings have been combined in a single award each for boys and for girls.[7]

The world champion accolade has been extended by the ITF to wheelchair tennis players of the Men's and Women's division since 1991 and also based on world ranking. In November 2017, the ITF announced that the quad wheelchair tennis division is to be recognised in its annual list of ITF World Champions.[8]

In 1996, the Philippe Chatrier Award was introduced, honouring individuals or organisations who have made outstanding contributions to tennis globally, both on and off the court. The award is considered to be the ITF's highest accolade and is named after the former French tennis player Philippe Chatrier, who was President of the governing body between 1977 and 1991.[9]

The ITF World Champions Dinner takes place annually to honour the previous year's champions,[10] who are presented with a trophy, but not any monetary prize.[11] The dinner was held during the French Open up until 2022, but since 2023 has been held during Wimbledon.

For 2020 there were no ITF World Champion awards given due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The tennis season was suspended for about 5 months for both the female and the male tennis players.[12]

Men's singles

The first men's panel in 1978 had three members, Don Budge, Fred Perry, and Lew Hoad,[11][13] who attended the season's Grand Slam events at ITF expense to inform their choice.[14] The 1983 panel split two to one between John McEnroe (votes of Budge and Perry) and Mats Wilander (vote of Hoad).[15] The 1984 panel had five members,[16] while the 1985 panel had four: Budge, Perry, Hoad, and Tony Trabert.[17] When Ivan Lendl was chosen as champion for 1985, the panel's announcement was accompanied with a rebuke for Lendl's criticism of some tournaments and his refusal to play in the Davis Cup.[17] Perry and Trabert were on the 1986 panel, with performances outside the Grand Slams taken into consideration.[18]

The 1990 designation of Lendl as champion was a surprise.[19] That year, the Association of Tennis Professionals named Stefan Edberg its "Player of The Year", in accordance with the ATP rankings, while Tennis Magazine (France) ranked Edberg first, Andre Agassi second, and Lendl third.[20] Tennis also suggested the ITF was punishing Edberg for denigrating the Grand Slam Cup tournament it had introduced.[20] The ITF panel, of Perry, Trabert, and Frank Sedgman, called it "the toughest decision any of us can remember having to make", and stated it was Lendl's better average performance in the Grand Slams that made the difference.[19]

The choice to award Djokovic the ITF World Champion of 2013 over Nadal was unexpected. Nadal finished the year ranked #1 and with more Grand Slams (2 to 1), more Masters titles (5 to 3), and more tournament titles (10 to 7). Similar to the situation with Edberg in 1990, the ITF cited Nadal's failure to win a match at 2 of the 4 Grand Slams (DNP the Australian Open, 1st round loss at Wimbledon) to justify their decision and Djokovic's consistent results across all four Grand Slams (1 title, 2 runner-ups, 1 SF), Davis Cup (led Serbia to final, won 7/7 singles rubbers) and the ATP World Tour Finals (won title).[21]

Other instances when the ITF choices differed from the ATP rankings are 1978 (Jimmy Connors), 1982 (McEnroe), 1989 (Lendl), and 2022 (Carlos Alcaraz). None of these were controversial, with the 1978 and 1982 choices being particularly clear cut in favor of Borg (1978) and Connors (1982). Nadal won in 2022, despite Alcaraz being the year-end number 1; Nadal won two Grand Slam titles, while Alcaraz failed to reach the semi-final stage in three of four Grand Slams.

YearPlayer
1978Sweden Björn Borg
1979Sweden Björn Borg (2)
1980Sweden Björn Borg (3)
1981United States John McEnroe
1982United States Jimmy Connors
1983United States John McEnroe (2)
1984United States John McEnroe (3)
1985Czechoslovakia Ivan Lendl
1986Czechoslovakia Ivan Lendl (2)
1987Czechoslovakia Ivan Lendl (3)
1988Sweden Mats Wilander
1989West Germany Boris Becker
1990Czechoslovakia Ivan Lendl (4)
1991Sweden Stefan Edberg
1992United States Jim Courier
1993United States Pete Sampras
1994United States Pete Sampras (2)
1995United States Pete Sampras (3)
1996United States Pete Sampras (4)
1997United States Pete Sampras (5)
1998United States Pete Sampras (6)
1999United States Andre Agassi
2000Brazil Gustavo Kuerten
2001Australia Lleyton Hewitt
2002Australia Lleyton Hewitt (2)
2003United States Andy Roddick
2004Switzerland Roger Federer
2005Switzerland Roger Federer (2)
2006Switzerland Roger Federer (3)
2007Switzerland Roger Federer (4)
2008Spain Rafael Nadal
2009Switzerland Roger Federer (5)
2010Spain Rafael Nadal (2)
2011Serbia Novak Djokovic
2012Serbia Novak Djokovic (2)
2013Serbia Novak Djokovic (3)
2014Serbia Novak Djokovic (4)
2015Serbia Novak Djokovic (5)
2016United Kingdom Andy Murray
2017Spain Rafael Nadal (3)
2018Serbia Novak Djokovic (6)
2019Spain Rafael Nadal (4)
2020No award due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021Serbia Novak Djokovic (7)
2022Spain Rafael Nadal (5)
2023Serbia Novak Djokovic (8)
TotalPlayer
8  Novak Djokovic (SRB)
6  Pete Sampras (USA)
5  Roger Federer (SUI)
 Rafael Nadal (ESP)
4  Ivan Lendl (TCH)
3  Björn Borg (SWE)
 John McEnroe (USA)
2  Lleyton Hewitt (AUS)
1  Jimmy Connors (USA)
 Mats Wilander (SWE)
 Boris Becker (GER)
 Stefan Edberg (SWE)
 Jim Courier (USA)
 Andre Agassi (USA)
 Gustavo Kuerten (BRA)
 Andy Roddick (USA)
 Andy Murray (GBR)

Women's singles

The women's panel initially featured three former women's champions, Margaret Court, Margaret duPont and Ann Jones.[22][11][13] Althea Gibson was a member through the early 1980s.[23]

ITF world champions for women differed from the WTA year-end rankings the following years: 1978 (Martina Navratilova), 1994 (Steffi Graf), 2001 (Lindsay Davenport), 2004 (Lindsay Davenport), 2005 (Lindsay Davenport), 2011 (Caroline Wozniacki), 2012 (Victoria Azarenka), 2017 (Simona Halep), 2023 (Iga Swiatek).

YearPlayer
1978United States Chris Evert
1979United States Martina Navratilova
1980United States Chris Evert (2)
1981United States Chris Evert (3)
1982United States Martina Navratilova (2)
1983United States Martina Navratilova (3)
1984United States Martina Navratilova (4)
1985United States Martina Navratilova (5)
1986United States Martina Navratilova (6)
1987Germany Steffi Graf
1988Germany Steffi Graf (2)
1989Germany Steffi Graf (3)
1990Germany Steffi Graf (4)
1991Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Monica Seles
1992Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Monica Seles (2)
1993Germany Steffi Graf (5)
1994Spain Arantxa Sánchez Vicario
1995Germany Steffi Graf (6)
1996Germany Steffi Graf (7)
1997Switzerland Martina Hingis
1998United States Lindsay Davenport
1999Switzerland Martina Hingis (2)
2000Switzerland Martina Hingis (3)
2001United States Jennifer Capriati
2002United States Serena Williams
2003Belgium Justine Henin
2004Russia Anastasia Myskina
2005Belgium Kim Clijsters
2006Belgium Justine Henin (2)
2007Belgium Justine Henin (3)
2008Serbia Jelena Janković
2009United States Serena Williams (2)
2010Denmark Caroline Wozniacki
2011Czech Republic Petra Kvitová
2012United States Serena Williams (3)
2013United States Serena Williams (4)
2014United States Serena Williams (5)
2015United States Serena Williams (6)
2016Germany Angelique Kerber
2017Spain Garbiñe Muguruza
2018Romania Simona Halep
2019Australia Ashleigh Barty
2020No award due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021Australia Ashleigh Barty (2)
2022Poland Iga Świątek
2023Belarus Aryna Sabalenka
TotalPlayer
7  Steffi Graf (GER)
6  Martina Navratilova (USA)
 Serena Williams (USA)
3  Chris Evert (USA)
 Martina Hingis (SUI)
 Justine Henin (BEL)
2  Monica Seles (YUG)
 Ashleigh Barty (AUS)
1 Spain Arantxa Sánchez Vicario
United States Lindsay Davenport
United States Jennifer Capriati
Russia Anastasia Myskina
Belgium Kim Clijsters
Serbia Jelena Janković
Denmark Caroline Wozniacki
Czech Republic Petra Kvitová
Germany Angelique Kerber
Spain Garbiñe Muguruza
Romania Simona Halep
Poland Iga Świątek
Belarus Aryna Sabalenka

Doubles

Men's doubles

YearPlayer
1996Australia Todd Woodbridge & Mark Woodforde
1997Australia Todd Woodbridge (2) & Mark Woodforde (2)
1998Netherlands Jacco Eltingh & Netherlands Paul Haarhuis
1999India Mahesh Bhupathi & India Leander Paes
2000Australia Todd Woodbridge (3) & Mark Woodforde (3)
2001Sweden Jonas Björkman & Australia Todd Woodbridge (4)
2002The Bahamas Mark Knowles & Canada Daniel Nestor
2003United States Bob Bryan & Mike Bryan
2004United States Bob Bryan (2) & Mike Bryan (2)
2005United States Bob Bryan (3) & Mike Bryan (3)
2006United States Bob Bryan (4) & Mike Bryan (4)
2007United States Bob Bryan (5) & Mike Bryan (5)
2008Canada Daniel Nestor (2) & Serbia Nenad Zimonjić
2009United States Bob Bryan (6) & Mike Bryan (6)
2010United States Bob Bryan (7) & Mike Bryan (7)
2011United States Bob Bryan (8) & Mike Bryan (8)
2012United States Bob Bryan (9) & Mike Bryan (9)
2013United States Bob Bryan (10) & Mike Bryan (10)
2014United States Bob Bryan (11) & Mike Bryan (11)
2015Netherlands Jean-Julien Rojer & Romania Horia Tecău
2016United Kingdom Jamie Murray & Brazil Bruno Soares
2017Poland Łukasz Kubot & Brazil Marcelo Melo
2018United States Mike Bryan (12) & United States Jack Sock
2019Colombia Juan Sebastián Cabal & Colombia Robert Farah
2020No award due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021Croatia Nikola Mektić & Croatia Mate Pavić
2022United Kingdom Joe Salisbury & United States Rajeev Ram
2023United Kingdom Joe Salisbury (2) & United States Rajeev Ram (2)

Women's doubles

YearPlayer
1996United States Lindsay Davenport & United States Mary Joe Fernández
1997United States Lindsay Davenport (2) & Czech Republic Jana Novotná
1998United States Lindsay Davenport (3) & Belarus Natasha Zvereva
1999Switzerland Martina Hingis & Russia Anna Kournikova
2000France Julie Halard-Decugis & Japan Ai Sugiyama
2001United States Lisa Raymond & Australia Rennae Stubbs
2002Spain Virginia Ruano Pascual & Argentina Paola Suárez
2003Spain Virginia Ruano Pascual (2) & Argentina Paola Suárez (2)
2004Spain Virginia Ruano Pascual (3) & Argentina Paola Suárez (3)
2005United States Lisa Raymond (2) & Australia Samantha Stosur
2006United States Lisa Raymond (3) & Australia Samantha Stosur (2)
2007Zimbabwe Cara Black & United States Liezel Huber
2008Zimbabwe Cara Black (2) & United States Liezel Huber (2)
2009United States Serena Williams & Venus Williams
2010Argentina Gisela Dulko & Italy Flavia Pennetta
2011Czech Republic Květa Peschke & Slovenia Katarina Srebotnik
2012Italy Sara Errani & Italy Roberta Vinci
2013Italy Sara Errani (2) & Italy Roberta Vinci (2)
2014Italy Sara Errani (3) & Italy Roberta Vinci (3)
2015Switzerland Martina Hingis (2) & India Sania Mirza
2016France Caroline Garcia & France Kristina Mladenovic
2017Switzerland Martina Hingis (3) & Chinese Taipei Chan Yung-jan
2018Czech Republic Barbora Krejčíková & Czech Republic Kateřina Siniaková
2019Hungary Tímea Babos & France Kristina Mladenovic (2)
2020No award due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021Czech Republic Barbora Krejčíková (2) & Czech Republic Kateřina Siniaková (2)
2022Czech Republic Barbora Krejčíková (3) & Czech Republic Kateřina Siniaková (3)
2023Australia Storm Hunter & Belgium Elise Mertens

Junior

Boys' combined (2004– )

YearPlayer
2004France Gaël Monfils
2005United States Donald Young
2006Netherlands Thiemo de Bakker
2007Lithuania Ričardas Berankis
2008Chinese Taipei Yang Tsung-hua
2009Sweden Daniel Berta
2010Colombia Juan Sebastián Gómez
2011Czech Republic Jiří Veselý
2012Canada Filip Peliwo
2013Germany Alexander Zverev
2014Russia Andrey Rublev
2015United States Taylor Fritz
2016Serbia Miomir Kecmanović
2017Argentina Axel Geller
2018Chinese Taipei Tseng Chun-hsin
2019Argentina Thiago Agustin Tirante
2020No award due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021China Shang Juncheng
2022Belgium Gilles-Arnaud Bailly
2023Brazil João Fonseca

Girls' combined (2004– )

YearPlayer
2004Netherlands Michaëlla Krajicek
2005Belarus Victoria Azarenka
2006Russia Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova
2007Poland Urszula Radwańska
2008Thailand Noppawan Lertcheewakarn
2009France Kristina Mladenovic
2010Russia Daria Gavrilova
2011Russia Irina Khromacheva
2012United States Taylor Townsend
2013Switzerland Belinda Bencic
2014United States Catherine "CiCi" Bellis
2015Hungary Dalma Gálfi
2016Russia Anastasia Potapova
2017United States Whitney Osuigwe
2018France Clara Burel
2019France Diane Parry
2020No award due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021Croatia Petra Marčinko
2022Czech Republic Lucie Havlíčková
2023Russia Alina Korneeva

Singles (1978–2003)

Boys' singles

YearPlayer
1978Czechoslovakia Ivan Lendl
1979Ecuador Raúl Viver
1980France Thierry Tulasne
1981Australia Pat Cash
1982France Guy Forget
1983Sweden Stefan Edberg
1984Australia Mark Kratzmann
1985Italy Claudio Pistolesi
1986Spain Javier Sánchez
1987Australia Jason Stoltenberg
1988Venezuela Nicolás Pereira
1989Sweden Nicklas Kulti
1990Italy Andrea Gaudenzi
1991Sweden Thomas Enqvist
1992United States Brian Dunn
1993Chile Marcelo Ríos
1994Argentina Federico Browne
1995Argentina Mariano Zabaleta
1996France Sébastien Grosjean
1997France Arnaud Di Pasquale
1998Switzerland Roger Federer
1999Denmark Kristian Pless
2000United States Andy Roddick
2001Luxembourg Gilles Müller
2002France Richard Gasquet
2003Cyprus Marcos Baghdatis

Girls' singles

YearPlayer
1978Czechoslovakia Hana Mandlíková
1979United States Mary-Lou Piatek
1980United States Susan Mascarin
1981United States Zina Garrison
1982United States Gretchen Rush
1983France Pascale Paradis
1984Argentina Gabriela Sabatini
1985Italy Laura Garrone
1986Argentina Patricia Tarabini
1987Soviet Union Natalia Zvereva
1988Argentina Cristina Tessi
1989Argentina Florencia Labat
1990Czechoslovakia Karina Habšudová
1991Czechoslovakia Zdeňka Málková
1992Paraguay Rossana de los Ríos
1993Georgia (country) Nino Louarsabishvili
1994Switzerland Martina Hingis
1995Russia Anna Kournikova
1996France Amélie Mauresmo
1997Zimbabwe Cara Black
1998Australia Jelena Dokić
1999Russia Lina Krasnoroutskaya
2000Argentina María Emilia Salerni
2001Russia Svetlana Kuznetsova
2002Czechoslovakia Barbora Strýcová
2003Belgium Kirsten Flipkens

Doubles (1978–2003)

Boys' doubles

YearPlayer
1982Mexico Fernando Pérez Pascal
1983Australia Mark Kratzmann
1984Mexico Agustín Moreno
1985Czechoslovakia Petr Korda & Czechoslovakia Cyril Suk
1986Spain Tomás Carbonell
1987Australia Jason Stoltenberg
1988Czechoslovakia David Rikl & Czechoslovakia Tomáš Anzari
1989South Africa Wayne Ferreira
1990Sweden Mårten Renström
1991Morocco Karim Alami
1992Mexico Enrique Abaroa
1993New Zealand Steven Downs
1994Australia Benjamin Ellwood
1995Venezuela Kepler Orellana
1996France Sébastien Grosjean
1997Chile Nicolás Massú
1998Venezuela José de Armas
1999France Julien Benneteau & France Nicolas Mahut
2000United Kingdom Lee Childs & United Kingdom James Nelson
2001Mexico Bruno Echagaray & Mexico Santiago González
2002Romania Florin Mergea & Romania Horia Tecău
2003United States Scott Oudsema

Girls' doubles

YearPlayer
1982United States Beth Herr
1983Soviet Union Larisa Savchenko
1984Argentina Mercedes Paz
1985Argentina Mariana Perez-Roldan & Argentina Patricia Tarabini
1986Soviet Union Leila Meskhi
1987Soviet Union Natalia Medvedeva
1988Australia Jo-Anne Faull
1989Czechoslovakia Andrea Strnadová
1990Czechoslovakia Karina Habšudová
1991Czechoslovakia Eva Martincová
1992Belgium Nancy Feber & Belgium Laurence Courtois
1993United States Cristina Moros
1994Slovenia Martina Nedelkova
1995Czech Republic Ludmila Varmuzova
1996Czech Republic Jitka Schönfeldová & Czechoslovakia Michaela Paštiková
1997Kazakhstan Irina Selyutina & Zimbabwe Cara Black
1998Denmark Eva Dyrberg
1999Czech Republic Daniela Bedáňová
2000Argentina María Emilia Salerni
2001Czech Republic Petra Cetkovská
2002Belgium Elke Clijsters
2003Czech Republic Andrea Hlaváčková

Wheelchair

Men's wheelchair

YearPlayer
1991United States Randy Snow
1992France Laurent Giammartini
1993Germany Kai Schramayer
1994France Laurent Giammartini (2)
1995Australia David Hall
1996Netherlands Ricky Molier
1997Netherlands Ricky Molier (2)
1998Australia David Hall (2)
1999United States Stephen Welch
2000Australia David Hall (3)
2001Netherlands Ricky Molier (3)
2002Australia David Hall (4)
2003Australia David Hall (5)
2004Australia David Hall (6)
2005France Michaël Jeremiasz
2006Netherlands Robin Ammerlaan
2007Japan Shingo Kunieda
2008Japan Shingo Kunieda (2)
2009Japan Shingo Kunieda (3)
2010Japan Shingo Kunieda (4)
2011Netherlands Maikel Scheffers
2012France Stéphane Houdet
2013Japan Shingo Kunieda (5)
2014Japan Shingo Kunieda (6)
2015Japan Shingo Kunieda (7)
2016United Kingdom Gordon Reid
2017Argentina Gustavo Fernández
2018Japan Shingo Kunieda (8)
2019Argentina Gustavo Fernández (2)
2020No award due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021Japan Shingo Kunieda (9)
2022Japan Shingo Kunieda (10)
2023United Kingdom Alfie Hewett

Women's wheelchair

YearPlayer
1991Netherlands Chantal Vandierendonck
1992Netherlands Monique Van Den Bosch
1993Netherlands Monique Kalkman (2)
1994Netherlands Monique Kalkman (3)
1995Netherlands Monique Kalkman (4)
1996Netherlands Chantal Vandierendonck (2)
1997Netherlands Chantal Vandierendonck (3)
1998Australia Daniela Di Toro
1999Australia Daniela Di Toro (2)
2000Netherlands Esther Vergeer
2001Netherlands Esther Vergeer (2)
2002Netherlands Esther Vergeer (3)
2003Netherlands Esther Vergeer (4)
2004Netherlands Esther Vergeer (5)
2005Netherlands Esther Vergeer (6)
2006Netherlands Esther Vergeer (7)
2007Netherlands Esther Vergeer (8)
2008Netherlands Esther Vergeer (9)
2009Netherlands Esther Vergeer (10)
2010Netherlands Esther Vergeer (11)
2011Netherlands Esther Vergeer (12)
2012Netherlands Esther Vergeer (13)
2013Netherlands Aniek van Koot
2014Japan Yui Kamiji
2015Netherlands Jiske Griffioen
2016Netherlands Jiske Griffioen (2)
2017Japan Yui Kamiji (2)
2018Netherlands Diede de Groot
2019Netherlands Diede de Groot (2)
2020No award due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021Netherlands Diede de Groot (3)
2022Netherlands Diede de Groot (4)
2023Netherlands Diede de Groot (5)

Quad's wheelchair

YearPlayer
2017United States David Wagner
2018Australia Dylan Alcott
2019Australia Dylan Alcott (2)
2020No award due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021Australia Dylan Alcott (3)
2022Netherlands Niels Vink
2023Netherlands Niels Vink (2)

See also

References

ITF Constitution
  • Fecci, Vicki (6 January 2010). "Memorandum, Articles of Association and Bye-laws of ITF LIMITED; Trading as the International Tennis Federation" (PDF). Nassau, Bahamas: ITF. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 January 2012. Retrieved 20 December 2013.

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 ITF Constitution, p.26, Rule 2.2(a)(iii)
  2. "ITF opt for Hewitt and Capriati". BBC Online. 2 December 2001. Retrieved 20 December 2013.
  3. ITF Constitution, p.53 Appendix E
  4. "Rafael Nadal, Garbine Muguruza win ITF Player of the Year awards". ESPN.com. 2017-12-08. Retrieved 2018-12-14.
  5. ITF Constitution, p.29: Article 29(a)
  6. ITF Constitution, p.38 Regulation 3.1
  7. ITF Constitution, Appendix E, pp.53, 60
  8. "ITF Tennis - WHEELCHAIR - Articles - ITF to honour quad wheelchair world champions". www.itftennis.com. Archived from the original on 2017-12-13.
  9. Gillen, Nancy (1 April 2020). "Santana and Stolle receive ITF Philippe Chatrier Award". Inside the Games. Retrieved 15 July 2020.
  10. "World Champions Dinner". ITF. 2013. Archived from the original on 16 August 2013. Retrieved 20 December 2013.
  11. 1 2 3 "Borg: Sitting on top of the World". Evening Independent. St. Petersburg, Florida. Associated Press. 17 January 1979. p. 11C. Retrieved 20 December 2013 via Google News Archive.
  12. "ITF celebrates 2019 World Champions". www.itftennis.com. Retrieved 29 May 2021.
  13. 1 2 Joe Jares (February 13, 1978). "Champion by committee". Sports Illustrated. Vol. 48, no. 8. p. 11.
  14. "Wind, Herbert Warren (15 February 1978). "The Sports Scene: Budge and the Grand Slam". The New Yorker. Vol. 63. p. 76.
  15. UPI (17 January 1984). "McEnroe tapped as world's best". The Bulletin. Bend, Oregon. p. D-1. Retrieved 20 December 2013.
  16. "McEnroe crowned World Champ by tennis panel". Gainesville Sun. 17 January 1985. p. 3E. Retrieved 20 December 2013.
  17. 1 2 Fogarty, Mark (21 January 1986). "All the awards, plus a rebuke". The Age. p. 48. Retrieved 20 December 2013.
  18. "It's official: Lendl best in world". Boca Raton News. 11 December 1986. p. 4D. Retrieved 20 December 2013.
  19. 1 2 "Lendl, not Edberg, named tennis world champion". Moscow-Pullman Daily News. Associated Press. 18 December 1990. p. 1C. Retrieved 20 December 2013.
  20. 1 2 Tennis (in French). France (179). February 1991. On' a choisi de sanctionner un champion qui n'avait pas craint d'avouer publiquement le peu d'importance qu'il accordait à la Coupe du Grand Chelem, la fameuse invention de la FIT pour 'casser' l'ATP Tour. (It was decided to punish a champion who was not afraid to admit publicly how little he thought of the Grand Slam Cup, the famous ITF invention to 'break' the ATP Tour) {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  21. "Williams and Djokovic named 2013 ITF World Champion". ITF. 18 December 2013. Archived from the original on 24 January 2022. Retrieved 15 September 2018.
  22. Ron Rosen (January 17, 1978). "Fie to Computers, Let People Decide". Washington Post.
  23. Flink, Steve (30 September 2003). "Obituaries: Althea Gibson". The Independent. Retrieved 20 December 2013.
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