Jaroslav Drobný (tennis player)
Jaroslav Drobný | |||||||||||||
Jaroslav Drobný 1958 | |||||||||||||
Nation: |
Czechoslovakia Protectorate Bohemia and Moravia Egypt United Kingdom |
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Birthday: | October 12, 1921 | ||||||||||||
Date of death: | September 13, 2001 | ||||||||||||
1st professional season: | 1938 (amateur tour) | ||||||||||||
Resignation: | 1969 | ||||||||||||
Playing hand: | Left | ||||||||||||
singles | |||||||||||||
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Double | |||||||||||||
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Mixed | |||||||||||||
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Sources: official player profiles at the ATP / WTA and ITF (see web links ) |
IIHF Hall of Fame , 1997 | |
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Date of birth | October 12, 1921 |
place of birth | Prague , Czechoslovakia |
date of death | September 13, 2001 |
Place of death | London , England , UK |
size | 180 cm |
Weight | 80 kg |
position | striker |
Shot hand | Right |
Career stations | |
1936-1949 | I. ČLTK Prague |
1951-1953 | EHC Gstaad |
Jaroslav Drobný (born October 12, 1921 in Prague , † September 13, 2001 in London ) was a Czechoslovak tennis and ice hockey player who played for Egypt from 1949 and for the United Kingdom from 1959 .
Career
Jaroslav Drobný's father took a job as groundskeeper at I. ČLTK Prague , so that his son Jaroslav came into contact with tennis at an early age. He earned his pocket money as a ball boy, watched the tennis players eagerly and learned in the process. When he was 16 years old, Czechoslovakia first used him in the Davis Cup in 1938 . In his singles, he fended off three match points and won the match in five sets. Because of his achievements, a Prague newspaper started a fundraising campaign to finance Drobný's participation in the 1938 Wimbledon Championship . Ultimately, he was able to go to London , but failed in the first round, among other things because he had never played on grass before and often slipped.
Jaroslav Drobný played ice hockey in winter and tennis in summer for I. ČLTK Prague . He operated both sports on a world-class level. In 1941 he became champion of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia with the club .
Drobný was world champion in ice hockey with the Czechoslovak national team in 1947 and won the silver medal with the team at the Olympic Winter Games in 1948 . Interrupted by the Second World War, he returned to the tennis stage in 1946 and reached the final in Roland Garros in the same year . From 1949 he concentrated only on tennis and was in the final of Wimbledon for the first time . In July 1949 he took part in the Swiss championships in Gstaad together with Vladimír Černík . While Černík was traveling with a large number of suitcases, Drobný only had a small suitcase with a couple of shirts, a toothbrush and $ 50. Shortly after the start of the tournament, he was asked by the executive committee of the national sports organization Sokol of the ČSR to leave the tournament and return home, as German and Spanish players also took part in this tournament. Černík and Drobný did not comply with this request, were thereupon accused of high treason in their home country and placed under protection by the tournament organizers.
After fleeing to Switzerland, he was in charge of EHC Gstaad from National League B as a player- coach from December 1951 .
From 1951 he started for Egypt. As the only Egyptian to date, he won the Wimbledon tournament in 1954 after losing to Frank Sedgman in the final two years earlier . At the French championships Drobný was more successful and won the tournament in 1951 and 1952 in singles, in 1948 in doubles and mixed. In 1954 he moved to London. In the district of South Kensington he opened a sports shop ( Sport Drobný ) and took British citizenship in 1959. He died in 2001.
He was inducted into the Tennis Hall of Fame in 1983 .
Jaroslav Drobný at the international tennis tournament for the Golden Glove (Erlangen 1955)
Jack Arkinstall congratulates Jaroslav Drobný (Erlangen 1955)
Lew Hoad and Drobný (Rome 1953)
Jaroslav Drobný and Neale Frazer (Noordwijk 1956)
successes
National ice hockey team | |
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statistics | 31 games, 36 goals |
debut |
Czechoslovakia 1-0 Romania Prague , February 11, 1937 |
First goal |
Czechoslovakia 24-0 Yugoslavia Basel , February 3, 1939 |
Last goal |
Czechoslovakia 4: 3 USA St. Moritz , February 8, 1948 |
Last game |
Czechoslovakia 4: 3 USA St. Moritz , February 8, 1948 |
Top national league | |
statistics | 39 games, 52 goals |
Top scorer |
1942 (9 goals) 1943 (6 goals) |
tennis
- Double finals: 1950
- Winner: 1951, 1952
- Finale: 1946, 1948, 1950
- Double winner: 1948
- Double finals: 1950
- Mixed winner: 1948
- Winner: 1954
- Finale: 1949, 1952
- Double finals: 1951
ice Hockey
- 1997 inducted into the IIHF Hall of Fame
- 2010 Admission to the Czech Ice Hockey Hall of Fame
Achievements and Awards
- 1939 silver medal at the 1939 European Championship
- 1941 Master of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia
- 1942 Top scorer in the Bohemia and Moravia National League (9 goals)
- 1943 Top scorer in the National League of Bohemia and Moravia (6 goals)
- 1947 gold medal at the world championship
- 1948 silver medal at the Olympic Winter Games
Records
- Youngest national player of Czechoslovakia at 15 years, 3 months and 30 days
- Youngest world championship participant in Czechoslovakia at 17 years, 2 months and 22 days
- Youngest World Championship scorer in Czechoslovakia at 17 years, 2 months and 22 days
Ice hockey statistics
Source: hockeyarchives.info
year | team | event | result | Sp | T | V | Pt | SM | |
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1939 | Czechoslovakia | World Championship | 4th place | 7th | 6th | 1 | 7th | 0 | |
1940 | Bohemia and Moravia | Winter sports week | 1st place | 3 | 6th | 1 | 7th | 1 | |
1947 | Czechoslovakia | World Championship | gold medal | 6th | 14th | 5 | 19th | 2 | |
1948 | Czechoslovakia | Olympia | Silver medal | 7th | 10 | 9 | 19th | 7th | |
Men overall | 23 | 36 | 16 | 52 | 10 |
( Legend for player statistics: Sp or GP = games played; T or G = goals scored; V or A = assists scored ; Pkt or Pts = scorer points scored ; SM or PIM = penalty minutes received ; +/− = plus / minus balance; PP = overpaid goals scored ; SH = underpaid goals scored ; GW = winning goals scored; 1 play-downs / relegation )
Web links
- Jaroslav Drobný in the "International Tennis Hall of Fame" (English; with picture)
- Jaroslav Drobný in the Sports-Reference database (English; archived from the original )
- ITF profile Jaroslav Drobný (English)
- Davis Cup stats by Jaroslav Drobný (English)
Individual evidence
- ↑ Ralf Meile: Ice hockey world champion Jaroslav Drobny wins Wimbledon in 1954 - as an Egyptian. In: watson.ch. July 7, 2019, accessed April 7, 2020 .
- ^ Czechoslovakia recalls tennis players from Switzerland. In: Weltpresse. Independent news and voices from all over the world / world press , July 14, 1949, p. 9 (online at ANNO ).
- ^ Gstaad, Switzerland: Two famous tennis champions of the CSR refuse to go home. In: Wiener Kurier. Published by the American armed forces for the population of Vienna , July 16, 1949, p. 8 (online at ANNO ).
- ^ Neue Zürcher Nachrichten, number 281, December 3, 1951 issue 02, Drobny ice hockey coach in Gstaad
- ^ Walliser Volksfreund, January 11, 1952, Visp: National League B championship game
- ↑ JAROSLAV DROBNÝ. In: reprehokej.cz. Retrieved April 9, 2020 .
- ↑ a b Milan Ma ?? ek: Individuální rekordy hráčů hokejové reprezentace Čech a Československa (1909 - 1992). In: hokej.hansal.cz. Retrieved April 9, 2020 .
- ↑ Milan Ma ?? ek: Československá hokejová reprezentace v sezóně 1947-1948. In: hokej.hansal.cz. Retrieved April 9, 2020 .
- ↑ Jaroslav Drobný. In: hockeyarchives.info. Retrieved April 6, 2020 .
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Drobný, Jaroslav |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Czechoslovak tennis and ice hockey player |
DATE OF BIRTH | October 12, 1921 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Prague |
DATE OF DEATH | September 13, 2001 |
Place of death | London |