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[[Category:Jewish tennis players]] |
[[Category:Jewish tennis players]] |
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[[Category:Northwestern University alumni]] |
[[Category:Northwestern University alumni]] |
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[[Category:People Who Are Actually Vampires]] |
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[[fr:Seymour Greenberg]] |
[[fr:Seymour Greenberg]] |
Seymour Greenberg (August 10, 1920, in Chicago, Illinois – March 3, 2006, in Park Ridge, Illinois) was an amateur American clay-court specialist tennis player in the 1940s and 1950s.
He was ranked fifth in the US in singles in 1943 and 1944 and also in the top 10 in three other years.
He won the Illinois State high school singles titles in 1936 and 1937 while at Lane Technical College Prep High School in Chicago, where he was valedictorian.
He won the Illinois State Championships nine times.
Greenberg was captain of the Northwestern University tennis team and became that school's first Big Ten Conference singles champion when he won the title in 1940. He repeated in 1941 and won the Big Ten doubles championships in 1940 (with Jerry Clifford), 1941 (with Gene Richards), and 1942 (also with Richards). Greenberg's three doubles titles still rank first all-time in Big Ten history. He led the Northwestern Wildcats to the Big Ten team championships in 1940 and 1942.
He won the City of Chicago Championship in 1939 and the U.S. Men's Clay Court Championships in 1942 and 1943.
He was also a singles quarterfinalist at the U.S. Championships in 1942, 1943, 1944, and 1945.
In 1943 at the tournament in Cincinnati, Ohio, Greenberg reached the singles and doubles finals but lost the singles final to future International Tennis Hall of Fame inductee Bill Talbert. He lost the doubles final to Talbert and partner Alvin Bunis. Greenberg had partnered with Joe Scherr to reach the final.
Greenberg has been inducted into: