Tony Trabert - Retirement

Retirement

In 1971, he began a 33-year career as a tennis and golf analyst for CBS covering such events as the US Open. During many of these years he teamed with Pat Summerall and was the lead expert commentator at the US Open. The popularity of their broadcasts helped propel the US Open into an annual financial success for CBS and the U.S. Tennis Association. He was also the US Davis team Captain from 1976 to 1980. Tony's captaincy is remembered by his frustration in dealing with the egos of younger players like John McEnroe, and for his racket-wielding expulsion of an apartheid protest demonstrator during a Davis Cup match against South Africa at the Newport Beach Tennis Club in California in April 1977. He is also a tennis author and a motivation speaker.

Forty years after his matches with Gonzales, Trabert told interviewer Joe McCauley "that Gonzales' serve was the telling factor on their tour — it was so good that it earned him many cheap points. Trabert felt that, while he had the better ground-strokes, he could not match Pancho's big, fluent service."

In 2004, Trabert announced his retirement from broadcasting while commentating at the Wimbledon Championships in London.

Trabert was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island in 1970.

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