Earl Cochell


Earl Harry Cochell, is the only tennis player ever barred for life by the United States Tennis Association.
Cochell was ranked as high as No. 6 in the U.S. rankings before the 1951 U.S. National Championships. In a fourth round match in that event against Gardnar Mulloy, Cochell, well known for a fiery temper and an intractably independent streak, became angry over a line call and tried to address the crowd by climbing up the chair umpire's ladder to take the microphone. Cochell was stopped from doing so and eventually lost the match to Mulloy, but afterwards, in a locker-room confrontation over the incident with tournament Referee S. Ellsworth Davenport, Cochell insulted Davenport with such abusive obscenity that, two days later, the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association banned him for life from the game and immediately dropped him from the rankings. The ban was lifted in 1962, but by then Cochell was no longer a serious competitor, and he never played another important tennis match, making only a couple of court appearances in 1962.
Cochell played his collegiate tennis at the University of Southern California, and was runner-up in the NCAA singles championship in 1951. In 1946, he reached the singles quarterfinals at the Tri-States Tennis Championships at Cincinnati.