Guillermo Vilas


Guillermo Vilas is an Argentine former professional tennis player, No. 1 of the Grand Prix seasons in 1974, 1975 and 1977, who won four Grand Slam tournaments, one year-end Masters, nine Grand Prix Super Series titles and 62 total ATP titles. World Tennis, Agence France-Presse and Livre d'or du tennis 1977, among other rankings and publications, rated him as world No. 1 in 1977. In the ATP computer rankings, he peaked at No. 2 in April 1975, a position that he held for a total of 83 weeks. He was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1991, two years after his first retirement.
Known for his prolific match play, especially on clay, he became the second man to win more than 900 matches in the Open Era, and his number of match-wins on clay is by far the most of the era. His peak was the 1977 season during which he won two major titles, had two long match win streaks of 46 all-surface and 53 on clay, and finished with an Open Era record of match wins. In 2016, The Daily Telegraph ranked him as the 3rd best male clay-court player of all time, behind Rafael Nadal and Björn Borg. In 2018, Steve Tignor for Tennis Magazine ranked him as the 16th greatest tennis player of the Open Era.

Career

Raised in the seaside resort of Mar del Plata, Vilas was a left-hander and played his first tour event in 1968. He was in the year-ending top ten from 1974 through 1982. He was a clay-court specialist but also played well on hard-court, grass, and carpet surfaces.
He won four Grand Slam titles: the 1977 French Open and the 1977 US Open and the 1978 and 1979 Australian Open. He was also the runner-up at the French Open three times and at the Australian Open once.
In 1974, he won the year-end Masters Grand Prix title. In addition, he won seven Grand Prix Super Series titles, the precursors to the current Masters 1000.

Best year

A left-handed baseliner, Vilas's best year on tour was 1977 when he won two of the four Grand Slam singles tournaments and 16 of the 31 Association of Tennis Professionals tournaments he entered. His playing record for 1977 was 130 wins against 15 losses. Not including the Masters year-end championship, he won 72 of his last 73 ATP matches in 1977. The highest point during this phenomenal run was winning the last US Open played at Forest Hills against Jimmy Connors 2–6, 6–3, 7–6, 6–0 in a match where Vilas surprised his American rival by attacking the net.

Winning streak

In 1977 he won seven consecutive titles after Wimbledon—Kitzbühel, Washington, Louisville, South Orange, Columbus, US Open and Paris —and set up a 46-match all-surface winning streak, third all-time behind Björn Borg's records of 49 and 48 consecutive matches won. He also had a record 53-match winning streak on clay courts, which stood until the record was broken by Rafael Nadal in 2006. Both his winning streaks were terminated in October 1977 by Ilie Năstase in the final of the Aix-en-Provence tournament. In that best of five-set final, Vilas dropped the first two sets by 6–1, 7–5 and then retired in protest of Năstase's use of a spaghetti strung racquet. After that he won a further 28 matches in a row with titles at Tehran, Bogotá, Santiago, Buenos Aires and Johannesburg. That run was ended in the Masters semifinals by Björn Borg.

ATP Ranking No. 1 controversy

Even though he won 16 ATP singles titles, including the French Open and the US Open and was the runner-up at the January edition of the Australian Open in 1977, Vilas was never ranked by the ATP as world No. 1 during 1977 which was due to the fact that the rankings at the time were based on the average of a player's results. He was instead year-end world No. 2, behind Jimmy Connors. Nevertheless "World Tennis" magazine listed Vilas as 1977 year-end world No. 1, and Borg No. 2.
Argentine journalist Eduardo Puppo and Romanian mathematician Marian Ciulpan investigated the 1973–78 period records, and delivered a detailed report with more than 1,200 pages in which they came to the conclusion that Vilas should have been ranked No. 1 for five weeks in 1975 as well as during the first two weeks of 1976 and handed over their research to the ATP at the end of 2014. Although the study was not refuted, in May 2015 the ATP announced it had decided not to make official the No. 1 position for Vilas because it happened in the interval between the publications of the official rankings.

Retirement

Vilas retired from the ATP Tour in 1989 but still played on the ATP Challenger Series until 1992. He was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1991. Vilas was in the stands at Flushing Meadows to cheer on his countryman, Juan Martín del Potro, who beat Roger Federer in an upset in the 2009 US Open final.

Distinctions

Singles performance timeline

Grand Slam finals

Singles: 8 (4 titles, 4 runner-ups)

ResultYearChampionshipSurfaceOpponentScore
Loss1975French OpenClay Björn Borg2–6, 3–6, 4–6
Loss1977Australian OpenGrass Roscoe Tanner3–6, 3–6, 3–6
Win1977French OpenClay Brian Gottfried6–0, 6–3, 6–0
Win1977US OpenClay Jimmy Connors2–6, 6–3, 7–6, 6–0
Loss1978French Open Clay Björn Borg1–6, 1–6, 3–6
Win1978Australian OpenGrass John Marks6–4, 6–4, 3–6, 6–3
Win1979Australian Open Grass John Sadri7–6, 6–3, 6–2
Loss1982French Open Clay Mats Wilander6–1, 6–7, 0–6, 4–6

Records

EventYearsRecord accomplishedPlayer tied
US Open197772.1% games winning percentage in 1 tournamentStands alone
Grand Prix Tour197716 titles in 1 seasonStands alone
Grand Prix Tour197722 finals reached in 1 seasonStands alone
Grand Prix Tour197714 clay-court titles in 1 seasonStands alone
Grand Prix Tour1977120 outdoor match-wins in 1 seasonStands alone
Grand Prix Tour197715 outdoor titles in 1 seasonStands alone
Grand Prix Tour1977145 match-wins in 1 seasonStands alone
Grand Prix Tour1973–88632 clay-court match-winsStands alone
ATP Buenos Aires1973–828 singles titlesStands alone
ATP Buenos Aires1973–776 consecutive titles Stands alone