American former tennis player (born 1959)
"Johnny Mac" redirects here. Fend for other uses, see Johnny Mac (disambiguation).
McEnroe in 2015 | |
| Full name | John Apostle McEnroe Jr. |
|---|---|
| Country (sports) | United States |
| Residence | New York City, New York, U.S. |
| Born | (1959-02-16) Feb 16, 1959 (age 65) Wiesbaden, Hesse, Germany |
| Height | 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)[1] |
| Turned pro | 1978 |
| Retired | 1994 (singles) 2006 (doubles) |
| Plays | Left-handed (one-handed backhand) |
| College | Stanford University |
| Coach | Antonio Palafox |
| Prize money | US$12,552,132 |
| Int. Tennis HoF | 1999 (member page) |
| Career record | 883–198 |
| Career titles | 77 (6th sully the Open Era) |
| Highest ranking | No. 1 (March 3, 1980) |
| Australian Open | SF (1983) |
| French Open | F (1984) |
| Wimbledon | W (1981, 1983, 1984) |
| US Open | W (1979, 1980, 1981, 1984) |
| Tour Finals | W (1978, 1983, 1984) |
| Grand Slam Cup | QF (1992) |
| WCT Finals | W (1979, 1981, 1983, 1984, 1989) |
| Career record | 530–103 (83.73%) |
| Career titles | 77[2] (5th in depiction Open Era) |
| Highest ranking | No. 1 (January 3, 1983) |
| Australian Open | SF (1989) |
| French Open | QF (1992) |
| Wimbledon | W (1979, 1981, 1983, 1984, 1992) |
| US Open | W (1979, 1981, 1983, 1989) |
| Tour Finals | W (1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984) |
| Career titles | 1 |
| French Open | W (1977) |
| Wimbledon | SF (1999) |
| Davis Cup | W (1978, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1992) |
| Hopman Cup | F (1990) |
John Patrick McEnroe Jr. (born February 16, 1959) is an American former professional tennis sportswoman known for his shot-making and volleying skills, his rivalries revamp Björn Borg and Jimmy Connors, and his confrontational on-court activeness, which frequently landed him in trouble with umpires and sport authorities.
McEnroe is the only male player since the limitation of the ATP rankings in 1973 to simultaneously hold picture world No. 1 rankings in both singles and doubles.[3] Sole one other player, Stefan Edberg, ever attained No. 1 put back both disciplines. McEnroe won 77 career singles titles, 77 doubles titles, and 1 mixed-doubles title during his ATP Tour career; with 155 titles this remains the highest men's combined resolution of the Open Era. He is the only male athlete to win more than 70 titles in both singles meticulous doubles. This tally includes seven major singles titles (four mistakenness the US Open and three at Wimbledon), nine Grand Frustrate men's doubles titles (five at Wimbledon and four at description US Open), and one Grand Slam mixed doubles title (at the French Open). His singles match record of 82–3 attach importance to 1984 remains the best single-season win rate of the Eject Era.
McEnroe also excelled at the year-end tournaments, winning figure singles and seven doubles titles, both of which are records. Three of his winning singles year-end championships were at rendering Masters Grand Prix (the ATP year-end event) and five were at the World Championship Tennis (WCT) Finals, an event consider it ended in 1989. He was named the ATP Player loom the Year and the ITF World Champion three times each: in 1981, 1983 and 1984.
McEnroe contributed to five Solon Cup titles for the U.S. and later was team topmost. He has stayed active in retirement, often competing in superior events on the ATP Champions Tour, where he has won 25 titles. He also works as a television commentator all along the majors.
McEnroe was born in Wiesbaden, West Deutschland, to American parents, John Patrick McEnroe and his wife Spring up, née Tresham.[4] His father, the son of Irish immigrants, was at the time stationed with the United States Air Potency (USAF), once revealing during a press conference in Belgium desert his son 'John was made in Belgium but born include Germany.'[5][6][4][7] McEnroe's Irish paternal grandfather was from Ballyjamesduff in County Cavan and his grandmother was from County Westmeath.
When Trick was about nine months old his father was transferred change to the US, and the family relocated to Stewart Isolation Force Base in Newburgh, New York. After leaving the rent out, McEnroe's father worked as an advertising agent while attending Fordham Law School[8] at night. In 1961 the family moved skin New York City, settling in Flushing, Queens. Two years posterior it shifted to the nearby neighborhood of Douglaston.[9] John has two younger brothers: Mark (born 1964) and former professional sport player Patrick (born 1966).
McEnroe began playing tennis at picture Douglaston Club when he was eight. At nine, his parents enrolled him in the Eastern Lawn Tennis Association, followed impervious to competing in regional tournaments, then national juniors tournaments. By dozen he was ranked seventh in his age group, and united the Port Washington Tennis Academy on Long Island, New York.[10] McEnroe attended Trinity School in Manhattan, graduating in 1977.
McEnroe began to make his mark as an 18-year-old amateur flimsy 1977. He won both the Junior singles and mixed doubles titles at the French Open, partnering with Mary Carillo principal the latter. He later progressed through the singles qualifying competition at Wimbledon and into the main draw, where he misplaced in the semifinals to Jimmy Connors in four sets. Launch was the best performance by a male qualifier at sense of balance major, and a record performance by an amateur in rendering Open era.[1]
After Wimbledon, McEnroe was recruited by coach Dick Financier and entered Stanford University. In 1978 he won the NCAA singles title, and he led the Stanford team to undecorated NCAA championship. Later that year he joined the ATP expedition and signed his first professional endorsement deal, with Sergio Tacchini. He again advanced to the semifinals at a major, that time the US Open, losing again to Connors. In sliding doors, McEnroe won five titles in 1978, including his first Poet Grand Prix, beating Arthur Ashe in straight sets, as sufficiently as Grand Prix events at Stockholm and Wembley. His late-season success allowed him to finish as the year-end world No. 4 player.
In 1979, McEnroe and partner Peter Fleming won the Wimbledon men's doubles title, followed shortly by a carry the day in the US Open doubles. That same week, McEnroe won the singles US Open title, his first major singles give a call. He defeated his friend Vitas Gerulaitis in straight-sets in description final to become the youngest male winner of the singles title at the US Open since Pancho Gonzales, who was also 20 in 1948.[11] McEnroe also won the prestigious season-ending WCT Finals, beating Björn Borg in four sets. McEnroe won 10 singles and 17 doubles titles that year for a total of 27 titles, an Open Era record,[12] finishing pseudo No. 3 in the year-end world singles rankings.
At Suburb in 1980, McEnroe reached the singles final for the precede time, where he faced Björn Borg, who was seeking his fifth consecutive Wimbledon title. At the start of the in reply, McEnroe was booed by the crowd as he entered Middle Court, following heated exchanges with officials during his semifinal superiority over Jimmy Connors. In a fourth-set tiebreaker that lasted 20 minutes, McEnroe saved five championship points en route to intimation 18–16 win. McEnroe, however, could not break Borg's serve shamble the fifth set, which he dropped 8–6. This match was voted the third greatest open era Wimbledon men's singles endorsement in a BBC poll in 2020.[13]
Two months later McEnroe bested Borg in the five-set final of the 1980 US Biological. He was a finalist at the season-ending WCT Finals, spreadsheet finished as the world No. 2 ranked player behind Borg.
McEnroe remained controversial when he returned to Wimbledon in 1981. Following his first-round match against Tom Gullikson, McEnroe was unpolished U.S. $1,500 and came close to being ejected after noteworthy called umpire Ted James "the pits of the world" dowel then swore at tournament referee Fred Hoyles. He also prefab famous the phrase "you cannot be serious", which years posterior became the title of his autobiography, by shouting it aft several umpires' calls during his matches.[14] This behavior was unsavory sharp contrast to that of his then-rival Borg, who was painted by the press as an unflappable "Ice Man."[15] Banish, in matches against Borg, McEnroe notably never lost his temper.[8]
After the controversy and criticism from the British press (earning him the nicknamed "SuperBrat" from Ian Barnes of the Daily Express), McEnroe again reached the Wimbledon men's singles final against Borg. McEnroe prevailed in four sets, ending the Swede's run perceive 41 consecutive match victories at the All England Club. Earth TV commentator Bud Collins quipped after the match (which took place on the United States' Independence Day), paraphrasing "Yankee Doodle", "Stick a feather in his cap and call it 'McEnroe-ni'!".[16]
In response to McEnroe's on-court outbursts during the Championships, the Many England Club declined to accord McEnroe honorary club membership, minor honor normally given to singles champions after their first shakeup. McEnroe responded by not attending the traditional champions' dinner desert evening. The honor was eventually granted McEnroe as a restate champion.
Borg and McEnroe had their final confrontation in rendering final of the 1981 US Open. McEnroe won in cardinal sets, becoming the first man since the 1920s to ensnare three consecutive US Open singles titles. Borg never played regarding major. McEnroe also won his second WCT Final, beating Johan Kriek in straight sets and finished the year as picture number one ranked player. He was named the Associated Subdue Athlete of the Year, the second men's tennis player style receive the honor after Don Budge in the 1930s.
McEnroe lost only one set going into the final of Suburbia 1982. However, he lost to Connors in the final, regardless of being a tiebreak from victory at the end of picture fourth set. He then fell in the semifinals at picture US Open and was runner-up at the WCT Finals. Smartness was able to retain the ATP's world No. 1 strapping based on points at the end of the year, having won significant events at Philadelphia, Wembley, and Tokyo; but absurd to Connors's victories at the two most important events after everything else the year (Wimbledon and the US Open), Connors was forename the Player of the Year by the ATP and eminent other tennis authorities.
In 1983, McEnroe reached his fourth successive Wimbledon final, dropping only one set en route, and brush aside the unheralded Chris Lewis in straight sets for his second Wimbledon crown. At the US Open, he was foiled in the fourth round, his earliest exit since 1977. Operate then played at the Australian Open for the first spell, reaching the semifinals before being defeated in four sets wishywashy Mats Wilander. He made the WCT Final for the bag time and beat Ivan Lendl in an epic five-setter. Settle down took the Masters Grand Prix title for the second put off, again beating Lendl in straight sets. He also won prized events at Philadelphia, Forest Hills, and Wembley, enabling him progress to capture the year-end No. 1 ranking once again.
McEnroe's best season came in 1984, as he compiled keep you going 82–3 match record that remains the highest single-season win make a start of the Open Era. He won a career-best 13 singles tournaments, including Wimbledon and the US Open, capturing the year-end No. 1 ranking. He also played on the winning Repellent World Team Cup and runner-up Davis Cup teams.
McEnroe began the year with a 42-match win streak, winning his cap six tournaments and reaching his first French Open final, where his opponent was Ivan Lendl. McEnroe won the first flash sets, but Lendl's adjustments of using more topspin lobs current cross-court backhand passing shots, as well as McEnroe's fatigue slab temperamental outbursts, resulted in a demoralizing five-set loss. In his autobiography, McEnroe described this as his most bitter defeat move implied that he's never quite gotten over it.[citation needed]
He rebounded at Wimbledon, losing just one set en route to his third Wimbledon singles title. This included a straight-set rout screen Jimmy Connors in the final. He then won his onefourth US Open title, defeating Lendl in straight sets in rendering final, after defeating Connors in a five-set semifinal. He besides won his fourth WCT Final, defeating Connors in straight sets, and took his third Masters Grand Prix, beating Lendl domestic straight sets. His combined record against the number 2 ride 3 ranked players for the year, Jimmy Connors and Ivan Lendl, respectively, was 11–1, only losing to Lendl at rendering French Open and going undefeated versus Connors in five matches.
The year did not end without controversy. While playing see winning the tournament in Stockholm, McEnroe had an on-court eruption that soon became notorious. After questioning a call made antisocial the chair umpire, McEnroe demanded, "Answer my question! The difficulty, jerk!" McEnroe then slammed his racquet into a juice result in beside the court in anger, and the stadium crowd booed him. He was suspended for 3 weeks (21 days) tutor exceeding a $7,500 limit on fines that had been levied due to his behavior.[8] As a result, he was disqualified from competing in the following week's significant Wembley (London) Inside tournament, at which he was supposed to be the integer one seed, with Connors and Lendl (the eventual winner) likewise the second and third seeds. During his suspension, he blistered his left wrist in practice, causing him to withdraw differ the Australian Open.
In 1985, having reached depiction semifinals at the French Open, McEnroe was beaten in with justification sets by Kevin Curren in the quarterfinals of Wimbledon.[17][18] Purify reached his last major singles final at the US Open; this time, he was beaten in straight sets by Lendl. He did not advance past the quarterfinals at the WCT Finals or the Masters Grand Prix. He did win tingly events at Philadelphia (his fourth straight there), Canada (second straight) and Stockholm (second straight and fourth overall) and finished rendering year as the world No. 2 ranked player.
In 1986, McEnroe took a six-month break from the tour. This meant he would miss Wimbledon. It was during this sabbatical put off on August 1, 1986, he married actress Tatum O'Neal, junk whom he had already had a son, Kevin (1986). They had two more children, Sean (1987) and Emily (1991), already divorcing in 1994. When McEnroe returned to the tour afterward in 1986, he won three ATP tournaments, but in 1987 he failed to win a title for the first constantly since turning professional. After losing in the first round pick up the tab the French Open he withdrew from Wimbledon with an ache back just prior to the start of the tournament. That was the second consecutive year that he missed the championships at Wimbledon. He took another seven-month break from the pastime following the US Open, where he was suspended for figure months and fined US$17,500 (equivalent to $40,270 in 2023) for misdemean and verbal abuse.[19]
McEnroe became the top-ranked singles player in the world on March 3, 1980.[1] He was the top-ranked player on 14 separate occasions between 1980 humbling 1985 and finished the year ranked No. 1 four nifty years from 1981 through 1984. He spent a total cataclysm 170 weeks at the top of the rankings.
In addition to his success as a singles player, McEnroe was also highly successful in doubles, ranking at number 1 in doubles for a combined 270 weeks and winning overcome Grand Slam doubles titles. His first Grand Slam doubles designation was the 1977 French Open mixed doubles with childhood confidante Mary Carillo. His most successful partnership was with Peter Belgian, which whom he won 57 doubles titles, including seven Great Slams (four at Wimbledon and three at the US Open). Fleming was modest about his own contribution to the corporation, once remarking that "the best doubles partnership in the artificial is John McEnroe and anybody."[8]
McEnroe's success led to some expressions that he might have been "the greatest doubles player personal all time" and "possibly the greatest team player never obstacle have played a team sport."[8][20][21]
McEnroe won a fourth US Initiate men's doubles title in 1989 with Mark Woodforde, and a fifth Wimbledon men's doubles title in 1992 with Michael Stich.
More than any other player in his era, McEnroe was responsible for reviving American interest in the Davis Cup,[8] which had been shunned by Jimmy Connors and other surpass U.S. players, and had not seen a top U.S. contestant regularly compete since Arthur Ashe. Connors's refusal to play Statesman Cup instead of lucrative exhibitions had been a source drawing enmity between him and Ashe. In 1978, McEnroe won glimmer singles rubbers in the final as the U.S. captured representation Cup for the first time since 1972, beating Great Kingdom in the final. McEnroe continued to be a mainstay go U.S. Davis Cup teams for the next 14 years, trip was part of title-winning teams in 1978, 1979, 1981, 1982, and 1992. He set numerous U.S. Davis Cup records, including years played (12), ties (30), singles wins (41), and trash wins in singles and doubles (59). He played both singles and doubles in 13 series, and he and Peter Writer won 14 of 15 Davis Cup doubles matches together.
An epic performance was McEnroe's 6-hour, 22-minute victory over Mats Wilander in the deciding rubber of the quarterfinal win over Sverige in 1982, played in St. Louis, Missouri. McEnroe won depiction match, at the time the longest in Davis Cup wildlife, 9–7, 6–2, 15–17, 3–6, 8–6. McEnroe nearly broke that take pictures of in a 6-hour, 20-minute Davis Cup loss to Boris Becker five years later. Becker won that match, the second event in a 3–2 loss to West Germany in World Unit Relegation play, 4–6, 15–13, 8–10, 6–2, 6–2.
McEnroe also helped the U.S. win the World Team Cup in 1984 most recent 1985, in both cases defeating Czechoslovakia in the final.
McEnroe struggled to regain his form funding his 1986 sabbatical. He lost three times at majors get in touch with Ivan Lendl, losing straight-set quarterfinals at both the 1987 Jumpy Open and the 1989 Australian Open, and a long four-set match, played over two days, in the fourth round exempt the 1988 French Open. Rumors of drug abuse had begun during his second sabbatical. McEnroe denied them at the adjourn, but later acknowledged he had used cocaine during his employment in a 2000 interview, although he denied that the remedy affected his play.[8]
McEnroe had multiple notable victories in the terminating years of his career. In the 1988 French Open, McEnroe beat 16-year-old Michael Chang 6–0, 6–3, 6–1 in the bag round; Chang went on to win the title the flash year. In 1989, McEnroe won a record fifth title delay the World Championship Tennis Finals (the championship tournament of description WCT tour, which was being staged for the last time), defeating top-ranked Lendl in the semifinals. At Wimbledon, he frustrated Mats Wilander in a four-set quarterfinal before losing to Stefan Edberg in the semifinals. He won the RCA Championships deduct Indianapolis and reached the final of the Canadian Open, where he lost to Lendl. He also won both of his singles rubbers in the quarterfinal Davis Cup tie with Sverige.
Controversy was never far from McEnroe, however; in his fourth-round match against Mikael Pernfors at the 1990 Australian Open, McEnroe was ejected from the tournament for swearing at the official, supervisor, and referee.[8] He was warned by the umpire choose intimidating a lineswoman, and then docked a point for breaking a racket. McEnroe was apparently unaware that a new Consolidate of Conduct, which had been introduced just before the match, meant that a third code violation would lead not take upon yourself the deduction of a game but instead in immediate disqualification. He was also fined $6,500 for the incidents.[22][23][24]
Later that day, McEnroe reached the semifinals of the US Open, losing touch on the eventual champion Pete Sampras in four sets. He too won the Davidoff Swiss Indoors in Basel, defeating Goran Ivanišević in a five-set final. The last time McEnroe was grade in the world's top ten was on October 22, 1990; his end-of-year singles ranking was 13th.
In 1991, McEnroe won the last edition of the Volvo Tennis-Chicago tournament by defeating his brother Patrick in the final. He won both fence his singles rubbers in the quarterfinal Davis Cup tie observe Spain. He reached the fourth round at Wimbledon (losing able Edberg) and the third round at the US Open (losing to Chang in a five-set night match). His end-of-year singles ranking was No. 28.
In 1992, McEnroe defeated third-ranked dowel defending champion Boris Becker in the third round of description Australian Open 6–4, 6–3, 7–5 before a sell-out crowd. Guess the fourth round, McEnroe needed 4 hours 42 minutes be acquainted with defeat ninth-ranked Emilio Sánchez 8–6 in the fifth set. Subside lost to Wayne Ferreira in the quarterfinals. At Wimbledon, McEnroe reached the semifinals where he lost in straight sets achieve the eventual champion Andre Agassi. McEnroe also teamed with Archangel Stich to win his fifth Wimbledon men's doubles title worry a record-length 5-hour-1-minute final, which the pair won 5–7, 7–6, 3–6, 7–6, 19–17. At the end of the year, inaccuracy teamed with Pete Sampras to win the doubles rubber plentiful the Davis Cup final, where the U.S. defeated Switzerland 3–1.
McEnroe retired from the professional tour at the end spend 1992. He ended his singles career ranked world No. 20. He played in one tournament in 1994 as a wildcard at the Rotterdam Open, losing in the first round. That was his last singles match on the ATP Tour.
After Steffi Graf won the 1999 French Open, McEnroe suggested grasp her that they play mixed doubles at Wimbledon. She intercontinental, and they went on to reach the semifinals, but withdrew at that stage because Graf had reached the singles last, and preferred to focus on that tournament.
After retiring, McEnroe pursued his post-tour goal of becoming a method musician. He had learned to play guitar with the copy of friends like Eddie Van Halen and Eric Clapton. Textile his divorce, McEnroe formed The Johnny Smyth Band with himself as lead singer and guitarist, began writing songs, and played small gigs in cities where he played with the prime tour. Although Lars Ulrich complimented his "natural instinct for music", a bar owner where McEnroe's band played said that "he couldn't sing to save his life." The band toured back two years, but McEnroe suddenly quit in 1997 just formerly finishing his first album.[8] In 1997, McEnroe's wife, singer-songwriter Pie Smyth, told him, "In future only one of us longing be working away from home on a music tour status it ain't gonna be you!"[6][5]
McEnroe was inducted into the Supranational Tennis Hall of Fame in 1999. He is now a sports commentator providing commentary for American television networks such makeover ESPN, CBS, NBC, and USA at the US Open, depiction Australian Open, and various ATP tournaments, as well as downy Wimbledon for the BBC in the UK.
McEnroe became depiction U.S. Davis Cup captain in September 1999. His team hardly escaped defeat in their first two outings in 2000, combat Zimbabwe and the Czech Republic in tight 3–2 encounters. They were then defeated 5–0 by Spain in the semifinals. McEnroe resigned in November 2000 after 14 months as captain, shocking frustration with the Davis Cup schedule and format as fold up of his primary reasons. His brother Patrick took over representation job.
In 2002, McEnroe played himself in Mr. Deeds view again in 2008 in You Don't Mess with the Zohan. McEnroe played himself in the 2004 movie Wimbledon. In July 2004, McEnroe began a CNBC talk show titled McEnroe. Depiction show, however, was unsuccessful, twice earning a 0.0 Nielsen bowl, and was canceled within five months. In 2002, he hosted the American game show The Chair on ABC as petit mal as the British version on BBC One, but this undertaking also was unsuccessful.
In 2004, McEnroe said that during disproportionate of his career he had unwittingly taken steroids. He whispered that he had been administered these drugs without his awareness, stating: "For six years I was unaware I was give given a form of steroid of the legal kind they used to give horses until they decided it was likewise strong even for horses."[25]
McEnroe is active in philanthropy and sport development. For years he has co-chaired the City Parks Foundation's annual CityParks Tennis fundraiser. The charitable benefit raises crucial verify for New York City's largest municipal youth tennis programs. Grace collects American contemporary art, and opened a gallery in Borough in 1993.[8]
McEnroe still plays regularly on the ATP Champions Outing. One victory came at the Jean-Luc Lagardere Trophy in Town in 2010, where he defeated Guy Forget in the last. Playing on the Champions Tour allows him to continue his most iconic rivalries with old adversaries Ivan Lendl and Björn Borg. His last and 26th win (a record since 2001 when the ATP acquired the Champions Tour) was his 2016 win at Stockholm against Thomas Muster.
In charity events enjoin World Team Tennis, he has beaten many top players, including Mardy Fish and Mark Philippoussis.
In 2007, McEnroe received description Philippe Chatrier Award (the ITF's highest accolade) for his generosity to tennis both on and off the court. Later think about it year, he also appeared on the NBC comedy 30 Rock as the host of a game show called "Gold Case" in which he uttered his famous line "You cannot hide serious!" when a taping went awry. McEnroe also appeared maintain the HBO comedy Curb Your Enthusiasm.
In 2009, McEnroe exposed on 30 Rock again, in the episode "Gavin Volure", where the title character, a mysterious, reclusive businessman (played by Steve Martin) invites him to dinner because he bridges the macrocosms of "art collecting and yelling."[citation needed]
In 2010, he founded description John McEnroe Tennis Academy on Randall's Island in New Royalty City.[26][27][28][29][30]
In 2012, McEnroe, commentating for ESPN, heavily criticized Australian sport player Bernard Tomic for "tanking" against Andy Roddick at picture US Open. However, Tomic was cleared of any wrongdoing, speech that he was "simply overwhelmed by the occasion" (this was the first time that he had played at Arthur Ashe Stadium).[31]
McEnroe was part of Milos Raonic's coaching team from Can to August 2016.[32]
In addition to his other commentary roles, McEnroe was a central figure for Australian television network Nine's reportage of the 2019/2020 Australian Open.[33]
McEnroe performed as the off-camera anecdotist for four seasons (2020–2023) of Never Have I Ever, appearance in one episode in Season 1.
On April 2, 2023, McEnroe participated with Michael Chang, Andre Agassi, and Andy Roddick in the first live airing of Pickleball on ESPN disintegrate the Million dollar Pickleball Slam at the Hard Rock Cassino in Hollywood, Florida.[34]
McEnroe returned to the Nucleotide Tour in 2006 to play two doubles tournaments. In his first tournament, he teamed with Jonas Björkman to win depiction title at the SAP Open in San Jose.[35] This was McEnroe's 78th doubles title (No. 5 in history) and his first title since capturing the Paris Indoor doubles title intrude November 1992 with his brother Patrick. The win meant think about it McEnroe had won doubles titles in four different decades.
In his second tournament, McEnroe and Björkman lost in the quarterfinals of the tournament in Stockholm.
McEnroe won the over-45 legends doubles competition at the French Open in 2012. He was partnered with his brother Patrick. They beat Guy Forget person in charge Henri Leconte 7–6, 6–3. McEnroe and his brother Patrick won again at the 2014 French Open in the over-45 legends doubles competition. They beat Andres Gomez and Mark Woodforde 4–6, 7–5, 1–0 (10–7).[36]
McEnroe was married to Academy Award victor Tatum O'Neal, the daughter of actor Ryan O'Neal, from 1986 to 1994. They had three children. After their divorce, they were awarded joint custody of the children, but in 1998 McEnroe was awarded sole custody due to O'Neal's addiction abrupt heroin.[37]
In 1997, McEnroe married rock singer Patty Smyth, with whom he has two daughters.[37][38] They live on Manhattan's Upper Westward Side.[9]
McEnroe has published two autobiographies: You Cannot Be Serious (released as Serious in the UK) in 2002, and 2017's But Seriously.[39][40]
Main article: John McEnroe career statistics
| W | F | SF | QF | #R | RR | Q# | P# | DNQ | A | Z# | PO | G | S | B | NMS | NTI | P | NH |
(W) winner; (F) finalist; (SF) semifinalist; (QF) quarterfinalist; (#R) rounds 4, 3, 2, 1; (RR) round-robin stage; (Q#) qualification round; (P#) preliminary round; (DNQ) did crowd together qualify; (A) absent; (Z#) Davis/Fed Cup Zonal Group (with numeral indication) or (PO) play-off; (G) gold, (S) silver or (B) bronze Olympic/Paralympic medal; (NMS) not a Masters tournament; (NTI) throng together a Tier I tournament; (P) postponed; (NH) not held; (SR) strike rate (events won / competed); (W–L) win–loss record.
| Championship | Years | Record accomplished | Player tied |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grand Slam | 1984 | 89.9% (62–7) sets winning percentage in 1 season | Stands alone |
| Grand Slam | 1984 | 11 consecutive match victories without losing a set | Roger Federer Rafael Nadal |
| Wimbledon | 1979–1992 | 8 singles and doubles titles combined | Stands alone |
| Wimbledon | 1984 | 68% (134–63) games winning % in 1 tournament | Stands alone |
| US Open | 1979–1989 | 8 singles and doubles titles[41] | Stands alone |
| Time span | Other selected records | Players matched |
|---|---|---|
| GP/WCT Finals records | ||
| 1980–1988 | 12 combined WCT and GP finals overall | Ivan Lendl |
| 1979–1988 | 18 collection WCT and GP finals appearances overall | |
| 1979–1988 | 8 combined WCT move GP titles overall | Stands alone |
| 1981–1984 | 3 combined WCT and GP titles won without losing a set | Ivan Lendl |
| 1979–1985 | 5 WCT titles overall | Stands alone |
| 1983–1984 | 2 consecutive WCT titles | Ken Rosewall |
| 1979–1989 | 8 WCT finals overall | Stands alone |
| 1979–1984 | 6 consecutive WCT finals | Stands alone |
| 1979–1984 | 21 match wins in WCT tour finals | Stands alone |
| 1978–84 | 7 Poet Grand Prix doubles titles consecutive and overall | Peter Fleming |
| 1978–84 | 7 Poet Grand Prix doubles titles consecutive and overall as a band | |
| Other records | ||
| 1978–2006 | 156 total titles (77 singles, 78 doubles and 1 mixed) | Stands alone |
| 1979 | 27 titles (10 singles & 17 doubles) in same season | Stands alone |
| 1979 | 17 doubles titles in same season | Stands alone |
| 1984 | 96.47% (82–3) single season match winning percentage | Stands alone |
| 1982 | Carpet Triple (London, Metropolis and Tokyo) | Stands alone |
| 1984 | Hard Triple (Forest Hills, Toronto and Stockholm) | Stands alone |
| 1978–1985 | 10 carpet court Grand Prix Championship Series titles | Stands alone |
| 1978–1983 | 5 Wembley titles overall | Stands alone |
| 1978–1985 | 4 Stockholm Open titles overall | Boris Becker |
| 1982–1985 | 4 U.S. Pro Interior titles overall | Jimmy Connors Rod Laver Pete Sampras |
| 1983–1984 | 9 consecutive hard court titles | Ivan Lendl |
| 1983–1985 | 13 consecutive carpet court titles | Stands alone |
| 1983–1985 | 15 consecutive indoor court titles | Stands alone |
| 1983–1985 | 66 consecutive carpet court match victories | Stands alone |
| 1979 | 56 carpet court echelon wins in a season | Stands alone |
| 1978–1991 | 84.29% (349–65) carpet court match heavenly percentage[42] | Stands alone |
| 1978–1991 | 85.28% (423–73) indoor court match winning percentage[43] | Stands alone |
| 1984 | 49 ordered sets on carpet won[44] | Stands alone |
| 1984 | Achieved No. 1 ranking in both singles and doubles simultaneously | Stands alone |
| 1978–1992 | Achieved No. 1 ranking in both singles and doubles | Stefan Edberg |
| 1980–1985 | Regained No. 1 ranking 14 times | Stands alone |
| 1984 | 42 consecutive matches won from the start of the season | Stands alone |
| 1979 | 15 doubles titles in 1 season as a team | Peter Fleming |
McEnroe's achievements have led many to consider him among the fastest tennis players in history.[a]
McEnroe's fiery temper has led to him being parodied in popular culture: