Rafael Osuna still represents everything we want tennis to be. Fifty years after his tragic death, we remember Mexico’s greatest player, and his place on the greatest college tennis team of all time
The annual event, which was started in 1972 and is named after the most accomplished tennis player in Mexican history, Rafael Osuna, pits former college standouts, national champions and Davis Cup players from the United States and Mexico against each other in a friendly competition. The two countries take turns hosting; the 47th edition will be held this year at the Las Brisas Resort, in Huatulco. At a time when the United States is talking about building a wall between the nations, the Osuna Cup offers a bridge.
Since 2002, Mexico’s captain has been Rafael Belmar Osuna, a nephew of the event’s namesake. He says the Cup has fostered an enduring sense of cross-border camaraderie.
“Besides being a tournament where teams from the USA and Mexico face off athletically,” Osuna says, “it has become a link of friendship between families of both nations.”
The Cup is a fitting legacy for his uncle, who spent his career bridging that same border.
Rafael Osuna was born in Mexico City, but he became a serious tennis player in Los Angeles. He won his first Wimbledon doubles title with an American partner, Dennis Ralston, and his second with a Mexican partner, Antonio Palafox. He led Mexico to its only Davis Cup final, in 1962, but he won his biggest singles title in the States, at the 1963 U.S. Nationals.
Osuna was a member of one of the greatest college teams of all time, the 1963 USC Trojans. At the same time, he was a link in a chain of Latin players who earned All-American honors at USC, from Alex Olmedo in the 1950s, to Joaquin Loyo-Mayo in the late-’60s, to Raul Ramirez in the ’70s.
“Osuna was one of the great guys; friendly to everyone, he didn’t care who you were,” says Tom Edlefsen, a teammate of his on that 1963 USC team and an Osuna Cup regular. “He never walked by anyone and looked the other way.”
この記事は Tennis の May/June 2019 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
すでに購読者です ? サインイン
この記事は Tennis の May/June 2019 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
すでに購読者です? サインイン
The Tennis Conversation: Jenson Brooksby, a piano man
Billy Joel may be a New York City icon, but the fans in Queens should start getting to know this piano man
The Five-Step Sit-Down Plan
Don’t neglect the value of a smart changeover routine
MAKING THE TURN
Six years after saying goodbye to the protour grind, Mardy Fish may be more active than ever—on the court, on the course, and helping combat a struggle anyone can encounter
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
Queens is known for its gastronomy as much as its tennis. Daniil Medvedev, equal parts sugar and spice, hopes to add a unique flavor to the borough as he vies for his first major
SUMMER IN THE CITIES
Broadway may not re-open until mid September, but tennis offers its own brand of live theatre in the preceding months
REOPEN SEASON
The pandemic halted tennis as an up-close experience— but is now giving way to pandemonium among crowds. As the pro game reopens this summer and fans gather again, we’re realizing what we’ve been missing for so long
Court of Appeals
Resolving Your Rules Questions&Quarrels
An Open Mind: New York's Slam has no shortage of history, but it always evolves
In the last decade, Arthur Ashe Stadium got a roof, and a new Grandstand and Louis Armstrong Stadium debuted.
Those Fall Feels
The end of summer may be bittersweet, but getting lost amid the backroads of NEW ENGLAND adds a silver—and golden—lining to the season change. Pack a few sweaters along with your tennis kit and prepare for leaf-peeping, scenic drives and delicious autumnal ingredients to pair with your forehands
Court of Appeals
Resolving Your Rules Questions & Quarrels