Dale Power
Tennis Player
1949 –
Who is Dale Power?
Dale Power is a former top-ranked Canadian tennis player.
Power held the best singles Davis Cup record by winning percentage of any Canadian player. Power also has the distinction of having played in the longest set in Davis Cup history, a second set that was won by Colombian Álvaro Betancourt 24-22 in a match won by Power in 5 sets in a 1976 tie.
Power was the top-ranked player in Canada for 10 of 12 years, winning the Canadian Closed Championship for singles 7 times. He failed however to win a single top-tier professional tour match, going 0-11. His high singles ranking was World No. 210, achieved in June, 1976.
In August 2006 Power was inducted into the Canadian Tennis Hall of Fame.
Power was also a skilled hockey player, and was drafted by the Montreal Canadiens in 1969, before deciding to concentrate exclusively on his tennis career. Leaving hockey a year later for four years, he returned for the 1974-75 season to play for the Fort Wayne Komets leading the team in scoring with 29 goals and a total of 78 pts. Only after a knee injury did he decide to return full-time to tennis
Power is currently Head Tennis Professional at the Thornhill Country Club in Toronto. He has one daughter, Sarah.
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- Born
- Oct 2, 1949
Canada - Nationality
- Canada
- Profession
- Lived in
- Toronto
Submitted
on July 23, 2013
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