Former Australian Wimbledon Doubles Champion Peter McNamara Dies From Cancer

Former Australian tennis player Peter McNamara has died from cancer at the age of 64. McNamara, who formed a successful doubles pair with compatriot Paul McNamee, reached a career ranking high of number 7 in 1983. The Melbourne-born star died on Monday.

Peter McNamara (Photo Credits : Getty Images)

Sydney, July 22 : Former Australian tennis player Peter McNamara has died from cancer at the age of 64. McNamara, who formed a succesfull doubles pair with compatriot Paul McNamee, reached a career ranking high of number 7 in 1983. The Melbourne-born star died on Monday. While he is best remembered for his doubles partnership with McNamee, McNamara beat American great Jimmy Connors and Czech legend Ivan Lendl to win two of his five singles titles.

As a singles player in Grand Slams, McNamara reached the semi-finals of the Australian Open in 1980, the quarter-finals of Wimbledon in 1981 and the French Open last eight in 1982. "Hard to believe that after 50 years of friendship Macca is gone... you lived life to the full mate and will be missed by your loved ones and many more...a toast to the great times mate," McNamee tweeted on Tuesday.

With McNamee, he won the 1979 Australian Open and Wimbledon in 1980 and 1982. He retired in 1987 and has enjoyed a succesfull coaching career. He coached Mark Philippoussis, Grigor Dimitrov in his formative years and more recently Matt Ebden and Wang Qiang.

(The above story first appeared on LatestLY on Jul 22, 2019 03:15 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com).

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