Allen E. Fox (born June 25, 1939) is an American former tennis player in the 1960s and 1970s who went on to be a college coach and author. He was ranked as high as U.S. No. 4 in 1962, and was in the top ten in the U.S. five times between 1961 and 1968.[2]
After Fox successfully convinced his friend Larry Nagler to join him and attend the University of California at Los Angeles and play tennis for the Bruins, on a team where Fox was the #1 player, Nagler says "we were bitter rivals and close friends."[4] They were on the junior U.S. Davis Cup team together. Nagler recalled how: "Allen was a vicious competitor who hated to lose, especially to me. One year [1960] at UCLA I beat him in the singles final of the Ojai tournament. After he lost, he broke two racquets and sneered at me that he was going to throw the doubles finals. And I was his partner! He said he couldn't stand for me to win another title. Sure enough, we lost to UCLA teammates we usually thrashed."[4][5] Nagler and Fox won the doubles title at Ojai in 1961, defeating Bill Hoogs and Jim McManus.[6]
When he graduated, Fox was the 4th-ranked singles player in the United States.[7][12] He won the singles title at Cincinnati in 1961. He won also the 1962 US National Hard Court title.[7][12] That year, he reached the singles final in Cincinnati, falling to Marty Riessen.
Four years later, he was back at the 1969 Maccabiah Games as the top seed, and again won the gold medal, this time defeating South African Julian Krinsky in the men's individual semi-finals and South African Davis Cup player Jack Saul in the finals.[20][21][22] In doubles, he and partner Ronald Goldman won the gold medal after they defeated Americans Tom Karp and Peter Fishbach in the semifinals, and then Americans Ed Rubinoff and Leonard Schloss in the finals.[23]
Davis Cup
He was named to the U.S. Davis Cup team in 1961, 1962, and 1966.[7] He played 2 singles matches, winning both of them without giving up more than 2 games in any of the 6 sets that he played.[24]
He was inducted into the Southern California Tennis Association Hall of Fame in 2002. Fox was also inducted into the UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame in 2005.[7][26]
Coaching
Fox coached the Pepperdine University men's tennis team, at the highest level-Division 1, for 17 years.[12] His teams, which included Brad Gilbert, reached the NCAA finals twice, the semifinals three times, and the quarterfinals six times. In his career, he coached his teams to a 368–108 won-lost record between 1979 and 1995; the .778 winning percentage is the best in Pepperdine tennis history.[27] He was named to the Intercollegiate Tennis Coaches Hall of Fame and, aside from Gilbert, coached players such as Robbie Weiss (NCAA singles winner), Kelly Jones (NCAA doubles winner and world No. 1 doubles player), and Martin Laurendeau (Captain of the Canadian Davis Cup Team).
Writing and videos
Fox has worked as a broadcaster, writer, and lecturer.[2] He has authored several books, including Think to Win: The Strategic Dimension of Tennis (1993), If I'm The Better Player, Why Can't I Win?, and The Winner's Mind: A Competitor's Guide to Sports and Business Success.[7] He is a former editor of Tennis Magazine.
Allen has published two videos, titled Allen Fox's Ultimate Tennis Lesson (2001) and Allen Fox's Ultimate Tennis Drills (2001).[2]
Personal
Fox has two sons, Evan and Charlie, and lives in San Luis Obispo, California, with his wife Nancy.