General Alberto conte
Bonacossa
Male
Italy
1883-08-24
Vigevano, Pavia, Italy
1953-12-31
Milano, Italy


About

Alberto Bonacossa was a prominent figure in Italian sports, as a competitor, judge, author, journalist, organiser, and administrator. He was one of the early proponents of tennis in Italy, the sport in which he also took part in the Olympics. In 1914, he published the tennis manual \"Il Tennis\", which proved a very popular book. President of the Milan Tennis Club, he set up the Italian Open Championships in 1930, presently known as the Rome Masters. He also won the Italian doubles title twice, in 1937 and 1939, and was captain of the Italian Davis Cup team.

Bonacossa was also an avid skater, winning ten Italian figure skating championships individually, and three more with his wife Marisa in the pairs event. His wife won seven individual titles herself in the 1920s. In 1926, Bonacossa founded the Italian Ice Sports Federation (FISG), which combined the ice skating, ice hockey and bobsled federations of Italy - all of which had been founded and presided by Bonacossa. He also was the first president of the FISG, although only until 1927. In addition, Bonacossa was involved in various international and national organizations for motorcycling, auto racing, alpine skiing. He also worked as an editor for the Italian sports newspaper Gazzetta dello Sport.

A member of the Italian National Olympic Committee (CONI) since 1912, Bonacossa was admitted as a member of the IOC in 1925, and became a member of the Executive Committee in 1935. In 1943, he briefly served as the president of CONI. After his death in 1953, CONI founded the Trofeo Alberto Bonacossa, which was then accepted by the IOC as an award for the National Olympic Comittee best serving the development of the Olympic Movement. It was discontinued after 1971.



Media


Archive statistics 1909 - 1929
0
23
11


Tournaments Trieste - 1929 Villa d'Este - 1929 Milano International - 1928 Italian National Championships - 1927 Stresa Campionato dei Laghi - 1927 Stresa Campionato del Verbano - 1927 World Hardcourt Championships - 1922 Olympics, Olympic Games - 1920 Engelberg - 1912 Wiesbaden Cup - 1909 Baden-Baden - 1909 Wiesbaden Championships - 1909

4 thoughts on “player

  1. Hello! I’d like to bring to your attention that after recent updates to the site, the player search has become less efficient. Specifically:

    1. A single search now returns no more than 30 results.
    2. The alphabetical order of the results is gone.
    3. As far as I understand, it’s now impossible to find a player by two or three letters, while three-letter last names are very common (for example, Lee, Dod, etc.; Tommy Ho can only be found by his full name).
    4. It’s also impossible to find a player by their last name and first initial if they also have a middle initial. E.g., searching for “A. White” returns results like “A. White” and “T.A. White,” but not “A.G. White”. This was previously the exact opposite, and it would be great to combine the previous and current options so that the same search for “A. White” would return all three results.
    5. Results now also include last names/first names that contain last names/first names from the search. E.g., the query “Bell” returns results like “Campbell,” while the query “Clint” returns results like “McClintock.” This is debatable, as it could, on the other hand, find players with double last names or players with last names close to the ones you search (like “Carroll” – “O’Carroll”). However, it’s probably better to eliminate cases like the second example, where a word in the query is the middle of the returned result. Because if someone searches for a player using the query “Clint,” a player with the last name “McClintock” is unlikely to be relevant and would clutter the results.

    I hope these issues are resolved, as I believe this would help many site users. Thanks in advance!

  2. Regarding point 4, I’d like to add that a similar problem exists with full names. For example, Reginald Arthur Gamble can be found by searching for “Arthur Gamble,” but not “Reginald Gamble.”

  3. New South Wales Hard Court Championship 1924

    Round 1:
    E.A. Busby vs. S.L. Barden 6-1 4-6 6-1
    C.V. Todd vs. A. Lloyd (AUS) 6-0 6-0
    A.G. Gavin vs. Dr. H.T. Illingworth 4-6 6-2 9-7
    B. Whiteley vs. J.W. Elliott walkover
    A. Fitzgerald vs. R.M. Kidston 6-4 3-6 6-4
    G.J. Perry bye
    S. Cameron bye
    G. Collins bye
    A.N. Peach bye
    W.J. Matchett vs. E. Orth 7-5 5-7 6-4
    P. Laverack vs. W.M. Blekemore 6-4 3-6 6-3
    Ron P. Bulman vs. R.O. Palmer 6-1 6-1

    1. S.L. Barden (AUS)

    2. J.W. Elliott (AUS)

    3. E. Orth (AUS)

    4. W.M. Blekemore (AUS)

    5. Ron P. Bulman (AUS) is in your database R.P. Bulman

    6. R.O. Palmer (AUS)

  4. From: 1952 Apr 11 – 1952 Apr 15 Source: The Age

    Bendigo Easter Tournament 1952

    Surface: Grass
    Place/court: Bendigo, Quarry Hill Tennis Club Courts

    Semifinals:
    L.B. Brodie vs. W.H. Beischer 6-1 6-3
    J.K. Wilson vs. W.E. Anstee 4-6 6-3 6-4

    Final: 1952-04-15
    L.B. Brodie vs. J.K. Wilson 6-3 6-2

    W.H. Beischer (AUS)

    Bendigo Easter Tournament:

    Surface: Clay from 1913 – 1928
    Surface: Grass from 1929 – present

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