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Biography of Michael Chang - Tennis
Biography
M
Michael Te Pei Chang (張德培;
Pinyin: Zhang|Zhāng Dépéi; born February 22
1972 in Hoboken, New Jersey) is a former
professional tennis player from the United States.
He is best remembered for becoming the
youngest-ever male winner of a Grand Slam in
tennis|Grand Slam singles title when he won the
French Open in 1989 as an unseeded player.
Utilizing his tremendous speed and strong
determination, Chang was one the best Tennis
_strategy#Defensive_baseliner|counterpunchers of
all time and stayed in the Top 10 in the
Association_of_Tennis_Professionals|ATP for
several years, with a career best at No. 2. He has
a Chinese heritage and therefore was extremely
popular in Asia. At that time, there were no Asian
players in the higher ranks.
==Tennis Career==
Chang first came to the tennis world's attention
as a brilliant junior player who set numerous
"youngest-ever" records. He won his first national
title, the USTA Junior Hard Court singles, at the
age of 12. At age 13, he won the Fiesta Bowl 16s.
In 1987, aged 15, Chang won the USTA Boys 18s
Hardcourts and the Boys 18s Nationals, and became
the youngest player to win a main draw match at
the US Open (tennis)|US Open when he defeated Paul
McNamee in four sets in the first round. A month
later he reached the semi-finals at Scottsdale,
Arizona to become the youngest player to reach the
semi-final stage of a top-level professional
tournament. He won his first top-level singles
title in 1988 at San Francisco, aged 16 years and
7 months.
Chang's most significant youngest-ever record came
in 1989 when he won the French Open at the age of
17 years and 3 months, to become the youngest male
player ever to win a Grand Slam title. He defeated
Stefan Edberg in a memorable five-set final,
winning 6-1, 3-6, 4-6, 6-4, 6-2. His victory is
equally remembered for an epic five-set encounter
with Ivan Lendl in the fourth round (see below).
Chang became the first American man to win the
French Open since 1955. And in August 1989, Chang
became the youngest player to be ranked in the
world's top-five on the men's singles rankings.
(Chang's success marked the start of an era in
which a new generation of American
players—which also included Pete Sampras,
Jim Courier and Andre Agassi—would come to
dominate the game.)
Chang had another famous match against Edberg in
the semi-finals of the US Open in 1992. This time
Edberg won in a five-set encounter 7-6, 5-7, 6-7,
7-5, 4-6. The 5-hour, 26-minute marathon match was
the longest in US Open history.
Chang reached three further Grand Slam finals
after his famous 1989 French Open
triumph—losing the 1995 French Open final to
Thomas Muster, the 1996 Australian Open final to
Boris Becker, and the 1996 US Open final to Pete
Sampras.
Chang was a member of the US team which won the
Davis Cup in 1990, beating Australia in the final.
He was also on the US team which won the World
Team Cup in 1993.
For much of his career Chang was coached by his
older brother Carl, who also played in several
doubles tournaments with him in the early-1990s.
Chang retired from the professional tour in 2003.
During his career, he won a total of 34 top-level
professional singles titles. His final top-level
title was won in 2000 at Los Angeles. His total
career prize-money earnings was US$19,145,632. His
career-high singles ranking was World No. 2 in
1996.
==The Classic Match vs Ivan Lendl (French Open,
1989)==
Michael Chang's most famous match took place on
the way to winning the French Open title in 1989.
In the fourth round, he faced the World No. 1 and
three-time former champion Ivan Lendl.
Conventional wisdom made Lendl the heavy favourite
to win the match against the 17-year-old Chang.
Everything seemed to be going to expectation when
Lendl comfortably took the first two sets 6-4,
6-4, and then broke Chang's serve in the opening
game of the third set. Then Chang's fight-back
began. He broke back immediately and went on to
claim the third set 6-3. Part way through the
fourth set, Chang experienced a severe attack of
leg cramp. Fighting to stay in the match, Chang
resorted to some novel tactics. For a period he
began taking all speed out of the match by playing
"moon balls", and he wolfed down bananas and
drinks at every opportunity. Lendl, who was known
to be one of the least easily fazed players to
grace the court, completely lost his rhythm. He
began to swear at the umpire and the crowd,
especially after losing a key point in the fifth
set when Chang shocked him by delivering an
under-arm serve. Chang later explained, "I was
trying to break his concentration. I would do
anything to stay out there."
Barely able to stand, and screaming with pain
after many of his shots, Chang continued to battle
on. Despite being on the verge of physical
breakdown, he fought his way into the position of
a 5-3 lead in the fifth set with two match points
on Lendl's serve. Aiming to break Lendl's
concentration one more time, Chang stood well
inside the baseline, almost at the T-line in the
centre of the court while waiting to receive
Lendl's serve (normally an almost suicidal
position when facing an opponent's serve). The
tactic worked as Lendl produced a double-fault to
give Chang victory. Chang won one of the most
memorable matches in tennis history 4-6, 4-6, 6-3,
6-3, 6-3 in four hours and 37 minutes. Chang sank
to his knees and broke down in tears at the
conclusion of the match. Seven days later he would
go on to become the youngest male champion in
French Open history.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/tennis/1999/frenc
h_open/news/1999/05/22/tenyears_changfrench/index.
html
(Note: Chang and Lendl played another
similarly-exciting match in the semi-finals of the
1991 Grand Slam Cup, where Chang again came back
from two sets down and won 2-6, 4-6, 6-4, 7-6,
9-7.)
==Grand Slam Finals==
===Wins (1)===
Year Championship Opponent in
Final Score in Final
1989 French Open Stefan Edberg
6-1, 3-6, 4-6, 6-4, 6-2
===Runner-ups (3)===
Year Championship Opponent in
Final Score in Final
1995 French Open Thomas Muster
7-5, 6-2, 6-4
1996 Australian Open Boris Becker
6-2, 6-4, 2-6, 6-2
1996 US Open Pete Sampras
6-1, 6-4, 7-6
==Personal & Family Life==
Chang was born in Hoboken, New Jersey in 1972 to
Joe (張洪笙) and Betty
(董良因, née Tung). His parents
both grew up in Taiwan (though were born
elsewhere) and were educated in the United States,
where they met. (Betty moved to the US in 1959 and
Joe moved in 1966. They were introduced by a
mutual friend.) Betty was the daughter of the
Republic of China's ambassador Michael Tung
(董宗山) and was born in New
Delhi, India. Joe was born in Chaozhou, Guangdong,
and moved to Taiwan at age seven. Michael's
Chinese name was chosen by Joe, and his English
name by Betty (who named him after her father).
Chang dropped out of Grade 10 at San Dieguito High
School in Encinitas, California, after passing his
GED in February 1988 in order to pursue a
professional tennis career.
Chang served as Chairman of ATP Tour Charities in
1994. He has supported grassroots tennis
development in Asia through his Stars of the
Future program in Hong Kong and the Reebok
Challenge across Asia. He was one of five athletes
named in the second annual "Most Caring Athlete"
list by USA Today Weekend in 1995. In 1997, he was
given one of seven Asian-American leadership
awards by A Magazine for his status as a role
model for Asian-American youth. He has also served
as a national spokesman for the National Fish and
Wildlife Federation in the US.
A devout Christian, Chang and his family
established the Chang Family Foundation in 1999
"to introduce the Good News of Jesus|Jesus Christ
to the World".
In 2001, Chang served as a goodwill ambassador for
the 2008 Summer Olympics|2008 Beijing Olympic bid
committee.
Chang currently lives in Mercer Island,
Washington. He is an avid fisherman, who often
takes fishing trips while traveling. He also has a
passion for breeding African cichlids in several
large freshwater aquariums at his home.
Chang published a book about his career, Holding
Serve: Persevering On and Off the Court, in 2002.
He now attends the Talbot School of Theology in La
Mirada, California.
See also: Taiwanese American, Chinese American
==Further Reading==
* Michael Chang: Tennis Champion (1993) by Pamela
Dell ISBN 0-516-04185-1
* Holding Serve Persevering On And Off The Court
(June 4, 2002) by Michael Chang, Mike Yorkey ISBN
0-785-26656-9
== External Links ==
* http://www.mchang.com Official site
* http://themanmc.tripod.com Comprehensive fan
site
*
http://www.atptennis.com/en/players/playerprofiles
/default2.asp?playernumber=C274 Profile by
Association of Tennis Professionals
* http://hk.geocities.com/hkmcfc Chinese fan site
(in Traditional Chinese)
*
http://dailynews.dayoo.com/content/2003-09/06/cont
ent_1211507.htm A Chinese interview (in Simplified
Chinese)

