Anita_Kanter

Anita Kanter

Anita Kanter

American tennis player


Anita Kanter (born 1933) is a former amateur tennis player from the U.S. who played in the 1950s. In singles, Kanter was ranked # 6 in the United States (and # 10 in the world by World Tennis magazine) in 1952, and # 9 in the US in 1953.[1][2][3]

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Early life

Kanter was born in Santa Monica, California, and is Jewish.[4][5] She attended Santa Monica High School.[6]

Tennis career

Kanter won the 1949 US Girls National Hard Court Singles Championship.[3] She won the US girls tennis championship in 1951 as an 18-year-old sophomore at the University of California-Los Angeles, as well as the 1951 National Hard Court Doubles and Mixed Doubles championships.[7][3]

In 1952, she won the U.S. Women's Clay Court Championships, and was the runner-up at the Foothills Cup.[7][3] That year at the Cincinnati Masters, she won both the singles and doubles titles.[8]

In 1953 she won the US National hard court tennis championship,[5] successfully defended her doubles title,[3] and reached the singles final. She was seeded no. 1 in singles and doubles in both appearances in Cincinnati. In doubles in those two years, she paired with Joan Merciadis in 1952 and with Thelma Long of Australia in 1953.[9]

Maccabiah Games

Kanter, who is Jewish, competed in Israel in the 1953 Maccabiah Games—the "Jewish Olympics".[10] At the Games, Kanter, ranked #9 in the US at the time, lost the women's singles title to Angela Buxton and ended up with the silver medal,[11][12][13] but won two gold medals, one as she won the mixed doubles title with Grant Golden and one as she won the women's double title with Toby Greenberg - beating Angela Buxton and Carol Levy of Britain in the final.[7][14][3]

Hall of Fame

In 2014, she was inducted into the Southern California Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.[15][3]

See also


References

  1. Bernard Postal, Jesse Silver, Roy Silver (1965). Encyclopedia of Jews in Sports
  2. "ANITA KANTER-KAPPEl; Tennis - 2014". Southern California Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on June 18, 2016. Retrieved August 4, 2020.
  3. Bob Wechsler (2008). Day by Day in Jewish sports history. KTAV Publishing House. ISBN 9781602800137. Retrieved March 20, 2011.
  4. "UCLA Daily Bruin". Los Angeles. August 4, 1912 via Internet Archive.
  5. Robert Slater (2000). Great Jews in Sports. J. David Publishers. ISBN 9780824604332. Retrieved March 20, 2011.
  6. Eric Sondheimer (September 16, 2013). "15 selected for Southern California Jewish Sports Hall of Fame," Los Angeles Times.

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