Nicola Pietrangeli, Italy’s greatest tennis icon and a two-time French Open champion, died at the age of 92, the Italian Tennis Federation announced on Monday.
He had been in declining health following a hip fracture in December 2024.
Pietrangeli won 48 career titles, but he excelled most in the Davis Cup, where he played a record 164 matches and secured 120 victories — a feat still unmatched. He became the first Italian to win a Grand Slam singles title, lifting the French Open in 1959 and 1960. He also claimed a doubles crown in 1959 and a mixed doubles title in 1958.
One of his most memorable moments came in the 1960 French Open final against Chile’s Luis Ayala. Despite bleeding feet from relentless rallies, Pietrangeli fought through the pain and captured his second Roland Garros crown. His prize money was just USD 150, reflecting the era before tennis turned professional in 1968.
Beyond the court, Pietrangeli became a cultural phenomenon. With movie-star looks and cosmopolitan charm, he brought tennis into Italy’s national consciousness. He mingled with celebrities such as Marcello Mastroianni, Brigitte Bardot, and Claudia Cardinale, embodying the glamour of the 1960s jet set.
As captain, Pietrangeli led Italy to its first Davis Cup victory in 1976 against Chile, a politically charged final that sparked protests at home. Though later removed from his role, his legacy endured. He was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1986, the first Italian to receive the honour.
Rome’s Foro Italico sports complex named its second-largest stadium after him in 2006, a rare tribute for a living athlete. Pietrangeli remains celebrated as “the father of Italian tennis,” a master of clay courts whose elegance and charisma defined a generation.
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