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Tennis Journalist, Historian Bud Collins Dies


FILE - Tennis commentator Bud Collins, known for his flashy attire, displays a pair of brightly colored trousers as he sits overlooking the outside courts at Wimbledon, England, June 30, 1993. Collins died Friday at his home in Massachusetts; he was 86.
FILE - Tennis commentator Bud Collins, known for his flashy attire, displays a pair of brightly colored trousers as he sits overlooking the outside courts at Wimbledon, England, June 30, 1993. Collins died Friday at his home in Massachusetts; he was 86.

American tennis writer and sportscaster Bud Collins, who called himself a “scribbler and a babbler,” has died at age 86.

Collins, who died Friday at his home in Brookline, Massachusetts, was credited with paving the way for newspaper reporters to move into broadcasting, becoming a familiar face to U.S. television audiences with his “Breakfast at Wimbledon” coverage on NBC.

He made one of his final public appearances last September in New York, when the media center at the U.S. Open was dedicated in his honor. A plaque for him reads: “Journalist, Commentator, Historian, Mentor, Friend.”

Collins wrote several books, including The Education of a Tennis Player (with Rod Laver, 1971), Evonne! On the Move (with Evonne Goolagong Cawley, 1974), and a memoir, My Life With the Pros (1989).

He also wrote several tennis encyclopedias, including The Modern Encyclopedia of Tennis, The Bud Collins Tennis Encyclopedia, and Total Tennis, which became an authoritative standard in the sport.

Collins was married to photographer Anita Ruthling Klaussen.

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