Tennis Prose




Jun/13

27

Dustin Brown wants a new nickame, let’s give him one…

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ESPN had Dustin Brown in the studio with Brad Gilbert and Chris Fowler yesterday after he recorded the biggest win of his career, the four-set defeat of Lleyton Hewitt to reach the third round of Wimbledon 2013.

BG, Fowler and Brown discussed many things – the camper his folks bought him, earning $90,000 for beating Hewitt, Challengers, Futures, hard times, etc. It also came out that Brown is looking for a new nickname, I guess “Dreddy” isn’t quite cutting it.

It should be easy to figure out a moniker for such a unique and colorful athlete as Dustin Brown. Can you think of any, or one?

How about “The Brown Bomber”?

Of course, “The Brown Bomber” was the old nickname of former Heavyweight champion Joe Louis, but it’s been over 50 years since that nickname was used regularly.

Can you think of a better one?

…Dreddzilla…Dreddmaster…Dr. Ace…

Hey I thought this would be easier, help me out!

18 comments

  • Steve · June 27, 2013 at 1:49 pm

    I don’t get the love for Brown. Driving around in a camper playing tennis while you’re young, let’s face it, is an incredible vacation and beats the heck out of working most day jobs.

    Kohls is the vastly superior.

  • Scoop Malinowski · June 27, 2013 at 1:55 pm

    Life on the tour is glamorous if you’re an established star but Steve you don’t know how tough it is in the Futures and Challengers, playing in these far away places, if you lose you leave to the next stop. Very little money. No guarantees. No glory. Sleeping in cars even. Brown survived that for years. You should go to a Futures or a Challenger or even Newport, a lower level tour stop. These guys are grinders. Many of them lose and stay to practice on the courts or public courts nearby. I saw Igor Sisjling practice last year on the hardcourts behind the supermarket. Now look at him, he beat Raonic in straight sets. Very impressive display by the Dutchman.

  • Steve · June 27, 2013 at 2:10 pm

    Actually I do know. I spoke with many players about this, players that struggle for sponsors but you have to admit the camper sounds pretty sweet –it’s probably roomier than some NYC apartments.

  • Dan Markowitz · June 27, 2013 at 4:29 pm

    What about the “Dreddy Dunny Ball Stalker” as he always asks for the ball back after winning a point and he stalks the ball with his wiry frame and racquet.

  • JP · June 27, 2013 at 5:05 pm

    “Buzzy” because he is like a drunken buzz saw.

  • Scoop Malinowski · June 27, 2013 at 9:18 pm

    Not bad, kinda creative but I think “The Brown Bomber” is still in first place ) I’m gonna tweet it to him on Twitter see what he thinks.

  • loreley · June 28, 2013 at 2:53 am

    Dreddy Long Legs 😉

    He is a hit or miss player. Brown played Mannarino this year in the final of Sarajevo Challenger. The Frenchman won 7-6(3), 7-6(2). Beating Hewitt in Wimbldeon might fire up Brown.

  • dan markowitz · June 28, 2013 at 9:16 am

    Far be it from me, Scoop, to stifle artistic creativity when it comes to giving nicknames, but isn’t the Brown Bomber a tad racist in that it implies that black people are violent. I think it was ok for Joe Louis in the 1940’s, especially when he was fighting the Nazi, Max Schmeling.

  • Scoop Malinowski · June 28, 2013 at 10:08 am

    As far as I know, it was Joe Louis’ nickname long before he fought Max Schmeling and no it’s not racist in any way. Dustin Brown has a violent game, he smacks that ball as hard as anyone just about. Max Schmeling was not a nazi, the media misportrayed him. I read Max’s autobiography by George Vanderlippe. I actually tried to do a Biofile with Max via mail and received a typed letter in German from Max personally a few years before his passing at age 99. Max Schmeling was a great great man.

  • Scoop Malinowski · June 28, 2013 at 10:11 am

    TRIBUTE BIOFILE MAX SCHMELING
    by Scoop Malinowski

    Sept. 28, 1905 – Feb. 2, 2005

    BIRTHPLACE: Klein Luckaw, Brandenburg, Germany.

    STATUS: Former World Heavyweight champion June 12, 1930 – June 21, 1932.

    CHILDHOOD HEROES: “Jack Dempsey, my idol. He combined excellent boxing skills with a tremendous punch. Like some fighter from another galaxy. Dempsey used a style of technique and tactics. While before the emphasis was on pure punching. Growing up in Hamburg, I was intrigued when one of the local movie theatres advertised a film about the World Heavyweight Championship fight between Jack Dempsey and Georges Carpentier (age 15). The film impressed me so much. I saw it every evening for a week. I couldn’t restrain my enthusiasm at home. Dempsey scored his spectacular KO in the 4th round (1921). A few days later I bought my first boxing gloves at a second-hand store. I still remember bringing home the worn and patched gloves and how I hung them over my bed like a sacred relic.”

    HOBBIES/INTERESTS: “Play cards each Wednesday afternoon with friends, read, watch TV, follow the careers of the Klitschko brothers.”

    NICKNAME: The Black Uhlan.

    CHILDHOOD DREAM: “For a while I thought I’d become the soccer goalkeeper for the championship Nuremberg team.”

    PRE-FIGHT FEELING: “Everything became secondary to training. From the very start it was clear to me that achievement was built on discipline. No one reached their goals easily – inventor or businessman. Accomplishment in sports demands the commitment of one’s entire self – morally, intellectually, spiritually. Discipline over the body alone doesn’t make a great athlete. Avoid alcohol, cigarettes, live life according to a strict diet. And not just with respect to food. A slight delay in reaction time, a let down in exact timing, a deficient punch or the famous glass jaw can cost one a career despite all the sacrifice. In the ring as elsewhere, it’s intelligence that is the decisive factor. With tactics and strategy, even a less physically gifted boxer can outmaneuver a giant.”

    EARLY BOXING MEMORY: “My first pro fight, 1924. My opponent’s name was Hans Czapp, a local boy from Dusseldorf. I wasn’t boxing for sports glory – my very existence was being staked on whether I would win or lose. After six rounds I was awarded the victory by KO. The win brought me my first notoriety in local newspapers. I cut out the articles and sent them to my parents.”

    FAVORITE MOVIES: “Charlie Chaplin films, Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, Gregory Peck and Douglas Fairbanks films.”

    MUSICAL TASTES: “Leopold Stokowski, Michael Bohnen, Heinrich Schlusnus, Richard Tauber.”

    GREATEST SPORTS MOMENT: “Really no single event comes to mind when I think back. It was more the larger fight as an experience of putting one’s own existence on the line. Of making life an adventure. Of course, boxing was my world. I owe to it everything that I am. When I look back, it is less the individual fights that emerge before my inner eye. But rather the satisfaction that from early on, I was able to take my life into my own hands and make something of it.”

    FUNNY MEMORY: “I tried to get into the spirit of the war of words. We had a lot of fun trying to come up with the most swaggering threats but I couldn’t get into the tearing down of the opponent, as part of the American pre-fight hype. One reporter was trying to provoke me into a more hostile tone before the Sharkey fight (1930). I finally laughed, What do you want me to say? Will you finally be satisfied if I say that I eat Sharkey every morning for breakfast, with or without kraut?”

    TOUGHEST OPPONENT(S): “Joe Louis. He threw almost exclusively lefts. His left hand was the hardest and most versatile I had ever seen. Louis worked superbly. His movements were fast, cool, harmonious. When he landed with his full power, I felt the force of the punch down to my toes.”

    HARDEST PUNCHER: “Max Diekmann. He caught me in the ear with one of his hooks. And it started to bleed immediately. My corner couldn’t stop the bleeding. They stopped the fight two rounds later.”

  • Steve · June 28, 2013 at 12:14 pm

    Scoop, amazing Biofile and probably the best one ever. WOW.

    Do you think he wrote this letter response himself?

  • Scoop Malinowski · June 28, 2013 at 12:36 pm

    Thanks Steve, yes I’m sure he typed it up himself. I also have a letter handwritten from George Foreman while he was retired from boxing, working as a minister. As a kid I loved Foreman and asked him to please comeback to boxing, I thought he could still become champ. He told he was no longer interested in boxing, just his work and family and his center for kids. Then almost a decade later, he changed his mind ) I later met and interviewed George by phone – we did a Biofile for one of the official programs for one of his fights – and I asked him about if he remembered the letter? He then asked me what were some of the things he wrote to me in the letter. When I mentioned them, he said he did indeed remember. And he responded to me because “you were so serious I just had to write back.” True story )

  • loreley · June 28, 2013 at 12:46 pm

    Max Schmeling was never member of the NSDAP. But of course the Nazis abused his popularity.

    A while ago I noticed that a German girl called Dustin Brown “Brownie” on twitter. He didn’t seem to be upset, she is a fan. But how rude by her. I couldn’t believe that she doesn’t know better.

  • Scoop Malinowski · June 28, 2013 at 12:56 pm

    Loreley, I highly doubt she meant it in a bad way. Dave Brown was a popular Philadelphia Flyers hockey player and in his Biofile he told me his nickname was “Brownie.” It’s normal for a guy named “Brown” to be called “Brownie” no matter what the ethnicity. If Dustin wasn’t happy about it I’m sure he would have expressed so.

  • Dan Markowitz · June 28, 2013 at 1:06 pm

    Schmeling probably wasn’t a Nazi. He said he wasn’t, but he during World War II, Schmeling served with the German Air Force (Luftwaffe) as an elite paratrooper (Fallschirmjäger). He wasn’t Cassius Clay certainly. And he got in with Coca Cola and became a rich man so some preferential treatment, was indeed granted him.

  • Steve · June 28, 2013 at 1:44 pm

    What a well written response/letter/Biofile 🙂 Impressive.

  • Harold · June 28, 2013 at 8:38 pm

    One and Dunny

  • Dan Markowitz · June 28, 2013 at 8:56 pm

    Harold,

    You’re the maestro. Luv it!

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