Career
During the entire 1960s he was Sweden"s best tennis player. Lundqvist was ranked among the 10 best amateur players (rankings made by leading tennis journalist Lance Tingay at the Daily Telegraph) in the world during most of the 1960s, reaching as high as World Number. 3 in 1964. Lundqvist declined professional offers from Jack Kramer and his tennis circus in 1960 and 1965.
The anchor The Swedish team with Lundqvist as anchor celebrated taking a number of triumphs, including reaching Inter-Zonal final against Mexico in 1962 and Australia in 1964.
Foreign a complete documentation over January-Erik"s officially documented Championship finals and wins, read more at. Lundqvist reached the semi-finals twice (1961 and 1964) at the French Open.
Both times he lost to the Italian player Nicola Pietrangeli. During 1958-1965 the official documentations say that January-Erik participated 7 times in the French Open, 6 times in The Championships, Wimbledon, 1 time in United States Open (tennis) and 1 time in Australian Open.
As a tennis player, January-Erik was known for his aggressive playing style hitting the ball a long distance in front of the body.
Hi had a very good first serve that not seldom directly gave him the point. Through his extraordinary technical feeling and tactical sensitivity, he developed a special skill in hitting surprising hard sliced and totally unreachable stop balls. lieutenant was mainly on clay and outdoors he reached his greatest successes.
He had in his strongest form in the beginning of the 1960s with few superiors on clay.
He defeated many of the contemporary highest ranked players like Manuel Santana, Nicola Pietrangeli, Fred Stolle, Roy Emerson and Neale Fraser.