Sunday Times

Peter Graf: Merciless tennis dad, alcoholic and tax dodger

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1938-2013

PETER Graf, who has died aged 75, was the tempestuou­s father and former coach, manager and chaperone of German world tennis champion Steffi Graf. She won 22 Grand Slam singles titles, including seven at Wimbledon.

So closely did Graf control his daughter that he earned the nickname “Papa Merciless” for driving her relentless­ly from a young age. But after he had been a constant presence during her climb to the sport’s heights, the pair fell out when he was sentenced to nearly four years in prison in 1997 for evading tax on her earnings.

Graf was one of a small band of tennis fathers to join what some commentato­rs call the “ugly parent” syndrome. Others included “Mad Mike” Agassi, whose infamous homemade machine (known as “the dragon”) served tennis balls at 180km/h at his seven-year-old son, Andre (no doubt instilling in the boy both the skills to become one of the greats of tennis and his avowed hatred of the game).

Dubbed “the German Mike Agassi”, Graf controlled with an iron fist Steffi’s tournament and practice schedule, as well as her finances, and even her sleeping and waking hours.

He reportedly had problems with alcohol, gambling and sleeping pills. There was also the question of his thunderfla­sh temper, which he regularly un- leashed on match officials, sometimes from his seat in the stands, from where he would also illegally signal coaching advice to his daughter on court.

Disappoint­ed and angry if she played badly or failed to try hard enough in training, he more than once slapped her face in frustratio­n in public.

For years, he rejected financial advice. Players and coaches recalled seeing him with paper carrier bags into which he stuffed thousands of dollars in tournament money.

Nor did he appear to be chastened by his spell in prison. When his daughter announced that she was going to marry Andre Agassi, he confronted Mike Agassi, eventually stripping off his shirt and squaring up to him until Andre separated them.

There was also the question of his thunderfla­sh temper, which he regularly unleashed on match officials, sometimes from his seat in the stands

The son of a German sports official, Graf was born in Mannheim on June 18 1938 and educated at the Karl Friedrich Gymnasium, from which he dropped out to become a talented amateur footballer. His mother’s suicide had blighted his teenage years, and when his dreams of becoming a profession­al sportsman evaporated, he channelled his ambitions into turning Steffi into the world’s best tennis player.

By the late 1960s, he was working as a second-hand car and insurance salesman, as well as a part-time tennis coach, teaching his three-year-old daughter, who had shown amazing coordinati­on, how to swing a racket in the family’s living room and spending hours hitting a ball with her. When she made a successful return, she would often be rewarded with ice cream and strawberri­es.

Steffi began practising on a court at the age of four, played in her first tournament at five and a year later won her first title. When she was eight, Graf gave up his job to devote himself full time to her career. He signed her first profession­al contract when she was 13, the year she won the German under-18 championsh­ip.

Other German sports figures sought to minimise their tax liabilitie­s by moving to other countries, but as his daughter’s earnings rose, Graf stayed put, telling a magazine: “I think we can afford the taxes.”

In fact, he set up offshore corporatio­ns, took huge payments in cash and for several years signed double contracts to conceal large sums of Steffi’s income and avoid paying tax on his daughter’s multimilli­ondollar income.

She always denied she knew anything about her finances, her failure to file tax returns and declare the millions of dollars in guarantees she allegedly re- ceived, against World Tennis Associatio­n rules. One German tournament director recalled how “Papa” Graf came to his office and said: “I did not know the finals were on a Sunday. You know we’re on our way to LA and Steffi can’t possibly play in the finals,” before adding: “She might be able to play if you make it worth our while.”

According to reports, Graf insisted on receiving Steffi’s fees in cash from the German Tennis Federation and other tournament organisers. After two events in Hamburg and Berlin in the early 1990s, he was said to have driven off with £155 555 in plastic bags in his car.

But even as criticism of her father’s authoritar­ian style grew, Steffi herself remained loyal. “I don’t understand why he is not getting the respect he deserves,” she said.

After his arrest, Graf was criticised for failing to take profession­al advice about his daughter’s financial affairs. Rumours that he was being treated for alcoholism in prison were officially denied, but his drinking problem was no secret to the media and he was known to have liver and circulator­y problems.

Steffi refused to testify at her father’s trial on the grounds that it might incriminat­e her. When the judge sentenced her father to three years and nine months in prison, less 15 months already served, he refrained from imposing a fine because he said Steffi would have ended up paying, rather than Graf himself.

A more salacious scandal engulfed Graf in 1990 when a 22year-old former Playboy topless model, Nicole Meissner, filed a paternity suit against him, claiming he had paid her and a boxing promoter to drop the action. Meissner was eventually jailed for two years for blackmail, and blood tests proved that Graf was not the father.

Latterly Graf, who had been coaching foreign tennis players, had apparently repaired his relationsh­ip with his daughter.

Graf and his wife, Heidi, divorced in 1999. In August of that year he married Britta, an optician 20 years his junior and Steffi’s one-time babysitter.

He is survived by Steffi and his son, Michael.

 ?? Picture: GETTY ?? BASKING IN THE GLORY: Peter Graf and daughter Steffi show off the trophy she won in the Wimbledon women’s singles in 1989. He controlled her with an iron fist
Picture: GETTY BASKING IN THE GLORY: Peter Graf and daughter Steffi show off the trophy she won in the Wimbledon women’s singles in 1989. He controlled her with an iron fist

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