Von Cramm began playing tennis around the age of ten after his right hand had recovered from an accident. That accident, which resulted in him losing the top joint of his index finger on his right hand, was the result of a horse who took more than just the sugar cube offered to him by the young von Cramm. In 1932, Cramm earned a place in the German
Davis Cup team and won the first of four straight German national tennis championships. During this time he also teamed up with
Hilde Krahwinkel to win the 1933
mixed doubles title at
Wimbledon. Noted for his gentlemanly conduct and fair play, he gained the admiration and respect of his fellow tennis players. He earned his first individual
Grand Slam title in 1934, winning the French Championships at Roland Garros. He was the first non-American, British, Australian or French player to win a singles Grand Slam title. His victory made him a national hero in his native Germany; however, it was by chance that he won just after
Adolf Hitler had come to power. The handsome, blond Gottfried von Cramm fitted perfectly the
Aryan race image of a
Nazi ideology that put pressure on all German athletes to be superior. However, Cramm steadfastly refused to be a tool for Nazi propaganda. Germany effectively lost its 1935 Davis Cup Interzone Final against the US when Cramm refused to take a match point in the deciding game, by notifying the umpire that the ball had tipped his racket, and thus calling a point against himself, although no one had witnessed the error. For three straight years Cramm was the men's singles runner-up at the Wimbledon Championships, losing in the final to England's
Fred Perry in 1935 and again in 1936. The following year he was runner-up to American
Don Budge, both at Wimbledon and at the
U.S. National Championships. In 1935, he was beaten in the Roland Garros final by Perry, but turned the tables the following year and defeated his rival, gaining his second French championship. In addition to his Grand Slam play, Gottfried von Cramm is recalled for his deciding match against Don Budge during the 1937 Davis Cup. He was ahead 4–1 in the final set when Budge launched a comeback, eventually winning 8–6 in a match considered by many as the greatest battle in the annals of Davis Cup play and one of the pre-eminent matches in all of tennis history.
Ted Tinling, who served as the Player Liaison for the
All England Club, recalled in his memoir that as he was in the process of ushering Budge and von Cramm out to
Centre Court, they were interrupted by a long-distance call for von Cramm, and that following the call, von Cramm turned to him and Budge and said, 'Excuse me, gentlemen, it was Hitler. He wanted to wish me good luck.' Others say that Budge believed a tale invented by Teddy Tinling that Hitler had telephoned Cramm before the match. For his successful tennis career, he was decorated by the President of the Federal Republic of Germany with the Silver Laurel Leaf, Germany's highest sports award. ==Imprisonment for same-sex affair==