At the
Australian Open in December 1977, Lloyd became the first British male tennis player in the
Open era to reach a Grand Slam singles final. He lost in five sets to America's
Vitas Gerulaitis. No other British player reached a Grand Slam final for 20 years, until British-Canadian
Greg Rusedski reached the US Open final in 1997. In 1984 he reached the quarter-finals of the US Open. Lloyd never progressed beyond the third round in singles play at
Wimbledon. Though he did not win a Grand Slam singles title, Lloyd won three Grand Slam mixed doubles titles partnering Australia's
Wendy Turnbull, beginning with the
French Open mixed doubles in 1982. The pair finished runners-up in the mixed doubles at Wimbledon that year, and then went on to win the Wimbledon mixed doubles crown in both 1983 and 1984. Lloyd's career-high singles ranking was World No. 23 in 1978. He was a member of the British team that reached the final of the
Davis Cup that year with Lloyd himself losing in straight sets in the singles to
Brian Gottfried and to a 19-year-old
John McEnroe. As a player, he represented the British
Davis Cup team for 11 years. His career-high doubles ranking was World No. 34 in 1986. As his playing career came to an end, Lloyd stayed within the tennis world, finding work as a coach and television commentator, and appearing on the veterans circuit. In 2006, Lloyd was appointed the captain of Great Britain's
Davis Cup team, replacing
Jeremy Bates. Lloyd's reign started very well, with successive victories taking the team back into the World Group, but after the retirement of both
Greg Rusedski and
Tim Henman in 2007 the team suffered five successive defeats, their worst run in Davis Cup history, to drop back down to the third tier of the competition. Lloyd resigned as coach in mid-2010. ==Commentator==