Allison Danzig, the main tennis writer for 
The New York Times from 1923 through 1968, and the editor of 
The Fireside Book of Tennis, called Tilden the greatest tennis player he had ever seen. "He could run like a deer," Danzig once told 
CBS Sports. An extended Danzig 
encomium to Tilden's tennis appears in the July 11, 1946 issue of 
The Times, in which he reports on a 1920's-evoking performance in the first two sets of a five-set loss by the 53-year-old Tilden to 
Wayne Sabin, at the 1946 Professional Championship at Forest Hills.
[14]
In his 1979 autobiography, 
Jack Kramer, the long-time tennis promoter and great player himself, included Tilden in his list of the six greatest players of all time.
[15] Kramer began playing tennis with Tilden at age 15 at the Los Angeles Tennis Club (LATC).
Tilden, who was one of the most famous athletes in the world for many years, today is not widely remembered, despite his former renown.[
citation needed] During his lifetime, however, he was a flamboyant character who was never out of the public eye, acting in both movies and plays, as well as playing tennis. He also had two arrests for sexual misconduct with teenage boys in the late 1940s; these led to 
incarcerations in the 
Los Angeles area. After his convictions he was shunned in public. Philadelphia's 
Germantown Cricket Club, his home court, revoked his membership and took down his portrait.
[16]Tilden's criminal record has cast a long shadow: in March, 2016, a proposal to honor him with a historical marker at the club was voted down by the state of Pennsylvania panel charged with evaluating nominations.
[17] In 1950, in spite of his legal record and public disgrace, an 
Associated Press poll named Tilden the greatest tennis player of the half-century by a wider margin than that given to any athlete in any other sport (310 out of 391 votes).
[18] He was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1959.