Collins, who died at his home in the Boston suburb of Brookline, made one of his final public appearances last September, when the media center at the US Open was named in his honor, and he wrote both an encyclopedia and history of tennis that became authoritative standards in the sport.
"No media figure in history in my mind has ever been as important to one sport as Bud Collins was to the sport of tennis," said Mike Lupica, the New York Daily News sports columnist and ESPN commentator who followed the path Collins pioneered from the print ranks to TV fame.
The self-described "scribbler and babbler" was known sartorially for bow ties and custom-tailored pants that feature bright, vivid colors and often wild designs and unique as the man who wore them as he spent more than half a century covering major tennis events.
His tailor, Charlie Davidson from Harvard Square, used swaths of cloth Collins brought from as far away as New Zealand, Bangkok and the Himalayas. One pair of pants was made from Vietnamese flags.
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He covered Wimbledon 44 times, the first of them in 1968, making "Breakfast at Wimbledon" his realm during the years when the sport enjoyed its greatest US interest.
Collins was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1994.
Collins also wrote Globe travel stories that includes looks at such exotic locals as Cambodia, China, India, Italy, Nepal, Tanzania, and Tibet.