Posted on
November 04, 2009 by
JA Allen
Maureen Connolly won nine of the 11 Grand Slam tournaments in which she competed.
“There is nothing like competition. It teaches you early in life to win and lose, and, when you lose, to put your chin out instead of dropping it.”
— Maureen Connolly
Although her career spanned just a little over four years, Maureen Connolly’s reign at the top of women’s tennis was one of the game’s most dominant.
Like many little girls growing up in America, Maureen Catherine (“Little Mo”) Connolly loved horses. She wanted a horse of her own and she wanted to learn how to ride. But family circumstances prevented Mo’s mother from being able to afford to give her little girl riding lessons.
Instead, her mother bought her the tennis racket she desired and enrolled her in lessons. Because of that, Maureen Connolly became a tennis player—perhaps the greatest tennis player her sport has ever known.
Growing up in California aided her development, as, in San Diego, weather was hardly ever an issue. At the tender age of 10, she learned to play on the municipal courts of the City of San Diego, where her first coach, Wilbur Folsom, encouraged the young Connolly to switch from a left-handed grip to a right. Connolly was a natural left-hander.
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Tags: Maureen ConnollyU.S. ChampionshipsWimbledonWomen's Tennis
Category
Queens of the Court, Tennis
Posted on
November 02, 2009 by
Claudia Celestial Girl
Althea Gibson was 23 before she was allowed to compete in a major championship.
Born in 1927, the year after the historic “Match of the Century ” featured in our previous two articles between the divine Suzanne Lenglen and the poker-faced Helen Wills, Althea Gibson is another of our Queens of the Court.
In 1956 Althea Gibson made history by becoming the first person of African descent, of any nationality, to win a tennis major (the French).
Ironically, Althea Gibson became the first black woman to not only achieve major success in the world of professional tennis, but also to compete after leaving tennis as a professional golfer.
But her career in tennis was a tough row to hoe.
Unlike Suzanne Lenglen or Helen Wills, who both played their first tournaments as teenagers, and so began amassing statistics, Althea Gibson did not enter the world “tour” of tennis until the age of 23. Why?
As an African-American woman from Harlem, New York, Althea Gibson was not allowed to play the majors until in the fall of 1950, when she was allowed to enter the U.S. National Championships (later to become the U.S. Open), then played at Forest Hills.
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Tags: Althea GibsonQueens of the CourtWomen's Tennis
Category
Queens of the Court, Tennis
Posted on
October 30, 2009 by
Claudia Celestial Girl
Suzanne Lenglen won 12 Grand Slam titles.
She was called ‘La Divine.’ Some say in the 1920s Suzanne Lenglen was a bigger name in sports than that of Babe Ruth.
Between 1919 and 1926, at a time when three and not four tennis majors were played, she won twelve Grand Slam titles, on three different surfaces, and an Olympic Gold medal (Antwerp). Notably in seven of 81 singles titles she did not lose a game!
She was dominant in a way that only a handful of male stars have been since the open era of tennis. More than that, she imposed her personality on the sport, and the entertainment world of the day. We recognize such a personality in contemporary terms, in modern English, we might call her a diva. Read the rest of this entry →
Tags: Claudia LenglenHelen Wills MoodyQueens of the CourtWomen's Tennis
Category
Queens of the Court, Sports History, Tennis
Posted on
October 28, 2009 by
Marianne Bevis
Helen Wills Moody won 19 Grand Slam singles titles during her career.
The relatively unknown Molla Mallory holds the record for the most U.S. Open singles titles—eight. But it was the remarkable Helen Wills Moody who, at the age of just 17, relieved Mallory of her U.S. crown in 1923, and went on to hold the record of 19 singles Grand Slam titles for a third of a century.
This is the second in a series celebrating some of the most inspiring and influential women to have played tennis.
All the signs were that Helen Wills would make a success of her life.
She graduated from one of California’s top schools and won an academic scholarship to study fine arts at the University of California. She went on to be honored as a Phi Beta Kappa, one of the most prestigious liberal arts and sciences awards in the United States.
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Tags: Helen Wills MoodyQueens of the CourtWomen's Tennis
Category
Queens of the Court, Tennis
Posted on
October 26, 2009 by
Marianne Bevis
Molla Mallory won the U.S. Nationals women's singles title eight times, including four straight years from 1915-1918.
This is the first of a regular series of articles featuring some of the “Queens of the Court” in the history of women’s tennis.
When Anna Margarethe Bjurstedt was born in Oslo in March 1884, few could anticipate the mark she would make both on tennis and on women’s participation in sport.
This was the latter stages of the 19th century, when the modern rules of lawn tennis were still just 10 years old.
It was a world where Otto von Bismarck was Chancellor of Germany and Victoria was Queen of the British Empire.
There was no such thing as Greenwich Mean Time (that was set in October), and New York harbor was yet to receive the Statue of Liberty from France (on the 4th July that same year).
Van Gogh had not painted his “Sunflowers”, and Tchaikovsky had yet to write his “Sleeping Beauty.”
But this daughter of a Norwegian army officer was soon to introduce a new attitude and new approach to tennis.
In doing so, she won a record eight U.S. women’s singles titles and became the only woman—along with Chris Evert—to hold four of them consecutively. And her win in 1926, at the age of 42, established her as the oldest singles Grand Slam champion in history.
When Bjurstedt— Molla Mallory, as she was to become in 1919—first arrived in the United States in 1915, she had already won an Olympic bronze medal, but she was still a complete unknown. That was until she beat three-time defending champion Marie Wagner in straight sets to take the first of five singles titles at the national indoor championships.
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Tags: Molla MalloryQueens of the CourtWomen's Tennis
Category
General, Queens of the Court, Tennis
Posted on
October 17, 2009 by
JA Allen
The 1980s were a Golden Era for Professional Tennis.
It was the best of times – Tennis in the Eighties – when the thrill of tense tiebreaks entered everyman’s domicile, highlighted by exotic locales like Paris, Melbourne, London and New York.
The 1980s tennis also ushered in exciting yet exasperating players whose on-court conduct thrilled, engaged and enraged fans across the globe.
The ’80s energized the popularity base and took tennis out of country clubs and landed estates and into public parks and arenas. It became a sport in contrast to an amenable pastime.
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Tags: Bjorn BorgIvan LendlJohn McEnroeMartina NavratilovaSteffi GrafTennis in the 1980sWomen's Tennis
Category
Tennis