Ashe, Arthur

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| '''Height:''' || 185 cm (6 ft 1 in)
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'''Arthur Robert Ashe, Jr.''' (July 10, 1943 &ndash; February 6, 1993) was a prominent [[African American]] [[tennis]] player who was born and raised in [[Richmond, Virginia|Richmond]], [[Virginia]]. During his playing career, he won three [[Grand Slam title]]s. Ashe is also remembered for his efforts to further social causes. The [[Arthur Ashe Courage Award]] is named after him.
+
'''Arthur Robert Ashe, Jr.''' (July 10, 1943 &ndash; February 6, 1993) was a prominent African American [[tennis]] player who was born and raised in Richmond, [[Virginia]]. During his playing career, he won three [[Grand Slam title]]s. Ashe is also remembered for his efforts to further social causes. The Arthur Ashe Courage Award, an [[ESPY Award]] for humanitarian work, is named after him, as is the main stadium at the National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows, [[New York]], where the U.S. Open tournament is played.
  
==Biography==
+
The only black male to win the singles title at Wimbledon, the US Open, or Australian Open, Ashe also set a record in 1968, which may never be equaled. He won both the U.S. Amateur and the U.S Open championships, the first and only time such a double win has been accomplished.
In his youth, Ashe was small and decided to start playing tennis. He was coached by Ron Charity and later coached by Walter Johnson.
 
  
Ashe began to attract the attention of tennis fans after being awarded a tennis  [[scholarship]] to [[UCLA]] in 1963. That same year, Ashe was the first [[African American]] ever selected to the [[United States Davis Cup team]].
+
For twelve years, Ashe was ranked among the world's top ten tennis players.  He was ranked number one in both 1968 and 1975. One of the founders of the influential Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) in 1972, he served as the organization's president and was a highly respected spokesman for the game. Ashe served on numerous corporate boards, wrote books, and received several honorary degrees.
 +
{{toc}}
 +
Ashe was also a vocal and long-time protester of [[apartheid]] in [[South Africa]]. After several refusals, he was granted a visa to visit that country in 1973, becoming the first black person to win a title—a doubles match—in the South African Open.  
  
In 1965, Ashe won the individual [[National Collegiate Athletic Association|NCAA]] championship and was a chief contributor in UCLA's winning the team NCAA tennis championship.  While at UCLA, Ashe was initiated as a member of the Upsilon chapter of [[Kappa Alpha Psi]] Fraternity. With this successful college career behind him, Ashe quickly ascended to the upper echelon of tennis players worldwide after turning professional in 1969.
+
Ashe died of complications from [[AIDS]] on February 6, 1993, after contracting [[HIV]] from a blood transfusion during heart surgery.  
  
By 1969, most people considered Ashe to be the best American male tennis player. He had won the inaugural [[U.S. Open (tennis)|US Open]] in 1968, and had aided the US Davis Cup team to victory that same year. Concerned that tennis pros were not receiving winnings commensurate with the sport's growing popularity, Ashe was one of the key figures behind the formation of the [[Association of Tennis Professionals]] (ATP). That year would prove even more momentous for Ashe, when he was denied a visa by the [[South Africa]]n government, thereby keeping him out of the [[South African Open (tennis)|South African Open]].  Ashe chose to use this denial to publicize South Africa's [[apartheid]] policies. In the media, Ashe called for South Africa to be expelled from the professional tennis circuit. In 1970, he added a second [[Grand Slam (tennis)|Grand Slam]] title to his resume by winning the [[Australian Open]].
+
==Early Life==
 +
Ashe was born in Richmond, [[Virginia]]. His mother died when he was six. Ashe's small size helped him to decide on tennis rather than other sports in which his lack of height and weight would be a disadvantage. He began playing tennis at age seven and started training under Dr. Robert Walter Johnson of Lynchburg, Virginia at age 10. His tennis development in Richmond was limited by [[segregation]] laws that restricted him to African-American playgrounds. His senior year, he moved to [[St. Louis]], one of the major tennis centers in the United States to improve his game under the tutelage of Richard Hudlin. In St. Louis, he attended Sumner High, where he was taught values that aided his character development by Olivia Merriweather Perkins. He had the highest grades in his class.
  
In 1975, after several years of lower levels of success, Ashe played his best season ever by winning [[The Championships, Wimbledon|Wimbledon]], unexpectedly defeating [[Jimmy Connors]] in the final. He remains the only [[African American]] player ever to win the men's singles at Wimbledon, the US Open, or Australian Open, and one of only two men of [[Black people|black]] [[Africa]]n ancestry to win a Grand Slam singles event (the other being [[France]]'s [[Yannick Noah]], who won the [[French Open]] in 1983). He would play for several more years, but after being slowed by [[Cardiac surgery|heart surgery]] in 1979, Ashe retired in 1980.
+
==Tennis career==
 +
Ashe began to attract the attention of fans after being awarded a tennis  [[scholarship]] to [[UCLA]] in 1963. That year he was the first [[African American]] ever selected to the [[United States Davis Cup team]].
  
In his 1979 autobiography, [[Jack Kramer (tennis player)|Jack Kramer]], the long-time tennis promoter and great player himself, ranks Ashe as one of the 21 best players of all time.<ref> Kramer considered the best ever to have been either [[Don Budge]] (for consistent play) or [[Ellsworth Vines]] (at the height of his game). The next four best were, chronologically, [[Bill Tilden]], [[Fred Perry]], [[Bobby Riggs]], and [[Pancho Gonzales]]. After these six came the "second echelon" of [[Rod Laver]], [[Lew Hoad]], [[Ken Rosewall]], [[Gottfried von Cramm]], [[Ted Schroeder]], [[Jack Crawford (tennis player)|Jack Crawford]], [[Pancho Segura]], [[Frank Sedgman]], [[Tony Trabert]], [[John Newcombe]], Arthur Ashe, [[Stan Smith]], [[Björn Borg]], and [[Jimmy Connors]]. He felt unable to rank [[Henri Cochet]] and [[René Lacoste]] accurately but felt they were among the very best.</ref>
+
In 1965, Ashe won the individual [[National Collegiate Athletic Association|NCAA]] championship and was a chief contributor in UCLA's winning the team NCAA tennis championship. While at UCLA, he was initiated as a member of the Upsilon chapter of [[Kappa Alpha Psi]] Fraternity. He graduated with a bachelor's degree in business administration in 1966. He joined the Army and became a second lieutenant. He won the U.S. Men's Clay Court title in 1967. Ashe quickly ascended to the upper echelon of tennis players worldwide after turning professional in 1969.
  
After his retirement, Ashe took on many new tasks, from writing for ''[[Time magazine|Time]]'' magazine to commentating for [[ABC Sports]], from founding the [[National Junior Tennis League]] to serving as captain of the US Davis Cup team.  In 1983, Ashe underwent a second heart surgery.  To no one's surprise, he was elected to the [[Tennis Hall of Fame]] in 1985.
+
By 1969, many tennis analysts considered Ashe to be the best American male tennis player. He had won the inaugural [[U.S. Open (tennis)|US Open]] in 1968, while still an amateur, and had aided the U.S. [[Davis Cup]] team to victory that same year. Concerned that tennis pros were not receiving winnings commensurate with the sport's growing popularity, Ashe was one of the key figures behind the formation of the [[Association of Tennis Professionals]] (ATP).
 +
{{readout||right|250px|American [[tennis]] player Arthur Ashe fought against [[apartheid]] and was the first black person to win a title in the South African Open}}
  
The story of Ashe's life turned from success to tragedy in 1988, however, when Ashe discovered he had contracted [[HIV]] during the [[blood transfusion]]s he had received during one of his two heart surgeries. He and his wife kept his illness private until April 8, 1992, when reports that the newspaper ''[[USA Today]]'' was about to publish a story about his condition forced him to make a public announcement that he had the disease. In the last year of his life, Arthur Ashe did much to call attention to [[AIDS]] sufferers worldwide. Two months before his death, he founded the Arthur Ashe Institute for Urban Health, to help address issues of inadequate [[health care]] delivery and was named ''[[Sports Illustrated]]'' magazine's [[Sportsman of the Year]]. He also spent much of the last years of his life writing his [[memoir]] ''Days of Grace'', finishing the [[manuscript]] less than a week before his death.
+
The year 1969, would prove even more momentous for Ashe when he was denied a visa by the [[South Africa]]n government, thereby keeping him out of the [[South African Open (tennis)|South African Open]]. Ashe chose to use this denial to publicize South Africa's [[apartheid]] policies. In the media, Ashe called for South Africa to be expelled from the professional tennis circuit. In 1970, he added a second [[Grand Slam (tennis)|Grand Slam]] title to his resume by winning the [[Australian Open]]. After several refusals, South Africa granted Ashe a visa to enter the country in 1973, where he became the first black man to win a title—a doubles match—in the South African Open.
  
Ashe died of complications from [[AIDS]] on February 6, 1993.
+
In 1975, after several years of lower levels of success, Ashe played his best season ever by winning [[The Championships, Wimbledon|Wimbledon]], unexpectedly defeating [[Jimmy Connors]] in the final. He remains the only [[African American]] player ever to win the men's singles at Wimbledon, the U.S. Open, or Australian Open, and one of only two men of [[Black people|black]] [[Africa]]n ancestry to win a Grand Slam singles event—the other being [[France]]'s [[Yannick Noah]], who won the [[French Open]] in 1983. Ashe would play for several more years, but after being slowed by [[Cardiac surgery|heart surgery]] in 1979, he retired in 1980. In his 1979 autobiography, the long-time tennis promoter and great player himself, [[Jack Kramer (tennis player)|Jack Kramer]], ranked Ashe as one of the 21 best players of all time.
  
==Personal life==
+
After his retirement, Ashe took on many new tasks, from writing for ''[[Time magazine|Time]]'' magazine to commentating for [[ABC Sports]]. He also founded the [[National Junior Tennis League]] and served as captain of the U.S. Davis Cup team. In 1983, Ashe underwent a second heart surgery. To no one's surprise, he was elected to the [[Tennis Hall of Fame]] in 1985.
Ashe married [[Jeanne Moutoussamy]], on February 20, 1977. Jeanne was a photographer whom Arthur had met four months earlier. [[Andrew Young]], the U.S. ambassador to the [[United Nations]], performed the ceremony at the U.N. chapel in New York. Arthur and Jeanne adopted one child together, a daughter, who was born on December 21, 1986. She was named [[Camera]] after her mother's profession. Camera was only six years old when Arthur died of [[AIDS]].
 
  
==Civil rights leader==
+
==HIV and Death==  
Arthur, being the first African-American male to win a [[Grand Slam (tennis)|Grand Slam]] event, was an active civil rights supporter. He was a member of a delegation of 31 prominent African-Americans who visited [[South Africa]] to observe political change in the country as it approached racial integration.  
+
The story of Ashe's life turned from success to tragedy in 1988, however, when he discovered he had contracted [[HIV]] from the [[blood transfusion]]s he had received during one of his heart surgeries. He and his wife kept his illness private until April 8, 1992, when reports that the ''USA Today'' was ready to publish a story about his condition forced him to make a public announcement that he had the disease.
  
He was arrested on January 11, 1985, for protesting outside the South African [[embassy]] in [[Washington D.C]] during an anti-[[apartheid]] rally. He was also arrested again on September 9, 1992, outside the White House for protesting on the recent crackdown on Haitian refugees.
+
In the last year of his life, Arthur Ashe did much to call attention to [[AIDS]] sufferers worldwide. Two months before his death, he founded the Arthur Ashe Institute for Urban Health, to help address issues of inadequate [[health care]] delivery, He was also named ''Sports Illustrated'' magazine's Sportsman of the Year. Ashe spent much of the last years of his life writing his [[memoir]] ''Days of Grace,'' finishing the [[manuscript]] less than a week before his death. He died of complications from [[AIDS]] on February 6, 1993.
  
==Quotes==
+
==Legacy==
* "From what we get, we can make a living; what we give, however, makes a life."
+
[[Image:Arthur ashe stadium interior.jpg|thumb|right|400px|The Arthur Ashe Stadium in New York is the site of the U.S. Open tennis tournament.]]
* "Let me put it this way: I think Republicans tend to keep the ball in play, Democrats go for broke."
+
In addition to being one of history's greatest tennis players, Arthur Ashe was a pioneer who encouraged many young black people the world over to see tennis as a sport in which they could participate and excel. He helped end the whites-only policy of tennis at country clubs in the [[United States]] and was a major force in pressuring [[South Africa]] to end its policy of [[apartheid]]. It may be an exaggeration in terms of his talent to say that Ashe was to tennis what [[Tiger Woods]] is to golf, but in terms of the racial attitudes of the time, he was the more significant of these two great athletes.
* "True heroism is remarkably sober, very undramatic. It is not the urge to surpass all others at whatever cost, but the urge to serve others at whatever the cost."
 
During his battle with AIDS, from the world over, he received letters from his fans, one of which asked: "Why does God have to select you for such a bad disease"?
 
  
To this Arthur Ashe replied: The world over — 50,000,000 children start playing tennis, 5,000,000 learn to play tennis, 500,000 learn professional tennis, 50,000 come to the circuit, 5,000 reach the grand slam, 50 reach Wimbledon, 4 to the semi-finals, 2 to the finals, When I was holding a cup I never asked God "Why me?" And today in pain I should not be asking God, "Why me?"
+
After his death, Ashe's body lay in state at the governor's mansion in his home state of [[Virginia]]. The last time this was done was for General [[Stonewall Jackson]] during the [[American Civil War]]. The city of Richmond honored Ashe's life with a statue on Monument Avenue, a place that was traditionally reserved for statues of key figures of the [[Confederate States of America|Confederacy]].
  
==Honors==
+
The main stadium at the USTA National Tennis Center in [[Flushing Meadows Park]], where the U.S. Open is played, was named [[Arthur Ashe Stadium]] in his honor. This is also the home of the annual [[Arthur Ashe Kids Day]]. [[UCLA]]'s Student Health and Wellness Center, opened in 1997, is likewise named after Ashe. In 1993, the sports cable television network ESPN created the Arthur Ashe for Courage Award as one of its ESPY Awards, presented to the sports-related personage or team judged to have made the most significant or compelling humanitarian contribution in transcendence of sports in a given year.
*After Ashe's death, his body lay in State at the Governor's Mansion in his home state of Virginia.  The last time this was done was for [[Stonewall Jackson]] of the Confederate Army during the Civil War.
 
*The city of Richmond posthumously honored Ashe's life with a statue on [[Monument Avenue]], a place that was traditionally reserved for statues of key figures of the [[Confederate States of America|Confederacy]]. This decision led to some controversy in a city that was the capital of the Confederate States during the [[American Civil War]]. [[Image:Arthur Ashe stadium 2005.jpg|thumb|The Arthur Ashe Stadium in 2005.]]
 
*The main stadium at the [[USTA National Tennis Center]] in [[Flushing Meadows Park]], where the U.S. Open is played, is named [[Arthur Ashe Stadium]] in his honor. This is also the home of the annual [[Arthur Ashe Kids Day]].
 
*[[UCLA]]'s Student Health and Wellness Center, opened in 1997, is named after Ashe.
 
*In 2002, Arthur's achievement at Wimbledon in 1975 was voted 95th in Channel 4's [[100 Greatest Sporting Moments]].
 
*In 2005, the [[United States Postal Service]] announced the release of an Arthur Ashe commemorative postal stamp, the first stamp ever to feature the cover of a ''[[Sports Illustrated]]'' magazine.
 
*Also in 2005, TENNIS Magazine put him in 30th place in its list of [[TENNIS Magazine's 40 Greatest Players of the TENNIS Era|40 Greatest Players of the TENNIS era]].
 
*His wife wrote a book, [[Daddy and Me]], a photographic journey told from the perspective of his young daughter.  Another book, [[Arthur Ashe and Me]], also gives young readers a chance to learn about his life.
 
  
==Notes==
+
In 2005, the [[United States Postal Service]] announced the release of an Arthur Ashe commemorative postage stamp, the first stamp ever to be featured on the cover of a ''Sports Illustrated'' magazine. Also in 2005, ''TENNIS Magazine'' put him in 30th place in its list of 40 Greatest Players of the Tennis Era.
<references/>
 
  
 
==Grand Slam singles finals==
 
==Grand Slam singles finals==
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|1975 || [[Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]] || {{flagicon|USA}} [[Jimmy Connors]] || 6-1, 6-1, 5-7, 6-4
 
|1975 || [[Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]] || {{flagicon|USA}} [[Jimmy Connors]] || 6-1, 6-1, 5-7, 6-4
 
|}
 
|}
 
 
===Runner-up (2)===
 
===Runner-up (2)===
 
{|  
 
{|  
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|1972 || [[U.S. Open (tennis)|U.S. Open]] || {{flagicon|ROM}} [[Ilie Nastase]] || 3-6, 6-3, 6-7, 6-4, 6-3
 
|1972 || [[U.S. Open (tennis)|U.S. Open]] || {{flagicon|ROM}} [[Ilie Nastase]] || 3-6, 6-3, 6-7, 6-4, 6-3
 
|}
 
|}
 +
==Singles titles (33)==
 +
* 1968—U.S. National Chps., '''US Open''' (Grass)
 +
* 1970—'''Australian Open''' (Grass), Berkeley, [[Paris Masters|Paris Indoor]]
 +
* 1971—Charlotte, Paris Indoor, Stockholm Open
 +
* 1972—Louisville WCT, Montreal WCT, Rome WCT, [[ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament|Rotterdam WCT]]
 +
* 1973—Chicago WCT, Washington
 +
* 1974—Barcelona WCT, Bologna WCT, Stockholm
 +
* 1975—Barcelona WCT, Dallas WCT, Los Angeles, Munich WCT, Rotterdam WCT, San Francisco, Stockholm WCT, '''Wimbledon'''
 +
* 1976—Columbus WCT, Indianapolis WCT, Richmond WCT, Rome WCT, Rotterdam WCT
 +
* 1978—Colombus, Los Angeles, San Jose
  
== Singles titles (33) ==
+
==References==
* 1968 – U.S. National Chps., '''US Open''' (Grass)
+
*Ashe, Arthur. ''Days of Grace.'' Random House Value Publishing, 1996. ISBN 978-0517157619
* 1970 – '''Australian Open''' (Grass), Berkeley, [[Paris Masters|Paris Indoor]];
+
*Ashe, Arthur, and Frank Deford. ''Arthur Ashe: Portrait in Motion.'' Carroll & Graf Publishers, 1993. ISBN 978-0786700509
* 1971 – Charlotte, [[Paris Masters|Paris Indoor]], Stockholm Open
+
*Martin, Marvin. ''Arthur Ashe: Of Tennis & the Human Spirit.'' Franklin Watts, 1999. ISBN 978-0531114322
* 1972 – Louisville WCT, Montreal WCT, Rome WCT, [[ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament|Rotterdam WCT]]
+
*Steins, Richard. ''Arthur Ashe: A Biography.'' Greenwood Press, 2005. ISBN 978-0313332999
* 1973 – Chicago WCT, Washington
 
* 1974 – Barcelona WCT, Bologna WCT, Stockholm
 
* 1975 – Barcelona WCT, Dallas WCT, Los Angeles, Munich WCT, Rotterdam WCT, San Francisco, Stockholm - WCT, '''Wimbledon'''  
 
* 1976 – Columbus WCT, Indianapolis WCT, Richmond WCT, Rome WCT, Rotterdam WCT
 
* 1978 – Colombus, Los Angeles, San Jose
 
  
== References and external links ==
+
==External links==
{{wikiquote}}
+
All links retrieved August 16, 2023.  
* [http://www.tennisfame.com/famer.aspx?pgID=867&hof_id=45 International Tennis Hall of Fame profile]
+
* {{ATP|id=A063}}
+
* [https://arthurashe.ucla.edu/ The Arthur Ashe Legacy at UCLA]
* [http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/tennis/features/1997/arthurashe/ Sports Illustrated Arthur Ashe tribute website]
+
* [https://www.arthurasheinstitute.org/ Arthur Ashe Institute for Urban Health].  
* [http://www.arthurashe.org/ Official Arthur Ashe website]
+
* [https://www.tennisfame.com/hall-of-famers/inductees/arthur-ashe Arthur Ashe] ''International Tennis Hall of Fame''
* [http://www.arthurasheinstitute.org/ Arthur Ashe Institute for Urban Health]
 
* Arthur Ashe & Monument Avenue in Richmond, VA [http://www.monumenthouse.com/richmond/ashestatue/] alex[http://xroads.virginia.edu/~UG97/monument/ashe.html][http://xroads.virginia.edu/~UG97/monument/begin.html]
 
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=1662 Arthur Ashe's Gravesite]
 
* [http://foia.fbi.gov/foiaindex/ashe.htm FBI files]&mdash;Arthur Ashe is mentioned within six references of records maintained within FBIHQ main files concerning the Black Panther Party, the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, the Revolutionary Union and two newspaper articles.
 
* ''The Game — My 40 Years in Tennis'' (1979) — Jack Kramer with Frank Deford (ISBN 0-399-12336-9)
 
* [http://www.tv.com/arthur-ashe/person/135085/summary.html/ Tv.com profile]  
 
{{Australian Open men's singles champions}}
 
{{Wimbledon men's singles champions}}
 
{{US Open men's singles champions}}
 
  
[[category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
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[[Category:history and biography]]
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[[Category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
[[Category:art,music, literature, sports, and leisure]]
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[[Category:History]]
{{credit|126766485}}
 

Latest revision as of 11:06, 16 August 2023


Arthur Ashe
Arthur Ashe.jpg
Country: United States
Height: 6 ft 1 in
Weight: 160 lb
Plays: Right
Turned pro: 1966
Retired: 1980
Highest singles ranking: 1 (1968 and 1975)
Singles titles: 34
Career prize money: $2,584,909
Grand Slam Record
Titles: 3
Australian Open W (1970)
French Open QF (1970, '71)
Wimbledon W (1975)
US Open W (1968)

Arthur Robert Ashe, Jr. (July 10, 1943 – February 6, 1993) was a prominent African American tennis player who was born and raised in Richmond, Virginia. During his playing career, he won three Grand Slam titles. Ashe is also remembered for his efforts to further social causes. The Arthur Ashe Courage Award, an ESPY Award for humanitarian work, is named after him, as is the main stadium at the National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows, New York, where the U.S. Open tournament is played.

The only black male to win the singles title at Wimbledon, the US Open, or Australian Open, Ashe also set a record in 1968, which may never be equaled. He won both the U.S. Amateur and the U.S Open championships, the first and only time such a double win has been accomplished.

For twelve years, Ashe was ranked among the world's top ten tennis players. He was ranked number one in both 1968 and 1975. One of the founders of the influential Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) in 1972, he served as the organization's president and was a highly respected spokesman for the game. Ashe served on numerous corporate boards, wrote books, and received several honorary degrees.

Ashe was also a vocal and long-time protester of apartheid in South Africa. After several refusals, he was granted a visa to visit that country in 1973, becoming the first black person to win a title—a doubles match—in the South African Open.

Ashe died of complications from AIDS on February 6, 1993, after contracting HIV from a blood transfusion during heart surgery.

Early Life

Ashe was born in Richmond, Virginia. His mother died when he was six. Ashe's small size helped him to decide on tennis rather than other sports in which his lack of height and weight would be a disadvantage. He began playing tennis at age seven and started training under Dr. Robert Walter Johnson of Lynchburg, Virginia at age 10. His tennis development in Richmond was limited by segregation laws that restricted him to African-American playgrounds. His senior year, he moved to St. Louis, one of the major tennis centers in the United States to improve his game under the tutelage of Richard Hudlin. In St. Louis, he attended Sumner High, where he was taught values that aided his character development by Olivia Merriweather Perkins. He had the highest grades in his class.

Tennis career

Ashe began to attract the attention of fans after being awarded a tennis scholarship to UCLA in 1963. That year he was the first African American ever selected to the United States Davis Cup team.

In 1965, Ashe won the individual NCAA championship and was a chief contributor in UCLA's winning the team NCAA tennis championship. While at UCLA, he was initiated as a member of the Upsilon chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity. He graduated with a bachelor's degree in business administration in 1966. He joined the Army and became a second lieutenant. He won the U.S. Men's Clay Court title in 1967. Ashe quickly ascended to the upper echelon of tennis players worldwide after turning professional in 1969.

By 1969, many tennis analysts considered Ashe to be the best American male tennis player. He had won the inaugural US Open in 1968, while still an amateur, and had aided the U.S. Davis Cup team to victory that same year. Concerned that tennis pros were not receiving winnings commensurate with the sport's growing popularity, Ashe was one of the key figures behind the formation of the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP).

Did you know?
American tennis player Arthur Ashe fought against apartheid and was the first black person to win a title in the South African Open

The year 1969, would prove even more momentous for Ashe when he was denied a visa by the South African government, thereby keeping him out of the South African Open. Ashe chose to use this denial to publicize South Africa's apartheid policies. In the media, Ashe called for South Africa to be expelled from the professional tennis circuit. In 1970, he added a second Grand Slam title to his resume by winning the Australian Open. After several refusals, South Africa granted Ashe a visa to enter the country in 1973, where he became the first black man to win a title—a doubles match—in the South African Open.

In 1975, after several years of lower levels of success, Ashe played his best season ever by winning Wimbledon, unexpectedly defeating Jimmy Connors in the final. He remains the only African American player ever to win the men's singles at Wimbledon, the U.S. Open, or Australian Open, and one of only two men of black African ancestry to win a Grand Slam singles event—the other being France's Yannick Noah, who won the French Open in 1983. Ashe would play for several more years, but after being slowed by heart surgery in 1979, he retired in 1980. In his 1979 autobiography, the long-time tennis promoter and great player himself, Jack Kramer, ranked Ashe as one of the 21 best players of all time.

After his retirement, Ashe took on many new tasks, from writing for Time magazine to commentating for ABC Sports. He also founded the National Junior Tennis League and served as captain of the U.S. Davis Cup team. In 1983, Ashe underwent a second heart surgery. To no one's surprise, he was elected to the Tennis Hall of Fame in 1985.

HIV and Death

The story of Ashe's life turned from success to tragedy in 1988, however, when he discovered he had contracted HIV from the blood transfusions he had received during one of his heart surgeries. He and his wife kept his illness private until April 8, 1992, when reports that the USA Today was ready to publish a story about his condition forced him to make a public announcement that he had the disease.

In the last year of his life, Arthur Ashe did much to call attention to AIDS sufferers worldwide. Two months before his death, he founded the Arthur Ashe Institute for Urban Health, to help address issues of inadequate health care delivery, He was also named Sports Illustrated magazine's Sportsman of the Year. Ashe spent much of the last years of his life writing his memoir Days of Grace, finishing the manuscript less than a week before his death. He died of complications from AIDS on February 6, 1993.

Legacy

The Arthur Ashe Stadium in New York is the site of the U.S. Open tennis tournament.

In addition to being one of history's greatest tennis players, Arthur Ashe was a pioneer who encouraged many young black people the world over to see tennis as a sport in which they could participate and excel. He helped end the whites-only policy of tennis at country clubs in the United States and was a major force in pressuring South Africa to end its policy of apartheid. It may be an exaggeration in terms of his talent to say that Ashe was to tennis what Tiger Woods is to golf, but in terms of the racial attitudes of the time, he was the more significant of these two great athletes.

After his death, Ashe's body lay in state at the governor's mansion in his home state of Virginia. The last time this was done was for General Stonewall Jackson during the American Civil War. The city of Richmond honored Ashe's life with a statue on Monument Avenue, a place that was traditionally reserved for statues of key figures of the Confederacy.

The main stadium at the USTA National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows Park, where the U.S. Open is played, was named Arthur Ashe Stadium in his honor. This is also the home of the annual Arthur Ashe Kids Day. UCLA's Student Health and Wellness Center, opened in 1997, is likewise named after Ashe. In 1993, the sports cable television network ESPN created the Arthur Ashe for Courage Award as one of its ESPY Awards, presented to the sports-related personage or team judged to have made the most significant or compelling humanitarian contribution in transcendence of sports in a given year.

In 2005, the United States Postal Service announced the release of an Arthur Ashe commemorative postage stamp, the first stamp ever to be featured on the cover of a Sports Illustrated magazine. Also in 2005, TENNIS Magazine put him in 30th place in its list of 40 Greatest Players of the Tennis Era.

Grand Slam singles finals

Wins (3)

Year Championship Opponent in Final Score in Final
1968 U.S. Open Flag of Netherlands Tom Okker 14-12, 5-7, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3
1970 Australian Open Flag of Australia Dick Crealy 6-4, 9-7, 6-2
1975 Wimbledon Flag of United States Jimmy Connors 6-1, 6-1, 5-7, 6-4

Runner-up (2)

Year Championship Opponent in Final Score in Final
1971 Australian Open Flag of Australia Ken Rosewall 6-1, 7-5, 6-3
1972 U.S. Open Flag of Romania Ilie Nastase 3-6, 6-3, 6-7, 6-4, 6-3

Singles titles (33)

  • 1968—U.S. National Chps., US Open (Grass)
  • 1970—Australian Open (Grass), Berkeley, Paris Indoor
  • 1971—Charlotte, Paris Indoor, Stockholm Open
  • 1972—Louisville WCT, Montreal WCT, Rome WCT, Rotterdam WCT
  • 1973—Chicago WCT, Washington
  • 1974—Barcelona WCT, Bologna WCT, Stockholm
  • 1975—Barcelona WCT, Dallas WCT, Los Angeles, Munich WCT, Rotterdam WCT, San Francisco, Stockholm WCT, Wimbledon
  • 1976—Columbus WCT, Indianapolis WCT, Richmond WCT, Rome WCT, Rotterdam WCT
  • 1978—Colombus, Los Angeles, San Jose

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Ashe, Arthur. Days of Grace. Random House Value Publishing, 1996. ISBN 978-0517157619
  • Ashe, Arthur, and Frank Deford. Arthur Ashe: Portrait in Motion. Carroll & Graf Publishers, 1993. ISBN 978-0786700509
  • Martin, Marvin. Arthur Ashe: Of Tennis & the Human Spirit. Franklin Watts, 1999. ISBN 978-0531114322
  • Steins, Richard. Arthur Ashe: A Biography. Greenwood Press, 2005. ISBN 978-0313332999

External links

All links retrieved August 16, 2023.

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