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As a tennis player, Arthur Ashe was one
of the most prominent players of his time; an all-out competitor who
rarely beat himself. His legacy, however, will be the positive
changes he helped bring about and the causes he championed, both
within tennis and in society as a whole. Though at his best he was
for many the very definition of tennis, tennis never defined Arthur
Ashe. As a child growing up in
segregated Richmond, Virginia, Arthur’s physical stature did little
to indicate his future career as a professional athlete. "Skinny as
a straw," Arthur derived countless hours of pleasure reading and
listening to music with his mother, Mattie. He also showed a
surprising flair for tennis from the first time he picked up a
racquet. At the age of six, Mattie passed away suddenly. Though
heartbroken, Arthur’s memory of his beloved mother was a source of
inspiration throughout his life.
Upon graduation from high school,
Arthur was good enough to earn a tennis scholarship to UCLA. It was
at UCLA that Arthur became recognized for his tennis ability on a
national level, culminating with an individual and team NCAA
championship in 1965. He was growing as a person as well, graduating
in 1966 with a BA in Business Administration.
Ashe was selected in 1963 to
represent the United States in Davis Cup play, an honor in which he
took great pride. In doing so, he also became the first
African-American to be selected to play for the American team. In
actuality, Arthur Ashe was a trailblazer for African-American males
in tennis every time he succeeded on the court, in much the same
fashion as Althea Gibson had for African-American females some 10
years earlier. The relevancy of these accomplishments was not lost
on Ashe. His determination to succeed "despite" being an outcast in
a historically white sport was put to an even greater test in 1969.
In a year (1969) when he was basking
in the international fame he had gained the previous year after
winning the US Open and playing a key role on the United States
winning Davis Cup team, two separate issues came to the forefront
and helped shape Arthur the activist, a role he never ran from
throughout his life if he believed in the cause. At a time when
tennis’ popularity was growing by leaps and bounds, the amount of
prize money being offered to the players, the "drawing cards," was
lagging disproportionately behind. Ashe and several other players
formed in 1969, what later became known as the ATP (Association of
Tennis Professionals). It is from this small and visionary beginning
that today's top players enjoy the large sums of prize money for
which they compete. Later that year, as the #1-ranked American and
one of the best players in the world, Arthur applied for a visa to
play in the South African Open, a prestigious event. His visa was
denied because of the color of his skin. Though Arthur was well
aware that this would probably be the case, he decided to take a
bold stand. His call for expulsion from South Africa from the tennis
tour and Davis Cup play was quickly supported by numerous prominent
individuals and organizations, both in and out of the tennis world.
In effect, he raised the world’s awareness to the oppressive form of
government (apartheid) of South Africa. Buoyed by Arthur Ashe’s
initial efforts, blacks in South Africa slowly but surely began to
see change come about in their country.
By the mid-1970’s, people began to
whisper that perhaps Arthur was spending too much time on his causes
and not enough time on his game. It was from these doubts that
Arthur began to refocus on his game, determined to reach the level
of play he once enjoyed. In 1975, at the age of 31, Arthur Ashe
enjoyed one of his finest seasons ever and one of the shining
moments of his career by winning Wimbledon. He also attained the
ultimate ranking of #1 in the world.
Following his retirement in 1980 and
unexpected heart surgeries in 1979 and 1983, Arthur began reaping
awards and branching off into other professional areas, including
journalism, the media, and philanthropic endeavors. Included among
those were jobs as a commentator for HBO Sports and ABC Sports, as a
columnist for The Washington Post and Tennis magazine,
the publishing of Arthur’s 3-volume body of work, A Hard Road To
Glory, a stint as captain of the US Davis Cup team, a
well-deserved election to the Tennis Hall of Fame in 1985, and the
founding of numerous charitable organizations, including the
National Junior Tennis League, the ABC Cities Tennis Program, the
Athlete-Career Connection, and the Safe Passage Foundation.
Arthur looked to be making a smooth
transition into the second-half of his life, even becoming a father
in 1986, when his daughter Camera Elizabeth arrived. During a
doctor’s exam in 1988, however, the Ashe’s lives were irrevocably
changed.
While in the hospital for brain
surgery, Arthur received the overwhelming news that he was
HIV-Positive. He had contracted the virus through a tainted
transfusion during his two heart surgeries, almost certainly the
second in 1983. Wishing to maintain his and his family’s privacy,
and well-aware of the prejudice and paranoia that was often
associated with the disease during its first years of existence, the
Ashe’s, with help from close friends and trusted medical advisors,
were able to keep the startling information from the public’s
awareness. At issue were Arthur and Jeanne’s desire to raise their
daughter Camera in as normal an environment as possible, a desire
that would have been made impossible with a public disclosure.
Because of pressure from a national
newspaper that was indicating they had on good record that he had
AIDS, Arthur, rather than let the rumors persist, elected to make
his condition known to the world through a scheduled a press
conference on the morning of April 8, 1992. The knowledge that his
life and the lives of his family members would forever be altered
was foremost on Arthur’s mind. After his admission to the world, an
outpouring of compassion and support arrived, inspiring Arthur to
begin AAFDA. This outpouring can only perhaps be compared to the day
Lou Gehrig announced his retirement and contraction of amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis. Arthur Ashe passed away on February 6, 1993,
having raised awareness of AIDS to a level where paranoia was no
longer the overriding emotion.
For Arthur Ashe, tennis was a means
to an end. What began on the public recreation courts in Richmond,
Virginia, ultimately became a lucrative, illustrious 10-year career.
In between were many honors and awards, including three Grand Slam
singles titles and over 800 career victories. But for Arthur, it was
always more than personal glory and individual accolades. Rather, it
was the knowledge that his status as an elite tennis player afforded
him a unique and worldwide platform to speak out about inequities,
both in the tennis world and society as a whole. That in and of
itself was unique, but not outstanding. Arthur stood out when he
chose to utilize his status to bring about change. That is what
makes his legacy so unique and important.
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