CLASS OF 1985

Arthur
Ashe

Arthur Ashe
Biography
Career Highlights
Born
July 10, 1943 in Richmond, Virgina
Death
February 6, 1993
Player Style
Right-handed
Category
Recent Player
EDUCATION
UCLA
TOP RANKING
World No. 1 (1968)
CONTRIBUTIONS TO TENNIS
1st African-American male to win the US Open, Australian Open, and Wimbledon; 1st African-American chosen to compete for the Davis Cup on the U.S. team; Helped found the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP); Co-founded the National Junior Tennis League

5-TIME MAJOR CHAMPION, 7-TIME FINALIST

71.44%

OPEN ERA WIN PERCENTAGE

82.3%

DAVIS CUP WIN PERCENTAGE

47
OPEN ERA CAREER TITLES
996-398
OVERALL CAREER RECORD (OPEN ERA)
681-225
SINGLES RECORD 
315-173
DOUBLES RECORD

Davis Cup

Member of the U.S. Davis Cup Team 1963, 1965-70, 1974, 1976, 1978
(Championship Teams: 1963, 1968-70, 1978)
Captain of the U.S. Davis Cup Team 1981-86, 1981-82
- Overall Record 28-6
- Singles Record 27-5
- Doubles Record 1-1

Grand Slams

AUSTRALIAN OPEN

Singles

Winner: 1970 
Finalist: 1966, 1967, 1971
Semi-Finalist: 1978

Doubles

Winner: 1977 (with Tony Roche)
French Open Trophy

FRENCH OPEN

Doubles

Winner: 1971 (with Marty Riessen)

WIMBLEDON

Singles

Winner: 1975
Semi-Finalist: 1968, 1969

Doubles

Finalist: 1971 (with Dennis Ralston)
US Open Trophy

US OPEN

Singles

Winner: 1968
Finalist: 1972
Semi-Finalist: 1965, 1969, 1971

Doubles

Finalist: 1968 (with Andrés Gimeno)

Mixed Doubles

Semi-Finalist: 1965
Grand Slam Results
Career Timeline
  • As the No. 5 ranked junior in the country, Ashe won the National Junior Indoor Championship in 1962 and was awarded a full scholarship to the University of California at Los Angeles.
  • He became the first African-American chosen to play in the Davis Cup for the United States and in ten years representing the US, he helped win five championships.
  • During his time at UCLA, Ashe won the NCAA Division I singles and doubles championship. Defeating Mike Belkin of the University of Miami, 6-4, 6-1, 6-1 in singles, and teaming with Ian Crookenden to capture the doubles title.
  • At 25 years old, Ashe became a US Open Champion, defeating a field of tennis greats, including Australia's Rod Laver, Tony Roche, Ken Rosewall, and John Newcombe.
  • After a stellar season, and amazing performance in the U.S. Davis Cup that lead the team to a championship over Australia. Ashe became the No. 1 ranked U.S. player by the United States Lawn Tennis Association. 
  • Throughout the year Ashe had won 10 of 22 tournaments he entered, earning himself a 72-10 match record.
  • Ashe only competed at the Australian Nationals/Open six times, but became the first African-American to win the title in 1970, defeating five Aussies, including Dick Crealy in the final, 6-4, 9-7, 6-2.
  • Ashe had won a doubles title during the 1971 French Open playing alongside Marty Riessen in a lengthy 6-8, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 11-9 victory over fellow Americans Tom Gorman and Stan Smith.
  • Ashe helped found the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP), the organization that unionized the professional tour and protected the interests of its players.
  • After losing at Wimbledon in the semifinals in 1968 and 1969, Ashe came back strong when he defeated No. 1 seed and heavy favorite Jimmy Connors in 1975 Wimbledon tournament.
  • Throughout the 1975 season, Ashe had won eight of 26 tournaments, with a 97-18 record, earning himself an 84% win percentage. 
  • After a 20 year professional career, Ashe suffered from a heart attack that required bypass surgery, he retired at age 36.
  • He suffered a second heart attack and subsequent bypass surgery in 1983, which he widely believed led to him contracting HIV in 1988.
  • Ashe helped develop inner-city tennis programs and co-founded the National Junior Tennis League in New York City, Newark, Detroit, Atlanta, Kansas City, and Indianapolis.
  • At the end of 1992, Sports Illustrated named him its Sportsman of the Year, and a year later he created the Arthur Ashe Foundation for the Defeat of AIDS.
  • One year later, Ashe passed away February 6, 1993. 
From the Collection

Memorable Items from Arthur Ashe's Career

Red, shiny, front-zip vest with navy knit collar and sleeves. On the front "USA" is embroidered on the left breast, and "Ashe" embroidered on the right breast in navy blue. On the back "DAVIS CUP" is embroidered in white.
1 of 4
1 of 4
Original text
Rate this translation
Your feedback will be used to help improve Google Translate