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Christine Marie Evert (b. December 21, 1954 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida) is a
former World No. 1 woman tennis player from the United States. During her
career, she won 18 Grand Slam singles titles, including a record 7 at the French
Open. She also won 3 Grand Slam doubles titles. Evert's career win-loss record
in singles matches of 1309-146, or 90%, is the best of any professional player
in tennis history.
Tennis career
Evert began taking tennis lessons when she was five years old from her father,
Jimmy Evert, a professional tennis coach who had won the men's singles title at
the Canadian Championships in 1947. By 1969, she had become the No. 1 ranked
14-under girl in the United States. In 1970, at a small tournament in North
Carolina, the 15 year-old Evert served notice to the tennis world by defeating
Margaret Court (who was the World No. 1 at the time and had recently completed
the Grand Slam of singles titles) 7-6, 7-6. Evert made her Grand Slam debut at
the US Open in 1971, aged 16. After an easy straight-sets win in the first
round, she faced the US No. 4 Mary Ann Eisel in the second round and saved six
match points in the second set before going on to win 4-6, 7-6, 6-1. She made
two further gripping comebacks against seasoned-pros Francoise Durr (2-6, 6-2,
6-3) and Lesley Hunt (4-6, 6-2, 6-3), and progressed all the way to the
semi-finals before finally losing to Billie Jean King.
Evert's game, with booming groundstrokes delivered from the back of the court,
was best suited to playing on clay courts. But she quickly proved that her game
had enough class to succeed and excel on all surfaces. When she first started
playing as a youngster, she was too small and weak to hit backhand shots with
one hand and so developed a two-fisted backhand. This became a trademark of her
game and inspired generations of future players to copy her. Her tenaciousness
and refusal ever to concede a point endeared her to the crowds. Her graceful
appearance, good looks, quiet demeanor and gracious sportsmanship made her an
immediate favourite with the media and the fans.
Evert was runner-up at the French Open and Wimbledon in 1973. A year later, in
1974, she won both those events to claim her first Grand Slam titles. Her
boyfriend at the time, Jimmy Connors, won the Wimbledon men's singles title that
year and media attention surrounded the "golden couple" of tennis that summer
(although the relationship proved to be short-lived).
For most of the next five years, Evert was the World No. 1. She won the French
Open again in 1975, and the first of four straight US Open titles by defeating
Australia's Evonne Goolagong in a three-set final. She also won Wimbledon again
in 1976, again beating Goolagong in the final in a thrilling three-set
encounter. The rivalry between between Evert and Goolagong had fans compelled in
the mid-1970s. In all, Evert won 21 of their 33 matches. Evert's domination of
the women's game and her calm, steely demeanor on court earned her the nickname
of the "Ice Maiden" of tennis.
A new rival to Evert's dominance emerged on the scene in the later part of the
1970s in the form of Martina Navratilova. Though good friends off the court,
their fierce on-court rivalry is remembered as one of the greatest in tennis
history. Evert had the best of their earlier encounters, with Navratilova
eventually coming to gain the upper hand in later years of their rivalry in the
1980s. In total, the two met 80 times with Evert winning 37 matches and
Navratilova 43. Both players finished their careers with 18 Grand Slam singles
titles.
Though successful on all surfaces, it was on clay courts where Evert was most
dominant. Between 1973 and 1979, she won a record 125 consecutive matches on the
surface. She won the French Open singles title a record seven times. Two of her
best victories came in three-set battles against Navratilova in French Open
finals in the mid-1980s. In 1985, Evert prevailed 6-3, 6-7, 7-5 (a win which saw
her capture the World No. 1 ranking for the fifth and final time). And in 1986,
the 31 year-old Evert won what proved to be her last Grand Slam title by beating
Navratilova 2-6, 6-3, 6-3.
Evert retired from the professional tour in 1989. During her career, she won 154
top-level singles titles and 8 doubles titles. In 1984, she became the first
player to win over 1,000 professional singles matches. She won at least one
Grand Slam title a year for 13 years between 1974 and 1986. Evert reached the
semi-finals or better at 52 of the 56 Grand Slams events she entered during her
career. She won the WTA Tour Championships 4 times and helped the United States
win the Fed Cup 8 times. Evert was voted the Associated Press Female Athlete of
the Year on four occasions and received Sports Illustrated magazine's
"Sportswoman of the Year" award in 1976. In 1995, she was unanimously elected
into the International Tennis Hall of Fame following a worldwide ballot of 185
sports journalists.
Personal life
Evert's romance with the top men's player Jimmy Connors captured the public's
imagaination in the 1970s, particularly after they both claimed the singles
titles at Wimbledon in 1974. They became engaged, but the storybook romance did
not last. Their relationship became strained and a wedding planned for October
1974 was called off.
In the years that followed, Evert was romanticly linked with several other
high-profile men. She dated, among others, actor Burt Reynolds, Jack Ford (son
of US President Gerald Ford) and had an affair with the married British rock
star Adam Faith.
In 1979, Evert married the British tennis player John Lloyd (and for many years
she was known as Chris Evert-Lloyd). However the marriage ended in divorce in
1987.
In 1988, Evert married two-time Olympic downhill skier Andy Mill. The couple
have three sons – Alexander James (born 1991), Nicholas Joseph (born 1994) and
Colton Jack (born 1996).
Evert is a 1973 graduate of St. Thomas Aquinas High School in Ft. Lauderdale,
Florida.
Credit: en.wikipedia.org
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