Shanghai Daily

Fed Cup to be renamed after King

- TENNIS

ALMOST 60 years after Billie Jean King helped the United States win the inaugural Fed Cup, the team event is being renamed in honor of the greatest trailblaze­r in women’s tennis.

The competitio­n, revamped this year to feature a 12-nation finals week to rival the men’s Davis Cup, would from 2021 be known as the Billie Jean King Cup, the Internatio­nal Tennis Federation said in a statement.

This year’s finals, scheduled for Budapest, Hungary, in April, were postponed for a year because of the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.

King, a 12-time Grand Slam singles champion and the founder of the Women’s Tennis Associatio­n, said she was “humbled” to have the competitio­n named after her.

“Very proud, very humbled,” the American said by telephone. “I keep thinking it’s a dream. And then I start thinking about what an opportunit­y this is to help the game grow globally.

“(The Federation Cup) was 63 years behind the Davis Cup but we’ve gone from 16 to 116 nations.

“We have equal prize money to the Davis Cup and this sends out an important and strong message of equality.”

The Billie Jean Cup, sponsored by BNP Paribas, is the first major global team competitio­n to be named after a woman and next year’s finals in Hungary will boast US$12 million in prize money, equivalent to the revamped Davis Cup.

ITF President David Haggerty paid tribute to King’s fight for gender equality in sport and society.

“From playing the first Fed Cup as a member of the victorious US team in 1963, founding the WTA and becoming its first president, to being the first female athlete awarded the US Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom, Billie Jean King has never stopped breaking new ground,” Haggerty stated.

“Today she adds another ‘first’ to that list. The new name is a fitting tribute to everything she has achieved.”

The 76-year-old King was part of the team that won the inaugural competitio­n, then known as the Federation Cup, in London in 1963. She won it seven times as a player and four as captain and was appointed its first Global Ambassador last year.

“There is nothing quite like the feeling of representi­ng your country and being part of a team, which is why this competitio­n is so special and important to me,” she said.

“Our job is to share this vision with future generation­s of young girls, because if you can see it, you can be it.”

France, Russia, Hungary, Australia, Belarus, Belgium, the US, Spain, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Germany and Switzerlan­d will contest next year’s inaugural Billy Jean King Cup finals.

(Reuters)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China