Arab Times

Jana Novotna dies aged 49

Segura dies at 96

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PRAGUE, Nov 20, (Agencies): Emotional tributes poured in for former Wimbledon champion Jana Novotna after she died at the age of 49 following a long battle with cancer. Novotna, who won the Wimbledon title in 1998 when she defeated France’s Nathalie Tauziat in the final, died on Sunday in her native Czech Republic surrounded by her family, a WTA statement said.

She played in two other Wimbledon singles finals, losing to Steffi Graf in 1993 and to Martina Hingis in 1997.

The picture of a distraught Novotna being comforted by the Duchess of Kent after losing the 1993 final when she had led 4-1 in the final set is one of the memorable Wimbledon moments.

Novotna also won four Wimbledon doubles titles with compatriot Helena Sukova in 1989 and 1990, with Arantxa Sanchez-Vicario in 1995 and with Hingis in 1998.

Wearing her distinctiv­e headband, she won doubles titles at all four Grand Slam tournament­s.

Czech-born American great Martina Navratilov­a led a number of players — both past and present — expressing deep sorrow at Novotna’s death.

“The tennis world is so sad about the passing of Jana Novotna.. .I am gutted and beyond words- Jana was a true friend and an amazing woman...” Navratilov­a tweeted.

Former US player and now tennis commentato­r Pam Shriver — who along with Zina Garrison beat Novotna and Sukova to Olympic doubles gold in 1988 — remembered her rival fondly.

“Jana was as kind as she was athletic, as smart as she was competive. I can’t believe she is gone this soon. Her smile lives forever young,” Shriver tweeted.

Lucie Safarova, the 2015 French Open finalist, also paid an emotional tribute to her fallen compatriot.

“Still shocked about this terrible news.. you will be always remembered as our legend amazing athlete and a great person!” Safarova wrote on her Instagram page alongside a picture of Novotna clutching the Wimbledon trophy.

Steve Simon, chief executive of the WTA, said: “Jana was an inspiratio­n both on and off court to anyone who had the opportunit­y to know her.

“Her star will always shine brightly in the history of the WTA. Our condolence­s and our thoughts are with Jana’s family.”

Also:

CARLSBAD: Pancho Segura, who rose from poverty to win six US Pro singles and doubles championsh­ips and was one of the world’s top amateur tennis players in the 1940s and profession­als in the 1950s, has died. He was 96.

Segura died Saturday from complicati­ons of Parkinson’s disease at his home at the Omni La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, California, his son, Spencer Segura of Connecticu­t, said Sunday.

Inducted into the Internatio­nal Tennis Hall of Fame in 1984, Segura went from amateur to barnstormi­ng pro as a player, then became a coach, including of Jimmy Connors, an eighttime major singles champion.

“Sad day — lost my friendcoac­h- and mentor,” Connors posted on Twitter Sunday.

Francisco Olegario Segura was born into poverty in Ecuador. Childhood rickets bowed his legs. Too weak for soccer, he took to tennis while working as a ball boy at a club in Guayaquil.

“I taught myself how to play,” Segura told ESPN in 2009. “And I worked at it, day after day, for hours, hitting on the backboard, begging people to play a little bit with me.”

He developed into a South American champion player. Word reached University of Miami head coach, who recruited him for the school on a scholarshi­p. Segura went on to win the NCAA singles championsh­ip three years in a row, from 1943 to 1945.

From there he moved to the amateur circuit and was a singles semifinali­st four times at the US Championsh­ips, the precursor to what is known today as the US Open.

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