The Borneo Post

Laver and King special for 50th year of pro era

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LONDON: In the debate about the greatest players of all time, the names of Rod Laver and Billie Jean King crop up again and again.

With 59 Grand Slam titles between them, King pipping Laver with 12 to 11 in singles titles alone, the pair left an indelible imprint on the sport in the 1960s and 1970s.

This year is the 50th anniversar­y of the first Wimbledon of the profession­al era and fittingly the pair, who each won the singles title in 1968, will be back at the All England Club as the “Chairman’s Guests”.

For Laver, his victory in 1968 was a sweet one, the Australian having been banned for the previous five years because he had turned profession­al in 1962.

It was

I was pretty fortunate this happened for the five years, then when Open tennis came along, and I got a chance to play in the Open ranks, I was a different player. Rod Laver

only when Wimbledon led the way in making the sport’s governing bodies allow the profession­als to join the amateurs, who were being paid under the table, that the likes of Laver were allowed back in. In 1962 L av er completed the calendar-year Grand Slam - winning Wimbledon, US Open, French Open and Austral ian Open - and after he was welcomed back in 1968, he promptly won the Wimbledon title again, beating fellow Australian Tony Roche in the final.

Seven years after his first Wimbledon win, Laver said turning profession­al, when he repeatedly played against the likes of Ken Rosewall, Pancho Gonzales and Lew Hoad, had hardened him up.

“I was pretty fortunate this happened for the five years, then when Open tennis came along, and I got a chance to play in the Open ranks, I was a different player,” Laver told Reuters earlier this year.

“All the amateur guys said: ‘Who is this guy now? He doesn’t miss too many, he doesn’t make mistakes, his second service is as good as his fi rst.’

“That was the nice thing that happened to me. It (the Open era) was great for tennis.”

King’s 1968 victory was her third straight Wimbledon win and she went on to add three more singles titles at SW19 in the early 1970s.

By the time she was done, she had won 39 Grand Slam titles in all, including doubles and mixed doubles.

King said she feels Laver would have won many more Grand Slam crowns had he not been banned alongside the other profession­als.

“Here’s a guy who missed out on 20 opportunit­ies to win another major, so when somebody looks at his total majors at 11, it’s a joke,” King told Reuters.

“So when I see Federer win 20, in the back of my mind I wonder how many Rocket ( Laver) could have won. There should be a caveat if we’re going to do our history right. People sacrificed to try to make the game better.”

King was at the forefront of the change and was delighted to play at Wimbledon in 1968, having been unable to compete in the fi rst tournament of the Open era in Bournemout­h, in April of that year, because she had just signed up with a profession­al group.

“I was absolutely thrilled - and because we missed Bournemout­h, too, I thought, finally, we get to play as profession­als,” said King, who beat Australian Judy Tegart in the final.

King believes tennis historians should stop thinking about tennis as if it had begun in 1968.

“I think we should get rid of the Open era, either you won or you didn’t win,” she said.

“Margaret Court and I are in the middle, I call us the transition generation from amateur to profession­al. Sometimes ( people) will say ‘ Billie was a three-time US Open champion’ - no I am not, I’m four- time, one of them was nationals but that was still the US Open.

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 ??  ?? Rod Laver
Rod Laver
 ??  ?? Billie Jean King signs autographs at the premiere for ‘Battle of the Sexes’ in Los Angeles in this Sept 16, 2017. — Reuters file photo
Billie Jean King signs autographs at the premiere for ‘Battle of the Sexes’ in Los Angeles in this Sept 16, 2017. — Reuters file photo

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