Houston Chronicle

GRAND SLAM OR DROPPING THE BALL?

Discussing the complicate­d legacy of ‘Battle of the Sexes’

- By Steven Zeitchik

In a key scene late in “Battle of the Sexes,” the new tennis movie about the landmark Billie Jean King-Bobby Riggs match, an icon is reminded of her power to influence. “Times change,” King, played by Emma Stone, is told by a confidante. “You should know — you just changed them.” The 1973 exhibition, which pitted tennis great King against the 55-yearold champion from an earlier time, certainly was a study in contrasts - the showman versus the trailblaze­r, the old guard versus the new world.

How much it altered the face of the game has a more ambiguous answer. Did the highly symbolic, intensely circus-like event really usher in a new era of gender equality and celebrity in sports?

With the Jonathan Dayton-Valerie Faris picture making an implicit case for the match’s positive influence, we decided to explore the matter further. Figures from the movie, including Stone and costar Steve Carell, tennis expert Jon Wertheim, even King herself — all helped us make calls on a match’s legacy, on where tennis finds itself and how it got here.

Race and sexuality

At the heart of profession­al tennis lies a paradox. The sport has always had a more progressiv­e reputation than its counterpar­ts. It boasted top-flight female profession­als decades ahead of most team sports; it counts social-activist pioneers like Arthur Ashe among its ranks. And tennis was a global melange of cultures long before pro basketball and baseball moved in that direction.

And yet, to play the game is to require resources. Historical­ly, the champions have come from money, and often are white.

That contradict­ion is captured by the Battle of the Sexes itself.

On one hand, the match, which King won easily in straight sets, struck a blow for gender equality. Yet the exhibition highlighte­d and brought out chauvinist elements, epitomized by the promoter Jack Kramer (Bill Pullman at his unctuous best in the film) and some famous spectators who cringingly touted men’s superiorit­y.

So which view of the game is now more accurate, nearly a half-century after the match?

Certainly the modern era has brought some issues in this regard. Yes, the sport can at times feel like it exists in a bubble. The champion Martina Hingis, who continues her long reign with a spate of double titles, made homophobic remarks about the retired top player, Amelie Mauresmo, a lesbian, at Roland Garros some years ago. And some deep pockets are still needed to compete at various levels, initiative­s like the USTA’s youth programs notwithsta­nding.

The overall picture, though, remains stronger than the popular view.

“I think tennis needs a publicist just to deal with these issues,” said Wertheim, the Sports Illustrate­d executive editor and ESPN commentato­r who has

written numerous books about tennis. Trans pioneer “Renee Richards preceded Caitlyn Jenner by decades. Long before Jason Collins (came out while playing in the NBA) there was Martina Navratilov­a. Tennis is very progressiv­e, yet it’s held up as this country-club redoubt, white, elitist sport.”

Indeed, the Williams sisters have ushered in a new era of fans and competitor­s — witness both the women’s and girls’ finals at the U.S. Open this year, which had exclusivel­y African American players.

And the idea of tennis as a sport for the aristocrac­y has eroded too, as champions like Andy Murray and Novak Djokovic, along with the Williams sisters, come from more hardscrabb­le background­s.

“Go down the list of the top players, where they come from and how they came to the game,” Wertheim said. “The idea of it as this ‘Trading Places’ (scene of ) ‘and then he stepped on the ball’ just isn’t true anymore.”

Equal pay

The ‘73 match didn’t happen in a vacuum. King and other women’s players had been waging a fight for equal pay on the tour — one smaller tournament was set to pay men eight times as much as women in prize money, prompting the women to start their own tour, the Virginia Slims Circuit, which would evolve into the present-day Women’s Tennis Associatio­n.

When King accepted Riggs’ challenge, it was to popularize the equal-pay cause and pressure the tournament organizer to bring money into gender alignment.

Prize money at the majors is now equal. But don’t let the movie trick you into thinking the Battle of the Sexes was an immediate force for change. It took some of the Slams decades for men and women to earn equal prize money: Wimbledon, the last tournament to do so, didn’t change its policy until 2007.

Cringe-worthy

As recently as last year the head of the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells questioned women’s contributi­ons to the game.

“They ride on the coattails of men,” the CEO and tournament director Raymond Moore said, adding that, if he was a female player, he’d “go down every night on my knees and thank God that Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal were born.”

He was widely condemned and subsequent­ly resigned. But the fact “that this movie is relevant is what’s so sad, isn’t it?” Carell said, referring to genderequa­lity issues across multiple realms.

Stone looked at the bright side of the issue.

“It’s relevant to see a film like this because these are the shoulders on which we now stand” in the fight for equal pay, she said.

Nor should one think only in terms of prize money: Endorsemen­ts, where many players make the bulk of their money, are an area of disparity too. Studies routinely show sponsor dollars for women can come in at a fraction of those for the top male players. A couple of years ago Caroline Wozniacki and Nadal, though each ranked third, were separated by $18 million in earnings ($33 million to $14 million).

“There should be a lot more shoe deals; there should be deals with Adidas and Nike and so many other brands,” King said. “We still don’t get as much as the men do because of the old-boy network.”

What’s striking watching co-directors Dayton and Faris re-create the match is how much of a cult of personalit­y had sprung up around the principals. Rooting for Riggs or King said something about what you stood for — politicall­y, culturally, philosophi­cally.

That has now become de rigueur in tennis: Federer fans see themselves as graceful purists, Nadal supporters relate to the all-out passion; Murray enthusiast­s champion the grit and working-class sweat.

“The idea of tennis as representa­tion — I’m a fan of Serena, and I may never even have seen her play — I think can be traced to this match,” Wertheim said. Whether this increased emphasis on tennis personalit­y is a good thing remains an open question. For every person who embraces the cast of characters, some would say the interest in personalit­ies has detracted from the play itself.

Whatever your view, Dayton and Faris accentuate these personal elements in the film; it’s clearly a 2017 view on 1973’s events.

The movie, it should be said, takes its liberties: In real life, the Marilyn Barnett relationsh­ip ended less happily when she sued King for a portion of her assets. And the film elides the question of whether Riggs threw the match for gambling or mobpressur­e reasons.

But the movie underscore­s a truth: The match, improbably, shaped a sport and even a world that was decades away.

“In one sense, the match was this kooky one-off, this very ‘70s thing you could make fun of,” said Wertheim. “But it also has all these resonances that continue today.”

 ?? Associated Press file ?? In this Sept. 20, 1973, file photo, Billie Jean King holds the winner’s trophy high after defeating Bobby Riggs in the $100,000 winner-take-all tennis match at the Astrodome in Houston. But did that match really change anything in sports?
Associated Press file In this Sept. 20, 1973, file photo, Billie Jean King holds the winner’s trophy high after defeating Bobby Riggs in the $100,000 winner-take-all tennis match at the Astrodome in Houston. But did that match really change anything in sports?
 ??  ?? Emma Stone, above left, and Steve Carell re-create the July 11, 1973, news conference when Billie Jean King, below left, and Bobby Riggs engaged in a mock arm-wrestling match while announcing they would play each other in a Battle of the Sexes tennis...
Emma Stone, above left, and Steve Carell re-create the July 11, 1973, news conference when Billie Jean King, below left, and Bobby Riggs engaged in a mock arm-wrestling match while announcing they would play each other in a Battle of the Sexes tennis...
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 ?? Associated Press file ??
Associated Press file
 ?? Melinda Sue Gordon / Fox Searchligh­t Pictures via AP, File ??
Melinda Sue Gordon / Fox Searchligh­t Pictures via AP, File

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