Bangkok Post

40 YEARS LATER, NAVRATILOV­A RECALLS FIRST WIN

Wimbledon title was like an out-of-body experience for the Czech-American,

- writes Cindy Shmerler

Martina Navratilov­a’s voice was rising, inching higher and more animated with each word, each thought. She apologised for sounding so emotional, but she could not help herself. “What’s happening at those detention centres in Texas is unconscion­able, just beyond belief,” said Navratilov­a, the topranked woman in tennis for much of the 1970s and ‘80s.

“All these people who are lying through their teeth, saying, ‘The kids are OK — it’s like summer camp.’ I’m like, ‘Are you kidding me?’

“We complain about Boko Haram taking the girls in Nigeria, and here we are doing it to these women and men. And the kids are marked for life. Some will never be reunited. Some parents will never know what happened to their kid.”

Navratilov­a’s concern about families being separated is borne of personal experience. After fleeing communist Czechoslov­akia at 18 to seek political asylum in the United States during the 1975 US Open, Navratilov­a went nearly four years without seeing a member of her own family. She has said it was the most painful time in her life.

During that period, on July 7, 1978, Navratilov­a won the first of her record nine Wimbledon singles titles, kick-starting a career that would eventually include 18 Grand Slam singles championsh­ips.

“I was so happy, but it was bitterswee­t because my parents weren’t there and I didn’t even know if they were going to be able to see the match,” said Navratilov­a, who is tied with Billie Jean King with a record 20 Wimbledon titles in singles, doubles and mixed doubles.

“That’s when you put the blinders on and just keep going. It was all very emotional, but you don’t dwell on it because, if you do, you can’t play.”

“I found out after the match that they drove to Pilsen, on the German border, and watched on TV,” she added. “And somehow, my dad called me in the locker room, which was so difficult back then. I never asked him, ‘Wait, how did you get the number?’”

Navratilov­a played her first Wimbledon as a 16-year-old in 1973 and won the women’s doubles event in 1976 with her good friend Chris Evert. Two years later, Navratilov­a reached her first singles final there — against Evert.

Navratilov­a had beaten Evert in the final of a warm-up event in Eastbourne, England, 9-7 in the third set, claiming only her fourth victory in their 24 career meetings up to that point. Her fifth would come in the form of a 2-6, 6-4, 7-5 win at the All-England Club.

Forty years later, Navratilov­a, now 61, recalls the details, big and small.

“I served it out at love, but I just remember my heartbeat,” said Navratilov­a, who played, and won, her last Wimbledon match, the mixed doubles final with Leander Paes, at age 46 in 2003.

“I’ve never heard my heart beat like that before. It was so loud, but I wasn’t out of breath. It was like an out-of-body experience. I felt like the whole stadium could hear my heart beating.”

After Evert, the top seed, won the first set comfortabl­y, the second-seeded Navratilov­a was serving at 3-2, 15-30, in the second when, after a drop-shot exchange, both players found themselves at the net. Evert hit an uncharacte­ristic high forehand volley that smacked Navratilov­a squarely on the head, prompting her to fall back in feigned pain.

The players laughed, and Evert patted her opponent on the forehead. Navratilov­a proceeded to save two break points and hold serve for 4-2, which, Evert said, swung momentum in her favour.

Navratilov­a won Wimbledon again the following year. Coaxed by a plea from the Duchess of Kent, the Czechoslov­akian government issued a travel visa to Navratilov­a’s mother, Jana, who arrived on the eve of the tournament to watch her daughter play.

It would be several more years before the whole family, including a sister, would be reunited.

 ??  ?? Martina Navratilov­a during an exhibition match last year.
Martina Navratilov­a during an exhibition match last year.

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