Albuquerque Journal

Court’s award comes with considerab­le controvers­y

Champion-turned-minister has criticized opinions

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CANBERRA, Australia — Australia media are reporting that controvers­ial former tennis champion Margaret Court will receive the country’s top award in the Australia Day honors list, and the apparent decision is already being criticized.

The 78-year-old’s appointmen­t as Companion of the Order of Australia was due to be revealed late on Monday, but it was leaked on social media. Australia Day is on Tuesday.

The award is to recognize Court’s “eminent service to tennis” as winner of a record 24 Grand Slam singles titles and a mentor for young athletes.

But Court’s tennis achievemen­ts have more recently been overshadow­ed by her views on homosexual­ity, conversion therapy, same-sex marriage and transgende­r people.

Victoria state Premier Daniel Andrews said he did not support Court receiving the honor.

“I don’t believe that she has views that accord with the vast majority of people across our nation that see people, particular­ly from the LGBTQ community, as equal and deserving of dignity, respect and safety,” he said.

Court, a Pentecosta­l minister who runs the Victory Life Centre church in Perth, Western Australia, said she won’t change her opinions.

“All my life I’ve had those views and I was just saying what the Bible says,” Court told Australian Associated Press this week. “I should always be able to say my views biblically, being a pastor and helping people with marriages and family. And I’ll never change those views.”

Prime Minister Scott Morrison, who would not comment on Court’s possible honor, said compilatio­n of the Australia Day list was separate from the government.

“This is a completely independen­t set of processes,” Morrison said. “It is an announceme­nt that will be announced on that day. It is a system that recognizes the full spectrum of individual­s across this country.”

In 2020, Court was honored for the 50th anniversar­y of completing a calendar year Grand Slam — winning all four major tournament­s in 1970.

But former tennis stars including Martina Navratilov­a, Billie Jean King, John McEnroe and current player Andy Murray have all led calls for Court’s name to be removed from Margaret Court Arena at Melbourne Park because of her views.

DOPING: The Internatio­nal Tennis Federation on Saturday denied a bid by 29th-ranked Dayana Yastremska to lift a suspension for failing an out-of-competitio­n doping test.

The ruling can be appealed to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport by the 20-year-old Ukrainian.

Players at Grand Slam tournament­s and events sanctioned by the ITF, ATP and WTA are tested for substances prohibited by the World Anti-Doping Agency. Yastremska drew a provisiona­l suspension by the ITF on Jan. 7. She had tested positive for mesterolon­e metabolite, a prohibited substance that can be used to boost testostero­ne.

In a statement then on Twitter, Yastremska said she was “astonished and under shock.”

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