NEWPORT — Savvy fans took advantage of the four-hour delay in the start of play
Thursday to stroll through the International Tennis Hall of Fame and Museum and
linger at the stunning exhibits honoring the four luminaries who will be
inducted Saturday.
"Monica Seles: Pride and Passion for the Love of the Game" is a spectacular
multimedia display covering the nine-time Grand Slam champion's career. Five
display cases feature the spoils of her victories, and one case holds the
hardware from her triumphs at the Australian Open, French Open and U.S. Open.
Another displays memorabilia, among them a tennis ball with the drawing of a
mouse done by her cartoonist father, Karolj, when she was a child. He encouraged
her to think of herself as a cat and to whack the mouse.
The Seles exhibit takes up the entire room in the center of the museum. She
offered 80 items from her personal collection and about 50 are on display.
Nicole Markham, the museum curator, went to the Seles' home in Sarasota, Fla.,
and helped pack the items for shipment. Seles reviewed the text for the exhibit
and will see it for the first time Friday or Saturday.
Posters on the wall take us through her career from her childhood hitting balls
in her hometown of Novi Sad, Yugoslavia, to her run to the Orange Bowl final
when she was 13, to her family's move to Sarasota, Fla., to enroll her in Nick
Bollettieri's Tennis Academy and to her professional career.
Seles turned pro in 1989, when she was 15, and defeated Chris Evert in the
finals at Houston. She also reached the semifinals at the French Open. In 1990
she won the first of her three French Open titles, and in 1991 was ranked No.1
in the world. By the spring of 1993 she had won three Australian, three French
and two U.S. Opens.
Her career and life changed forever on April 30, 1993, when a deranged fan of
Steffi Graf stabbed her in the back during a changeover at a tournament in
Hamburg. Seles recovered from the wound that summer but remained off the tour
for two years to recover emotionally. She came back in 1995 and reached the U.S.
Open final; in 1996, she won the Australian Open again.
Karolj Seles died of stomach cancer in 1998, and Seles dedicated her French Open
to him and reached the finals. She played her last French Open in 2003.
Video highlights of her career roll on a screen, and laminated cards explain the
items in the display cases. One of them is her first trophy for finishing third
in the Yugoslavia Juniors in 1983. She was 9 years old.
Dr. Robert W. Johnson, a hero in the black tennis community from 1940 to 1970,
will be inducted posthumously. "Whirlwind: A Tennis Pioneer" offers a glimpse at
a college football player (Lincoln University, 1924-25), physician, coach,
teacher and role model to young players of all races. He conducted camps on his
backyard court in Lyncburg, Va., championed the American Tennis Association, the
umbrella organization for black tennis during segregation, and promoted the
careers of racial-barrier breakers such as Althea Gibson and Arthur Ashe. Among
the items on display is a telegram from Gibson to Johnson from London after her
1957 Wimbledon victory.
Johnson's followers referred to him as "Dr. J" long before the basketball star
turned the moniker into a household name.
Andres Gimeno of Spain was one of the best players in the world in 1968, after
Australians Ken Rosewall and Rod Laver. He lost to Laver in the Australian Open
final in 1969, the first victory of Laver's second Grand Slam. In 1972, he won
the French Open at 34, the oldest champion in tournament history.
Donald Dell was a force in tennis as a player (ranked No. 4 in the United
States), as a Davis Cup captain (1968 and 1969 champion), agent (founder of
ProServ), administrator (legal counsel for the fledgling Association of Tennis
Professionals), promoter (founder of the Legg Mason Classic in Washington) and
commentator (broadcast booth partner with Bud Collins).
Hall of Fame induction ceremonies will start Saturday at 12:30. Catch the
exhibit first, if you can.
All first-round matches were finished by early evening Thursday, and eight
Americans advanced to the second round, the most since 2002. They are No. 7
Kevin Kim, Rajeev Ram, Brendan Evans, Robby Ginepri, Taylor Dent, Alex
Bogolomov, No. 3 Sam Querrey and Jesse Levine.
One of the most interesting second-round matches will pit Fabrice Santoro, the
two-time defending champion, and Dent, the 2002 champion. Santoro is trying to
become the second three-time champion in tournament history. Greg Rusedski won
in 1993, 2004 and 2005. Santoro can become the first to win three in a row.