Conchita Martinez and Goran Ivanisevic, who will take their places in the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 2021. (Getty Images)
Of the many ITHF moments I’ve witnessed, a delightful one came in 2004. It was on a Saturday afternoon. Two inductees were enjoying a smooth and friendly hit on the grass. One had just been inducted that afternoon. Her name was Dorothy “Dodo” Cheney, who on that day was 87 years old and would eventually earn a record 395 USTA national age-group titles. Across the net was the man who’d introduced her at the ceremony, 1999 inductee John McEnroe. Cheney’s mother, May Sutton Bundy, had been the first American to win Wimbledon, all the way back in 1905. Thirty-three years later, Dodo was the first American to win the Australian championships. How wonderful to see the connection between mother and daughter, across a century—and that most relentlessly contemporary of tennis personalities, McEnroe, taking part in it too.
What memories do you associate with the ITHF, Steve?
Hi Joel,
First off, how can you not love a museum that’s housed in a building designed by Charles McKim and Stanford White? When you walk through the front door, you leave a modern commercial street and travel straight back to 1879, the year the Newport Casino opened. We should be thankful that the ITHF has never moved to a modern structure, which I’m guessing would inevitably be shaped like a giant tennis ball and colored optic yellow. (Actually, now that I mention it, that sounds kind of cool, too.)
I’ve attended the tournament and the induction ceremony three or four times in the past. It’s a nice way to come down off the frenetic two weeks of Wimbledon, while keeping the vintage-tennis vibe going. The highlight for me was seeing Steffi Graf induct her husband, Andre Agassi. Steffi gave a more moving and emotional speech than I think many of us expected. I also had a chance to see Rod Laver play doubles with McEnroe there. From what I remember, it was an early sign that the Rocket was recovering from the stroke that he had suffered a year or so earlier.
For me, and maybe for you, the Hall is also a tremendous resource. If you’re going to write about tennis history, the library there is a Mecca. When I wrote my book, High Strung, about the men’s game in the Borg-McEnroe era, I camped out at the Hall for a week, combing through every back issue of World Tennis and Tennis Week. It was probably the most enjoyable part of the whole book-writing process. You really feel like you’re excavating history that doesn’t exist anywhere else and bringing it to light.
I like the Goran-Conchita combination, and I’m bummed that they won’t get a ceremony until next year. Both had their most memorable victories in Wimbledon finals, and both have been Slam winners as coaches. I love to listen to Conchita talk tennis, and Goran, of course, is one of the sport’s all-time personalities.
When we think of the Hall, of course, we think about who should be in and who shouldn’t. With so few top players retiring in recent years, it can be hard to find suitable candidates. Is there anyone you think should be in who isn’t, Joel? The player who comes to my mind is Sergi Bruguera, a two-time Roland Garros champion and now a Davis Cup winning captain. I mean, why is Yannick Noah in and Bruguera isn’t? I know why, of course: Noah was a fan favorite everywhere and a legendary figure in the sport, and there’s no doubt that he deserves to be a member. But from what I know of Bruguera, he seems like a cool guy, too.
Once upon a time, the Hall was focused on American players at the expense of non-American players, but that has become less true in recent years. If that continues, maybe players like Bruguera will get their due.
Ivanisevic on being inducted into the Hall of Fame: