Women Tennis Greats: AP Female Athletes of the Year
Francesca Pitaro
The AP created the Female Athlete of the Year award in 1931, naming the swimmer Helen Madison as the first winner. The winners are selected by a vote of AP member sports editors and beat writers. Over the past 90 years, 17 of the athletes have been tennis players, some of them winning multiple times.
Helen Jacobs 1933
Helen Willis Moody 1935
Alice Marble 1939, 1940
Maureen Connolly 1951, 1952, 1953
Althea Gibson 1957, 1958
Maria Bueno 1959
Billie Jean King 1967, 1973
The open era in tennis began in 1968, allowing amateur and professional players to compete together for the first time for cash rewards. From the start, the disparities in rewards for men and women players were obvious. The 1970 men’s winner Ilie Nastase earned $3,500 while Billie Jean King took home $600. Unwilling to accept this blatant discrimination, King joined forces with eight other women tennis players: Peaches Bartkowicz, Rosie Casals, Judy Tegart Dalton, Julie Heldman, Kerry Melville, Kristy Pigeon, Nancy Richey and Valerie Ziegenfuss. The women, later known as the “Original Nine,” signed a $1 contract with Gladys Heldman, the publisher of World Tennis Magazine, to compete in a women’s only tournament in Houston. The group went on to great success on the women’s only Virginia Slims Circuit. In 1973 King became a founder of the Women’s Tennis Association, which succeeded in ensuring an equal prize for men and women players at the US Open that year. Wimbledon would not meet that goal until 2007. King also co-founded World Team Tennis, the Women's Sports Foundation and Women's Sports magazine. A winner of 39 Grand Slam titles, King retired from professional tennis in 1983. She continues to advocate for women, the LGBTQ community and equal rights.
"What started as a few women and a dollar has grown to thousands, living the dream – our dream. We were athletes who wanted to compete – and along the way we made history, determined to win, not just for ourselves, but for women everywhere," (Billie Jean King remarking on the 40th anniversary of the Women’s Tennis Association in 2013)
Evonne Goolagong 1971
Chris Evert 1974, 1975, 1977, 1980
Tracy Austin 1977, 1980
Martina Navratilova 1983, 1986
Steffi Graf 1989
Monica Seles 1991, 1992
Martina Hingis 1997
Jennifer Capriati 2001
Serena Williams 2002, 2009, 2013, 2015, 2018
In 2018 Serena Williams won the AP Female Athlete of the Year Award for the fifth time. The women's award has been won more times only by Babe Didrikson Zaharias, who won once for track and five times for for golf. In a December 26, 2018 story reporting on Williams’ award, the AP’s Brian Mahoney wrote:
She showed up in Paris wearing a black catsuit, a reminder that nobody can command the Grand Slam stage quite like Serena Williams.
She reached the finals at Wimbledon and the U.S. Open, proving again how well she can play no matter how little she practices.
Williams didn't win those or any other tournaments, which in every other situation might have made for a forgettable year.
In 2018, it was a remarkable one.
Her rapid return to tennis after a health scare following childbirth was a victory in itself, and for that, Williams was voted The Associated Press Female Athlete of the Year for the fifth time.
Williams received 93 points in balloting by U.S. editors and news directors announced Wednesday, while gymnast Simone Biles was second with 68. Notre Dame basketball player Arike Ogunbowale was third, while Olympic snowboarder Chloe Kim and swimmer Katie Ledecky, the 2017 winner, rounded out the top five.
All of those players won a title or titles in 2018, while Williams had to settle for just coming close a couple of times.
Now 37 and a new mother facing some players who weren't even born when she turned pro in 1995, Williams isn't the same person who ruthlessly ran her way to 23 Grand Slam singles titles - the last of which came at the 2017 Australian Open when she was pregnant.
"I'm still waiting to get to be the Serena that I was, and I don't know if I'll ever be that, physically, emotionally, mentally. But I'm on my way," Williams said on the eve of the U.S. Open final. "I feel like I still have a ways to go. Once I get there, I'll be able to play even hopefully better."
Williams' previous times winning the AP honor, in 2002, 2009, 2013 and 2015, were because of her dominance.
This one was about her perseverance.
Williams was also voted the AP Female Athlete of the Decade for 2010 to 2019. Williams won 12 of her professional-era record 23 Grand Slam singles titles over the past 10 years. No other woman won more than three in that span. She also tied a record for most consecutive weeks ranked No. 1 and collected a tour-leading 37 titles in all during the decade.