Hazel Hotchkiss Wightman

Hazel Wightman

Wightman in 1910
Full name Hazel Hotchkiss Wightman
ITF name Hazel Wightman
Country  United States
Born December 20, 1886
Healdsburg, CA, USA
Died December 5, 1974 (aged 87)
Newton, MA, USA
Plays Right-handed
Int. Tennis HOF 1957 (member page)
Singles
Grand Slam Singles results
Wimbledon 3R (1924)
US Open W (1909, 1910, 1911, 1919)
Doubles
Grand Slam Doubles results
Wimbledon W (1924)
US Open W (1909, 1910, 1911, 1915, 1924, 1928)
Other Doubles tournaments
Olympic Games Gold Medal (1924)
Grand Slam Mixed Doubles results
US Open W (1909, 1910, 1911, 1915, 1918, 1920)
Other Mixed Doubles tournaments
Olympic Games Gold Medal (1924)
Hazel Hotchkiss Wightman
Medal record
Women's tennis
Competitor for the  United States
Olympic Games
Gold 1924 Paris Doubles
Gold 1924 Paris Mixed doubles

Hazel Hotchkiss Wightman (December 20, 1886 – December 5, 1974) was a female American tennis player and founder of the Wightman Cup, an annual team competition for British and American women. She dominated American women's tennis before World War I, and won 45 U.S. titles during her life.

Personal life

Wightman was born in Healdsburg, California. In 1912, at the age of 25, she married George W. Wightman. Her father-in-law, George Henry Wightman, was a leader in the steel industry, as an associate of Andrew Carnegie, and one of the country's foremost pioneers of amateur tennis.[1]

Wightwan was the mother of five children. She died at her home in the village of Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, on March 5, 1974.[2]

Career highlights

Wightman dominated American women's tennis before World War I and had an unparalleled reputation for sportsmanship. Wightman won a lifetime total of 45 U.S. titles, the last at age 68. She won 16 titles overall at the U.S. Championships, four of them in singles (1909–11, 1919). Nine of her titles at the U.S. Championships came in 1909–11, when she swept the singles, women's doubles, and mixed doubles competitions three consecutive years.[3]

Wightman is known as the "Queen Mother of American Tennis" or "Lady Tennis" for her lifelong participation in and promotion of women's tennis and because she was instrumental in organizing the Ladies International Tennis Challenge between British and American women's teams, better known as the Wightman Cup.[4] The Cup was first held in 1923 and continued through 1989. She played five years on the American team and was the captain of the American team from inception of the competition through 1948. The Cup was composed of five singles and two doubles matches. The cup itself was donated in 1923 by Wightman in honor of her husband. The first contest, at Forest Hills, New York on August 11 and 13, 1923, was won by the United States.

Born during the early days of American tennis, Wightman was a frail and awkward child. Her doctor recommended that she take up a sport to strengthen herself. Her brother suggested tennis as it was considered a "genteel" sport. Wightman learned to play at the nearby courts of the University of California, Berkeley where she graduated in 1911. Her rivalry with fellow Californian, May Sutton, shaped a new women's game, with Wightman attacking the net to counter Sutton's dominating forehand.[5]

Wightman devoted herself to teaching young people, opening her home near Boston's Longwood Cricket Club to aspiring champions. In recognition of Wightman's contributions to tennis, the USTA Service Bowl was donated in her honor. In 1973 Wightman was appointed as an honorary Commander of the Order of the British Empire.

Career in depth

Though short in stature, Wightman anticipated and moved extremely well around a tennis court. She perfected her volleying style early, hitting the ball against the family home in Berkeley, California, where she grew up and graduated from the University of California. She refused to let the ball bounce because the yard was so uneven. She used to play against her four brothers and then the proud and spiky Sutton sisters.

Wightman was a shy, somewhat awed, and fascinated 22-year-old college girl when she arrived at the Philadelphia Cricket Club in 1909 for the U.S. Championships. She had never before played on grass, but she used her attacking style and rock-ribbed volleying—she was the first woman to rely so heavily on the volley—to win the all-comers final over Louise Hammond 6–8, 6–1, 6–4 and then the title over 39-year-old Maud Barger-Wallach 6–0, 6–1. Wightman also won the women's doubles and mixed doubles titles that year.

In the 1910 Washington State Championships, Wightman won one of the few recorded "Golden Matches" in which the winner did not lose a point. She defeated a Miss Huiskamp (first name unknown). [6]

Wightman successfully defended all three titles at the U.S. Championships in 1910 and 1911. Wightman easily defeated Hammond in the 1910 singles final. May Sutton, an old West Coast rival and singles titlist at the U.S. Championships in 1904, pushed Wightman hard in the 1911 singles final before Wightman prevailed 8–10, 6–4, 9–7.

The most remarkable comeback in Wightman's career came at the singles final of the 1911 Niagara International Tennis Tournament against Sutton. After losing the first set 0–6 and going down 1–5 in the second, she won twelve straight games and the title 0–6, 7–5, 6–0.[5]

In 1912, Wightman married Bostonian George Wightman and did not defend her U.S. titles. But, responding to a challenge from her father to win after becoming a mother, which would be a U.S. first, she played again in 1915, losing the singles final to Molla Bjurstedt Mallory but winning the women's doubles and mixed doubles titles. At age 32, she won her fourth singles title with the loss of only one set, beating Marion Zinderstein 6–1, 6–2 in the final. She also reached the women's doubles final. Thereafter, her success (U.S. adult titles between 1909 and 1943) was limited to doubles.[5]

Wightman envisioned a team tournament for women similar to the Davis Cup and offered a silver vase as prize. In 1923, the British and Americans had the strongest women players. So, Julian Myrick of the United States Lawn Tennis Association decided that a U.S.-Britain competition would be in order for the Wightman Cup. The event, with Wightman captaining and playing for a winning U.S. side, opened the newly constructed stadium at Forest Hills, New York. A treasured series, it lasted through 1989, disbanding when the event was no longer competitive.

Wightman, devoted to the game in all aspects, generously instructed innumerable players at no charge throughout her life. She also teamed with two of her protégées who later joined her in the International Tennis Hall of Fame to win important titles: Wimbledon, U.S., and Olympic doubles titles with Helen Wills Moody in 1924 and U.S. Indoor women's doubles titles with Sarah Palfrey Cooke from 1928 through 1931. Her second Olympic gold medal in 1924 came in mixed doubles with Dick Williams.

The last of Wightman's record 34 U.S. adult titles was recorded in 1943 as she, 56, and Pauline Betz Addie won the women's doubles title at the U.S. Indoor Championships over Lillian Lopaus and Judy Atterbury, 7–5, 6–1.

Wightman was included in the year-end top ten rankings issued by the United States Lawn Tennis Association in 1915, 1918, and 1919 and was the top ranked U.S. player in 1919 (rankings began in 1913).[7]

Grand Slam singles finals

Titles (4)

Year Championship Opponent Score
1909U.S. Championships United States Maud Barger-Wallach 6–0, 6–1
1910U.S. Championships United States Louise Hammond Raymond 6–4, 6–2
1911U.S. Championships United States Florence Sutton 8–10, 6–1, 9–7
1919U.S. Championships United States Marion Zinderstein 6–1, 6–2

Runner-ups (1)

Year Championship Opponent Score
1915U.S. Championships Norway Molla Mallory 4–6, 6–2, 6–0

Grand Slam singles tournament timeline

Tournament 1909 1910 1911 1912 – 1914 1915 1916 – 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 Career SR
Australian Championships NH NH NH NH NH NH NH NH NH A A A A A A A 0 / 0
French Championships* R R R A NH NH NH A A A A NH A A A A 0 / 0
Wimbledon A A A A NH NH A A A A A 3R A A A A 0 / 1
U.S. Championships W W W A F A W A A A A A A 3R 1R QF 4 / 8
SR 1 / 1 1 / 1 1 / 1 0 / 0 0 / 1 0 / 0 1 / 1 0 / 0 0 / 0 0 / 0 0 / 0 0 / 1 0 / 0 0 / 1 0 / 1 0 / 1 4 / 9

*Through 1923, the French Championships were open only to French nationals. The World Hard Court Championships (WHCC), actually played on clay in Paris or Brussels, began in 1912 and were open to all nationalities. The results from that tournament are shown here from 1912 through 1914 and from 1920 through 1923. The Olympics replaced the WHCC in 1924, as the Olympics were held in Paris. Beginning in 1925, the French Championships were open to all nationalities, with the results shown here beginning with that year.

References

  1. "Geo. H. Wightman, Pioneer in Tennis". New York Times. April 21, 1937.
  2. Alfred E. Clark (March 6, 1974). "Hazel Hotchkiss Wightman Dies; Holder of Tennis Titles was 86". New York Times.
  3. Collins, Bud (2010). The Bud Collins History of Tennis (2nd ed. ed.). [New York]: New Chapter Press. pp. 467, 468, 479, 481. ISBN 978-0942257700.
  4. "Hall of Famers – Hazel Hotchkiss Wightman". International Tennis Hall of Fame. Retrieved 22 September 2012.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Ohnsorg, Roger W. Robert Lindley Murray: The Reluctant U.S. Tennis Champion; includes "The First Forty Years of American Tennis". Victoria, BC: Trafford On Demand Pub. p. 47. ISBN 978-1-4269-4514-4.
  6. All-Time Records, Tennis Magazine, February 1981, page 72
  7. United States Tennis Association (1988). 1988 Official USTA Tennis Yearbook. Lynn, Massachusetts: H.O. Zimman, Inc. p. 260.

Further reading

External links