Jennifer Capriati’s tennis career — and her teenage life — took a number of twists and turns.
She started as a teenage prodigy, was later sidetracked with off-court troubles, rebounded to become a three-time Grand Slam champion and now her journey is complete with her induction into the International Tennis Hall of Fame.
Capriati, three-time French Open champion Gustavo Kuerten, 1975 US Open champ Manuel Orantes and two others were inducted into the Hall during a 90-minute ceremony on Saturday.
Photo: AFP
The others were tennis industry executive Mike Davies and wheelchair champion Randy Snow, who was honored posthumously.
In a tear-filled acceptance speech, the 36-year-old Capriati remembered her great moments in the game and touched on some of her troubles off the court.
“I still managed to overcome some adversity, win a gold medal, win some Grand Slams and stand at the podium at the Hall of Fame,” Capriati said. “This is one milestone I thought I’d never achieve.”
She feels as though her tennis career is fulfilled.
“It’s been quite a journey,” Capriati said at a morning press conference. “Here, I look back at all those really great things I’ve accomplished and the achievements I’ve had and those achievements I overcame.”
As a 14-year-old, she burst onto the scene and reached the semi-finals at her first Grand Slam event, the 1990 French Open. Drug and other problems sidetracked her life and career, and she temporarily dropped off the tour following the 1993 US Open.
She returned to tennis in 1996. Five years later, she reached those lofty expectations that were thrust upon her, beating past champions Seles, Lindsay Davenport and Martina Hingis en route to the 2001 Australian Open title and her first top-10 ranking in seven years.
She followed that by capturing the French Open and was the only player to reach at least the semis in all four Grand Slams that year.
The highlight match of her career — and maybe one of the top performances in the game — was the 2002 Australian Open when she trailed Hingis 4-6, 0-4 before rallying to a three-set victory.
She won an Olympic gold medal in Barcelona in 1992, and her career ended in 2004 with a 430-176 record.
Kuerten was No. 1 in the world for 43 weeks and the clay-court specialist captured French Open titles in 1997, 2000 and 2001.
“I believe it’s the surface you have to suffer more,” the 35-year-old Brazilian said. “You have to be out there for many hours. You have to use every weapon you can and fight like a warrior. It’s fun to try.”
Orantes, elected in the master-player category, beat top-seeded Jimmy Connors for the 1975 US Open title. The 63-year-old Spanish star stayed in the top 10 for five straight years and was a Davis Cup stalwart from 1967 to 1980, winning 60 of his 87 matches.
Davies was elected in the contributor category. He held executive positions with various tennis organizations and was a driving force behind the game’s move to network television, instituting rules offering breaks for commercials to make the game more appealing to the networks.
Snow, who passed away in 2009, won 22 major tournaments.
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