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Maureen Connolly

Maureen Connolly (1934-1969) was one of the greatest singles players in the history of women's tennis. In 1953, she won four international tournaments known as the Grand Slam of Tennis, an accomplishment achieved by only two other female players since. She is rememberd as a pioneer of women's tennis, who made significant contributions to help popularize the sport.

Maureen Catherine Connolly was born on September 17, 1934 in San Diego, California. She was the victim of a broken home. Her father, Marten Connolly, left the family when she was a toddler. Her mother, Jassamine Connolly, told the young girl that her biological father was deceased, an untruth that caused a rift between mother and daughter later, when Connolly achieved fame and Marten Connolly resurfaced.

Connolly was raised by her mother and a stepfather, August Berste, a musician by profession. Connolly's mother, an amateur pianist herself, urged her daughter to find a career in music, but Connolly had other plans. As a youngster she grew inspired by watching tennis players at a local park. By the time she was ten years old, she asked her parents persistently for a tennis racket. Connolly's parents indulged her wish and purchased a racket for $1.50. Connolly was instantly obsessed with the sport of tennis. She practiced incessantly, even after dark and into the night. Initially she took lessons from Wilbur Folsom, but eventually she met Eleanor "Teach" Tennant, a distinguished and charismatic coach who agreed to work with the ten-year-old. Tennant instilled in Connolly a fierce sense of pride, confidence, and a desire to win. Connolly practiced with exceptional dedication.

Connolly was naturally left-handed, but with the help of her coach she developed a powerful right-hand swing. In her obsession to win she learned to generate hatred for her opponents on the court. At the same time, Connolly learned to conceal her emotion and remain expressionless during competition. The intimidating combination of Connolly's unflinching "court face" and powerful swing consistently overwhelmed her opponents. Retired tennis champion Ted Schroeder played partners with Connolly in mixed doubles at La Jolla in 1950, when she was only 14 years old. He recalled her unyielding determination to win. Schroeder's recollection of Connolly was quoted in 1998 by ESPN's Tom Farrey, "There's only one way to describe her-as an assassin … She was one of the nicest people you'd ever meet, but on the court, boy she went at it."

As Connolly grew into adolescence she remained unaffected by the rigorous regimen of her tennis practice. She was known to practice for three hours daily, seven days a week, yet she indulged her teen-age nature, despite the trappings of budding success. She sucked on sugar lumps, and loved to eat hamburgers. She was an average student at Cathedral High School in San Diego, and she crammed her studies into the precious few spare moments in her day. Her tennis wardrobe reflected the style of the times-She wore skirts made from cloth with a "sharkskin" finish that was popular in the 1950s; and she sometimes wore a tennis skirt with a poodle applique with rhinestone detail, also characteristic of the teen-age fashion of the times. Her "goodluck" jewelry consisted of a ring with double-dragons protecting a ball, and a heart-shaped locket given her by her mother. Connolly loved horses-perhaps more than she loved tennis-and enjoyed riding whenever time permitted. She practiced dancing, jumped rope, and performed calisthetics in an effort to maintain flexibility and to increase her stamina for tennis tournaments.

Entered Competitive Tennis

Connolly entered her first tennis tournament shortly after she began to play at the age of ten and emerged as the runner up. In May 1947, shortly after she began working with Tennant, she won the 15-and-under title in the Southern California Invitational Tennis Championship. That early victory began on a winning streak that endured for 56 successive matches. By the age of 14 she was the youngest girl ever to win the national junior tennis championship. During an early match, Connolly lost control under the pressure of competition. She flew into a rage and threw her racket, but learned quickly to control her temper and to accept the decisions with grace. Off the court, she was a completely different person. Charming at all times, she endeared herself to every audience because of her youthful effervescence and extraordinary zest for the game of tennis. She won 50 championships by the age of 15 and was ranked 19th among women singles players in the U.S. Lawn Tennis standings in 1948. The personable, five-foot-three-inch teen-aged slammer became known affectionately as "Little Mo," after she won the national junior championship. The nickname, coined by a reporter, was derived from the "Big Mo," a term used in reference to the battleship U.S.S. Missouri.

Connolly graduated from junior competition to women's tennis after winning the USA Junior International Grass Courts Championships in 1949 and 1950. In 1950, her first year in the adult standings, she was ranked tenth among U.S. women singles players. In 1951 she successfully defended the Wightman Cup for the United States and was the youngest team member in the history of that competition. She went on to play for four consecutive years on the Wightman cup team, winning all of her matches in those tournaments. Connolly won eight successive tournaments in 1951, including the U.S. National Women's Title at Forest Hills-the competition that came to be known as the U.S. Open. Connolly, still a rookie at that time, was largely inexperienced in offensive playing techniques and was undeveloped in power serving, yet she was the youngest player in history to win the U.S. National Women's singles tournament, and she repeated the victory in 1952 and again in 1953. On July 5, 1952, at the age of 17, Connolly became the second youngest woman in history to win the women's singles tournament at Wimbledon, second only to Lottie Dod of England. Not since 1887 had the title gone to someone so young. Connolly retained the Wimbledon title through 1954.

Won the Grand Slam

In 1953, after three successive U.S. National titles and two Wimbledon victories. Connolly attained the pinnacle of women's tennis with a series of wins known as the Grand Slam of Tennis. During that calendar year she won not only the U.S. Nationals and Wimbledon, but the Australian Championship and the French Open. The four competitions together comprise the Grand Slam. Not only was Connolly the first woman, she was also the youngest woman in history to win the four Grand Slam tournaments, all within the same year. Only two other women ever accomplished the feat after Connolly: Margaret Court in 1970, and Steffi Graf in 1988. Graf, who was also a child tennis star, was Connolly's senior by three months when she took the Grand Slam title, leaving Connolly as the youngest Grand Slammer in the history of women's tennis. Connolly won not only the Grand Slam, she won all but one game set of the competitions involved.

Competitive Career Ended Tragically

In 1952, Connolly was the guest of honor at a parade organized by her home town of San Diego, following her unprecedented success at Forest Hills and Wimbledon. In recognition of her achievement, Connolly was given a horse named Colonel Merryboy. Two years later, on July 20, 1954, as Connolly rode Merryboy he became "spooked" and threw her from his back. In an instant Connolly was hurled into a cement truck and her leg was shattered by the impact. She spent some time in recuperation and returned to competitive tennis, but the extent of her leg injuries were ultimately too severe for the rigors of competition. On February 22, 1955, she announced that she would retire from professional tennis competition.

Connolly was not yet 21 when she announced her retirement. She had competed in women's professional tennis for less than five years. During her abbreviated career she amassed multiple wins in major tournaments around the world. In addition to her triumphs at the U.S. Nationals, Wimbledon, Australia, and France, Connolly won the Italian Championships in 1953 and again in 1954. She was honored by the Associated Press as the Female Athlete of the Year in 1951, 1952, and 1953. She was ranked the number one female tennis player in the world in 1952, 1953, and 1954.

A New Life

On the day that Connolly retired from competitive tennis, she announced her engagement to Norman Eugene Brinker. Five months later, on June 11, the couple married in San Diego. The 23-year-old Brinker, a naval officer and Olympic equestrian athlete, was a student at San Diego State College at the time of their marriage.

After Connolly retired from competition she devoted her time to coaching. She contributed a sports column to the San Diego Union, and on February 6, 1956 she signed with Wilson Sporting Goods in Chicago as a sports "pro" (a professional consultant) and public relations representative. Connolly by that time was just 21 years old. She devoted much of her energy to further the sport of tennis. She was deeply involved with tennis programs that encouraged women and children to play the game.

In time Connolly and Brinker set up housekeeping in Dallas, Texas where they raised two children. She was diagnosed with cancer and died in Dallas on June 21, 1969, at the age of 34. Before her death, Connolly was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1968. She was inducted posthumously into the Women's Sports Foundation Hall of Fame in 1987. The tennis world honors her memory with the Maureen Connolly Brinker Continental Players Cup for junior girls, an international competition that was dominated by Britain during the 1990s. In 1998, Farrey praised Connolly and held her as a standard for modern women's tennis contenders to emulate. "Show me what Maureen Connolly showed us," he demanded, and went on, "Her game demonstrated that she was No. 1."

Further Reading

Krull, Kathleen. Lives of the Athletes, Harcourt Brace, 1997.

Woolum, Janet. Outstanding Women Athletes Who Influenced American Sports, Oryx Press, 1992.

Sports Illustrated, August 29, 1988, p. 124.

ESPN Sports Zone, July 1, 1998, available at http://espn.go.com/ gen/columns/farrey (March 18, 1999).

 
 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Maureen Catherine Connolly

(born Sept. 17, 1934, San Diego, Calif., U.S. — died June 21, 1969, Dallas, Texas) U.S. tennis player. She became the youngest winner of the National Girl's Tournament at age 14. "Little Mo" won her first National Women's title in 1951. In 1953 she became the first woman to win the grand-slam (the Wimbledon, U.S., Australian, and French singles competitions). Her career was ended in 1954 by a horseback-riding accident.

For more information on Maureen Catherine Connolly, visit Britannica.com.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Connolly, Maureen,
1934–69, American tennis player, b. San Diego, Calif. She became, at 16, the youngest player to win the U.S. national singles. She successfully defended the U.S. title (1952, 1953), won the Wimbledon championship (1952, 1953, 1954), and completed a grand slam of the world's four major titles in 1953 with the French and Australian championships. Little Mo, as she was known, was one of America's greatest woman tennis players. Following a serious injury in a horseback riding accident, she was forced to retire in 1955.
 
Quotes By: Maureen Connolly

Quotes:

"Tennis can be a grind and there's always the danger of going stale if you think about it too much. You can get embittered if you train too hard and have nothing else on your mind. You have to be able to relax between matches and between tournaments."

 
Wikipedia: Maureen Connolly
Maureen Connolly
Born September 17, 1934
Flag of the United States Flag of California San Diego, CA
Died June 21 1969 (aged 34)
Flag of the United States Flag of Texas Dallas, TX
Nationality Flag of the United States United States

Maureen Catherine ("Little Mo") Connolly (born September 17, 1934 – died June 21, 1969) was an American tennis player who was the first woman to win all four Grand Slam tournaments during the same calendar year.

Connolly was born in San Diego, California, United States. As a child, she loved horseback riding, but her mother was unable to pay the cost of riding lessons. So, she took up the game of tennis.

Connolly's career began at the age of 10 on the municipal courts of San Diego. Her first coach, Wilbur Folsom, encouraged her to switch from a left-handed grip to right and she soon became a baseline specialist with tremendous power, accuracy, and an especially strong backhand. Aged 14, she won 56 consecutive matches and the following year became the youngest ever to win the U.S. national championship for girls 18 and under.

At the 1951 U.S. Championships, the 16 year old Connolly defeated Shirley Fry to become, at that time, the youngest ever to win America's most prestigious tennis tournament.

Connolly successfully defended her U.S. title and won Wimbledon in 1952. For the 1953 season, she hired a new coach, the Australian Davis Cup captain Harry Hopman, and entered all four Grand Slam tournaments for the first time. She defeated Julie Sampson Haywood in the Australian Championships final and Doris Hart in the finals of the French Championships, Wimbledon, and the U.S. Championships to become the first woman, and only the second person, to win the world's four major titles in the same year, commonly known as a "Grand Slam." She lost only one set in those four tournaments.

In 1954, Connolly did not defend her title at the Australian Championships but successfully defended her French and Wimbledon championships. On July 20, 1954, just two weeks after she won her third straight Wimbledon title, she was horseback riding when an accident with a truck crushed her right leg, ending her tennis career at age 19.

Grand Slam singles results for Connolly's 11 appearances:

  1. Australian Championships - 1 time: Winner 1953
  2. French Championships - 2 times: Winner 1953, 1954
  3. Wimbledon - 3 times: Winner 1952, 1953, 1954
  4. U.S. Championships - 5 times (1949-1953): Winner 1951, 1952, 1953

Connolly won the last nine Grand Slam singles tournaments she played, including 50 consecutive singles matches.

During her Wightman Cup career from 1951 through 1954, Connolly won all seven of her singles matches.

Connolly's achievements made her the darling of the media and one of the most popular personalities in the U.S. She was named Associated Press Female Athlete of the Year for three straight years from 1951 through 1953. However, Connolly recognized the downside of her tennis career, saying, “I have always believed greatness on a tennis court was my destiny, a dark destiny, at times, where the court became my secret jungle and I, a lonely, fear-stricken hunter. I was a strange little girl armed with hate, fear, and a Golden Racket.”[1]

In June 1955, Connolly married Norman Brinker, a member of the 1952 Olympic equestrian team for the United States, who shared her love of horses. They had two children while she remained partially involved in tennis, acting as a correspondent for some U.S. and British newspapers at major U.S. tennis tournaments and as a coach for the British Wightman Cup team during its visits to the U.S. In Texas, where the couple lived, she and her husband established the "Maureen Connolly Brinker Foundation" to promote junior tennis.

Tragedy struck again in 1966 when she was diagnosed with cancer. After a long battle with the disease, Connolly died at age 34 in Dallas, Texas on June 21, 1969, and was interred in the Sparkman-Hillcrest Memorial Park Cemetery in Dallas.

Connolly was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1969 and the International Women's Sports Hall of Fame in 1987.

Grand Slam record

  • French Championships
    • Singles champion (2): 1953, 1954
    • Women's Doubles champion: 1954
    • Women's Doubles runner-up: 1953
    • Mixed Doubles champion: 1954
    • Mixed Doubles runner-up: 1953
  • Wimbledon
    • Singles champion (3): 1952, 1953, 1954
    • Women's Doubles runners-up (2): 1952, 1953
  • U.S. Championships
    • Singles champion (3): 1951, 1952, 1953
    • Women's Doubles runner-up: 1952

Grand Slam finals (18)

Singles (9)

Wins (9)

Year Championship Opponent in Final Score in Final
1951 U.S. Championships Flag_of_the_United_States.svg Shirley Fry Irvin 6-3, 1-6, 6-4
1952 Wimbledon Flag_of_the_United_States.svg Louise Brough Clapp 6-4, 6-3
1952 U.S. Championships (2) Flag_of_the_United_States.svg Doris Hart 6-3, 7-5
1953 Australian Championships Flag_of_the_United_States.svg Julie Sampson Haywood 6-3, 6-2
1953 French Championships Flag_of_the_United_States.svg Doris Hart 6-2, 6-4
1953 Wimbledon (2) Flag_of_the_United_States.svg Doris Hart 8-6, 7-5
1953 U.S. Championships (3) Flag_of_the_United_States.svg Doris Hart 6-2, 6-4
1954 French Championships (2) Flag_of_France.svg Ginette Jucker Bucaille Grandguillot 6-4, 6-1
1954 Wimbledon (3) Flag_of_the_United_States.svg Louise Brough Clapp 6-2, 7-5

Women's doubles (6)

Wins (2)

Year Championship Partnering Opponents in Final Score in Final
1953 Australian Championships Flag of the United States Julie Sampson Haywood Flag of Australia Beryl Penrose
Flag of Australia Mary Bevis Hawton
6-4, 6-2
1954 French Championships Flag of Australia Nell Hall Hopman Flag of France Maude Galtier
Flag of France Suzanne Schmitt
7-5, 4-6, 6-0

Runners-up (4)

Year Championship Partnering Opponents in Final Score in Final
1952 Wimbledon (1st) Flag of the United States Louise Brough Clapp Flag of the United States Doris Hart
Flag of the United States Shirley Fry Irvin
8-6, 6-3
1952 U.S. Championships Flag of the United States Louise Brough Clapp Flag of the United States Doris Hart
Flag of the United States Shirley Fry Irvin
10-8, 6-4
1953 French Championships Flag of the United States Julie Sampson Haywood Flag of the United States Doris Hart
Flag of the United States Shirley Fry Irvin
6-4, 6-3
1953 Wimbledon (2nd) Flag of the United States Julie Sampson Haywood Flag of the United States Doris Hart
Flag of the United States Shirley Fry Irvin
6-0, 6-0

Mixed doubles (3)

Win (1)

Year Championship Partnering Opponents in Final Score in Final
1954 French Championships Flag of the United States Lew Hoad Flag of Australia Jacqueline Patorni
Flag of Australia Rex Hartwig
6-4, 6-3

Runners-up (2)

Year Championship Partnering Opponents in Final Score in Final
1953 Australian Championships Flag of the United States Hamilton Richardson Flag of the United States Julie Sampson Haywood
Flag of Australia Rex Hartwig
6-4, 6-3
1953 French Championships Flag of Australia Mervyn Rose Flag of the United States Doris Hart
Flag of the United States Vic Seixas
4-6, 6-4, 6-0

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Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Quotes By. Copyright © 2008 QuotationsBook.com. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Maureen Connolly" Read more

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