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Billie Jean King grimaced when
she heard that Martina Hingis wasn't so sorry
about the Amelie Mauresmo uproar after all, when
she was told that in Hingis' grand view from the
top of the tennis world, there is just so much
public affection that a racquet-wielding lesbian
should show.
"She's young," King said one
recent morning over coffee, before remembering
that Hingis, at 18 and carrying the responsibility
of being No. 1, isn't that young. "What, if you're
straight and you bring your husband, you're not
allowed to hold his hand? I'm going to have to
talk to Chris."
Chris Evert, King said, counsels
Hingis as part of a mentoring program on the women's
tour. King had better talk to Evert and Evert
to Hingis before the Swiss Miss mismanages another
news media session and again comes across as the
spokeswoman for homophobia.
"If she grew up with that, that's
unfortunate, but that's where someone like Chris
has to step up," King said. "Sometimes, when you're
No. 1, you think you can get away with anything.
Martina has to learn to say to herself, 'What's
the right thing to do?"'
What Hingis did, with an unintentional
assist from Lindsay Davenport, was turn an inspiring
Australian Open run late last month by the relatively
unknown Mauresmo into a distasteful referendum
on the Frenchwoman's sexuality, played out sensationally
in the Australian tabloids.
After telephoning Davenport, to
whom she is close, King was certain that the American
was sorry for her clumsy language in discussing
Mauresmo's power and physique after their semifinal
match. First of all, there are women on the tour
-- Venus Williams and Mary Pierce, to name two
-- more sculpted than Mauresmo. Second, before
she whipped herself into better shape, Davenport
understood that people snickered about her weight.
She, of all people, should have known better.
"It's probably good for them
because now they know they need to be careful
with what they say," King said. "When I talked
to Lindsay, she said, 'Billie, I felt so bad,
like I was walking on eggshells."' Davenport sent
Mauresmo a heartfelt letter before the final,
won by Hingis, who then apologized to her vanquished
opponent for saying in an interview that Mauresmo
is "half a man; she's here with her girlfriend."
Mauresmo, 19, told Hingis, "I
hope you really mean this." Hingis apparently
did not.
The following day, she told Tim
Layden of Sports Illustrated that she "wasn't
regretting" what she had said. Much worse, she
added, of Mauresmo and her companion, Sylvie Bourdon,
"Everyone makes her own choices, but ... they
are hugging and kissing all the time, and I'm
just, 'OK, there's a limit."
King, one of a handful of star-quality
female athletes who have acknowledged a lesbian
life style, sighed and said: "Am I shocked she
said this? Why would I be? I lived this. Martina
Navratilova lived this. It just tells me there's
still homophobia on the tour."
And now, of all times, when the
men's draw at a Grand Slam tournament is the rough
equivalent of the jayvee game. King, the mother
of the women's pro circuit, a rebel to the core,
said, if anything, that women should not even
play Australia until it offers equal prize money.
Or the French Open and Wimbledon, for that matter.
"This is the moment, the window," she said, adding
that the chances of a united women's movement
are slim.
There is always the next purse
to win, another endorsement to earn. At the root
of Hingis' revulsion to Mauresmo is most likely
the old-school belief that she will somehow be
mislabeled, stigmatized. Hingis' ideal female
tennis icon, judging from her recent rash of showy
magazine shoots, is obviously Anna Kournikova,
the tour's reigning boys' locker room pinup.
This uninformed, regressive attitude
negates the leaps and bounds of women's sports,
and misses the spiritual triumph of a leveling
playing field. A generation of schoolgirls is
finally being encouraged to compete, to sweat,
without having to worry about sexuality being
factored into their personal scouting report.
It shouldn't matter and, to increasing
audiences and consumers, it doesn't matter. Everyone
makes their own choices, as Hingis put it, and
Evert or someone should teach her to respect them.
"The tour has so many different personalities
now," King said. "Celebrate the differences."
Next Monday night, King will
receive the Arthur Ashe Award for Courage at the
ESPY Awards at Radio City Music Hall. Here is
some sound mentoring advice for Martina Hingis:
Call up Chris Evert and find out why
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