{"id":299885,"date":"2023-12-12T16:43:59","date_gmt":"2023-12-12T16:43:59","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/sports-life-news.com\/?p=299885"},"modified":"2023-12-12T16:43:59","modified_gmt":"2023-12-12T16:43:59","slug":"jones-on-raducanus-struggles-and-blazing-a-trail-with-king","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sports-life-news.com\/tennis\/jones-on-raducanus-struggles-and-blazing-a-trail-with-king\/","title":{"rendered":"Jones on Raducanu's struggles and blazing a trail with King"},"content":{"rendered":"
It is, Ann Jones wishes to clarify, not a trophy cabinet but a \u2018cabinet with trophies in it\u2019. Either way, the old furniture piece in her dining room contains two of her most prized possessions.<\/p>\n
One is a replica of the Venus Rosewater Dish, which she received for winning the women\u2019s singles at Wimbledon in July 1969. The other she picked up five months later, when she was crowned BBC Sports Personality of the Year.<\/p>\n
Jones was the 16th recipient of the iconic award, which will be handed out for the 70th time in Salford a week tomorrow. The 85-year-old is also, Mail Sport tells her, the oldest living winner.<\/p>\n
\u2018I am not sure that is an accolade I am attracted to,\u2019 smiles Jones, sitting on her sofa at her home in Birmingham, flanked by Rocky, her English Setter, and Alfie, her son\u2019s Papillon.<\/p>\n
Jones topped the public vote in 1969 ahead of Open golf champion Tony Jacklin and Manchester United winger George Best. She was presented with the silver four-turret lens camera trophy at the old BBC Television Theatre in London by Princess Alexandra, Queen Elizabeth II\u2019s cousin.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Ann Jones at home in Birmingham with her SPOTY trophy, and dog Rocky<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
\u2018I didn\u2019t expect to win it, I was just happy to be there,\u2019 admits Jones. \u2018I thought Tony Jacklin would win. When they read my name out, I was quite surprised. I hadn\u2019t prepared a speech. I just had to bumble through. But it was very exciting. It was a big thing in the sporting fraternity.<\/p>\n
\u2018It is an award I value as much as anything else I won because it is a public accolade. It is an acceptance by the British public of what you have achieved.\u2019<\/p>\n
Jones was the first of five tennis players to claim the BBC gong. The last was Emma Raducanu, after she became the first British woman in 44 years to lift a Grand Slam singles trophy with her 2021 US Open triumph aged 18.<\/p>\n
Raducanu has had a nightmare two years since, struggling with injury and slipping to 296 in the world. \u2018It is very sad,\u2019 says Jones. However, the Brummie was riled by recent comments made by Raducanu, who claimed her high turnover of coaches was because they could not \u2018keep up\u2019 with her questions.<\/p>\n
\u2018Well, what did she think we all did?\u2019 asks Jones. \u2018We had to find our own answers. You have to work at things yourself. To fire a coach after she had just won the US Open was the most ridiculous thing I\u2019ve ever heard.\u2019<\/p>\n
Raducanu, 21, has been out of action since April but will return at the start of next month in Auckland. Jones fears she may never reach the heights of 2021 again and believes Raducanu has caused some of her own injury issues by changing her game.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Jones beat Billie Jean King to win the women\u2019s singles title at Wimbledon in 1969<\/p>\n
\u2018Life is about momentum,\u2019 says Jones. \u2018If you\u2019ve got the momentum, you have to take advantage of it and carry on.<\/p>\n
\u2018You\u2019ve got a natural game. What you need to do is to improve what you have got. You don\u2019t have coaches come along and change your game.<\/p>\n
\u2018The results are clear. You get injured, because it\u2019s not natural for you to hit the ball in that way. It was natural to hit it the way you hit it in the first place.<\/p>\n
\u2018How do you recover your natural game after it has been changed? It\u2019s very difficult to find what you had before. I think she\u2019s really enjoyed winning and I don\u2019t think she wants to lose now. It\u2019s a waste and we could do with a champion here.\u2019<\/p>\n
Jones won the French Open in 1961 and 1966, then added the Wimbledon crown by beating top seed Margaret Court in the semi-finals and three-time defending champion Billie Jean King in the final. \u2018Nobody could say I fluked my way through,\u2019 grins Jones.<\/p>\n
She was the first left-handed female to triumph at SW19, as well as the first Brit in the Open era. Her final against King was such big news that, as the story goes, the Beatles paused recording of their song Golden Slumbers to listen on the radio.<\/p>\n
Jones, though, did not return to Wimbledon to defend her title, reducing her playing schedule to start a family, then moving into the commentary box. \u2018It took me 13 years to win it, I wasn\u2019t going to defend it!\u2019 she laughs.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Jones was the first of five tennis players to claim the BBC gong, the last was\u00a0Emma Raducanu<\/p>\n
On the coffee table in her lounge is the book Trailblazers: The Unmatched Story of Women\u2019s Tennis, written by old friend and rival King. Jones was a trailblazer herself, helping increase the prize money for women at Wimbledon, \u2018stimulated\u2019 by her own paltry pay cheque of \u00a31,500 in 1969, half of what men\u2019s champion Rod Laver had received.<\/p>\n
\u2018Billie Jean and I went with David Gray, the secretary of the International Tennis Federation, to see Sir Brian Burnett, who was chairman of the All England Club,\u2019 recalls Jones. \u2018We said it wasn\u2019t fair, it was a joint event and we nailed him to the wall. We eventually got women\u2019s prize money from 50 per cent of the men\u2019s to about 80.\u2019<\/p>\n
Jones also helped King organise the first professional female touring group, which became the WTA. Last year, the pair were reunited at Wimbledon at a parade of champions to celebrate the centenary of Centre Court.<\/p>\n
\u2018Angela Mortimer and I said we just hoped we were going to get on and off the court without falling over,\u2019 chuckles Jones, who remains a vice-president of the All England Club.<\/p>\n
She has, however, decided not to join a similar roll call of past winners at SPOTY\u2019s 70th anniversary show next week.<\/p>\n
\u2018My grandson wanted to go but I didn\u2019t want to go and look after him \u2014 I wanted someone to take me and look after me!\u2019 admits Jones, who says her vote would go to England Ashes hero Stuart Broad if he made the shortlist, announced tomorrow.<\/p>\n
\u2018It\u2019s like going to the Wimbledon final, it brings all the emotions back. But it is a long sit. It used to just be a sporting occasion with a trophy at the end. Now it\u2019s a huge thing.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Emma Raducanu is nearing a long-awaited return after a nightmare few years with injuries<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Since winning the US Open in 2021, Raducanu has been faced with several major setbacks<\/p>\n
\u2018The atmosphere has changed. The young ones go for a party but I don\u2019t know anybody now. All my lot have died.\u2019<\/p>\n
Ten SPOTY winners have died, including Sir Stirling Moss, Bobby Moore and Henry Cooper. Jones, though, is alive and well.<\/p>\n
\u2018I walk the dogs, I go swimming, I look after the house, I look after the garden, I play bridge on an evening,\u2019 she adds. \u2018I can\u2019t play tennis now because I can\u2019t move. But I feel fine. I am lucky.<\/p>\n
\u2018Something is going to get you in the end, but I will keep going for as long as I can.\u2019<\/p>\n