Indigenous breakthrough a matter of time, says Goolagong-Cawley
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[July 30, 2018]
By Ian Ransom
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Nearly half a
century after Evonne Goolagong-Cawley became the first Aboriginal
Australian to win a grand slam title at the 1971 French Open, the
nation still waits for another indigenous talent to emerge and claim
the game's highest honors.
Aboriginal athletes have featured prominently in the narrative of
Australian sport and regularly light up the country's top flight
rugby league (NRL) and Australian Rules football (AFL) competitions.
Breaking into the big time of global tennis has proved a bigger
obstacle, however, with world number 16 Ashleigh Barty the only
indigenous player currently in the women's top 200.
The men's ATP tour has long been bereft of Aboriginals, with
promising juniors failing to make an impression in the professional
ranks.
Ian Goolagong, Goolagong-Cawley's younger brother, is the only
Aboriginal man to have played at Wimbledon having made a mixed
doubles appearance with his seven-times grand slam title-winning
sister in 1982.
Goolagong-Cawley, whose foundation is a prominent sponsor of
indigenous tennis, has no illusions about the challenge of producing
champions from Australia's 650,000 Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islanders, a population comparable to Macau.
A lack of tennis infrastructure, particularly for remote communities
spread across the vast interior, invariably means the first piece of
sporting equipment grasped by an Aboriginal child is an oval
football rather than a racquet.
"All you need is a ball to kick, even in the communities and so on,"
Goolagong-Cawley told Reuters in a telephone interview on Monday.
Goolagong-Cawley, however, believes that tennis can soon expect a
dividend from investments that have been made in specialist programs
for a number of years.
"The more young indigenous kids we have playing the game, the more
chance we'll have of finding a champion," she said.
"Now we've got a better chance, because Tennis Australia is creating
more pathways for them."
A clutch of indigenous juniors are making their way onto the feeder
International Tennis Federation (ITF) circuit, including teenage
siblings Corey and Krystal Clarke from Camden Haven in northern New
South Wales state.
INDIGENOUS CARNIVAL
Tennis Australia hopes for a further boost from the inaugural
National Indigenous Tennis Carnival in Darwin in September, which
will bring together 180 of the community's top players from every
state and territory for the first time.
[to top of second column] |
Former tennis player Evonne Goolagong-Cawley arrives with the
women's singles trophy before the final match between Serena
Williams of the U.S. and Germany's Angelique Kerber at the
Australian Open tennis tournament at Melbourne Park, Australia,
January 30, 2016. REUTERS/Jason Reed Picture Supplied by Action
Images
"The need that this fills is that it rounds out the pathway that's
been provided," Tennis NT chief executive Sam Gibson, who runs the
game in the remote Northern Territory, told Reuters.
"You look at the AFL and the number of indigenous players playing
there and being successful.
"We need to be able to harness that skill-set with tennis because
that will create a lot more opportunities (for players) to attend
grand slams and win grand slams."
Indigenous people continue to suffer disproportionately high rates
of suicide, domestic violence and imprisonment in Australia, and
track near the bottom in almost every economic and social indicator.
A recent government report said the nation was failing to meet more
than half of its targets aimed at closing the gap between indigenous
people and the mainstream, including increased life expectancy and
improved literacy.
Goolagong-Cawley, however, believes there has been progress in
making tennis more inclusive.
"When I started I was pretty well the only Aboriginal player who was
playing tournaments," she added.
"And you go back further, Aboriginal people weren’t allowed in
clubs. And so times have changed."
Raised with seven siblings in Barellan, New South Wales,
Goolagong-Cawley said tennis glory might have passed her by if it
had not been for the generosity of the people of the tiny country
town.
"We couldn't afford anything. Suitcase, clothes, everything,
Barellan people bought for me," she said.
"So I want to do what the townspeople did for me."
(Editing by Nick Mulvenney)
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