Andrea Jaeger: Sexually harassed 'at least 30 times' by female official
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[June 25, 2022]
Former teenage tennis phenom
Andrea Jaeger said she was sexually harassed "at least 30 times" by
a female Women's Tennis Association staff member during the 1980s.
Jaeger, now 57, also told The Independent she also was unknowingly
served alcohol when she was 16 by a different staff member, who
drove her home and tried to kiss her.
The two-time Grand Slam finalist was on the tour from ages 14 to 19
and was ranked as high as No. 2 in the world in 1981. Despite her
success, she said she made it a habit to avoid WTA officials at
tournaments during her five years on tour. Jaeger said much of the
harassment occurred in locker rooms.
"I'd change in portable toilets or a bathroom stall because I didn't
want to deal with the comments, the interest or actions of people,"
Jaeger said, according to The Independent. "I had at least 30
incidents with one specific non-playing staff member, physical
attempts all in the locker room very, very early in my career. That
particular non-playing staff employee had a major issue keeping her
hands to herself.
"I avoided being in training rooms alone because an approach was
made on me there as well."
Jaeger said she was served multiple alcoholic drinks following the
1982 WTA Championships and began to get fuzzy. An official drove her
home.
"When we got to my condo, she walked me to the door and tried
something on with me," Jaeger said. "She was trying to kiss me. I
was so sickened that I was crawling up the stairs inside trying not
to throw up so my dad wouldn't see me."
Jaeger said she complained to WTA officials after the incident and
was threatened with reprisals.
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"I said this has got to stop. Every week I have to
worry about this (expletive)," Jaeger said. "They said 'if you say
one more word about this, we'll make sure your sister's scholarship
at Stanford gets pulled.'
"Every time I tried to stand up for myself, I was threatened with
someone else getting harmed."
Jaeger told The Independent that there were many inappropriate
relationships within the sport.
"There was a physical therapist who was in a relationship with one
of the players," Jaeger said. "I had a groin injury, a muscle
strain, and should have got it examined but I didn't want to get
treated by that person. All these unethical situations are something
that a 14- to-19-year-old should never be dealing with."
Jaeger felt now was the right time to speak up
about her experiences.
"I can see how in any sport, even now 40 years later, if a kid was
confronted with similar situations they may also stay quiet when
threatened," Jaeger said. "I don't want to enable any further harm
to happen." Because if that is the real story behind the teenage
phenom who burnt out, her legacy is the hundreds of young lives
she's brought a light to since."
Jaeger won 10 career titles before retiring at age 19 due to a
shoulder injury. She lost to Martina Navaratilova in the 1982 French
Open final and also in the 1983 Wimbledon final.
Jaeger also was a Grand Slam semifinalist three times -- the U.S.
Open in 1980 and 1982 and the Australian Open in 1982.
--Field Level Media
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