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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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1995-02-23
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<text id=94TT0918>
<title>
Jul. 11, 1994: Sport:Last Waltz at Wimbledon
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Jul. 11, 1994 From Russia, With Venom
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ARTS & MEDIA/SPORT, Page 61
Last Waltz at Wimbledon
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Playing the finals for a record 12th time, Martina Navratilova
gives everyone but Conchita Martinez lessons on Centre Court
</p>
<p>By Paul A. Witteman
</p>
<p> In football it's the legs that go first, sapped of their spring
and strength by season upon season of relentless battering.
In baseball it's the eyes, diminished to the degree that a curve
ball looks like a fast ball and there are too many called strike
threes. In golf it's the nerves, causing a 3-ft. putt to look
like three miles of bad road. In sports from archery to yachting,
age steals away the skills, leaving nothing behind for the graying
champion to embrace. Except heart.
</p>
<p> Martina Navratilova brought her surgically repaired knees, prescription
eyeglasses and fragile psyche this year to the All England Lawn
Tennis and Croquet Club for a sentimental valedictory on tennis'
most hallowed turf. No expectations. Just an opportunity to
bask one more time in the genteel applause of the faithful at
Centre Court. After all, Martina is 37, and the serve no longer
sizzles. Wimbledon and its slippery green amalgam of fescue
and ryegrass are now the domain of five-time champion Steffi
Graf, 25. It's a surface for the young and the restless. On
grass either you are quick or you are quickly dismissed.
</p>
<p> Everyone forgot about the champion's heart. Martina packed hers
along with her rackets and sweatbands and made her last dance
the most memorable Wimbledon in years. Against all odds, she
swept through to the finals, vanquishing veterans and prodigies
alike. Meanwhile Graf fell out in the first round, and second-seeded
Arantxa Sanchez Vicario, 22, was sent to the sidelines in the
fourth. Navratilova could be forgiven last Saturday if she was
overcome with the urge to pinch herself. For there she was on
Centre Court again, playing for an unprecedented 10th ladies'
singles title against third-seeded Conchita Martinez, 22, a
baseline basher from Barcelona, Spain.
</p>
<p> In a stadium as steamy as a Turkish bath, Navratilova parried
top-spin forehands with crisp volleys. Martinez responded by
hitting passing shots with precision; they found the lines unerringly.
Martinez won the first set 6-4. Navratilova was leading 3-0
in the second set when Martinez called a time-out for a muscle
injury. The delay seemed to break Navratilova's concentration,
but she held on to win the set, 6-3. In the decisive third set,
however, younger legs prevailed 6-3. But the warmest cheers
after the match belonged to the runner-up, who magnanimously
allowed Martinez a solo turn around her court with the trophy.
Pausing as she left the stadium, Navratilova stooped and picked
a tuft of turf as a last memento. "I wasn't so splendorful today,"
she said. And was this really the end? "Definitely. Enough."
</p>
<p> Not that losing in her final Wimbledon appearance diminishes
her achievement. Navratilova's record there stands as much as
a testament to durability as well as talent. The once chubby
player from Prague first showed up at Wimbledon as a junior
in 1973. Over these 22 years she has played in 12 finals, losing
only to Graf twice and now to Martinez. She has teamed up with
various partners to win the women's doubles seven times. She
fooled around in the mixed doubles too, winning that title twice.
Navratilova seems to have been a fixture at Wimbledon almost
as long as radio commentator and former champ Fred Perry, whose
last title came in 1936 and who is still broadcasting for BBC
Radio.
</p>
<p> But Navratilova's contribution to the women's game goes beyond
the nearly 170 singles titles and $20 million in prize money
she has won in her career. She has left her mark as indelibly
as Billie Jean King, who introduced emotion and brio to the
game, and Chris Evert, whose legacy includes killer concentration
and the two-fisted backhand. Navratilova's gifts may be even
more significant. She elevated serve and volley tactics to a
higher level on the women's tour and made it fashionable for
women to display muscle tone. Even traditionalist Evert began
to pump iron after Martina showed the way.
</p>
<p> Along the way Navratilova revealed she was gay, became embroiled
in spectacularly difficult relationships and displayed a knack
for looking a bit foolish. Her affair with Judy Nelson came
to an embarrassing end when Nelson sued her for palimony and
the public was treated to their videotaped agreement. At another
point she told her biographer that she wanted to have a child
with hockey player Wayne Gretzky because the gene combination
would produce a great athlete.
</p>
<p> During Wimbledon she reiterated her desire to have a child.
Parenting duties might be shared with current companion Danda
Jaroljmek. Or they might not.
</p>
<p> What makes Navratilova so refreshingly different from other
athletes is that she says what she thinks. Ask a question. Martina
answers. No punches pulled. About her sexuality, she has said,
"I've shown a few homophobes that their prejudices were not
well founded...I don't have horns on my head. I don't have
a tail."
</p>
<p> What she still has is a surgeon's touch with the drop volley
and the ability to cut off return angles with quick rushes to
the net. Her serve has diminished to a mortal 97 m.p.h. Mortal,
that is, when compared with her serve of five years ago. But
what's a flaw or two when the achievement itself can never be
erased by the passage of time?
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>