Richard Williams (tennis coach)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other people named Richard Williams, see Richard Williams (disambiguation).
Not to be confused with R. Norris Williams.
Williams at the 2007 Acura Classic
| |
Born | February 16, 1942 Shreveport, Louisiana,United States |
---|---|
Coaching career (1994–) | |
Coaching achievements | |
Coachee Singles Titles total | 45(V)-64(S) (109 titles) |
Coachee(s) Doubles Titles total | 21(S-V)-2(V)-5(S) (28 titles) |
List of notable tournaments (with champion)
| |
Coaching awards and records | |
Records |
Richard Williams (born February 16, 1942[1]) is an American tennis coach, and father of Venus and Serena Williams.
Early life[edit]
He was one of six children and only son of single mother Julia Mae Williams of Shreveport, Louisiana. His father abused his mother before abandoning the family altogether.[2] He graduated from high school, moved to Chicago, and eventually to California,[3] where he met Betty Johnson, whom he married in 1965. They had two daughters and three sons before divorcing in 1973.[1] Williams met Oracene Price in 1979, who had three daughters by her late husband. They married in 1980 after Venus was born,[1] and lived for a time in Lansing, Michigan, but eventually moved to Compton.
Career[edit]
He took tennis lessons from a man known as Old Whiskey, and decided his future daughters would be tennis professionals when he saw Virginia Ruzici playing on television.[1] He says that he wrote up a 78-page plan, and started giving lessons to Venus and Serena when they were four and a half, and began taking them to the public tennis courts. (He now says he feels like he took them too early, and six is a better age.)[3] Soon he got them into Shreveport tennis tournaments. In 1995, Richard pulled them out of a tennis academy,[why?] and coached them himself.
Serena won the US Open in 1999; Venus beat Lindsay Davenport to win the 2000 Wimbledon title. After that victory, Richard shouted "Straight Outta Compton!" (in reference to a song by N.W.A based on that area in Los Angeles) and jumped over the NBCbroadcasting booth, catching Chris Evert by surprise and performing a triumphant dance. Evert said that the broadcasters "thought the roof was coming down".[citation needed]
Personal life[edit]
Later in his daughter's careers, he took a less visible role turning to other interests such as photography. He raised public interest again after his 2002 divorce fromOracene Price and his appearances with new girlfriend Lakeisha Graham, who is a year older than Venus.[3] Richard and Lakeisha were married in 2010. Their son, Dylan Starr Williams, was born during 2012.[4]
Richard, Lakeisha and Oracene are frequently seated together in the players box at WTA tennis tournaments.
Books[edit]
- With Bart Davis, Black and White: The Way I See It (New York: Altria Books, 2014), forthcoming.[2]
References[edit]
- ^ ab c d Edmondson, Jacqueline (2005). Venus and Serena Williams: A Biography. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 0-313-33165-0.
- ^ ab http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/venus-serena-williams-father-reveals-tough-childhood-black-white-article-1.1762359
- ^ ab c Wiedeman, Reeves, "Tiger Dad: Child's Play," The New Yorker, June 2, 2014, pp. 24-25.
- ^ http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2297513/Venus-Williams-young-new-fan-father-71-brings-baby-son-tournament.html
External links[edit]
- SportsIllustrated.com, about the Indian Wells incident
- http://www.sportsline.com/tennis/story/10725357
|
No comments:
Post a Comment