By International Tennis Hall of Fame
This year we celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Original 9—the women who decided to take a stand against inequality in tennis.
The Original 9
This year we celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Original 9—the women who decided to take a stand against inequality in tennis. In 1970, when the disparity of prize money at men’s and women’s tournaments reached a critical point, some women players approached Gladys Heldman, publisher of World Tennis magazine, for help in forming a women’s tournament. Together, Peaches Bartkowicz, Rosie Casals, Judy Dalton, Julie Heldman, Billie Jean King, Kerry Melville, Kristy Pigeon, Nancy Richey, and Valerie Ziegenfuss signed $1 pro contracts with Heldman and Philip Morris CEO Joseph F. Cullman, 3rd at the Houston Racquet Club. They skipped the sanctioned Pacific Southwest Tournament and played in the newly formed Houston Women’s Invitation for $7,500 in prize money. This became the first tournament on the Virginia Slims Circuit, which eventually became the Women’s Tennis Association. This is their inspiring and groundbreaking story.
The Original 9 (1970-09-23) by RGD0006N-1970-2841-004, Houston Post Photographs, Houston Public Library, HMRCInternational Tennis Hall of Fame
The Original 9: Valerie Ziegenfuss, Billie Jean King, Nancy Richey, Peaches Bartkowicz, Judy Dalton, Kerry Melville, Rosie Casals, Gladys Heldman (representing daughter Julie), and Kristy Pigeon. (Photo taken at the Houston Racquet Club)
The Open Era
When the Open Era began in 1968, tennis was changed forever, though women players soon realized that they weren’t benefitting quite as well as the men. The first few years of the Open Era were confusing for everyone in tennis. Some players remained amateurs and were unable to make money in the Open events they played. Others had signed contracts to become touring pros but were still restricted by their national associations and the International Lawn Tennis Federation (ILTF, now the ITF) in the events which they could play.
Billie Jean King signed a contract to be a touring professional in the National Tennis League. Here, she was guaranteed $40,000 for the year, while lesser-known women in her troupe received much less. Meanwhile, one of the men who traveled with her was guaranteed $70,000 for the year. The years-long fight to earn prize money had finally ended, but a new battle was just beginning—women tennis players set out to prove that they deserved the same amount of money as their male counterparts.
A Sign of the Times
In the early 1970s, many of the causes that led to protests and rioting in the 1960s were still ongoing points of contention and the women’s liberation movement was in full swing. Because the Open Era began during these times of change, it was the perfect opportunity for women players to fight for what they felt they deserved. Like many other bureaucracies at the time, the different associations that ruled tennis around the world were run by men. These men were mostly former players themselves and sympathized with the current men’s players.
Women needed someone to advocate for them and could stand up to the men in charge. Gladys Heldman, with help from Billie Jean King’s international renown and Joe Cullman’s money, took on that role. A champion for women’s rights long before this fight began, Heldman used her position as the founder of World Tennis magazine to advocate for women players. It was her idea that the women players who did not want to be treated as second-class citizens at the Pacific Southwest Tournament start their own tournament in Houston.
Risking Their Livelihoods
Some women players met secretly during the US Open to decide whether to boycott the Pacific Southwest. Many knew that if they did boycott, they might incur stiff penalties from their countries’ associations. Heldman came to the rescue, informing the women that they did not need to boycott and eight of them could participate in the new Houston Women’s Invitation.
Pacific Southwest director Jack Kramer did not take this lying down. He fought against a sanction that would allow the women’s tournament to take place during his event. After much back and forth, the USLTA (now USTA) told the women that if they played in Houston as professionals they would be suspended, but if they played as amateurs, they could get paid $7,500 under the table. The women did not budge. Under the still-new Open Era rules, a tennis club could hold an unsanctioned tournament only if the players in the tournament were contract professionals. The Original 9 signed one-week, $1 contracts with Heldman and made tennis history. Philip Morris CEO Joe Cullman then came into the mix to sponsor the tournament. Cullman gave $2,500, along with use of the Virginia Slims name and its slogan “You’ve Come a Long Way, Baby.”
The Impact of the Original 9
The impact of the Original 9's break from the establishment in 1970 has been felt in sports and society ever since. Women's tennis players are some of the highest-paid and most renowned athletes in the world. Their efforts have inspired women in other sports to take control of their careers as well, most notably the players of the U.S. Women's National Soccer Team (USWNT) in their lawsuit with the United States Soccer Federation over gender-bias and pay equality.
Other women's teams have been successful in their fights for equal pay. The U.S. Women's National Hockey Team battled with USA Hockey to get equal treatment to the men's team. They threatened to boycott the 2017 International Ice Hockey Federation World Championships, but USA Hockey conceded and 2017 and 2018 were immensely successful years for the team. More and more women are coaches on the sidelines of men's sports - there are currently 11 female assistant coaches in the NBA - and more women now hold positions in sports franchise front offices.
Gladys Heldman at the International Tennis Hall of Fame (1979-07-14) by International Tennis Hall of FameInternational Tennis Hall of Fame
An interview with Gladys Heldman at the International Tennis Hall of Fame
Original 9 (2020-09-23) by International Tennis Hall of FameInternational Tennis Hall of Fame
Hall of Famers Tracy Austin, Pam Shriver, and Chris Evert give their thanks to the Original 9 and their courage to fight for equality in tennis.
The Original 9 Photo Credit: RGD0006N-1970-2841-004, Houston Post Photographs, Houston Public Library, HMRC
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