1960s In 1961, Ashe won the
Eastern Clay Court Championships defeating George Ball and Bob Barker in close five set matches in the semifinal and final. In 1963, Ashe won the
Pacific Southwest Championships in Los Angeles on concrete defeating
Rafael Osuna and
Whitney Reed in the final two rounds. The following season he won the 1964
Eastern Grass Court Championships at South Orange, New Jersey defeating
Dennis Ralston,
Gene Scott, and
Clark Graebner in close matches. In 1963, Ashe became the first black player ever selected for the
United States Davis Cup team. In 1965, ranked the number 3 player in the United States, Ashe won both the
National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) singles title and the doubles title (with
Ian Crookenden of New Zealand), helping UCLA win the NCAA team tennis championship. In 1966 and 1967, Ashe reached the final of the Australian Championship but lost on both occasions to
Roy Emerson. He won the 1967
U.S. Men's Clay Court Championships in Milwaukee defeating
Marty Riessen in the final. In 1968, Ashe won the
United States Amateur Championships against Davis Cup teammate Bob Lutz. He served 26 aces in the US Open final to beat
Tom Okker in five sets. "I couldn't handle his serve" admitted Okker afterwards. He became the first
US Open champion of the
open era, becoming the first black male to capture the title and the only player to have won both the amateur and open national championships in the same year. In order to maintain Davis Cup eligibility and have time away from army duty for important tournaments, Ashe was required to maintain his amateur status. Because of this, he could not accept the $14,000 first-prize money, which was instead given to runner-up Okker, while Ashe received just $20 daily expenses for his historic triumph. His ability to compete in the championship (and avoid the Vietnam War) arose from his brother Johnnie's decision to serve an additional tour in Vietnam in Arthur's place. In December 1968, Ashe helped the U.S. team become Davis Cup champions after victory in the final in
Adelaide against defending champions, Australia. His only loss in the 12 Davis Cup tournament singles matches he played that year, was in the last
dead rubber game after the U.S. team had already clinched victory. The season closed with Ashe the winner of 10 of 22 tournaments with a 72–10 win-loss match record. In September 1969, the U.S. Davis Cup team retained the cup, beating
Romania in the final challenge round, with Ashe winning both his singles matches. The same year, Ashe applied for a visa to play in the
South African Open but was denied the visa by the South African government who enforced a strict
apartheid policy of racial segregation. He continued to apply for visas in the following years and the country continued to deny him one. In protest, he used this example of discrimination to campaign for U.S.
sanctions against South Africa and the expulsion of the nation from the International Lawn Tennis Federation (
ILTF) but, in defense of the individual South African players, refused the call from activists to forfeit matches against them.
1970s In January 1970, Ashe won his second
Grand Slam singles title at the
Australian Open. With the competition somewhat depleted by the absence of some world-class
National Tennis League (NTL) professional players barred by their league from entering because the financial guarantees were deemed too low, Ashe defeated
Dick Crealy in straight sets in the final (which was played in a light drizzle which caused Ashe's glasses to mist up) to become the first non-Australian to win the title since 1959. In March 1970, triggered by South Africa's refusal to grant Ashe a visa to play there, the country was expelled from the Davis Cup competition for its racial policy. In September 1970, Ashe helped the U.S. Davis cup team defeat
West Germany in the challenge round to win their third consecutive Davis Cup. Ashe then turned professional, signing a five-year contract with
Lamar Hunt's
World Championship Tennis. In March 1971, Ashe reached the final of the Australian Open again but lost in straight sets to
Ken Rosewall. In June that year, Ashe won the
French Open men's doubles with partner
Marty Riessen. In 1972, due to a dispute between the
ILTF and the WCT, Ashe, as one of the 32 contracted WCT players, was barred from taking part in any ILTF
Grand Prix tennis circuit tournaments from January to July. This ban meant Ashe was unable to play at the French Open and
Wimbledon Grand Slam tournaments. In September, Ashe reached the final of the US Open for the second time. After leading his opponent,
Ilie Năstase by 2 sets to 1 and 4–2 in the fourth set, he eventually lost in five sets. The loss from such a winning position was the biggest disappointment of Ashe's professional tennis career. At the post-match award ceremony, irritated by some of Năstase's on-court antics during the game, Ashe praised Năstase as a tough opponent and 'colourful' player, then suggested, "... and when he brushes up on some of his court manners, he is going to be even better". At this tournament, concerned that men's tennis professionals were not receiving winnings commensurate with the sport's growing popularity and to protect players from promoters and associations, Ashe supported the founding of the
Association of Tennis Professionals. He went on to become its elected president in 1974. In June 1973, as a result of an ATP boycott, Ashe was one of 13 seeded players and 81 players in total who withdrew from the
Wimbledon tournament to much public criticism. The catalyst for the boycott was that
Yugoslavian ATP member
Niki Pilić had been suspended for nine months by his tennis federation after allegedly refusing to represent them in a Davis Cup tie against New Zealand in May, something Pilić denied. The ban was upheld by the ILTF though they reduced it to just one month. The ATP contested the ban but lost a lawsuit to force Pilić's participation at Wimbledon during the ban period. As a member of the ATP board, Ashe voted to boycott the tournament, a vote that was only narrowly passed when ATP chairman,
Cliff Drysdale abstained. Commentators considered that the boycott demonstrated the power of the fledgling ATP, and showed the tennis associations that professional players could no longer be dictated to. In November 1973, with the South African government seeking to end their
Olympic ban and re-join the Olympic movement, Ashe was finally granted a visa to enter the country for the first time, to play in the South African Open. He lost in the final to
Jimmy Connors, but won the doubles with partner Tom Okker. Despite boycotts against South African sport, Ashe believed that his presence could help break down stereotypes and that by competing and winning the tournament, it would stand as an example of the result of integration, and help bring about change in apartheid South Africa. He reached the singles final again in 1974, losing in straight sets to Connors for the second consecutive year. In 1977, Ashe addressed a small crowd of boycott supporters at the U.S. Open and admitted that he had been wrong to participate in South Africa and once again supported the boycott of South African players after he had tried to purchase tickets for some young Africans for a tennis match in South Africa, and was told to use an "Africans only" counter. In the media, Ashe called for South Africa to be expelled from the professional tennis circuit and Davis Cup competition. In May 1975, Ashe beat
Björn Borg to win the season-ending championship
WCT Finals in
Dallas. On July 5, 1975, in the first all-American Wimbledon final since 1947, Ashe, seeded sixth and just a few days short of his 32nd birthday, won
Wimbledon at his ninth attempt, defeating the overwhelming favorite and defending champion, Jimmy Connors. Ashe had never beaten Connors in any of their previous encounters and Connors had not dropped a set in any of the six earlier rounds, but Ashe played an almost perfect game of tactical tennis to win in four sets. In the lead-up to the final, the two players' relationship was already strained. Connors was suing the ATP, with Ashe as its president, for $10 million for alleged
restraint of trade after opposition from the ATP and French officials meant he was refused entry to the 1974 French Open as a contracted member of
World Team Tennis (WTT). Just two days before the start of the Wimbledon tournament, it had been announced that Connors was now suing Ashe for $5 million for comments in a letter Ashe had written to ATP members in his role as president, criticizing Connors' insistence that Davis Cup captain
Dennis Ralston should be fired and Connors' "unpatriotic" boycott of the competition which had started after Ralston left him out of the team against the
West Indies in Jamaica in March 1972. On the final day, Ashe pointedly and symbolically wore red, white and blue wristbands throughout the match and wore his U.S.-emblazoned Davis Cup warm-up jacket when walking out onto
Centre Court and during the award ceremony while receiving the trophy and winner's cheque for GBP £10,000 (1975 equivalent US$23,000). Soon after the final, Connors dropped the libel suit. Ashe played for a few more years and won the Australian Open doubles with
Tony Roche in January 1977, but a left foot heel injury requiring surgery a month later and subsequent long-term rehabilitation saw his world ranking drop to a lowly 257th before a remarkable comeback saw him rise back to 13th in the world again the following year at the age of 35. However, after undergoing
heart surgery in December 1979, Ashe officially retired on April 16, 1980, at the age of 36. His career record was 818 wins, 260 losses, and 51 titles. == Post-tennis career and activism ==