Chris Evert
Christine Marie Evert (born December 21, 1954) is an American retired professional tennis player widely regarded as one of the greatest in the sport's history.[1] She dominated women's tennis during the 1970s and 1980s, securing 18 Grand Slam singles titles: seven at the French Open (a women's record), six at the US Open, three at Wimbledon, and two at the Australian Open.[2] Evert reached the world No. 1 ranking on November 3, 1975, and held it for a cumulative 260 non-consecutive weeks, while amassing a professional record of 1,309 wins against 146 losses for a .900 winning percentage—the highest in the Open Era.[3][2] Known for her precise baseline game, two-handed backhand, and unflappable composure under pressure, she pioneered a style emphasizing consistency and mental fortitude, winning 154 WTA singles titles and becoming the first player to reach 1,000 career singles victories.[3][2] Her storied rivalry with Martina Navratilova elevated the level of competition, drawing global attention to women's tennis, and she was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1995.[2]Early Life
Family Background and Upbringing
Christine Marie Evert was born on December 21, 1954, in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, to James Andrew "Jimmy" Evert and Colette Thompson Evert.[4][5] She was the second of five children in the family, which included brothers Drew and John and sisters Jeanne and Clare, with Evert being the eldest daughter.[6][7] The Everts resided in Fort Lauderdale, where Jimmy Evert worked as a professional tennis coach and director at the city's Holiday Park facility for nearly five decades, providing a stable but modest household centered on his career and family responsibilities.[8][9] Colette Evert served as a homemaker, managing the household and supporting local charities while raising the five children amid Jimmy's demanding schedule.[6] The family dynamics emphasized structured routines, with Jimmy's authoritative presence fostering a environment of accountability and familial unity in their South Florida home.[10] The Everts adhered to a strict Roman Catholic faith, attending church regularly and enrolling their children in Catholic schools such as St. Thomas Aquinas High School, which reinforced values of discipline, modesty, and perseverance.[11] This upbringing prioritized moral grounding and hard work over material excess, shaping a household ethos that valued quiet achievement and familial devotion.[10][12]Introduction to Tennis
Chris Evert first encountered tennis at age five, when her father, Jimmy Evert—a professional coach at the Holiday Park courts in Fort Lauderdale, Florida—began instructing her alongside her siblings.[2] [13] Her initial training focused on basic strokes on the public clay courts, where Jimmy Evert emphasized repetitive drills to build muscle memory and technical proficiency from the outset.[2] [1] Due to her small stature and limited strength as a young child, Jimmy Evert introduced the two-handed backhand as a practical adaptation, initially intended as temporary but quickly solidifying as a reliable weapon in her arsenal.[1] [14] This early coaching philosophy prioritized steady, error-free play over power, fostering a foundation in prolonged rallies that suited the slower clay surface prevalent in her local environment.[12] By her pre-teen years, Evert demonstrated marked progress in club-level practice sessions, outlasting peers through disciplined consistency drilled by her father.[2]Junior and Early Amateur Career
Domestic Junior Successes
At age 13, Evert secured her first United States national junior title by winning the Girls' 14 singles championship in 1968.[15] She amassed six U.S. junior titles overall during her amateur years, demonstrating early dominance in age-group competitions.[16] By 1969, Evert had risen to the top national ranking in the under-14 category, followed by victories in the Girls' 16 singles division in both 1969 and 1970, capping her sweep of key domestic junior divisions.[17] Her junior record included a 46-match winning streak across tournaments, underscoring her unchallenged supremacy in U.S. circuits, particularly on Florida clay courts.[18] These achievements drew professional attention, including from Billie Jean King, and earned Evert an invitation to the 1971 U.S. Open after her national 16-and-under triumph.[19] At 16, her selection for the U.S. Wightman Cup team marked a transition toward higher-level amateur play; she debuted by defeating Britain's Ann Shaw in straight sets during the 1971 tie, contributing to America's victory.[20] This performance affirmed her preparedness for professional competition.[21]International Junior Recognition
Evert achieved notable international junior success at the Orange Bowl International Tennis Championships, an elite youth event attracting competitors from dozens of countries. She captured the girls' 18-and-under singles title in both 1969 and 1970, defeating strong international fields on clay courts in Miami. In the 1969 semifinals, she overcame Uruguay's Fiorella Bonicelli 6-3, 6-2, before securing the final against Karin Benson 6-2, 6-3; the following year, she again claimed the crown, demonstrating dominance against global peers at age 15.[22][23] These victories elevated her profile abroad, as the Orange Bowl's international draw showcased her precise baseline play and composure under pressure to European and Latin American scouts. Coaches, including her father Jimmy Evert, emphasized her potential to rival emerging stars like Evonne Goolagong, citing her 46-match winning streak entering 1971 and unflappable demeanor in high-stakes matches.[24] International media coverage began highlighting her as a poised American prodigy, drawing parallels to technical innovators in the sport.[25] By mid-1971, at age 16, amateur eligibility restrictions under International Lawn Tennis Federation rules limited her European tour participation, yet her domestic junior dominance fueled transatlantic hype from peers like Billie Jean King, who praised her mental toughness. This growing reputation abroad, coupled with invitations to professional events, accelerated discussions on her professional transition; she retained amateur status through 1972 but signed a pro contract on her 18th birthday in December, marking the end of her junior era amid widespread anticipation for her global impact.[2][26]Professional Tennis Career
Breakthrough and Early Professional Wins (1971–1974)
At age 16, Chris Evert made her Grand Slam debut at the 1971 US Open as an amateur, advancing to the semifinals with straight-set victories over established players before losing to Billie Jean King 6–2, 6–3.[27][2] This performance, marked by her precise two-handed backhand and baseline consistency, generated immediate attention and foreshadowed her professional potential, though she remained amateur through 1972.[27] Evert turned professional on December 21, 1972, her 18th birthday, signing an endorsement deal with Wilson shortly thereafter.[2][28] In her initial professional seasons, she compiled a winning percentage exceeding 90%, underscoring her rapid adaptation to the tour's demands.[2] By 1974, she achieved a 55-match winning streak across surfaces, a mark that stood as an Open Era record for a decade.[2] Evert secured her first Grand Slam titles in 1974, defeating Olga Morozova 6–1, 6–2 in the French Open final to claim the clay-court major and demonstrate her surface versatility.[29] Weeks later, she won Wimbledon, again beating Morozova 6–0, 6–4 in the final, her first grass-court crown at age 19.[30] These victories propelled her to the year-end world No. 1 ranking, capping a breakthrough phase with 16 tournament titles that season.[2]Mid-1970s Dominance and Grand Slam Ascendancy
Evert asserted control over women's tennis in the mid-1970s, securing her first Grand Slam singles title at the 1974 French Open by defeating Olga Morozova 6–1, 2–6, 6–4 in the final. She defended the French Open crown in 1975, beating Martina Navratilova 2–6, 6–2, 6–1, and claimed her inaugural US Open title that year with a 6–4, 6–3 victory over Evonne Goolagong Cawley.[31] These triumphs marked the onset of consecutive US Open wins from 1975 to 1978, during which she did not drop a set in the 1976 and 1977 finals against Goolagong Cawley.[2] Her baseline precision fueled an unparalleled 125-match winning streak on clay courts, spanning from August 14, 1973, to May 12, 1979, encompassing multiple French Open victories and underscoring her supremacy on the surface.[32] This period aligned with the expansion of the Virginia Slims circuit, where Evert captured key titles, including the 1975 Virginia Slims Championships for a then-record $40,000 first prize.[33] By 1976, she became the first female player to surpass $1 million in career prize money, benefiting from the equal prize money era initiated at the US Open in 1973 following Billie Jean King's advocacy and the Battle of the Sexes exhibition.[1] Evert's mid-1970s haul included the 1976 Wimbledon singles title, her first on grass, defeating Goolagong Cawley 6–3, 4–6, 8–6 in the final, and contributed to her year-end world No. 1 ranking that year, a position she held through much of the decade.[17] Her consistent semifinal-or-better appearances in Grand Slams—reaching at least the semifinals in 48 of 49 majors entered from 1971 to 1987—reflected sustained excellence amid growing professionalization and prize parity.[34]1980s Rivalries and Sustained Excellence
In the 1980s, Chris Evert's career was defined by fierce rivalries that tested her adaptability against power players like Martina Navratilova and Tracy Austin, amid a shift toward serve-and-volley dominance on faster surfaces. Evert and Navratilova met 80 times overall from 1973 to 1988, with Navratilova leading 43–37, including 36–24 in finals; their clashes often highlighted Evert's clay-court edge versus Navratilova's grass and hard-court superiority.[35][36] Evert also faced Evonne Goolagong Cawley, who upset her in the 1980 Wimbledon final 6–1, 7–6(4), denying Evert a major grass-court title that decade, though Evert held a career 28–7 advantage over Goolagong.[14] Against the young Austin, Evert trailed 6–8 head-to-head but prevailed in pivotal encounters, including the 1981 US Open final (6–7(4), 7–6(1), 6–2), securing her sixth US Open singles crown after Austin had previously ended Evert's 125-match clay winning streak in 1979.[37][38] Evert captured eight Grand Slam singles titles in the 1980s—French Open in 1980, 1983, 1985, and 1986; US Open in 1980 and 1982; Australian Open in 1982 and 1984—extending her streak of at least one major victory annually from 1974 to 1986.[39] These successes underscored her resilience on slower surfaces, where she won 72 of 75 clay-court matches from 1980 to 1983, even as Navratilova's fitness and versatility challenged her on other courts.[36] Entering her 30s, Evert mounted a notable resurgence, defeating Navratilova 6–3, 6–7(4), 7–5 in the 1985 French Open final for her sixth title there and 17th major overall, a match marked by Evert's mental fortitude in saving multiple breakpoints.[40] This victory propelled her back to world No. 1 in November 1985, the oldest to achieve it at that point. Despite accumulating physical wear from prolonged baseline rallies and minor injuries, Evert sustained top-tier form, reaching semifinals or better in 52 of 56 Grand Slams career-wide and holding top-5 WTA rankings through 1988.[39] Her 18 career majors tied Navratilova's record upon retirement, reflecting enduring excellence amid evolving competition.[2]Grand Slam Achievements and Key Tournaments
Chris Evert secured 18 Grand Slam singles titles, comprising two Australian Open victories (1982, 1987), a record seven French Open titles (1974–1975, 1979–1980, 1983, 1985–1986), three Wimbledon championships (1974, 1976, 1981), and six US Open wins (1975–1978, 1980, 1982).[2][5] Her baseline style, emphasizing consistency and defensive retrieval, aligned particularly with the slower clay courts of the French Open, where she compiled a 72-match winning streak from 1973 to 1979 and dropped just seven sets across her seven triumphs, factors that contributed to her unparalleled dominance on that surface until later eras.[2][34] Evert reached 34 Grand Slam singles finals overall, winning 18 and finishing runner-up in 16, reflecting a career-long consistency in majors from her 1971 debut through 1988; she advanced to at least the semifinals in 52 of 56 appearances, missing only two finals in the 72 possible slots across 18 years due to selective participation in events like early Australian Opens.[41][39] This record for most finals reached underscores her reliability against top competition, though her grass-court results at Wimbledon were comparatively limited by the faster surface, yielding three titles amid 10 total appearances there.[2] In doubles, Evert claimed three Grand Slam titles: two French Opens (1974 with Billie Jean King, 1975 with Martina Navratilova) and one Wimbledon (1976 with Navratilova), part of her 32 career doubles crowns; she also reached the mixed doubles final at the 1974 US Open partnering Jimmy Connors.[42][2] Beyond Slams, Evert excelled in year-end championships, capturing four WTA Finals equivalents (1972 Virginia Slims Championships, 1973, 1975, 1977), often on indoor surfaces suiting her steady play, and dominated the Avon Championships circuit with multiple wins including Oakland (1979), Seattle (1979), and others, bolstering her 157 total singles titles through affinity for controlled rallies on non-grass venues.[43][44]Retirement and Final Matches (1988–1989)
In 1988, at age 33, Evert continued to compete at a high level despite emerging injury issues, reaching the final of the Australian Open where she lost to Steffi Graf 6–1, 7–6(3).[45] She also advanced to the final of the Lipton International Players Championships, again falling to Graf, marking one of her final deep runs in a major WTA Tour event.[46] However, her season included setbacks, such as a third-round exit at the French Open to Arantxa Sánchez Vicario 6–3, 7–6(4), attributed to a heel spur injury that hampered her mobility.[47] These results reflected a gradual decline in consistency against younger, power-oriented players, though Evert maintained her baseline precision in select victories, including her last Australian Open win over longtime rival Martina Navratilova 6–2, 7–5 earlier in the tournament.[48] Entering 1989 as a 34-year-old veteran, Evert scaled back her schedule, prioritizing Grand Slams and team events amid mental fatigue and physical wear, effectively treating the year as a farewell tour.[49] She exited early at Wimbledon, losing in the third round, and showed variable form across tournaments, with strong wins interspersed by uncharacteristic errors against rising stars.[50] At the US Open, her final Grand Slam appearance, Evert reached the quarterfinals, defeating opponents including a 15-year-old Monica Seleš in the third round before an emotional loss to Zina Garrison on September 5, 6–7(3), 7–5, 2–6—her last match on the Flushing Meadows courts and a poignant walk-off amid standing ovations.[51] This marked her 100th career singles win at the event, underscoring her dominance there with six prior titles.[52] Evert's professional career concluded on October 9, 1989, in Tokyo during the Fed Cup final against Spain, where she delivered a decisive 6–3, 6–2 victory over Conchita Martínez in the opening singles rubber, securing a 1–0 lead for the United States en route to a 3–0 team win.[53][54] Across five Fed Cup matches that year, she lost only 14 games total, ending her 18-year career on a high note with a .900 overall winning percentage (1,309–146) and 157 singles titles, including 18 majors.[52][2] Her retirement, self-orchestrated to align with key events, avoided a prolonged fade, preserving her legacy as a baseline master who influenced generations of players.[49]Playing Style and Mental Game
Technical Strengths and Baseline Strategy
Chris Evert employed a baseline strategy defined by relentless consistency and defensive retrieval, pinning opponents behind the baseline with deep, penetrating groundstrokes to provoke unforced errors during extended rallies. This approach excelled on slower surfaces like clay and hard courts, where her precision and patience neutralized aggressive play. She maintained exceptionally low unforced error rates, a cornerstone of her technical proficiency that minimized giveaways and maximized opponent pressure.[55][25] Central to her arsenal was the two-handed backhand, a peerless stroke that revolutionized women's tennis by combining power, control, and early ball-taking for aggressive drives. Evert's forehand complemented this with reliable depth, while her proficiency in passing shots—executed accurately from defensive positions—countered net approaches effectively. She adeptly incorporated topspin lobs to disrupt rhythm and extend points, enhancing her baseline dominance without relying on net play.[56][55][25] Evert's serve prioritized accuracy and placement over velocity, delivering high-percentage first serves that set up favorable baseline exchanges. Excellent footwork, enabling superior anticipation and court coverage, underpinned her retrieval game, allowing her to redirect pace and maintain rally control. These elements, refined through early training emphasizing fundamentals, formed the technical foundation of her record 89.97% career singles win rate.[55][56]Mental Toughness and On-Court Demeanor
Chris Evert was renowned for her ice-calm composure during matches, earning the nickname "Ice Maiden" for displaying minimal emotion regardless of the scoreline.[57] This stoic demeanor, developed from an early hot-tempered youth into a focused, unflappable presence, allowed her to stay "present in every single point" and maintain strategic precision under pressure.[56] [58] Her mental toughness manifested in an ability to handle high-stakes situations without fraying, as she described being "born with the ability to... be calm and deal with pressure well, not get frazzled out there."[59] This trait contributed to comebacks, such as in the 1978 Wimbledon final against Martina Navratilova, where Evert recovered from a 1-5 deficit in the second set after winning the first 7-5, forcing deuce before ultimately falling 6-4.[60] Opponents often cited her unshakable poise as an intimidation factor, with her steady baseline play and calm stare amplifying psychological pressure by contrasting their own frustrations.[61] Empirically, Evert's clutch performance is evident in her career finals record of 157 wins against 72 losses, a 68.6% success rate in decisive matches against top competition, underscoring her consistency when outcomes hinged on mental resilience.[62] She embodied a "win or lose gracefully" ethos, rarely engaging in outbursts that could disrupt focus, which peers noted enhanced her edge in prolonged rallies akin to five-set men's battles in endurance and error avoidance.[63] This approach, prioritizing presence over explosiveness, sustained her dominance across eras of intensifying competition.[64]Criticisms and Tactical Limitations
Chris Evert's baseline-oriented playing style, characterized by exceptional consistency and precision from the back of the court, drew criticism for its perceived lack of offensive firepower and adaptability against aggressive serve-and-volley opponents. Analysts noted that Evert lacked the ability to end points quickly, relying instead on prolonged rallies to wear down foes, which proved less effective against players with powerful serves or net-rushing tactics.[65] Her serve, often described as lacking power and prone to inconsistency, was a frequent point of vulnerability, leading to double faults in critical moments; for instance, during a 1987 Virginia Slims Championships match, Evert double-faulted eight times, contributing to her early exit.[66] Tactically, Evert's reluctance to approach the net aggressively limited her versatility, particularly on faster surfaces like grass, where her volleys were deemed unreliable and her groundstrokes could be rushed. Early in her career, observers highlighted these flaws, including a serve that seldom overpowered opponents and a hesitation to volley effectively, which allowed serve-volleyers to exploit her positioning.[67] This was evident in her rivalry with Martina Navratilova, whose serve-and-volley dominance on grass courts, such as at Wimbledon, frequently neutralized Evert's baseline grinding; Navratilova defeated Evert in multiple finals there after 1978, capitalizing on the surface's speed to disrupt Evert's rhythm.[15] While Evert adapted somewhat over time—winning Wimbledon in 1985—critics argued her game remained fundamentally reactive, excelling on slower clay (with a 125-match win streak) but struggling against power and variety on quicker courts.[68] These limitations, though mitigated by her mental resilience, underscored a style that prioritized error-free tennis over proactive aggression, occasionally costing her against more dynamic foes.[59]Personal Life
Early Relationships and Engagements
Chris Evert's most prominent early romantic involvement was with fellow tennis player Jimmy Connors, whom she began dating in the early 1970s amid their rising stardom on the professional circuit.[69] The pair, both dominant forces in their respective tours, became engaged in 1974 following their Wimbledon singles triumphs that July, with a wedding initially scheduled for November 8 of that year.[70] Their relationship drew intense media attention, contrasting Evert's public persona as the poised, wholesome "girl-next-door" with the personal pressures of high-profile courtship in professional sports.[71] The engagement ended abruptly just weeks before the planned ceremony, a decision both later attributed to their youth and immaturity at ages 19 and 21, respectively, rather than readiness for marriage.[72] Evert has reflected that the split stemmed from recognizing insufficient emotional maturity, amid the demands of their burgeoning careers, though external family influences were also cited by Connors as contributing factors.[69] No children resulted from the relationship, and the breakup highlighted the challenges of balancing personal life with the scrutiny of public fame, without evidence of lasting professional repercussions for either.[73] Decades later, in his 2013 memoir The Outsider, Connors alleged that Evert had terminated a pregnancy with his child shortly before the wedding, claiming he would have accepted responsibility but was excluded from the decision.[74] Evert categorically denied the account as "disappointing and inaccurate," asserting it misrepresented events from nearly 40 years prior and violated her privacy.[70] The claim, unverified by independent evidence, amplified media focus on their past but underscored discrepancies in personal recollections, with Evert emphasizing the fabrication's irrelevance to their shared history.[73]Marriages, Divorces, and Family
Chris Evert married British tennis player John Lloyd on April 28, 1979, in a ceremony that attracted significant media attention due to their status as professional athletes.[75] The couple, who had no children together, divorced in July 1987 after eight years of marriage, with Lloyd later attributing strains from the demands of the international tennis tour and public scrutiny as contributing factors.[76] Evert has reflected positively on the relationship in retrospect, stating in 2025 that there were "never bitter feelings, always caring," despite the emotional challenges of the split.[77] In 1988, Evert married American Olympic skier Andy Mill, whom she met through mutual friend Martina Navratilova; the union produced three sons: Alexander (born 1991), Nicholas (born 1994), and Colton (born 1996).[78] [79] The couple divorced in December 2006 after 18 years, with Evert filing the petition and assuming primary custody of the children amid reports of an amicable settlement focused on family stability.[80] Evert later cited hormonal changes from menopause as influencing her decision to end the marriage, describing it as a period of personal reevaluation.[81] Post-divorce, Evert and Mill maintained cooperative co-parenting, with Evert emphasizing the importance of family unity and the children's low-profile upbringings away from public spotlight.[78] Evert's third marriage was to Australian golfer Greg Norman; the pair announced their engagement on December 14, 2007, while traveling to South Africa, and wed on June 28, 2008, in the Bahamas.[82] [83] The marriage dissolved after 15 months, with divorce finalized in December 2009, amid reports of compatibility issues shortly after the wedding.[84] No children resulted from this union. Evert has since prioritized her role as a mother and, as of May 2024, grandmother to Hayden James, the son of Nicholas Mill and his wife Rebecca, highlighting family bonds as a source of enduring support through personal transitions.[85] [78]Health Battles and Recent Diagnoses
In December 2021, Evert underwent a preventive hysterectomy prompted by genetic testing that revealed a BRCA1 mutation, following the 2020 death of her sister Jeanne from ovarian cancer.[86][87] Pathology from the procedure detected stage 1C ovarian cancer in her fallopian tubes.[86] She completed six rounds of chemotherapy and announced in January 2023 that she was cancer-free, with medical estimates indicating a 90 percent chance of no recurrence.[88] In December 2022, Evert had a double mastectomy to mitigate breast cancer risk associated with the BRCA1 variant.[88] The cancer recurred in late 2023, leading Evert to undergo further surgery and chemotherapy; she publicly shared the diagnosis on December 8, 2023, via ESPN.[89] This relapse caused her to miss ESPN's coverage of the 2024 Australian Open.[89] By February 2025, Evert reported being cancer-free again, though she continues proactive monitoring with scans every three months.[90] Evert, who received treatment at the Cleveland Clinic, has emphasized the role of genetic testing and early intervention in her outcomes, crediting these for enabling detection at an early stage despite the familial risk.[87] At age 70, she has demonstrated resilience through these battles, providing updates via professional channels to highlight the importance of vigilance for BRCA-related cancers.[90]Post-Retirement Activities
Broadcasting and Tennis Commentary
Following her retirement from professional tennis in 1989, Evert transitioned into broadcasting, joining NBC as a commentator and analyst in 1990. In this role, she provided expert analysis during major tournaments, leveraging her experience as an 18-time Grand Slam singles champion to offer insights into player strategies and match dynamics. Her early commentary work established her as a respected voice in tennis media, emphasizing technical precision and competitive mindset drawn from her own career, which included a record 89.97% win percentage in singles matches.[91] Evert expanded her broadcasting presence in June 2011 by joining ESPN as a tennis analyst, where she has covered all four Grand Slam events, including extensive US Open coverage.[92] [93] During the 2025 US Open, she marked the 50th anniversary of her first title win there in 1975, contributing to broadcasts that highlighted historical milestones alongside contemporary play.[31] Her analysis often focuses on the mental toughness required in high-stakes matches, informed by her own undefeated 55-match win streak early in her career and consistent semifinal appearances in 52 of 56 Grand Slams entered.[94] Evert's media contributions, including her 1982 autobiography Chrissie: My Own Story, have enhanced visibility for women's tennis by bridging eras, offering balanced evaluations of modern players' baseline games and endurance against her era's standards.[95] Through these roles, she has provided viewers with data-driven perspectives, such as comparisons of serve efficiency and rally lengths, underscoring evolutions in the sport while maintaining focus on verifiable performance metrics like unforced error rates.[92]Philanthropy, Advocacy, and Business
Chris Evert co-founded Chris Evert Charities in 1990 to support prevention and intervention programs aimed at eliminating drug abuse and child neglect among at-risk youth in Florida.[96] The organization partners with the Ounce of Prevention Fund of Florida and hosts annual events such as the Chris Evert Pro-Celebrity Tennis Classic, which have collectively raised over $25 million to fund drug rehabilitation, tutoring, parenting classes, and related services for affected families.[97][98] In 2019, Evert was appointed chairwoman of the USTA Foundation, the charitable arm of the United States Tennis Association established in 1994 to expand tennis access and provide educational opportunities for underserved youth.[99][100] In this role, she serves as spokesperson and ambassador, promoting initiatives like the National Junior Tennis & Learning network, which has served millions of children through tennis-based life skills and academic programs.[101] To mark the 50th anniversary of her first US Open singles title in 1974, Evert highlighted the foundation's efforts in youth development during 2024 events, emphasizing its role in fostering leadership beyond sport.[102] Following her 2022 ovarian cancer diagnosis linked to a BRCA1 mutation, Evert has advocated for genetic testing, preventive surgeries, and early detection to reduce cancer risks, sharing her experiences in public essays and interviews to underscore the value of family medical history in decision-making.[88] She has supported organizations like the Prevent Cancer Foundation through endorsements, including a 2023 tennis bracelet initiative to fund screening and research programs.[103] Her advocacy aligns with empirical evidence from genetic counseling, which has shown preventive measures can lower hereditary cancer incidence by up to 90% in high-risk cases.[87] In business, Evert co-founded the Evert Tennis Academy in Boca Raton, Florida, in 1996 with her brother John Evert, focusing on year-round training for junior players targeting high school, collegiate, or professional levels.[104] The academy employs personalized coaching methods derived from Evert's baseline playing style, emphasizing technical development and mental resilience, and has produced competitive players through structured programs.[105] She also heads Evert Enterprises, overseeing related ventures that extend her involvement in tennis instruction and youth development.[106]Public Statements and Media Controversies
In 2013, Jimmy Connors' memoir The Outsider revealed that Chris Evert had terminated a pregnancy in 1974 shortly before their planned wedding, portraying it as a unilateral decision that contributed to their breakup. Evert publicly expressed disappointment, stating the account misrepresented a "very personal and emotionally painful" matter from 40 years prior and was disclosed without her knowledge or consent.[70][73][107] Evert's tennis commentary has drawn accusations of favoritism toward American players, particularly Coco Gauff. During the 2024 US Open, her repeated praise for Gauff amid losses to Emma Navarro and Naomi Osaka prompted fan backlash on social media and forums, with descriptions of "insane bias" and "cringeworthy" analysis that overlooked opponents' strengths or Gauff's errors.[108][109] Similar criticism arose in 2025 French Open coverage, including Gauff's quarterfinal against Madison Keys, where Evert's focus on Gauff's resilience despite inconsistency was deemed overly sympathetic.[110][111] At the 2025 Wimbledon, Evert speculated during Emma Raducanu's match against Aryna Sabalenka about rumors of Raducanu's romance with Carlos Alcaraz, linking it loosely to her own past with Connors, which critics labeled intrusive and irrelevant to the tennis.[112][113] Evert dismissed the complaints curtly, responding to one accusation with "No comment" and rejecting parallels to her history as unfounded.[114] Broader forum discussions, including on Reddit and Tennis Warehouse, have characterized her style as "annoying," "condescending," and predictably biased toward familiar baselines, though defenders cite her seven French Open titles as grounding her insights.[115][116][117] Evert has made infrequent political statements, often critical of Donald Trump. In December 2016, following Trump's election, she tweeted that the focus should shift from personality to "service and leadership," adding "#getoverit."[118] In March 2025, she reacted strongly to a heated White House exchange involving Trump, JD Vance, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, posting "I have a boundary" in apparent disapproval of their tone toward Zelenskyy.[119] Despite associations with conservative figures through ex-partners like John Lloyd, Evert has described herself as apolitical, noting in a 2016 tweet that she had "never talked about" her stance publicly.[120][121]Legacy, Awards, and Records
Honors, Inductions, and Recognitions
Evert was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1995, recognizing her dominance in women's tennis with 18 Grand Slam singles titles and a career win percentage exceeding 89%.[2] In 2023, the United States Professional Tennis Association awarded her the Tim Heckler Hall of Fame Award for her playing achievements and contributions to the sport's professional development.[122] She received the Associated Press Female Athlete of the Year award four times, in 1974, 1975, 1977, and 1980, highlighting her consistent excellence amid competition from peers like Billie Jean King and Martina Navratilova.[106] Evert became the first woman selected as Sports Illustrated Sportswoman of the Year in 1976, the publication's inaugural sole female honoree for athletic performance.[123] In 1981, she earned the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Overseas Personality award for her global impact on tennis. Additional recognitions include the Flo Hyman Award for excellence in sports, presented by President George H. W. Bush in 1990.[124] In 2024, during the International Tennis Hall of Fame enshrinement weekend, the USTA Foundation dedicated its Newport National Junior Tennis & Learning facility's Canfield House as the Chris Evert Learning Center, honoring her philanthropic efforts in youth tennis and education.[125]Statistical Records and Grand Slam Timeline
Evert amassed a professional singles win-loss record of 1,309–146, yielding a 90.0% winning percentage, the highest in tennis history for players with at least 1,000 matches.[126] She captured 157 singles titles, including a record seven at the French Open and six at the US Open (tied for the tournament record).[2] Her Grand Slam achievements encompassed 18 titles across 34 finals, with victories spanning 13 consecutive years from 1974 to 1986.[5] Notable streaks included 55 consecutive match wins from February to December 1974, a record at the time later surpassed by Martina Navratilova, and an unmatched 125-match winning streak on clay courts from 1973 to 1979.[5] Evert reached the semifinals or better in 52 of her 56 Grand Slam appearances, accumulating 300 main draw victories, third all-time behind Serena Williams and Navratilova.[2] In head-to-head matchups, she recorded a 37–43 ledger against Navratilova across 80 encounters, prevailing in 25 of their 28 Grand Slam meetings.[34]| Grand Slam | Titles | Years Won |
|---|---|---|
| Australian Open | 2 | 1982, 1984 |
| French Open | 7 | 1974, 1975, 1979, 1980, 1983, 1985, 1986 |
| Wimbledon | 3 | 1974, 1976, 1981 |
| US Open | 6 | 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1980, 1982 |