
Billie Jean King interview: Wimbledon should change tradition – no all-white kit and names on shirts
From the top floor of a London hotel, Billie Jean King scans the city skyline through her fuchsia spectacles with the air of a businesswoman perfecting a sales pitch.
While most octogenarians are doing crosswords or busying themselves with a spot of gardening, King, who turns 82 in November and has spent her life serving up answers to advance women's sport, is on a never-ending mission to exercise her influence.
She has just finished delivering a speech about leadership – sharing a stage with one of the world's most powerful women, Melinda French Gates, at a women's sport summit – days out from her favourite time of the year: Wimbledon.
Ever since powering to her maiden Wimbledon title in the doubles as a 17-year-old in 1961 – the first of 20 titles she won at SW19 across singles and doubles – King has returned every summer to the All England Club. She continues to be captivated by its eye-catching floral displays and meticulously mowed lawns, which rekindle happy memories of her time as a serial winner on its hallowed grass courts.
But there is one thing about the place that she resents: Wimbledon whites. In an age where sports are jostling to stand out in a saturated marketplace, King believes the clothing rule, officially implemented two years after she landed that doubles title as a teenager and dictates that players must wear predominantly white kit, was a 'total mistake'.
King herself wore dresses featuring blue and pink embroidery as well as intricate patterns during her playing days at Wimbledon but the rule became more restrictive in the mid-Nineties, which she believes makes it harder for viewers to distinguish between players.
'There's a match that comes on, you sit down, and you look – let's say it's television – who's who? Tennis people say: 'Well, the mark is next to their name' [to indicate who is serving]. I shouldn't have to look at a mark, I shouldn't have to look at anything. I should know [who's who]. My sport drives me nuts,' she sighs, burying her head in her hands.
After momentarily being stunned into silence, I meekly point out that whites are what make Wimbledon quintessentially British. It is a sporting institution that has – and always will be – draped in tradition. 'But they shouldn't have the same uniforms on. They both have white on,' retorts King. 'You can change tradition.'
It is a mantra that King has embodied as a lifelong campaigner for social justice and equality. She was instrumental in pushing for equal prize money for men and women at the US Open in 1973 – the same year her ' Battle of the Sexes ' victory over Bobby Riggs would irreversibly shift public perceptions of women's athleticism.
Despite having the foresight to spread her influence across different sports spheres, it is tennis where King's status as a visionary shines through. One of her latest ideas is for players to be assigned numbers and have names on their kit. 'I'd have merch with their names on the back so they'd make money, the tournament makes money, everybody makes money,' she says. 'We're losing out on millions and millions because of that. Numbers are really important! Kids love numbers and they can retire numbers – like a Federer. It's so obvious. Take what other sports are doing and what people like from other sports.'
Ever since she started owning tennis tournaments with her former husband, Larry King, her continued advocacy of women's sport has exploded into a booming portfolio that includes teams from baseball, basketball and soccer. In 2020, she was part of a star-studded list of celebrity names who bought a stake in Angel City FC in the United States' National Women's Soccer League. Last September, it sold for $250 million (£182 million), making history as the most valuable football club ever in women's sport. More recently, King was a major financial backer in a new, professional Women's Ice Hockey League, which drew record-breaking audiences and viewership in its inaugural season.
Nowadays, King is all too happy that others have joined the party in dipping into their pockets to help level the playing field. Last month, Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian pledged to make Chelsea women a 'billion-dollar franchise' after buying a stake in the Women's Super League club, while Michele Kang, the American tech pioneer, has invested more than $85 million (£67 million) into women's sports projects. The owner of three women's football clubs – Washington Spirit, Lyon and London City Lionesses – Kang last year donated $4 million (£2.9 million) to the USA Rugby women's sevens programme after seeing the impact of social media phenomenon Ilona Maher. 'I've waited my whole life to see people believing in the investment of women's sport,' says King, clapping her hands together. 'That we matter. It's great.'
Never one simply to cheer-lead, King insists it is impossible to champion women's sport – the global revenues of which Deloitte predicts will surpass £1.82 billion this year – without recognising its commercial viability. 'Women athletes sometimes say: 'We deserve more. We deserve this.' I'm like, 'Did they make money this year?' If they haven't, why do you think you deserve more? I want athletes to know the business side of it. When an athlete asks me: 'What do I do?' I say: 'Understand the business you're in. If the budget isn't going well, guess where my prize money is going to go? Back into the budget.' That's really understanding the business.'
Half an hour in King's company is an intense experience. Other than sport, there is no linear thread to our conversation, which meanders from the PE diet British schoolchildren are fed during summer ('You have rounders – do you pitch underarm for that?') to the biweekly hit-about she has with her wife and business partner, Ilana Kloss, to stay in shape, and how the Premier League is wallowing in collective financial debt (£3.6 billion being the last reported figure). King cracks a wry smile at the latter. 'Men's sports lose money too, but people never talk about the men,' she says.
Tennis is one of a number of sports that has deepened its ties with Saudi Arabia, with the sport last year hosting the WTA Finals in Riyadh. Is the country's harsh stance on LGBTQ+ rights not a profound mismatch with her own moral compass? 'I know things don't change without engagement,' says King, who was the first prominent female athlete to be publicly outed as gay in 1981 and subsequently lost $2 million-worth of endorsement deals.
'You're damned if you do and damned if you don't. I have a feeling it's going to help long term. In the short term, it probably doesn't feel like it. It's the girls who watched it [the WTA Finals]. They had some mothers and girls there of colour and they started getting excited about it. You never know how one person is going to impact another person's life. Muhammad Ali and I used to talk about this a lot. If you don't engage, things will stay the same.'
That engagement has culminated in a landmark maternity policy, which is being bankrolled by Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund and includes fertility grants for players to freeze their eggs and covers the top 150 players in the world. Again, King believes opportunity trumps optics. 'I would have frozen my eggs for sure,' says King, whose well-publicised abortion in 1971 led her to becoming a fierce advocate for women's reproductive rights. 'But it costs money. If I was a young woman and had the money I would have got my eggs frozen by the time I was 30, knowing what we know now. But we didn't know any of this.'
Tennis' flagship women's team competition – the Billie Jean King Cup – stages its finals in Shenzhen, China, this September, starting a three-year association with the country that is yet to provide answers over the disappearance of Peng Shuai. The Chinese tennis player accused a high-ranking government official of sexual assault in 2021 before vanishing from public life, instigating international concern and leading the WTA to boycott the country. She later said there had been a 'huge misunderstanding', although this was in a highly controlled interview, and the WTA said a return to China would not be considered until the request for a private meeting with her had been met.
At the time, King hailed the organisation she founded as being on 'the right side of history' but the opportunity to take the sport to a country with the second-largest tennis-playing population globally was too good to pass up – WTA backpedalled and announced its return to China in April 2023. King harbours her own regrets over the situation. 'The fact we're taking tennis back to China is important,' she says. 'I'm very big on engagement and building bridges. I'm really looking forward to it. I'm sorry we left China. I thought we should have stayed.'
Engagement remains high on King's agenda when discussing one of sport's most divisive topics: transgender women in sport. Ever the advocate for inclusion, she believes the debate requires less toxicity and more empathy. 'The whole thing's a nightmare,' she says. 'I don't think people have any idea of how hard it is for trans people. Just listen to their stories. Listen – not tell them. Everyone is unique. Make them feel included because you really don't know. With every person I meet, I try to start with a blank. Ask questions. If I weren't doing this interview with you, I'd be bugging you with a lot of questions.'
And with that, King is whisked away to her next engagement. A day trip to Wimbledon on a London Routemaster bus beckons, and with it another trip down memory lane.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
36 minutes ago
- The Sun
Liverpool ready to offer winger to Crystal Palace in swap for £50m-rated Marc Guehi as transfer spree goes on
LIVERPOOL are ready to throw flying Scot Ben Doak into a swap deal for England star Marc Guehi. The Kop's transfer team are focusing on centre-half Guehi, 24, as their next target but Palace want around £50million for him. 3 3 Doak, 19, is fancied by Palace and rated in the £25m class despite his limited appearances outside a loan spell at Middlesbrough. He played 24 times in the Championship last term, scoring three times and assisting seven goals. Liverpool would offer the winger and cash to snap up Guehi but that will take a great deal of negotiating. Palace supremo Steve Parish is renowned for standing firm on valuations. Everton are keen on Doak but not at that price. Meanwhile, Guehi is letting his deal run down but has been relatively low-paid at Selhurst Park for some time — money is not his driving force. His deal is set to expire at the end of the 2025/26 campaign. Liverpool are not the only club interested in his services with Newcastle and Manchester United also keen. Arne Slot 's side are looking to add another centre-back to the squad with Jarell Quansah expected to leave. The Under-21 Euros winner with England is set to sign for Bundesliga giants Bayer Leverkusen. Quansah, 22, will have a medical with Erik ten Hag 's side on Monday ahead of a £30m switch, according to Fabrizio Romano. Liverpool have been active in the transfer market as they look to strengthen ahead of the Premier League title defence. The likes of Florian Wirtz, Jeremie Frimpong, Milos Kerkez and Freddie Woodman have been welcomed through the doors at Anfield. 3


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Yorkshire v Essex, Somerset v Nottinghamshire and more: county cricket day one
Update: Date: 2025-06-29T09:05:08.000Z Title: Division Two Table Content: 1 Leicestershire 155 2 Derbyshire 122 3 Glamorgan 110 4 Gloucestershire 99 5 Northamptonshire 94 6 Lancashire 80 7. Middlesex 77 8 Kent 76 Update: Date: 2025-06-29T09:05:08.000Z Title: Division One Table Content: 1 Nottinghamshire 127 2 Surrey 125 3 Sussex 109 4 Somerset 106 5 Warwickshire 104 6 Durham 97 7 Hampshire 96 8 Essex 85 9 Yorkshire 71 10 Worcestershire 57 Update: Date: 2025-06-29T09:05:08.000Z Title: Fixtures Content: DIVISION ONE Southampton: Hampshire v Worcestershire Taunton: Somerset v Nottinghamshire The Oval: Surrey v Durham Hove: Sussex v Warwickshire York: Yorkshire v Essex DIVISION TWO Chesterfield: Derbyshire v Lancashire Sophia Gardens: Glamorgan v Gloucestershire Canterbury: Kent v Northamptonshire Grace Road: Leicestershire v Middlesex Update: Date: 2025-06-29T09:05:08.000Z Title: Preamble Content: Good morning! I'm chugging into York, the heat shimmering, the grass splinter-dry. We're in for another Kookaburra round, which, in conjunction with the soaring temperatures, makes it an unfortunate time to be a seam bowler. A few consoling captain's arms will rest on weary shoulders (GET OFF ME). It's cricket week down in Canterbury, while Lancashire and Yorkshire have decamped to Chesterfield and York. Play starts around the grounds at 11am, do join us with a wet flannel and a pint of something cold.


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
‘Jack Draper will win big, big titles': Jannik Sinner on bromance with British No1
Jannik Sinner was in a snoozy mood. He must have yawned three or four times while I was interviewing him, which does not say much for the originality of my questions. But one subject sparked his interest. Asked about his friendship with Jack Draper – the latest British hero to enter the labyrinth of Wimbledon – Sinner perked up noticeably and leaned forward. From the beady look in his eye, he could have been preparing to return serve. 'You're lucky to have a player like him,' said Sinner, the top seed and world No 1. 'After Andy [Murray], they need someone big. He [Draper] is someone big, and he's someone who is going to stay there for a very, very long time.' It was an unusually emphatic statement from Sinner, a low pulse-rate sort of fellow who is as understated as the young Bjorn Borg. But then his relationship with Draper is clearly heartfelt. 'One of the best friends I have on the tour,' he explained of Draper, a man he once taught to cook pasta during a moment of downtime on the Challenger circuit. 'We are quite similar in the way we make a lot of sacrifices to be the best we can. 'He came also, when I was banned. He came to Monaco to practise there and everything was great. But now things are … are a bit different, because, you know, he's No 4 in the world.' 'Aha,' I said, sensing a possible grey area in Sinner's neatly organised world. 'Does that mean you can't practise with him any more?' 'OK, it's harder to practise with him all the time,' Sinner acknowledged. 'You share less things on court, I guess. You don't want to show him much, you know, in the practice sessions. And he's not gonna show me the real tennis either. It is a bit complicated. 'But it doesn't mean that the friendship goes away completely. It's maybe the opposite. We talk about playing doubles in the future, and we grab dinner at times. 'Jack has grown so much,' Sinner concludes. 'Physically, he's strong. Mentally, he's very, very good. I truly believe he is going to win some big, big titles.' Sinner's enthusiasm stems from a long association with Draper on the junior tour, as well as a shared sense of humour. A mutual friend explains that 'You don't see the real Jannik unless you really know him, but he's actually very funny in private and has a mickey-taking side that British people appreciate.' Delving into the archives, Telegraph Sport found photographic evidence of this childhood connection. A group shot from the 2013 Nike Junior World Tour shows an 11-year-old Draper grinning broadly in the front row. Meanwhile Sinner stands in a patch of shadow, peering through a gap between two other boys, and rocking a bushy red mullet. Their positioning in that photo feels deliberate. Sinner was a literal backmarker at the time, having only recently taken up tennis at the expense of skiing (a sport where he once finished second in the national giant-slalom for juniors). Progress was slow at first, and Draper recently described a teenage doubles encounter where 'we were saying 'Hit to him [Sinner, who was 15 at the time], because he's not the best player on the court!'' But as Sinner whizzed through the rankings like a snowboarder on a black run, the two men developed a close bond. 'We send each other messages in good moments, bad moments,' Draper explained last year. 'You're on the road, you're playing such a relentlessly intense sport, and we haven't got many friends. So to have the support of someone who's going through it themselves is really big.' How very wholesome. For better or for worse, the relationships at the top of modern tennis seem positively collegiate these days, especially by comparison with the vitriolic rivalries of the 1980s and 90s. Remember McEnroe versus Connors? Or how about Sampras v Agassi? During this week's interview, Sinner revealed that he had also sat down with Novak Djokovic after their initial competitive encounter – which came in Monaco in 2021 – to ask for a detailed assessment of his own game. As Sinner recalled, 'Novak said, 'Yeah, good player, but you were too predictable at times.'' It was generous of Djokovic to offer such assistance, and arguably he has paid the price, with Sinner now leading their head-to-head by five wins to four. As Sinner's coach Darren Cahill put it in a recent interview, 'it [the meeting] left a big impression on a young player. For Jannik, it was 'Let's start doing these changes.'' When you combine the unrivalled depth and pace of Sinner's bread-and-butter groundstrokes with the additional grace notes he has developed in recent years – touch volleys, drop shots and slices – you come away with a kind of tennis Terminator: a T1000 who just keeps rumbling forward, no matter what you throw at him. There is only one other player who can stand up to such relentless bombardment. Three weeks ago, in the French Open final, Sinner's fast-twitch style collided with the wizardly improvisations of his greatest rival Carlos Alcaraz. They battled for almost six hours, and although Sinner lost, the margin of victory was just a single inch: the overlap between Alcaraz's forehand and the baseline on one of Sinner's three unconverted match points. 'I went home with my parents, with my friends,' said Sinner, when asked how he had processed that gigantic let-down. 'We had barbecues, played some ping pong, you know, trying to forget. But it was a very special match. The audience need rivals. It's part of history now, and I'm very happy that I was part of it.' We were speaking on the Wimbledon terrace, high above Court No 3. As I fired off questions, Sinner lounged in a comfy chair, his long body stretched almost parallel to the ground like human spaghetti. All elbows and angles on the court, he is contrastingly languid off it: a man saving his energy for when he needs it most. Sinner is an unusual Italian, with his red hair and pale skin, but then he grew up in South Tyrol – the Alpine skiing paradise where German is the first language. The last time we met, during 2023's World Tour Finals, I asked him whether he empathised with Andy Murray in the sense of being an outsider in his own country. But he shot me down quickly, pointing out that he had left home aged 13 to train with coaching savant Riccardo Piatti at an Italian academy near Monaco. 'I had all Italian people surround me,' he insisted, 'so I feel now fully Italian.' As we chatted this week, three members of the Lavazza team looked on. The Italian coffee brand is proud to have had an association with Sinner since 2018, when he was just another teenage wannabe. And the Lavazza family were more than happy to assist him directly in February, at the start of his three-month doping ban. The family house in Monaco happened to boast a 'backyard clay court' – in Cahill's words – which was one of the few places where Sinner was allowed to train. Only in April did the terms of his suspension relax, whereupon Draper's arrival for a training block coincided with an upgrade to the famous Monte Carlo Country Club. 'We asked Jack if he could come,' Sinner recalled of that week, 'because I needed some feedback from the best players in the world. And it was good for me to see I was still quite rusty. Day by day, we tried to work on things, trying to go to Rome with certain feelings. After some time, we found it.' Sinner's clean-cut image was undoubtedly damaged by his two positive tests for the banned steroid clostebol, which he justified by explaining that his physical trainer had contaminated him during a massage. After initially being cleared of all charges, he later accepted a three-month ban from the World Anti-Doping Agency on the grounds of 'strict liability'. The convenient timing of the ban, which did not affect Sinner's participation in any grand-slam events, caused disquiet among certain members of his peer group, even if others – including Draper – defended him staunchly. The public response was also mixed, although fortunately Sinner says that 'I am not the kind of person who is on social media for an hour every day… There are weeks when I am zero on it.' When I asked him about the abusive online messages that disappointed gamblers send to players after each defeat, he looked unmoved. For one thing, the world No 1 doesn't lose many matches. For another, he is not a great one for screens, unless he is playing Fifa on his PlayStation. He is more interested in his cars and his kitchen, where he indulges a very Italian passion for cooking – his signature dish is tiramisu. 'I don't think we can stop this social-media thing,' Sinner said, 'because it's so big and it's very difficult. But yeah, my advice is always to just take the phone away. I have the most important people on WhatsApp, and that's all I need.' Jack Draper, we can assume, is one of them.