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Southern Tennis Foundation

Southern Tennis Foundation

Southern Tennis Hall of Fame Inductees 2016 - 2020

Susan Sloane – Love of tennis drove her to WTA title and No. 19 ranking

Susan Sloane’s journey to the Southern Tennis Hall of Fame was four decades in the making. And it all began with a love for the game.

“I became obsessed with it,” said Sloane, of Lexington, Ky. “It was just this tennis connection. I was lucky enough to have the talent and I wanted to play all the time.

“I had an unusual story,” she said. “No one in my family had any tennis background. They didn’t know how to keep score. They didn’t have their own agenda and we had to listen to people who knew what they were talking about. My older sister played other sports and decided to go out for Tares Creek High School tennis team. That’s when I was introduced to tennis.”

Saying she got lucky, Sloane added, “I think it was meant for me to play. The Lexington Tennis Club was two miles away.” There she came under the tutelage of coach Fritz Nau.

Nau, who has been developing top-level tennis juniors for decades, said, “If it wasn’t for Susan, I wouldn’t be a tennis coach.” He added that he was a basketball player and coach in Lexington but was looking to expand his involvement in other sports. “Susan was so good that everyone in tennis thought I knew what I was talking about.

“In the first time I coached her, she was six years old. She hit a ball into the net and I told her not to do that. Then, she didn’t miss a ball for an hour and a half. Within six months, she was practicing two to three hours a day. She was so good mentally. The best player I ever coached.”

Sloane remembers not winning her first trip to the Kentucky State Championship. Then again, she was only in the fifth grade! She did capture three straight titles the next three years, from 1983-85. Skyrocketing up the Southern rankings, she reached No. 1 in the 12s for two years when she was 9 years old and played in the national championship.

Beginning with her victory in the 1981 12s National Indoors, a rivalry grew between Sloane and Mary Joe Fernandez – the former No. 4, Fed Cup captain and current broadcaster – that would continue through their junior and pro careers.

“I was super competitive, and she was, too,” Sloane explained.

Other junior national titles for the Kentuckian were the 1982 12s Clay Court, 1984 14s and 16s Indoor, and the 1985 18s Hard Court.

She lived at the acclaimed Bollettieri IMG Academy for more than two years. She also was coached by Dennis Emery, the longtime men’s tennis coach at the University of Kentucky. “I worked one-on-one (with Emery) and practiced ‘with the guys,’” she said, referring to the men’s players.

Emery recalled, “I worked with Susan from age 16 to 21. During that time, she went from 130 in the world to top 20 for three straight years. During that period, we would work four to five hours a day. It was a heavy workload because Susan had the best mind I had ever seen. Her ability to focus intently for long periods of times was almost superhuman. It was what made her great. Her mind was her best weapon.”

In 1986, Sloane did what many highly-rated girls did: She went pro. “I was ranked No. 3 in 18s and Mary Joe was No. 2. We all turned pro at basically the same time. If you weren’t ready to turn pro at 17, you missed your opportunity. It’s a great thing for girls now to be able to go to college and that gives them a lot more time to mature.”

In 1988, she won a WTA title at the Virginia Slims of Nashville. She reached No. 19 in 1989. Also, she advanced to the round of 32 four times in Grand Slams in 1988-89.

“I always loved the US Open, New York and staying in the city,” she said of her pro career. “Chris Evert was always the player I looked up to.

“In at least two matches, I came back from being way down,” she said. “In New Orleans. I was down 5-1, 40-15 came back and won that way in the French Open first round, too. Even if you’re 99 percent out of the match, it shows that you’re never really out of it. That’s where tennis is such a mental game. It makes you have to finish out the match.”

Sloane owned and operated the Kentucky Tennis Academy from 1995-2002, coaching multiple competitive junior players as well as teaching adults.

“I’ve ebbed and flowed with teaching,” she said. “Also, I’ve stayed home with my kids. Now I’m a full-time realtor.” She currently teaches at the new Top Seed Tennis Club in Nicholasville, Ky., and runs numerous top-level junior tournaments at the facility.

Sloane was inducted into the Kentucky Tennis Hall of Fame in 1995 and the Kentucky Athletic Hall of Fame in 1998.

Highlights of Susan Sloane’s achievements

  • Captured three Kentucky high school singles titles from sixth through eighth grades
  • 1 in USTA Southern girls’ 12s at the ages of 9 and 10
  • Winner of five USTA national girls’ titles
  • Trained at the Bollettieri IMG Academy
  • Won the 1988 WTA Virginia Slims of Nashville singles title
  • Reached No. 19 in the world in 1989
  • Inducted into the Kentucky Tennis and Kentucky Athletic halls of fame
  • Owned the Kentucky Tennis Academy
  • Teaches at the Top Seed Tennis Club

Filed Under: Southern Tennis Hall of Fame Inductees 2016 - 2020 Tagged With: Susan Sloane

Mike McNulty – Family Influence Fueled Rise through USTA Board

While the McNulty family has served tennis for decades, its service will rise to new heights as Mike McNulty was elected as USTA Chairman of the Board and President for the 2021-22 term.

The influence of the McNulty family in Southern tennis is reflected in the fact that the USTA Southern Family of the Year award is named for Mickey McNulty, his father. The family, whose roots go back to Lake Charles, La., has been instrumental in promoting tennis from the local, state, sectional and national levels.

Mickey was the USTA Louisiana President and influenced Mike to get involved in volunteering. Mike remembered his dad saying, “‘I think you can make a difference. You will make friends for a lifetime.’ Well, truer words have never been said. I’m so glad I followed his advice and got involved.”

Mike said, “In the early 80s, Bill Phillips (USTA Southern Tennis Service Representative, Louisiana) helped us get the Lake Area Community Tennis Association organized.”

Serving was also instrumental for the father and son duo, who won the Louisiana Father/Son title. Mike remembers that tournament fondly. “It was played in Jeanerette, about a mile from a sugar refinery that was a tournament sponsor. As winners, we didn’t receive a trophy. We received a pound bag of sugar. I kept it on my desk for years, a fond memory of that victory. One day,15 years later, I went into my office and the bag was surrounded by ants. That was the end of that bag!”

McNulty was a longtime volunteer with USTA Louisiana, where he served as President. He is a member of the Louisiana Tennis Hall of Fame and recipient of the President’s Award. His family is the recipient of the USTA Louisiana Mickey McNulty Family of the Year Award. He is the founder of the Lake Area Community Tennis Association.

McNulty has a long history of volunteerism at USTA Southern. He served as President, Executive Vice President, Vice President and member of the Board of Directors of USTA Southern and as Section Delegate to the USTA. He served three consecutive terms as Chair of the Constitution and Rules Committee, Chair of the Nominating Committee and Board Liaison to multiple committees.

He is the 2012 recipient of the USTA Southern Jacobs Bowl, the most prestigious volunteer service award given by the Section. Mickey also received the award in 2001. The younger McNulty was honored with the Charlie B. Morris Service Award in 2015; and the President’s Award. He served as Chair of the Southern Tennis Foundation. He is former Tournament Chairman of the Truist Atlanta Open, a US Open Series tournament, and served multiple terms on the Tournament Steering Committee.

2016 Southern Tennis Hall of Fame inductee Rex Maynard said, “Mike is a great friend, and even a greater person and USTA volunteer, and I’m excited to have him join us in the Southern Tennis Hall of Fame. He knows tennis at every level … from his days in Lake Charles, to his work and leadership in Louisiana, followed by his many accomplishments at Southern, and now his work and contributions at the national level. When we were struggling financially during the early years of the Truist Atlanta Open pro tournament, he spearheaded to move to Atlantic Station, which was the key to attracting more sponsors and exposure. That turned the tournament around from a fan and financial standpoint. No question, he’s the right guy at the right time to become the USTA President, and he makes all of us in the Southern Section proud!”

On the national level, he began serving his first two-year term as First Vice President of the USTA and his third consecutive two-year term on the USTA Board of Directors in January 2019. He has served as chair of the Strategic and Creative Planning Committee and as Board Liaison to the Adult Tennis Leadership Council. He has also been a member of the Budget Committee, International Tennis Committee and the ITF Constitution Committee. In addition, he served two consecutive terms on the Nominating Committee and the Constitution and Rules Committee, where he was Vice Chair, and was Council Chair to Tennis Rules and Regulations and the Advisory Group on Committees.

In anticipation of being elected to the USTA helm, McNulty spoke about his plans for the upcoming USTA term. “Parks and rec is going to my focus. Seventy percent of tennis is played in the parks and we need to maximize their impact. We need to deliver great programing in an area where tennis participation can grow. You have to provide a great customer service in this area. Our Net Generation kids will go from learning tennis in the schools to playing in parks.” He also highlighted the need to further the mission of Tennis Industry United and continue to reach out to the entire tennis community.

McNulty was a partner with the law firm of Plauche Smith & Nieset, LLC. He has subsequently taken Of Counsel status and is considered one of America’s top attorneys in insurance defense with specialties in construction and products liability. He served as Delegate to the Louisiana Bar Association, Director to the Louisiana Association of Defense Council and President of the St. Mary Parish Bar Association. He is a certified mediator and arbitrator. He has been named to the Best Lawyers in America-Insurance Law and Personal Injury and Best Lawyers in Louisiana.

McNulty and his wife, Mary, reside in New Orleans.

Highlights

  • Elected as USTA First Vice President for the 2019-20 term.
  • Elected as USTA Southern President in 2011. Also served as Southern Tennis Foundation Chair and as Section Delegate to the USTA.
  • Served as USTA Louisiana President.
  • Inducted into the Louisiana Tennis Hall of Fame.
  • Chaired the Truist Atlanta Open Tournament Committee (called the BB&T Atlanta Open at that time).
  • Honored with the following USTA Southern awards: Jacobs Bowl, the Charlie B. Morris Service Award and the President’s Award.
  • His family is the recipient of the USTA Louisiana Mickey McNulty Family of the Year Award.
  • Winner of the Louisiana Father/Son Championship with his father, Mickey.
  • Named to the Best Lawyers in America-Insurance Law and Personal Injury and Best Lawyers in Louisiana.

Filed Under: Southern Tennis Hall of Fame Inductees 2016 - 2020 Tagged With: Mike McNulty

Jack Tuero, Louisiana, 2020

Jack Tuero had the great fortune to be a teammate of two Southern Tennis Hall of Fame members, all of whom played under another famed inductee.

That was the story of New Orleans tennis in the 1940s and 1950s.

Tuero was a member of the Tulane University Green Wave that dominated men’s tennis for decades. He played with Southern Hall of Famers Wade L. Herren and Leslie Clarke Longshore Jr. Other Tulane players who have been inducted in the hall include Crawford Henry, Hamilton F. “Ham” Richardson, Lester M. Sack, Jr., Ernest M. Sutter and Ron Holmberg.

The guiding force of the university’s success was coach and Hall of Famer Emmett Paré, who led the men’s team from 1933 to 1973. Tulane won the program’s sole NCAA championship in 1959 and captured 18 SEC championships.

According to tennis historian Billy Crawford, while at Tulane, Tuero won 59 of 60 SEC Conference matches and lost only two more in his college career.

In 1949 he won the National Intercollegiate (NCAA) Championship in a dramatic 1-6, 0-6, 6-4, 9-7, 6-0 comeback against Sam Match of San Francisco State. Additionally, he was SEC singles champion in 1947, 1949 and 1950 and was the doubles champion in 1947 with Gleann Gardner, and in 1948-50 with Dick Mouledous.

In 1949, Tuero also won the Blue-Gray singles tournament. He captured the title again in 1951, gaining a win over Tony Trabert, who would go on to win five Grand Slam titles.

Tuero sandwiched his brilliant collegiate career between numerous successes as a junior and adult.

Tuero was born in 1926 in Waco, Tex. His father, Oscar, was a baseball pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals, pitching in 58 games. Jack lived in Memphis from 1936 to 1940 when his father was playing baseball there. The family moved to New Orleans, where Jack started playing tennis.

In 1940, he was the boys’ 15s Southern champion and national 15s runner-up. The next year he was a national finalist again in the 18s and under division. In 1943 he was Southern singles titlist in the Open division and was selected for the Junior Davis Cup team. He would win the Southern singles title again in 1948. At 17, he advanced to the U.S. National Championships, losing in the quarterfinals to the great Jack Kramer. He was the national clay court doubles champion with Ted Schroeder. He was ranked No. 1 in the section in 1943 and 1951.

The ATP shows Tuero had a 7-9 career record and reached the US Open second round in 1954.

He participated in numerous tournaments around the country with extensive success. Later he focused on serving as a teaching pro at Clubs in Beverly Hills, Calif.

His niece, 1995 Southern Hall of Fame inductee Linda Tuero, said, “I imagine that the members of the Southern Tennis Hall of Fame are familiar with the impressive tennis record of my late uncle, Jack Tuero. … He was so incredibly talented, a natural athlete. I remember watching him effortlessly glide around the court, never seeming to struggle.”

Richardson recounted, “Jack had a superb backhand, slightly weaker forehand (in spite of Emmett Paré efforts!), great quickness and speed around the court, and a marvelous volleying touch. His balletic grace was a delight to watch.”

Longshore, another Southern Tennis Hall of Fame inductee, wrote, “In the history of Southern tennis, for most of us, Bitsy Grant and Ham Richardson are our most famous players. After these two, I believe that Jack Tuero was our most talented. … Jack’s friendly personality and unselfish attitude made him a positive influence on countless young players through the years.”

He was inducted into the Louisiana Tennis Hall of Fame in 1985.

His honors and accomplishments include:

  • Won the 1949 National Intercollegiate (NCAA) Championship
  • SEC singles champion in 1947, 1949 and 1950
  • Boys’ 15s Southern champion and national 15s runner-up in 1940
  • In 1948, he was Southern singles champ and was ranked No. 1 in the section in 1943 and 1951
  • Four-time NCAA doubles champion in 1947, 1948-50
  • Had a 7-9 career in ATP matches
  • Reached the second round of the US Open in 1954
  • 1949 and 1951 Blue-Gray singles titlist
  • Inducted into the Louisiana Tennis Hall of Fame in 1985

Filed Under: Southern Tennis Hall of Fame Inductees 2016 - 2020 Tagged With: jack tuero

Jaime Kaplan, Georgia, 2020

Jaime Kaplan made news on the tennis court at the age of 9.

Her hometown of Macon, Ga., was hosting a pro tennis tournament and there were lots of ball boys, but only one ball girl. “The newspaper caption called me a ‘breakthrough for women’s lib,’ ” she laughed and said in a 2014 interview.

“I wanted to be a tennis pro since the first time I picked up a racquet. Some kids want to be a doctor or a lawyer. There was never a question in my mind.”

Kaplan made that dream come true in 1983 when she began her seven-year career on the WTA Tour.

Kaplan’s prominence cuts across many of the connecting fibers of Macon tennis, starting with her junior career. From 1971-80, she was ranked No. 1 singles and doubles in USTA Southern and Georgia 13 times, competing in the Girls’ 10s through Women’s Open. At Stratford Academy, she was a three-time high school state champion in basketball as an All-State and All-Star player.

She didn’t too bad in tennis, either, going undefeated in singles and doubles (156-0) throughout her five-year career. Kaplan received Stratford’s 1979 Best Senior Athlete award and was named the 1977 Amateur Athlete of the Year presented by the Macon Sports Hall of Fame as a sophomore. She was nominated as Best Athlete of the Decade by The Macon Telegraph, eight years after they ran that photo of her as a ball person.

Four decades later, the academy’s tennis center was named after Kaplan. The Jaime Kaplan Tennis Center has served as the site of the Macon Pro Circuit tournament as well as several state, sectional and national tournaments. She had an outstanding collegiate career, winning the SEC doubles title at the University of Georgia in 1981. Next stop was Florida State, where she was a singles champion and two-time doubles titlist in the Metro Conference. She was the first FSU player to qualify for the NCAA championships.

Over the next seven years, Kaplan appeared in 14 Grand Slam tournaments including five times at Wimbledon. In 1988 she reached the Wimbledon round of 16 in mixed doubles. She won five WTA doubles crowns, teaming with Jill Hetherington for her biggest victory and with Iva Budarova defeated two top 10 singles players in doubles, the Maleeva sisters, Katerina and Manuela.

Kaplan’s highest rankings were No. 91 in doubles and No. 252 in singles until a knee injury cut short her career in 1989.

Randy Stephens, a former USTA Southern President who was inducted into the Southern Tennis Hall of Fame in 2014, said, “Jaime Kaplan’s accomplishments and contributions to tennis cross a wide spectrum.  In addition to an outstanding junior and collegiate career, she played professional tennis at the highest level. After her playing career, she worked as a successful teaching professional and is one of the most successful high school coaches in the history of Georgia tennis.

“After becoming the head tennis coach at Stratford in 2005, her no-cut tennis teams have won 46 area/region titles and 17 state championships,” Stephens continued. “Also, she developed a celebrity golf tournament that has raised over $9,000,000 for local charities in Middle Georgia over the past 30 years. Her influence through tennis in Macon is unmatched. She is a shining star in our community.”

Over the past 30 years, she serves or has served on over a dozen nonprofit boards and in 2011 filled an unexpired term for six months on Macon’s City Council.

Kaplan has battled numerous injuries and surgeries. But, in 2009, she faced her biggest hurdle. She was diagnosed with extramedullary acute myeloid leukemia (AML). She cited the support of her high school players as helping her recover. Kaplan has served as Stratford’s head tennis coach from 2005 to present.

She is the former Alumni Director and Major Gifts Coordinator for Stratford. Currently, she is the Director of Philanthropy at United Way of Central Georgia and Manager of the Five Star Kevin Brown Russell Henley Celebrity Classic.

A notable volunteer honor – the USTA Eve Kraft Award – came her way in 2008. “Eve Kraft was a dedicated community tennis pioneer who was the original architect of how to grow the game at the grassroots level, making tennis accessible for anyone who wants to play,” said Kurt Kamperman, Chief Executive, USTA National Campus. “Jaime Kaplan is a passionate, hands-on volunteer. She’s cut from the same cloth as Eve and we are proud to honor her with this award.”

Her honors and accomplishments include:

  • Reached world rankings of No. 91 in doubles and No. 252 in singles
  • Won five WTA doubles crowns
  • Went undefeated in singles and doubles in five years of high school play
  • Previously inducted into four halls of fame: USTA Georgia Tennis (2006), Georgia Sports (2005), Macon Sports (2001) and Stratford Academy Athletic (2004)
  • Won the SEC doubles title at the University of Georgia in 1981
  • Metro Conference 1983 singles champion and two-time doubles titlist while playing at Florida State
  • Ranked No. 1 singles and doubles in USTA Southern and Georgia 13 times
  • Honored with the USTA Eve Kraft Award in 2008
  • Stratford Academy’s tennis center is named the Jaime Kaplan Tennis Center

Filed Under: Southern Tennis Hall of Fame, Southern Tennis Hall of Fame Inductees 2016 - 2020

Lenny Simpson, North Carolina, 2020

Lendward “Lenny” Simpson was first introduced to the game of tennis at age 5. His parents’ backyard backed up to the property of Dr. Hubert and Celeste Eaton, a local physician who lived in a two-story home with a spacious property of about five acres. The property featured a pool, three-car garage and, most notably, a first-class clay tennis court. The Eatons’ property was known locally as the “Black Country Club.” During the Jim Crow era, the many local parks were for whites only. Even the one park designated for blacks had whites-only tennis courts. The Eatons’ court was the only court available to blacks, and then only to a privileged few.

Simpson’s introduction to this court came via a friend and next-door neighbor, Nathaniel Jackson. A 20-time ATA national champion, Jackson escorted Simpson onto the property through the big side gates and introduced him to world champion Althea Gibson. The first thing Gibson said to him was, “Hello, Champ. What took you so long?” then handed Simpson his first tennis racquet. He hit off the backboard for the next two years with Gibson and Jackson at his side each day after they finished playing. Simpson was told that, to be a champion, he had to “beat the backboard” and to this very day, is still trying to beat that backboard.

In 1957, Simpson played in his first tournament at age 8 and won the 11 & Under Doubles. At age 9, recommended by Gibson, Jackson and Eaton, Simpson attended Dr. Walter “Whirlwind” Johnson’s predominately black American Tennis Association (ATA) Junior Development Team to develop his tennis talents. He traveled all over the country, from Chattanooga to Connecticut, becoming one of the top juniors in the ATA and then the USTA. A young Arthur Ashe was also on the team, living through countless nights when they struggled to find accommodations in the South and ended up staying in segregated YMCAs. Sometimes, they drove through the night to a tournament for which they qualified only to be told they could not play. Being five years younger than Ashe, Simpson was placed under the watch of the future world champion, forming a brotherly bond that would last the rest of their lives.

Partnered at age 9 with Bonnie Logan in mixed doubles, the pair never lost a match and won several ATA titles. “I’ve seen all the greats,” Logan said. “None of them have the kind of spring movement in their legs that Lendward had – and that includes Roger Federer. He was just so quick to the net.”

This ability helped Simpson receive academic and athletic scholarship to attend two of the best prep schools in the country: Hill School in Pennsylvania and Cheshire Academy in Connecticut. There he won the National Prep School Championships and was on the “Who’s-Who” list in America for tennis, soccer and basketball. Simpson was the ATA National Boys’ singles & Men’s doubles champion from 1964-67. With his doubles partner, Luis Glass, Simpson was in the top 10 of every age group in singles and doubles from the 10s to 18s at the Boys’ National Championships in Kalamazoo, MI, and Chattanooga, TN. With their success in doubles, both Simpson and Glass were nominated for the US Junior Davis Cup Team. Simpson was selected as the No. 1 player to represent North Carolina in a rivalry North Carolina vs South Carolina team event, during which he defeated Peyton Watson in three sets. Simpson won several states; championships in the North and in the South in singles and doubles before defeating Dick Stockton in the Eastern Boys’ Championships in Forest Hills, N.Y., to qualify for the US Nationals.

In 1964, at the age of 15, Simpson played his first of three consecutive US National Championships, known today as the US Open. He was, at the time and for some 40 years following, the youngest male to play in the prestigious tournament although it was barely noted. Winning his first round, he advanced into the second round to discover his opponent was Ashe, his mentor, coach and hero in the ATA and USTA.

Simpson accepted an academic and athletic scholarship to East Tennessee State University where he played from 1968-72 and won four ATA mixed-doubles titles while double-majoring in Psychology and Physical Education and earning the ETSU “Who’s-Who” in America in tennis and basketball. Simpson was a quarterfinalist in one NCAA tournament and played No. 1 in singles and doubles all through his college career. He was Ohio Valley Conference champion in singles and doubles and coached the team in 1972-73. In 1973, Simpson married JoAnn and the couple moved to West Bloomfield, MI. They had two daughters, Celeste and Jennifer, both earning academic and athletic scholarships to Division schools. Simpson was the Director of Tennis at the Square Lake Racquet Club in West Bloomfield and helped run the Michigan Junior Development Program. Simpson turned pro in 1974 and was the first black player to play World Team Tennis, playing for the Detroit Loves. The team included Rosie Casals, Phil Dent, Allan Stone, Butch Seewagen and Trish Faulkner.

Simpson has produced over 65 exhibition matches and events with the first featuring Billie Jean King and Hana Mandlíková in 1980. Following matches included top players Serena Williams, John McEnroe, Todd Martin, James Blake, Zina Garrison, Martina Navratilova, Chandra Rubin, Katrina Adams, Caroline Wozniacki, the Bryan brothers, Andy Roddick, John Isner and many others. It was the 2012 Azalea Festival that brought him back to Wilmington, N.C., for an exhibition match with John McEnroe, Todd Martin, Rubin and Katrina Adams, the largest event on the city’s social calendar. Invited to be a special Celebrity and sit in a VIP section along the 3rd Street parade route, he reflected that as a young boy sitting on the curb in hopes of catching a piece of candy during the parade, where he was called every derogatory name in the book. Now he would soon be sitting where he never felt welcomed before. Perhaps the world had changed enough that it was time to return to Wilmington to make a difference in his hometown community, to give an opportunity and hope to at-risk kids, just like Eaton and Gibson did for him so many years ago.

2013 saw the founding of the Lenny Simpson Tennis & Education Fund (LSTEF), a not-for-profit focused on working with at-risk kids in Wilmington and beyond. The name stemmed from Arthur Ashe Tennis & Education Center and, as Simpson has said many times, “if it was good enough for Arthur Ashe, it was good enough for Lenny Simpson.” The primary program of the LSTEF is One Love Tennis. One Love travels to all the city centers and afterschool programs, bringing tennis instruction and an academic enrichment program to develop kids both academically and athletically after school during the school year and in the mornings during summer camps. Program participants peak at more than 550 kids a week. One Love charges nothing for its services to ensure that no child is denied the opportunity for academic support and to play the great game of tennis.

One Love started by bringing the Bryan brothers to Wilmington for an exhibition match and clinic. One Love has been honored by USTA North Carolina and USTA Southern for its Academic Enrichment program, sent a team that won the Junior Team Tennis Under 10s Nationals, was awarded the USTA North Carolina NJTL Chapter of the Year, has twice been invited to escort Fed Cup players onto the court and participate in Fed Cup Opening Ceremonies, has twice been selected to perform on-court skills demonstrations at the US Open on Opening Day and flip the ceremonial coins (three times), and was invited to sit in the President’s Suite to celebrate Arthur Ashe Kids Day at the US Open four years in a row. One Love also was invited to have front row seats at the USTA National Tennis Center for the Althea Gibson Statue unveiling ceremony. The 40 letters that One Love kids wrote in 2017 requesting recognition for Althea Gibson at the US Open helped make the statue of Althea Gibson – unveiled in 2019 – a reality. These kids will forever be a part of history.

One Love was invited to screen the acclaimed documentary film, “Althea,” by Rex Miller at the All England Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club, commonly known as Wimbledon, for its exclusive membership and formed a partnership with the club’s Wimbledon Foundation and Wimbledon Learning Center to teach yearly outreach clinics for at-risk girls in England. One Love screened the film for every student in New Hanover County, N.C., in elementary, middle and high school, both public and private. One Love brought the Breaking the Barriers Exhibit to Wilmington for display during Black History Month. Simpson has his own live morning radio show each week called “Tennis Tuesdays,” that covers the world of tennis and topics of the day, reaching a large listening audience on the air and Internet. One Love has been involved with several film projects, including the CBS Sports Network documentary “Althea & Arthur,” two USTA special documentary films and two Tennis Channel documentary films that were shown during the US Open in 2019 to accompany the unveiling of the Althea Gibson statue. One Love was featured in print media from around the world in the lead-up to and following the statue’s unveiling. For his work with One Love, Simpson has been recognized with the USTA Southern Marilyn Sherman Spirit Award, the prestigious USTA NJTL Founder’s Service Award and made the USTA Foundation’s NJTL 50th Anniversary list “50 For 50” as well as being presented with a Community Service Award by the mayor and prosecuting attorney for making the community a better place through his service to children and families in Wilmington.

Simpson has been inducted into the Cheshire Academy Hall of Fame, the Hill School Hall of Fame (for basketball), the Black Tennis Hall of Fame, the Greater Wilmington Sports Hall of Fame and the North Carolina Tennis Hall of Fame. He is also featured in the International Tennis Hall of Fame’s Breaking the Barriers Exhibit and has a personalized engraved paver in the Avenue of Aces walkway at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, which is just outside Arthur Ashe Stadium.

Perhaps the most significant accomplishment of One Love is the purchase of the former Eaton property at 1406 Orange Street in Wilmington. The historic and iconic backyard clay court had all but disappeared through years of neglect except for some fencing that indicated where the court used to be. A complete restoration saw the court reopen for use in 2019 as the “home court” for One Love kids, spawning congratulatory media coverage throughout the world of tennis. The home is being completely restored and will house the One Love offices. Gibson’s upstairs living quarters will become an Academic Enrichment Center with a stairway and observation deck leading right to the court. The Simpsons will live in the home as caretakers of the property, protecting and sharing the legacy of those who lived, trained and played there. The property will be listed on the National Register of Historic Places and a marker will be installed. Starting his tennis career just feet away from the 1406 Orange Street court and now acting as caretaker, teacher and coach, just as Eaton did, brings Simpson’s story and tennis career completely full circle. As his friend, coach and mentor Ashe once said, “The way to change the world is one heart at a time, one person at a time, one child at a time.” Simpson and his wife, with the entire One Love family, are weaving their own legacy into the legacies of Eaton, Johnson, Gibson and Ashe, to be an inspiration for the next generation of 5-year-olds who will be handed a racquet and warmly greeted, “Hello, champ.”

His accomplishments and honors include:

  • Awarded the USTA NJTL Founder’s Service Award, USTA North Carolina Educational Merit Award, USTA Southern Educational Merit Award, USTA Southern Marilyn Sherman Spirit Award, USTA North Carolina NJTL Chapter of the Year, Wilmington Community Service Award and selected for the USTA Foundation NJTL 50 For 50
  • Inducted into the Cheshire Academy Hall of Fame, the Hill School Hall of Fame (for basketball), the Black Tennis Hall of Fame, the Greater Wilmington Sports Hall of Fame and the North Carolina Tennis Hall of Fame
  • Ranked top 10 nationally in every junior age group in singles & doubles
  • Captain of the Eastern Tennessee State University tennis team 1968–72 and listed in the “Who’s-Who” in America athletes in tennis and basketball
  • Ohio Valley Conference Champion in singles & doubles
  • Entered the Pro Tour in 1974 as the first African American to play World Team Tennis on the Detroit Loves
  • Served as Tennis Director for Nick Bollettieri junior and adult tennis camps
  • Founder of the Lenny Simpson Tennis & Education Fund, which includes One Love
  • Owner and caretaker of 1406 Orange St., Wilmington, N.C, the former home of Dr. Hubert Eaton

Filed Under: Southern Tennis Hall of Fame, Southern Tennis Hall of Fame Inductees 2016 - 2020

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