Current:Home > reviewsBillie Jean King still globetrotting in support of investment, equity in women’s sports -Prime Capital Blueprint
Billie Jean King still globetrotting in support of investment, equity in women’s sports
View
Date:2025-04-14 17:44:10
NEW YORK (AP) — Billie Jean King is still globetrotting in support of more investment and equity in women’s sports.
She attended the Women’s World Cup in Australia, kicked off the player draft for the new women’s professional hockey league in Toronto and is opening an office in London for a tennis business venture involving the international Billie Jean King Cup.
That’s all in the last three months for King, who turns 80 in November.
“We’re kind of at a tipping point,” King said. “People are actually looking at women’s sports like a great investment.”
She’s part of ownership groups involved with the Los Angeles Dodgers, the NWSL’s Angel City FC and the PWHL hockey league that starts in January.
Her busy schedule is reminiscent of the summer of 1973, when a 29-year-old King established the WTA, won the Wimbledon triple crown in singles, doubles and mixed doubles, achieved equal pay at the U.S. Open and beat self-proclaimed chauvinist Bobby Riggs in the “Battle of the Sexes” match.
On Thursday, King and about 60 athletes will celebrate the 50th anniversary of equal prize money at the U.S. Open and the King-Riggs match at her annual awards dinner for the Women’s Sports Foundation in New York.
In August, former President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama attended the U.S. Open at Arthur Ashe Stadium to mark the pay equity milestone.
“Let us remember all of this is bigger than a champion’s paycheck,” Michelle Obama said during the ceremony on opening night. “This is about how women are seen and valued in this world.”
King recently launched the production company “Pressure is a Privilege,” a phrase associated with the 39-time Grand Slam winner. She’s also an executive producer and host of “Groundbreakers,” a documentary about female athletes that airs on PBS on Nov. 21.
There’s an effort by members of Congress to award King the Congressional Gold Medal, one of the highest U.S. civilian honors given to individuals whose achievements have a lasting impact in their field.
Here’s a Q&A with King, which has been edited for brevity and clarity.
___
AP: It’s the 50th anniversary of so many accomplishments in 1973. Talk about that whirlwind.
KING: We started the WTA four days before Wimbledon. I won all three titles at Wimbledon, which for me was a big deal. Then equal prize money came into being, it started in 1972 with us saying we’re not coming back (to the U.S. Open in 1973). Then King-Riggs. That’s all in 3 months. I can appreciate it since being away from it so long. How the heck did we do that?
AP: You’ve said the King-Riggs match was about social change, women standing up for themselves in all areas.
KING: It was really about men, too. Because men started to shift a little. Obama was 12 years old when he saw the King-Riggs match. He said it affected him a lot. Guys are much better thinking about their daughters than they used to be. All these things add up.
AP: You’re part of ownership groups for pro sports. How did you get involved in women’s pro hockey, which will have teams in Boston, New York, Minnesota, Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal?
KING: The PWHL, it’s really exciting. It took five years. Plus, it took all those years of the other leagues, everyone trying. (U.S. Olympic gold medalist) Kendall Coyne said, ‘can you help us?’ We need to have a league where the very best players will play. We went to Toronto and I did an opening speech about trailblazers. It was amazing because the families were crying, the players were crying, they said ‘we’ve never been treated like this, it’s amazing, we feel like pros for the first time.’ There were a lot of little kids there. Kids are going to have an amazing opportunity that the generations before them never had. All three of their networks had it on. It’s a religion up there.
AP: How is investment in women’s sports changing?
KING: I’m asking CEOs and everyone now — ‘do you invest as much in women as you do in men?’ Then it usually gets quiet. But I must say it’s better than it used to be. We’re really lucky to be with this investment group. The male allies we’ve had through the years have made such a difference. They have the money and the power. But we’re getting there, getting more and more women investors, particularly in soccer. Women’s sports, we’ve all been fighting for it.
AP: What would you like to see in the future for women’s sports?
KING: More. And make sure we get girls early in life into sports. It’s really about the health issue, more than anything. More jobs, more everything. Women of color and diversity is really important.
We only get 5% of the media. That’s where the money is. People always say, ‘why doesn’t the WTA have as much money as the ATP?’ I’m like, really? If you watch a show at night, a sports show, just count how many minutes are on men and how many minutes are on women. We’re at 5%. We’ve got to change that.
___
AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis
veryGood! (6515)
Related
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Matt LeBlanc, Courteney Cox remember friend and co-star Matthew Perry after actor's death
- Mother of 6-year-old boy who shot teacher faces sentencing for marijuana use while owning a gun
- Jury finds Wisconsin woman guilty of poisoning friend with eye drops
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Man charged with abducting Michigan teen who was strangled dies while awaiting trial
- North Korea says it tested new solid-fuel engines for intermediate-range ballistic missiles
- 1 woman in critical condition a day after knife attack at Louisiana Tech University
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- After controversy, Texas school board says transgender student can sing in school musical
Ranking
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Draymond Green, Klay Thompson, Jaden McDaniels ejected after Warriors-Timberwolves fight
- GOP Sen. Markwayne Mullin challenges Teamsters president Sean O'Brien to fight at Senate hearing
- Kim Kardashian on divorce from Ye, leaving school with dad Robert Kardashian for O.J. Simpson trial
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Save 58% On the Viral Too Faced Lip Plumper That Works in Seconds
- ‘Thanksgiving Grandma’ teams up with Airbnb to welcome strangers for the holiday
- Colombia begins sterilization of hippos descended from pets of drug kingpin Pablo Escobar
Recommendation
Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
'King of scratchers' wins $5 million California Lottery prize sticking to superstition
Peter Seidler, Padres owner whose optimism fueled big-spending roster, dies at 63
An ethnic resistance group in northern Myanmar says an entire army battalion surrendered to it
Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
Dutch government shelves plans to reduce flights from Amsterdam’s busy Schiphol Airport
Spain leader defends amnesty deal for Catalan in parliament ahead of vote to form new government
Environmental Justice a Key Theme Throughout Biden’s National Climate Assessment