After becoming the first Asian men to be inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, India’s Leander Paes and Vijay Amritraj feel...
International Tennis Hall of Fame inductees Leander Paes (left), Richard Evans and Vijay Amritraj (right) are all smiles after the ceremony in Newport, Rhode Island, on Saturday. Pic/Getty Images
Former doubles World No. 1 Leander Paes and tennis broadcaster, actor and player Vijay Amritraj became the first Asian men inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame here on Saturday.
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The first inductees from India were joined by British tennis journalist and author Richard Evans in enshrinement ceremonies at the Hall of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island. Paes recounted his youth playing football and hockey before turning to tennis and eventually following his hockey-captain father as an Olympic medallist.
“It’s my greatest honour to be on this stage with not only these legends of the game, people who have inspired me every single day of my life—not because you’ve only won Grand Slams, not because you’ve shaped our sport but every single one of these people have shaped the world we live in,” Paes said.
“I would like to thank you so much for giving this Indian boy hope.”
Amritraj, 70, played from 1970 until retiring in 1993, winning 15 ATP singles titles and 399 matches and being ranked as high as 18th in the world and helped India to the Davis Cup finals in 1974 and 1987.
“I am humbled and honoured to join this incredible and exclusive group that have brought glory to our sport,” Amritraj said.
Vijay overcome with emotion
After his playing days, Amritraj has helped humanitarian causes, backed ATP and WTA events in India and has acted in the James Bond and Star Trek movie series. “A feeling came over me that I had never experienced,” Amritraj said of learning about his election to the Hall.
“This was an honour not just for me, for my family, for my parents, but for all of my fellow Indians and my country who live around the world.”
Like Amritraj, Evans was inducted in the contributor category for his life impact on the sport. Paes, 51, was an 18-time Grand Slam champion in doubles and mixed doubles who was selected in the player category after honing his trade in an Amritraj youth academy.
Paes and Amritraj made India the 28th nation represented in the Hall of Fame. “Playing for 1.4 billion people could either be pressure or it could be wind within your wings,” Paes said. “I’d like to thank every single one of my countrymen who supported me, who stood by through all the ups and downs, and we’ve been through a few, but you all were the inspiration, the support, you were even the strength to guide me through when even I didn’t believe.”
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Newport, Lee’s special venue
Paes won career Grand Slams in both men’s and mixed doubles, completing one in men’s by winning the 2012 Australian Open and another in mixed by capturing the 2016 French Open. He won the 1996 Atlanta Olympics bronze medal by defeating Brazil’s Fernando Meligeni 3-6, 6-2, 6-4. His only ATP singles title came in 1998 on Newport grass in the same venue where he was inducted.
“As my father always said to me, if you believe in yourself, you work hard, you’ll be passionate not only to win prize money and trophies, but you do that to inspire the world,” Paes said. “It has been my greatest honour to play for my countrymen in seven Olympics, to stand where the national anthem is playing in all those Davis Cups, and to prove that we Asians can win Grand Slams and also be No. 1 in our field, be it tennis or anything.”
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