Top 5 Nude Women Tennis Players
Because someone had to do it.

This week, Tennis Now's very own Sean Bradley finishes off last week's half list with the Top 5 women tennis players to appear nude.  With some appearing in posed settings and others getting caught by the papparazi, this week's women make for an interesting count down.
 
Ana Ivanovic – This early picture was posted on her own website, reportedly just after she turned the legal age of eighteen.  On her website, she also posted pictures from a 2005 photo shoot with photographer Stephan Schacher very artsy and quite suggestive.  Ivanovic also posed for Sports Illustrated magazine’s 2010 Swimsuit Issue, echoing an earlier Anna Kournikova K-Swiss photo campaign.

Steffi Graf
– She was famously caught sunbathing nude in 1994, beside her father, Peter.  She has had a few other public nudity slip-ups, most all taking place in the early 90’s.  Recently, her husband Andre Agassi, facilitating the bidding at a Taiwanese auction, gave a peek of his naked wife to a man who bid $4,000.  A little pricey for something so easily Google-able.

Serena Williams
– Serena bared it all on the cover of the 2010 ESPN Body Issue, but has been no stranger to posing with little to nothing on before. 2007 saw her pose for Jane magazine, wearing nothing but a carefully placed flower.  She was quoted in the magazine saying, “I’ll take off my shirt in a second – locker room girls don’t have much shame.”

Vera Zvonareva
– This Russian posed for this year’s ESPN Magazine’s Body Issue, lying on a bench with blinds-filtered light pouring in, paying homage to the great photographers of the19th and 20th centuries like Alfred Steiglitz, Minor White, and Edward Weston.  Isn't that tight?  Zvonareva was quoted: “Somethings you want to try just once in your life.”

Ashley Harkleroad
-  She posed for the August 2008 cover of the most coveted naked magazine of all time, Playboy.  She was the first tennis player to grace the magazine and was reportedly paid a healthy $65,000 for her appearance, which is able $40,000 more than she earned at Wimbledon in 2008, just before she released the photos.  But c’mon, it’s Playboy after all! 
 

Posted to Tennis Stars Burning Bright by Sean Bradley on 11/1/2011 5:06:07 PM | with 2 comments


From being banned from tournaments to threatening foreign diplomats, these dads went too far.


4) Peter Graf – Steffi Graf’s father taught her how to play tennis at the age of three, and she quickly became an on-court phenomena. The German turned professional at the age of 14, and from that time her father tightly controlled her tournament and practice schedule, as well as her finances.
 
Over the years, he earned the nickname “Papa Merciless” because of how hard he pushed his daughter. When they traveled, Peter reportedly made Steffi hit the practice court immediately after disembarking from the plane, and his demand for success and the cash that comes along with it was high.
 
Then, in 1995, Peter was arrested for income tax evasion. Authorities raided their home in Mannheim, Germany in search of evidence, and Steffi was interviewed for eight hours about the situation. To his credit, Peter vehemently stated that his daughter was not involved, and the investigation against her was dropped. But Peter was convicted, and was in prison until 1998.
 
For the next two years, Steffi constantly fielded questions from the press about the trial. Yet despite the unpleasant off-court distraction, the German still won six Grand Slam titles.
 
3) Marinko Lucic – Mirjana Lucic was nothing short of a child prodigy. The Croatian set several “youngest-ever” records, as she won the Australian Open women’s title as a 15 year old. She also made the semifinals of Wimbledon in 1998 and reached a career high of No. 32, and looked poised for a great career until she disappeared from the game in 2003.
 
What happened? Her father, Marinko, who was named as the worst tennis dad ever in a British newspaper poll in 2003. In a 2006 interview with the New York Daily news, Mirjana said her father was physically and verbally abusive, saying that Marinko started hitting her when she was five.
 
The abuse continued until 1998, when Mirjana and her mother left their Zagreb apartment after a particularly unpleasant incident. She said they then ran into Goran Ivanesivic, who let the pair stay in his home for three days.
 
On July 4, 1998, Mirjana’s family, minus Marinko, fled from Zagreb to a hideout in the country, where they stayed until they were granted political asylum elsewhere. Her father reportedly took all but $23,000 of the money she earned on the tour, and her career has since been stalled because of a lack of funds.
 
Mirjana is back on the tour though, and she is ranked within the top 120.  
 
2) Jim Pierce – In 1993, Sports Illustrated featured a cover story named “Why Mary Pierce Fears For Her Life.” When Mary turned pro in 1989, she was known just as much for her talent as she was for her father’s behavior.
 
In the cover story, the Frenchwoman admits that her father hit her, and he was also known to be verbally abusive. The Women’s Tennis Council banned Jim from attending any tour tournaments at the 1993 French Open after he choked her cousin and screamed at her during a match.
 
She successfully filed for a restraining order in 1993, but that didn’t stop her father from turning up at her tournaments. A few weeks after she filed for the restraining order, he got into a fight with her bodyguard outside of her hotel room in Italy. Photos of him were also distributed to security guards at tournaments.
 
All of this prompted the WTA to pass the Jim Pierce rule, which prohibits abusive behavior on the tour.

Since then, they have apparently reconciled.
 
1) Damir Dokic – Damir Dokic really takes the cake here. He was verbally and physically abusive, he is indefiniately banned from all WTA Tour events, and he spent time in jail for threatening the life of the Australian ambassador to Belgrade.
 
Dokic has a long list of incidents at tournaments. He was removed from Wimbledon in 2000 after he smashed a journalist’s phone, and he was thrown out of the US Open later that year for being abusive to the staff.
 
In July of 2009 he was sentenced to 15 months in prison for threatening the Australian ambassador, for causing public endangerment and for illegal possession of weapons. All because he wanted the ambassador to force Australian newspapers to stop publishing stories about his alleged abuse.
 
All of these incidents have lead to the father and daughter becoming estranged over the years, although they’ve also recently reconciled their relationship.
 

Posted to Tennis Stars Burning Bright by on 11/8/2011 7:03:25 PM | with 0 comments


Here are the 10 best players who lasted the longest on the pro tour.


10. Is Andre Agassi, who came back to claim the Australian Open in 2003 at the age of 32. He was born on April 29, 1970 and retired in 2006 at age 36. He won his last title in 2005 in Los Angeles.
 
9. Is Spain's Andres Gimeno, who won the French Open at 34 in 1974. He was born August 3, 1937 and didn’t retire until he was 37.
 
8. Is Kimiko Date-Krumm, who is 40 years old and has played for Japan since 1988 on the WTA Tour. She was born on September 28, 1970. She is an active player and in 2009 became second-oldest player in Open Era to win a WTA title. November 22, 1943 she was born
 
7. Is the oldest player to win a title in the open era. Billie Jean King became the oldest WTA player to win a singles tournament when won Birmingham at 39 years, 7 months and 23 days. She retired at age 40 with 129 titles
 
6. Is Rod Laver who played until he was 41 with a Calendar year grand slam of 11 slam titles.  He is often called the greatest of all time.
 
5. Is Thomas Muster who was 44 when he gave his resignation  in 2011. He was born October 2, 1967 and was a former no. 1 back in 1996.
 
4. is Jimmy Connors and he gets recognition here for reaching the 1991 US Open semi finals at the age of 39. Born on September 2, 1952. Connors was 44 when he played his last match.
 
3. Richard 'Pancho' Gonzalez, who was still giving Connors and the young upstarts a run for their money in his 45th year. He retired a year later at 46.
 
2. Is Martina Navratilova who played until 2006 when she was 49 years old with her famous right one-handed backhard with a career record of 747 wins of 143 losses. She won the all-time record for men or women for titles at177.
 
1. Is 1909 Wimbledon champion Arthur Gore, whose century old glory was achieved by winning the third of his singles titles at the age of 41. Born January 2, 1868, he didn’t retire until he was 54.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Posted to Tennis Stars Burning Bright by on 11/17/2011 11:15:02 AM | with 1 comments







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