John McEnroe and Martina Navratilova
John McEnroe and Martina Navratilova on court making their protest. (Twitter)
3 min read

Tennis greats John McEnroe and Martina Navratilova have been criticised by Australian Open organizers after they staged a written protest on court over the naming of the Margaret Court Arena in Melbourne Park.

A day after 24-time grand slam champion Court was honoured at the tournament on the 50th anniversary of her calendar Grand Slam, McEnroe and Navratilova unfurled a banner calling for the Margaret Court Arena to be renamed in honour of fellow Australian Evonne Goolagong.

The protest followed an open letter that was written by Navratilova and published on tennis.com about the issue.

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After the conclusion of her veterans doubles match, Navratilova climbed into the umpires’ chair to address the remaining crowd only to have the television feed cut off as she was speaking.

“I’ve been speaking out about an issue for a while now and John McEnroe is here to join me and push the conversation forward…’ she said, according to reports, before she was cut off.

The pair, fierce critics of Court’s views on LGBTIQ matters, then held aloft a banner which read “Evonne Goolagong Arena”.

Court was presented with a trophy by Australian great Rod Laver ahead of the fourth-round match between Rafael Nadal and Nick Kyrgios in Melbourne on Monday.

The controversial Court, now a Pentecostal pastor in Western Australia, has likened LGBTQ teaching in schools to the work of “the devil” and previously said tennis is “full of lesbians”.

The 77-year-old, the most successful player of all time, won all four grand slams in 1970, and while she was invited to this year’s tournament in honour of the milestone, Tennis Australia added that it did not agree with her “demeaning” personal views.

In a statement, Tennis Australia said of McEnroe and Navratilova’s protest: “We embrace diversity, inclusion and the right for people to have a view, as well as their right to voice that view. But the Australian Open has regulations and protocols with respect to how any fan, player or guest can use our facility, the event and the global stage it provides. This is to ensure the integrity of our event.

“Two high-profile guests have breached these protocols and we are working through this with them.”

Martina Navratilova
Martina Navratilova

In a letter published on tennis.com, Navratilova said the arena should be renamed after Goolagong, describing the seven-time grand slam champion as the “embodiment of what a role model or hero truly is”.

Navratilova wrote: “When airports, buildings, streets or stadiums are named after particular people, it is done, or at least should be done, to honour exceptional human beings — our heroes.

“Think Muhammad Ali, Nelson Mandela, Martin Luther King, Billie Jean King, Rod Laver, Rosa Parks. Would it not be appropriate if the Staples Center were renamed as a tribute to Kobe Bryant?

“Such luminaries excelled in their fields and transcended them; they made a positive contribution to mankind; they led by example. And, perhaps most of all, they were on the right side of history.

“But Margaret Court does not belong in that company or category. Nobody disputes her achievements on the tennis court, and her place in the sport’s history remains as distinguished as it gets. Nobody wants to take away or diminish her career, least of all me. Margaret, Billie Jean and Rod were my childhood heroes. I wanted to be like them.

“So, it pains me to say this, but Margaret Court Arena must be renamed.

McEnroe  – Commissioner of Tennis

Earlier this week McEnroe mocked Court in a Eurosport segment entitled the “Commissioner of Tennis.” In the video, the seven-time grand slam champion called on 23-time grand slam winner Serena Williams, who was knocked out in the third round of the Australian Open, to better Court’s number of major titles.

“Serena, do me a favour. Get two more grand slams this year and get to 25 so we can leave Margaret Court and her offensive views in the past where they both belong,” said McEnroe, who was dressed as a medical doctor sitting behind a desk while wearing a lab coat and stethoscope.

Last Updated on Jan 29, 2020


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