Top 76 Quotes & Sayings by Arthur Ashe

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American tennis player Arthur Ashe.
Last updated on September 18, 2024.
Arthur Ashe

Arthur Robert Ashe Jr. was an American professional tennis player who won three Grand Slam singles titles. He started to play tennis at six years old. He was the first black player selected to the United States Davis Cup team and the only black man ever to win the singles title at Wimbledon, the US Open, and the Australian Open. He retired in 1980. He was ranked world No. 1 by Rex Bellamy, Bud Collins, Judith Elian, Lance Tingay, World Tennis and Tennis Magazine (U.S.) in 1975. In 1975 Ashe was awarded the 'Martini and Rossi' Award, voted for by a panel of journalists, and the ATP Player of the Year award. In the ATP computer rankings, he peaked at No. 2 in May 1976.

I guess I started too early because I just thought it was something fun to do.
One important key to success is self-confidence. An important key to self-confidence is preparation.
I don't care who you are, you're going to choke in certain matches. You get to a point where your legs don't move and you can't take a deep breath. You start to hit the ball about a yard wide, instead of inches.
Success is a journey, not a destination. The doing is often more important than the outcome. — © Arthur Ashe
Success is a journey, not a destination. The doing is often more important than the outcome.
Later, I discovered there was a lot of work to being good in tennis.
There is a syndrome in sports called 'paralysis by analysis.'
We must reach out our hand in friendship and dignity both to those who would befriend us and those who would be our enemy.
My potential is more than can be expressed within the bounds of my race or ethnic identity.
I accepted the face that as much as I want to lead others, and love to be around other people, in some essential way, I am something of a loner.
If I were to say, 'God, why me?' about the bad things, then I should have said, 'God, why me?' about the good things that happened in my life.
When bright young minds can't afford college, America pays the price.
I keep sailing on in this middle passage. I am sailing into the wind and the dark. But I am doing my best to keep my boat steady and my sails full.
I have always drawn strength from being close to home.
You learn about equality in history and civics, but you find out life is not really like that. — © Arthur Ashe
You learn about equality in history and civics, but you find out life is not really like that.
The ideal attitude is to be physically loose and mentally tight.
Clothes and manners do not make the man; but when he is made, they greatly improve his appearance.
True heroism is remarkably sober, very undramatic. It is not the urge to surpass all others at whatever cost, but the urge to serve others at whatever cost.
You've got to get to the stage in life where going for it is more important than winning or losing.
We must believe in the power of education. We must respect just laws. We must love ourselves, our old and or young, our women as well as our men.
I have tried to keep on with my striving because this is the only hope I have of ever achieving anything worthwhile and lasting.
Trust has to be earned, and should come only after the passage of time.
Let me put it this way: I think Republicans tend to keep the ball in play, Democrats go for broke.
A wise person decides slowly but abides by these decisions.
Do not feel sorry for me if I am gone.
From what we get, we can make a living; what we give, however, makes a life.
Start where you are. Use what you have. Do what you can.
If you're paid before you walk on the court, what's the point in playing as if your life depended on it?
When we were together, I loved you deeply and you gave me so much happiness I can never repay you.
I may not be walking with you all the way, or even much of the way, as I walk with you now.
I don't want to be remembered for my tennis accomplishments.
Wherever I am when you feel sick at heart and weary of life, or when you stumble and fall and don’t know if you can get up again, think of me. I will be watching and smiling and cheering you on.
I take the good with the bad, and I try to face them both with as much calm and dignity as I can muster.
I would like to flood South Africa with black personages of all sorts of persuasions: writers, educators, businessmen, you name it. If you are black and have any clout at all, I would like to see you go to South Africa and look for yourself and come back and try to use the tools that you have at your command to try and help the brothers down there.
If I don't ask "Why me?" after my victories, I cannot ask "Why me?" after my setbacks and disasters.
I wish more of us could understand that our increasing isolation, no matter how much it seems to express pride and self-affirmation, is not the answer to our problems. Rather, the answer is a revival of our ancient commitment to God, who rules over all the peoples of the world and exalts no one over any other, and to the moral and spiritual values which were once legendary in America. We must reach out our hand in friendship both to those who would befriend us and those who would be our enemy.
Regardless of how you feel inside, always try to look like a winner.
Life is like a tennis game. You can't win without serving.
There were times when I asked myself whether I was being principled or simply a coward.... I was wrapped in the cocoon of tennis early in life, mainly by blacks like my most powerful mentor, Dr. Robert Walter Johnson of Lynchburg, Virginia. They insisted that I be unfailingly polite on the court, unfalteringly calm and detached, so that whites could never accuse me of meanness. I learned well. I look at photographs of the skinny, frail, little black boy that I was in the early 1950s, and I see that I was my tennis racquet and my tennis racquet was me. It was my rod and my staff.
There's no better stage than the U.S. Open for me — © Arthur Ashe
There's no better stage than the U.S. Open for me
Every time you win, it diminishes the fear a little bit. You never really cancel the fear of losing; you keep challenging it.
Racism is not an excuse to not do the best you can.
Fear isn't an excuse to come to a standstill. It's the impetus to step up and strike.
I strongly believe the black culture spends too much time, energy and effort raising, praising, and teasing our black children about the dubious glories of professional sports.
You really are never playing an opponent. You are playing yourself.
Having grown up in a segregated environment in the south I know what it's like to be stepped on, I know what it's like also to see some black hero do well in the face of adversity.
Some folks call tennis a rich people's sport or a white person's game. I guess I started too early because I just thought it was something fun to do. Later, I discovered there was a lot of work to being good in tennis. You've got to make a lot of sacrifices and spend a lot of time if you really want to achieve with this sport, or in any sport, or in anything truly worthwhile.
I don't want to be remembered for my tennis accomplishments. That's no contribution to society. [Tennis] was purely selfish; that was for me.
Sometimes, a defeat can be more beautiful and satisfying than certain victories. The English have a point in insisting that it matters not who won or lost, but how you played the game.
I have always tried to be true to myself, to pick those battles I felt were important. My ultimate responsibility is to myself. I could never be anything else. — © Arthur Ashe
I have always tried to be true to myself, to pick those battles I felt were important. My ultimate responsibility is to myself. I could never be anything else.
You come to realize that life is short, and you have to step up. Don't feel sorry for me. Much is expected of those who are strong.
You've got to make a lot of sacrifices and spend a lot of time if you really want to achieve with this sport, or in any sport, or in anything truly worthwhile.
The best way to judge a life is to ask yourself, "Did I make the best use of the time I had?
I know I could never forgive myself if I elected to live without humane purpose, without trying to help the poor and unfortunate, without recognizing that perhaps the purest joy in life comes with trying to help others.
It doesn't have to glitter to be gold.
The world over - 50 million children start playing tennis, 5 million learn to play tennis, 500,000 learn professional tennis, 50,000 come to the circuit, 5000 reach the grand slam, 50 reach Wimbledon, 4 to semi final, 2 to the finals, when I was holding a cup I never asked GOD 'Why me?'. And today in pain I should not be asking GOD 'Why me?'
Start where you are, use what you have.
We blacks look for leadership in men and women of such youth and inexperience, as well as poverty of education and character, that it is no wonder that we sometimes seem rudderless.... We see basketball players and pop singers as possible role models, when nothing could be further, in most cases, from their capacities.
My humanity, in common with all of God's children, gives the greatest flight to my full range of my possibilities.
...I spent many, many hours in...libraries. Libraries became courts of last resort, as it were.
I have become convinced that we blacks spend too much time on the playing field and too little time in libraries.
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