American tennis player (born 1962)
Pam Shriver
|
Full name
| Pamela Howard Shriver
|
---|
Country (sports)
|
United States
|
---|
Residence
| Los Angeles
, California, U.S.
|
---|
Born
| (
1962-07-04
)
July 4, 1962
(age 61)
Baltimore
, Maryland, U.S.
|
---|
Height
| 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
|
---|
Turned pro
| 1979
|
---|
Retired
| 1997
|
---|
Plays
| Right-handed (one-handed backhand)
|
---|
Coach
| Don Candy
[1]
|
---|
Prize money
| $5,460,566
|
---|
Int. Tennis HoF
| 2002
(
member page
)
|
---|
|
Career record
| 625?270 (69.8%)
|
---|
Career titles
| 21
|
---|
Highest ranking
| No. 3 (February 20, 1984)
|
---|
|
Australian Open
| SF (
1981
,
1982
,
1983
)
|
---|
French Open
| 3R (
1983
)
|
---|
Wimbledon
| SF (
1981
,
1987
,
1988
)
|
---|
US Open
| F (
1978
)
|
---|
|
Career record
| 622?122
|
---|
Career titles
| 112
|
---|
Highest ranking
| No.
1
(March 18, 1985)
|
---|
|
Australian Open
| W
(
1982
,
1983
,
1984
,
1985
,
1987
,
1988
,
1989
)
|
---|
French Open
| W
(
1984
,
1985
,
1987
,
1988
)
|
---|
Wimbledon
| W
(
1981
,
1982
,
1983
,
1984
,
1986
)
|
---|
US Open
| W
(
1983
,
1984
,
1986
,
1987
,
1991
)
|
---|
|
Tour Finals
| W
(
1981
,
1982
,
1983
,
1984
,
1985
,
1986
Nov
,
1987
,
1988
,
1989
,
1991
)
|
---|
Olympic Games
| Gold Medal
(
1988
)
|
---|
|
French Open
| W
(
1987
)
|
---|
|
Fed Cup
| W
(
1986
,
1989
)
Record: 19?1 (95.0%)
|
---|
|
Pamela Howard Shriver
(born July 4, 1962) is an American former professional
tennis
player and current tennis broadcaster, pundit, and coach. During the 1980s and 1990s, Shriver won 133
WTA Tour
?level titles, including 21 singles titles, 111 women's doubles titles, and one mixed doubles title. This includes 22
major
titles, 21 in women's doubles and one in mixed doubles. Shriver also won an Olympic gold medal in women's doubles at the
1988 Seoul Olympics
, partnering with
Zina Garrison
. Shriver and regular doubles partner
Martina Navratilova
are the only women's pair to complete the
Grand Slam
in a calendar year, winning all four majors in
1984
. She was ranked as high as world No. 3 in singles, and
world No. 1
in doubles.
Playing style
[
edit
]
Shriver was well known for her variety, including sharp volleys and all-round solid technique at the net. She also possessed a strong slice forehand and underspin approach,
[1]
which set her apart from the rest of the women's field, but she had a comparatively weak chip backhand. She was known for being a
serve-and-volleyer
.
[1]
Career
[
edit
]
Shriver first came to prominence at the 1978
US Open
where, as a 16-year-old amateur, she reached the women's singles final. She defeated the reigning
Wimbledon
champion
Martina Navratilova
in a semifinal.
[1]
Shriver then lost to
Chris Evert
in the final. This early singles achievement proved to be the pinnacle of her singles success. Shriver also won her first career singles title in 1978 in Columbus, Ohio and won a total of 21 singles titles between 1978 and 1997.
The 1978 US Open final was the only Grand Slam singles final of Shriver's career. She lost the next eight Grand Slam singles semifinals she played, four of them to Navratilova, two to
Steffi Graf
, and one each to Evert and
Hana Mandlikova
.
In 2022 Shriver disclosed that she had been in a multi-year inappropriate relationship with her coach, Australian
Don Candy
, that started when she was a teenager.
[2]
[3]
She chose to reveal the story in part because of her concern that there are ongoing issues with young tennis players being placed in vulnerable situations.
Doubles
[
edit
]
Shriver achieved numerous successes in doubles tournaments with Navratilova, winning 79 women's doubles titles.
[4]
Shriver won 112 career doubles titles overall and is one of six female players in the
Open era
to have won more than 100 career titles.
[4]
[5]
Navratilova and Shriver formed one of the most successful women's doubles teams, capturing seven Australian Open, five
Wimbledon
, four
US Open
and four French Open titles. In 1984, the pair captured all four major women's doubles titles, i.e. the "Calendar Grand Slam." This was part of a record 109-match winning streak between 1983 and 1985.
[1]
The pair were named the
WTA Tour
's "Doubles Team of the Year" eight consecutive times from 1981 through 1988 and won the
WTA Tour Championships
title ten times between 1981 and 1992.
Shriver won another women's doubles Grand Slam title at the US Open in 1991, partnering with
Natasha Zvereva
. She was also the 1987 French Open mixed doubles winner with
Emilio Sanchez
. She won all three gold medals (singles, women's doubles, and mixed doubles) at the 1991
Pan American Games
in Havana, Cuba. Shriver also teamed with Zina Garrison to win the gold medal at the 1988 Olympics.
Shriver reached the world No. 1 doubles ranking in 1985 and held it briefly before relinquishing it again to Navratilova, her playing partner.
Federation Cup
[
edit
]
In the Federation Cup representing the United States, Shriver won five out of five singles matches and 14 of 15 doubles matches. From 1986 to 1992, she played in 17 Federation Cup ties. She reached three finals with her compatriots, winning twice; in 1986 the U.S. defeated Czechoslovakia (3?0); in 1987 the U.S. lost to Germany (1?2); and in 1989 the U.S. defeated Spain (3?0).
[6]
Broadcaster
[
edit
]
Shriver has provided television commentary for ABC, CBS, ESPN, and The Tennis Channel in the United States, the BBC in the United Kingdom, and the Seven Network in Australia. She has been providing coverage of various events since her 1996 retirement.
During Wimbledon 2010,
James Blake
admonished Shriver for criticizing him while his match was still in progress, as Shriver was in an outside commentary box and he could hear her. Shriver said she regretted responding to Blake while still on air.
[7]
Equipment
[
edit
]
Shriver was one of the first players to use an oversized racquet, manufactured by
Prince
.
[1]
Distinctions and honors
[
edit
]
- Throughout the 1980s, Shriver was ranked among the world's top 10 in women's singles, peaking at world No. 3.
- She was elected to serve as president of the WTA Tour Players Association from 1991 to 1994.
- She has served as president of the USA Tennis Foundation and on the board of directors of the
United States Tennis Association
.
- She was inducted into the
International Tennis Hall of Fame
in 2002.
- She was awarded the Ambassador Award of Excellence by the LA Sports & Entertainment Commission in 2002.
[8]
Personal life
[
edit
]
Shriver was born in
Baltimore, Maryland
, to Sam and Margot Shriver. She first started playing tennis at the age of three. She graduated from
McDonogh School
in Owings Mills, Maryland. She is a minority owner of the
Baltimore Orioles
and is active in various charitable organizations. Her first husband, Joe Shapiro, a former
Walt Disney Company
lawyer, died of
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
in 1999.
In 2002, Shriver married actor
George Lazenby
. She gave birth to their first child, George Samuel Lazenby, on July 12, 2004, and to twins Kaitlin Elizabeth "Kate" Lazenby and Samuel Robert "Sam" Lazenby on October 1, 2005. The family lived in Brentwood, California. In August 2008, Shriver filed for divorce from Lazenby after six years of marriage.
[9]
Their divorce was finalized in May 2011.
[10]
Shriver has two sisters—Marion, who died from cancer in 1997, and Eleanor who lives in Maryland. She is a fourth cousin of
Maria Shriver
,
[11]
the former First Lady of California and niece of President
John F. Kennedy
.
Shriver is an ambassador for Up2Us Sports, a national non-profit organization dedicated to supporting underserved youth by providing them with coaches trained in positive youth development.
[12]
In 2021, Shriver became a supporter of the new Women's Sports Policy Working Group
[13]
formed in response to President
Joe Biden
's executive order that mandates inclusiveness for transgender female athletes.
[14]
Grand Slam performance timelines
[
edit
]
Key
W
|
F
|
SF
|
QF
|
#R
|
RR
|
Q#
|
DNQ
|
A
|
NH
|
(W) winner; (F) finalist; (SF) semifinalist; (QF) quarterfinalist; (#R) rounds 4, 3, 2, 1; (RR) round-robin stage; (Q#) qualification round; (DNQ) did not qualify; (A) absent; (NH) not held; (SR) strike rate (events won / competed); (W?L) win?loss record.
Singles
[
edit
]
Doubles
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
Pagliaro, Richard (April 7, 2011).
"Gear Talk: Q&A With Pam Shriver"
. Tennis.com
. Retrieved
September 27,
2014
.
- ^
Shriver, Pam (April 20, 2022).
"Pam Shriver exclusive: 'I was in an inappropriate relationship with my 50-year-old coach at 17'
"
. The Telegraph
. Retrieved
April 21,
2022
.
- ^
"Pam Shriver's Story: Me, my coach, and the danger of crossing boundaries"
.
The Tennis Podcast
. April 20, 2022
. Retrieved
April 20,
2022
.
- ^
a
b
"Pam Shriver"
.
International Tennis Hall of Fame
.
- ^
"National Speakers Bureau biography"
. Archived from
the original
on November 8, 2007.
- ^
"Shriver's profile on the Federation Cup website"
. Archived from
the original
on August 23, 2011
. Retrieved
August 3,
2015
.
- ^
Pucin, Diane (June 22, 2010).
"James Blake loses his cool and the match"
.
Los Angeles Times
. Retrieved
June 4,
2021
.
- ^
"LA Sports & Entertainment Commission Announces 6th Annual Golf & Tennis Classic; Los Angeles Times Sports Editor Bill Dwyre to be Honored"
.
Business Wire
. February 14, 2005.
- ^
Pam Shriver files for divorce from George Lazenby
[
dead link
]
- ^
Finn, Natalie (May 16, 2011).
"Which James Bond Just Got His License to Divorce?"
.
E! Online
. Retrieved
September 9,
2021
.
- ^
Thomson, Candus (July 4, 2009).
"
'Yankee Doodle' 3 Marylanders' birthday tune"
. baltimoresun.com. Archived from
the original
on July 7, 2009
. Retrieved
May 17,
2011
.
- ^
"Pam Shriver Joins Up2Us Sports As Ambassador"
.
Southern California Tennis News
. October 24, 2015
. Retrieved
April 14,
2017
.
[
dead link
]
- ^
"About Us"
.
Women's Sports Policy Working Group
.
Archived
from the original on April 4, 2024.
- ^
Brennan, Christine (February 1, 2021).
"Sports leaders seek to protect women's sports while accommodating transgender girls and women"
.
USA Today
.
Archived
from the original on May 23, 2023.
External links
[
edit
]
Articles and topics related to Pam Shriver
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Grand Slam
|
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Men's singles
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Women's singles
| |
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Men's doubles
| |
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Women's doubles
| |
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Mixed doubles
| |
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| Non-calendar year Grand Slam
|
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Men's singles
| |
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Women's singles
| |
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Men's doubles
| |
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Women's doubles
| |
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Mixed doubles
| |
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| Career Grand Slam
|
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Men's singles
| |
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Women's singles
| |
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Men's doubles
| |
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Women's doubles
| |
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Mixed doubles
| |
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Pam Shriver Achievements
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1?5
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6?10
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11?15
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16?20
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21?25
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26?30
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31?35
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36?40
| |
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41?45
| |
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46?50
| |
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- WTA rankings incepted on September 4, 1984
- (year first held/year last held ? number of weeks (w))
- current No. 1 in bold, as of week of March 18, 2024
[update]
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Men
| Master players
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Players
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Recent players
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Court tennis players
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Women
| Master players
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Players
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Recent players
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Contributors
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