Click here to skip to main content.
SI.com
THE WEB SI.com Search
left edge right edge
bottom bar
NFL NCAA FOOTBALL MLB NBA NCAA BASKETBALL GOLF NHL Racing SOCCER TENNIS MORE SPORTS SCORECARD FANTASY SCORES
EMAIL ALERTS EMAIL THIS PRINT THIS SAVE THIS MOST POPULAR

<< 1991 | 1993 >>


Photograph by Michael O'Neill

"There are, he insists, only two alternatives. If enough human beings do not advance the common good, we cannot go on; we shall move from suffering a chain of sustainable losses to suffering extinction. But if enough do, if enough coaches find the grace to hold the guilt-stricken athlete who just lost the title and tell him that it's just a game, that he has nothing to be ashamed of, that he can leave his knife in his pocket, then Arthur Ashe will always be on cloud nine."

Text by Kenny Moore
Issue Date: December 21, 1992


Thirteen years after retiring from professional tennis, Arthur Ashe actively supported countless charities and humanitarian causes, including the American Heart Association, the United Negro College Fund and his own Foundation for the Defeat of AIDS. The 1975 Wimbledon champion and winner of two other Grand Slam events also fought diligently for human rights, particularly to end apartheid in South Africa. On Febuary 6, 1993 -- two months after receiving the Sportsman award -- Ashe died in New York of AIDS-related pneumonia.



Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

CHECK IT OUT
0
ADVERTISEMENT
divider line
SI.com
SI Media Kits | About Us | Subscribe | Customer Service
Copyright © 2005 CNN/Sports Illustrated.
A Time Warner Company. All Rights Reserved.
Terms under which this service is provided to you. Read our privacy guidelines.
search THE WEB SI.com Search