👌🏾🏆 Arthur Robert Ashe Jr. was more than a tennis champion, he was a trailblazer. The first Black man to win singles titles at Wimbledon, the US Open, and the Australian Open, a feat still unmatched. He closed his career with 51 titles and 818 wins.
While on a tennis scholarship at UCLA, Ashe pledged the Upsilon Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi, joining a brotherhood that, like him, stood for excellence and purpose.
After college, he served in the U.S. Army from 1966 to 1968, rising to second lieutenant at West Point. Even in uniform, Ashe kept winning, claiming the first-ever U.S. Open title in 1968 as an amateur. A year later, he co-founded the National Junior Tennis League to give underserved youth access to tennis and education.
Ashe battled racial barriers on and off the court. He protested apartheid, advocated for Haitian refugees, and shattered misconceptions about HIV/AIDS after revealing in 1992 that he had contracted the virus through a tainted blood transfusion during heart ...
Tags, Events, and Projects