Robyn Ray, Millennium Hall of Fame
A late bloomer who never envisioned that self-promotion and junior
tennis would actually hold serve in the same sentence, Robyn Ray is
making up for lost accolades as a senior.
Ray, the best junior player Sacramento had to offer in the early
1960s, was unaware of the requirements seemingly necessary for aspiring
players hoping to catch the eye of, say, the U.S. Junior Davis Cup coach.
“I was a big fish in a small pond in Sacramento,” said Ray, once
ranked No. 3 in Northern California in the boys 18s, before knocking off
the top two players that year (1963) in his division and earning a
scholarship to the University of Arizona.
Ray figured his play alone would warrant sponsorships or U.S. junior
national team consideration, but the phone never rang. Later, he realized
the world of competitive tennis encompassed the entire globe -- or, at
least out of Northern California.
“I didn’t travel outside of Northern California until after college,”
said Ray, who worked two years for an accounting firm out of college, but
felt the tugging of his tennis heart strings and returned to the courts
in 1969.
Prepared to make a comeback and give the professional circuit a shot,
Ray was older than most of his foes. Prize money was low and traveling
accommodations, especially in Europe, were often difficult when Ray
played for wages from 1970 to ’72.
“In Europe, you’d get a hotel room with five other guys, pay five
bucks a night and use one bathroom down the hallway,” Ray said. “It was
tough to break out of that and join the top echelon. The players who were
at the top of the echelon were making money. They’d get their hotel rooms
for free and take limousines, while we’re taking public buses to get to
the tennis clubs. They’re eating steaks and I’m eating cheeseburgers.”
Ray’s traveling companions from Europe and South America were 18, 19
and 21, when he was 25, 26 and 27, and after three years of grind on the
tour and counting every penny for the next day’s cup of coffee, Ray
decided that was enough.
Ray once beat Mark Cox, a former Top-10 player from England, at the
1969 Central California Championships in Sacramento, at the time a huge
tournament featuring players like Arthur Ashe (who won the title in ‘69)
and Alex Olmedo (the 1959 Wimbledon champion).
“That was before the big money,” said Ray, who played at Wimbledon and
the French Open in 1971, and the U.S. Open in ’72.
Ray, however, the longtime director of tennis at the Newport Beach
Marriott Hotel and Tennis Club, would come into his own at age 45.
Today one of the top players in the nation in the 50s and 55s, Ray was
ranked No. 1 in the 45s (singles) in 1993 and ’94 by the United States
Tennis Association, both years capturing the title at the U.S. National
Grass Court Championships in Philadelphia. Ray also won a doubles title
in the 45s at the 1994 U.S. National Indoors in Salt Lake City.
Further, Ray was selected to play on the U.S. Dubler Cup team, an
international competition in the men’s 45s that uses the same format as
the Davis Cup.
In 1994, the Ray-led U.S. squad lost a heartbreaker to Spain in the
championship match in Barcelona, then came back the following year and
won the Dubler Cup in Santiago, Chile.
In 1979 and ‘80, Ray qualified for the U.S. Open 35s, which featured
eight invited players and eight qualifiers. Ray advanced to the
quarterfinals both years, and, shortly thereafter, the USTA changed the
rules, because too many players like Ray were beating the marquee names.
Ray and longtime doubles partner Ken Stuart (Palisades Tennis Club
owner and operator) won several tournaments in California in the 35s,
before Ray stepped away from the competitive surface for awhile and tried
to focus on building a solid program at the Marriott.
When Ray started at the Marriott in November 1975, he was a one-man
show during the sport’s booming years. Today, the club employs five
staffers and is considered one of the top resort tennis clubs in Southern
California.
In 1996 and ‘97, the Marriott played host to the U.S. Women’s
Challenger of Newport Beach, a highly successful tournament on the
Women’s Tennis Association Tour for players not ranked in the Top 50 in
the world. The event, orchestrated by Ray and his wife, Erika, raised
$10,000 for the Dyslexia Foundation. Most stops on the WTA challenger
circuit are fortunate to break even.
“The Marriott has been real supportive of everything,” said Ray, a
Newport Beach resident whose name is synonymous with the club, which has
produced such female notables as Keri Phebus and Alex McGoodwin.
Ray, a crafty left-hander who has been trying to get his game back
into shape while hoping to stay injury-free, won the Pacific Southwest
Senior Championship singles title in the 50s last month at the Palisades
Club.
Playing “up” in the tournament because of his age, Ray wanted to
avenge last year’s semifinal setback to Michael Woiemberghe (Cypress), so
he returned to the 50s division. This time, Ray knocked off Woiemberghe
in the semifinals, 6-3, 6-7, 7-5, on his way to the crown. In the finals,
Ray beat Terry Elhers (San Clemente), 6-0, 6-3.
“I was ready for (Woiemberghe) this year,” Ray said. “I think I won
only one or two more points, but that was the difference.”
Ray, who once witnessed Jimmy Connors arrive at the U.S. Open in
Flushing Meadows, N.Y., via helicopter from his home on Long Island, has
launched himself into superstardom on the senior tennis circuit, and,
today, enters the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame, celebrating the
millennium.
Ray has a stepson, Rick, 24, and a daughter, Amber, 15.
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