Tennis Europe | Seniors Tennis
European Lifetime Senior Champions
Four of Europe's most distinguished senior tennis players were honoured with the first European Lifetime Senior Champion awards at a special ceremony held during the 2008 Roland Garros championships.
The accolade recognises both longevity and achievements, and will be presented to an elite band of players who win at least five World Championship and ten European Championship singles titles during their Senior Circuit careers.
Presenting the awards alongside Tennis Europe President Jacques Dupré, Senior Committee Chairman Philios Christodoulou said, "On behalf of Tennis Europe, I would like to express our sincere congratulations to the four champions selected to receive this unique and important recognition. Their names will be written down in history alongside all the other top athletes of the tennis world."
HEIDE ORTH
Heide Orth was born into a sporting family in Essen, Germany in 1942 and began to play tennis with her father at the age of 13. By 1960 she had become German junior champion, the first steps on a road to a career that would see her compete on the ladies circuit for many years, in which she was a regular participant in all four Grand Slams, the Australian Open, Roland Garros, Wimbledon and the US Open.
Faithful to her home country, Heide played on the national Fed Cup team on fifteen occasions, and has also been a reliable club representative, playing for ETUF Essen, Blau-Weiss Berlin and Skiclub throughout the years. After marrying in 1965 and giving birth to her first son in 1970, Heide took a five year break from tennis before entering the senior circuit, in which she has become a consistently successful force, having accrued 11 Tennis Europe Player of the Year titles.
Mrs. Orth was delighted to be amongst the winners, remarking, "I am not used to receiving such awards and attending these ceremonies, but this is a really great recognition for senior tennis."
MARIE PINTEROVA
Born in 1946 in Stara Boleslav, Czechoslovakia, Marie Pinterova has had an illustrious tennis career which saw her compete in numerous Grand Slams and record wins over some of the world's most legendary champions.
Amongst her many titles are two Bonfiglio Cups, Two Czech Internationals, Virginia Slims of Jacksonville, Cairo open, Japan Open and the World university Games. She also reached the semi finals in Rome, and was a quarterfinalist at Roland Garros, the German Open, and the US Indoors.
Along the way, she beat many of the greatest players of the time, such as Billie Jean King, Martina Navratilova, Kathy Jordan, Olga Morozova, Andrea Jaeger, Sue Barker and Betty Stove.
Marie married Hungarian textile engineer Andras Pinter in 1974, and had a son, Karim, two years later. She then made a successful comeback to professional tennis at the age of 34, winning the Tokyo title and competing at the Australian Open as a mother.
Since entering the senior circuit, she has gone on to win 11 world championship singles titles and an incredible 24 European titles. Mrs. Pinterova expressed her surprise and satisfaction with the award, saying she had not realised she had won so many titles in recent years.
PETER POKORNY
Peter Pokorny was born in Graz, Austria and became fascinated with tennis at an early age, using his pay for working as a ball-boy at the age of six to pay for his first racquet. By the age of 12, he had already earned a spot in the Austrian Under 18 team. By 14, he had reached the final of the Austrian Championships, and at 18 he was the national Under 18 champion. As an adult, he would go on to win the Austrian championships three times, and made his Davis Cup debut in 1963 against Israel, playing in the event for a further ten years.
His biggest success came in 1973, winning the Indoor Championships in Bremen, a reminder that he was then, and is now, one of Europe's finest indoors players.
During the later 1970's, Peter took a break from tennis, focusing on his family and business, before returning in 1980 to become the World Ski/Tennis champion, and captain of the Austrian Davis Cup team in 1981-82. The following year, at the age of 42, he reached the finals of the Austrian Championships, and entered the senior circuit in 1986. Since then, he has become the most successful senior player of the past decade, accumulating 27 European Championship titles, and earning recognition as the most successful Austrian player ever with an award in 2006. Accepting the award, Mr. Pokorny said that he is still looking to the future rather than the past, and that he hopes to add to his record tally of titles in the next few years.