
NEW YORK, â Billie Jean King has been awarded the Congressional Gold Medal, the United States Tennis Association said on Friday, becoming the first individual female athlete to receive the honour.
President Joe Biden signed the legislation into law on Thursday, recognising Kingâs groundbreaking contributions both on and off the court.
King has long been a trailblazer for gender equality in sports and society. The 80-year-oldâs relentless advocacy for equal pay in tennis led to the U.S. Open becoming the first Grand Slam tournament to offer men and women equal prize money in 1973, which cemented her legacy as a champion of womenâs rights.
That same year, King defeated Bobby Riggs in the âBattle of the Sexesâ match, a watershed moment for both tennis and the womenâs movement. Played in Houstonâs Astrodome, some 90 million tuned in worldwide to watch the match which further propelled the fight for equality in sports.
âBillie is one of the greatest athletes and ambassadors tennis has ever seen, but her impact off the court is even greater than her performance on it,â said Brian Hainline, chairman and president of the USTA. âShe has broken yet another barrier with this award.â
King captured 39 Grand Slam titles in singles, doubles and mixed doubles. She was instrumental in founding the Womenâs Tennis Association.
King is among a select group of athletes to have received the Congressional Gold Medal. Eleven individual athletes, as well as the 1980 U.S. Olympic team, had received the Congressional Gold Medal, but before King all had been men.