Throughout November and December, we'll be highlighting the true heroes of tennis with our annual celebration of the gifted, the courageous, the inspired and the inspiring. You can read about heroes we've honored previously here.
When he was 17, Ronald Elizondo was sitting in jail after holding up a tennis center employee at gunpoint.
Twenty-three years later, Elizondo runs Tennis Success, Inc., a program for inner-city youths at the H.E.B. Tennis Center in Corpus Christi, TX—the very same facility he once tried to rob.
Elizondo first discovered tennis less than three miles from the H.E.B. at the Al Kruse Tennis Center. Its tennis director at the time, the late Dr. Shelby Torrance, saw his potential as a player. Her daughter, Susan, was there the day the 12-year-old first rolled up to the courts on his bicycle.
“We became a second home to him, and he just hung out here instead of going home,” says Torrance, who is now the tennis director.
But living in a gang-influenced neighborhood of Corpus Christi, Elizondo was never far from trouble. Torrance recalls what she told the disgruntled youth when Elizondo landed in prison.
“God gave you a gift. He gave you tennis. He didn’t give it to you to be the best tennis player in jail.”
The tennis community stood by Elizondo even as he served a reduced sentence of eight months in prison, which provided him with a much-needed spark of inspiration.