Of course, just because Collins was a pioneering reporter doesn’t mean he was a great tennis writer. For that, you need two other things: a style and a worldview. Bud had them both, and both hold up well 30 years later.
Judging by his TV persona, you might suspect that Collins’s writing would be glib and cutesy. It’s true, a lot of the chapter titles in My Life With the Pros do end in overzealous exclamation points, and he does refer to his childhood self as a “barefoot boy with cheeks of freckle.” But for the most part, Bud brings a friendly, upbeat, humorous poetry to these pages.
Here he is on his first view of his personal Mecca, Forest Hills, after making a three-day pilgrimage with a pair of friends from his native Ohio:
“Two men in white were still playing to a congregation of perhaps two hundred. The minarets of the Forest Hills Inn and the groves of Forest Hills Gardens, the comfortable residential pocket in which the club nestles, stood confidently in the gloaming, sturdy defenders of the faith, gray against an azure evening. Laughter and the crystal-and-ice melodies of the terrace bar drifted from the distant clubhouse.”
On the debut of a demure killer, Chrissie Evert, at the 1971 US Open:
“Ponytailed and prim, although a delinquent cutting high school classes, the 16-year-old from Fort Lauderdale swooshed into the Forest Hills stadium like a Florida hurricane.”
On his first sighting of an 18-year-old Jimmy Connors in 1970:
“Here was Raggedy Andy in tennis costume, a rag doll throwing himself into every shot with such exuberance it couldn’t possibly last beyond 1990 or so. Hair, arms, legs flew with plenty of fur as Connors bashed his way in a game he so obviously loved.”
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So Bud could turn a phrase and set a scene. But perhaps more relevant today is his worldview. A small-town kid, he was, like many of us, a bumpkin drawn to the elegance and cosmopolitan nature he saw in tennis. But once he made it behind the sport’s country-club walls, he wanted to bring as many people along with him as he could. Collins always lamented the snobbishness that had made tennis, in his words, a “secret sport,” for so long. He was a democratizer with a live-and-let-live attitude.
What may be most notable about reading My Life With the Pros today is how casually progressive Bud was. He loved the game’s history, but he also loved to see that history move forward. He was thrilled to have a chance to cover Althea Gibson’s US Open victory, and to follow Arthur Ashe on his pathbreaking journey in the 1960s. He loved the dual-gender theatrics of World Team Tennis, a league that he described as a “delightful sexual aberration.” And, unlike many sportswriters of his era, he treated the men’s and women’s tours as equal attractions. If anything, Bud was more closely associated with WTA stars like Evert and King than he was with the top men.
In that sense, Collins’s writing helped highlight the progressive potential that has always existed in tennis. That might not make him the GTWOAT, but it’s an attitude that the sport’s readers, and leaders, could still learn from today.
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