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  1. Rosemary "Rosie" Casals (born September 16, 1948) is an American former professional tennis player. During a tennis career that spanned more than two decades, she won more than 90 titles and was crucial to many of the changes in women's tennis during the 1960s and 1970s.

  2. Sep 9, 2023 · The tennis star and equal pay advocate was one of just nine women who fought to close the gender pay gap between male and female tennis players early in her career. Casals began playing tennis in...

  3. Rosemary “Rosie” Casals was both a tennis player and a pioneer of the womens professional game. On court the 5-foot-2 dynamo played at a breakneck speed, running down every ball and pounding back returns with punch and power, flair, and creativity.

  4. Apr 8, 2020 · Rosie Casals was a leader, a prime mover and a shaker. She had been expressing her views on the financial mistreatment of female players for a long time, but now, in 1970, she took on a central role in taking women’s tennis into a new sphere of the sport. Casals celebrated a spectacular career in many ways.

  5. Nov 28, 2018 · She spotted Casals at the Berkeley Tennis Club in 1964; two years later, they were playing doubles together at Wimbledon. It was a thrilling and unlikely journey for Casals, the child...

  6. 'The General' joins the WTA Insider Podcast to discuss the turbulent early days of the tour. From the public courts in San Francisco to Centre Court at Wimbledon, Rosie Casals' trailblazing tennis career was instrumental in forming the foundations of the WTA.

  7. Rosemary Casals. 1948- American tennis player. R osemary Casals teamed with Billie Jean King to become one of the top doubles tandems ever in women's tennis. On the court, Casals disdained the conservative, baseline strategy that had been the trademark of the women's game until the late 1960s.

  8. Mar 9, 2020 · Outraged by the disparity, such players as King, Rosemary Casals and Nancy Richey quickly sought to address the matter with the LA event’s promoter, Jack Kramer. “I bailed out of that one, though,” wrote King in her 1974 autobiography. “Kramer had never been a friend of women’s tennis.

  9. Mar 2, 2009 · Billie Jean King was the star and the spokeswoman. But her risk-taking partner in crime, Rosie Casals, was as instrumental in making tennis better for everyone.

  10. Feb 15, 2019 · Casals’ dedication to growing and improving the sport speaks volumes about her character both on and off the court. She could have been remembered as a legend in sport solely through her athletic accomplishments, but she continues to work to bring about positive change.