Connect with us

Seeing Butterflies

Poverty Sidelines One Of Tennis’ Most Promising Players

Black

Black Women in Sports

Poverty Sidelines One Of Tennis’ Most Promising Players

Three years ago, Alicia ‘Tornado’ Black was the third-ranked junior girl in the world.

Black overcame insurmountable odds, including two stints of homelessness to reach the heights of junior’s tennis. However, while many of her contemporaries were preparing to play in the U.S. Open, Black was home in Florida, teaching and giving young students tennis lessons.

Black isn’t playing in the U.S Open because she wasn’t good enough.

Instead, she has been sidelined by debilitating sports hernias and muscle tears, which have left her in constant pain. A simple operation would fix Black’s ailments, but her insurance and Medicaid won’t cover the out-of-state procedure and her share of the surgery would be extremely costly. The estimated cost of the surgery is $16,000, but Black says she needs an additional $40,000 to rehabilitate from the surgery without having to work. Compounding the issue, Black’s mother is sickened with skin cancer, severe asthma and unable to help financially.

Black’s 16 year old sister Hurricane Tyra Black is currently ranked number 55 in the juniors. “My muscle is torn apart and it’s really painful,” Black said. “It’s so tough because I want to get my surgery, but I can’t leave my family hanging. What kind of person would I be if I left them on the street?” Black’s family faced two stints of homelessness before the age of 12. For two months, Black, her mother and sister spent two months living in a car as she trained for the United States Tennis Association in Boca Raton.

“We were living in the car,” she said. “So that’s actually how I got into the U.S.T.A. They had me stay in the dorms because I was sleeping in the car every day. I was going out to court too tired, worrying, mosquito bites, everything.” Her former U.S.T.A coach Federico Rodriguez saw the potential in Black at age 12. “She was already the best 12-year-old in the country,” Rodriguez said. “She has a rare combination of speed, power and court intelligence that makes her so dangerous. It’s just really sad that she isn’t playing now.”

While Black earned $47,348 in career prize money, that money is long gone. And …

 

Please read original article- Poverty Sidelines One Of Tennis’ Most Promising Players

I am a future butterfly at the stage of growth when I am turning into an adult. I am enclosed in a hard case shell formed by love, family, and friends. It is the hardest stage of becoming a black butterfly. You will encounter many hardships only to come out stronger and better than what you went in. At this stage, you are finding out who you truly are and how to love yourself.

More in Black Women in Sports

To Top