Antelope Valley Press

Nick Bollettier­i, coach to tennis stars, is dead

- By HOWARD FENDRICH and STEVEN WINE AP Sports Writers

Nick Bollettier­i, the Hall of Fame tennis coach who worked with some of the sport’s biggest stars, including Andre Agassi and Monica Seles, and founded an academy that revolution­ized the developmen­t of young athletes, has died. He was 91.

Bollettier­i died, Sunday night, at home in Florida after a series of health issues, his manager, Steve Shulla, said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press, on Monday.

“When he became sick, he got so many wonderful messages from former students and players and coaches. Many came to visit him. He got videos from others,” Shulla said. “It was wonderful. He touched so many lives and he had a great send-off.”

Known for his gravelly voice, leathery skin and wraparound sunglasses — and a man who called himself the “Michelange­lo of Tennis” despite never playing profession­ally — Bollettier­i helped no fewer than 10 players who went on to be No. 1 in the world rankings. That group includes sisters Serena and Venus Williams, Jim Courier, Maria Sharapova, Agassi and Seles.

“Our dear friend, Nick Bollettier­i, graduated from us last night. He gave so many a chance to live their dream,” Agassi wrote on Twitter. “He showed us all how life can be lived to the fullest… Thank you, Nick.”

Bollettier­i remained active into his 80s, touring the world to drop in on the top tournament­s and in 2014 became only the fourth coach to be inducted into the Internatio­nal Tennis Hall of Fame. That was the same year another one of his proteges, Kei Nishikori, reached the final of the US Open.

Six of his pupils already are in the Hall of Fame, a number sure to grow once others are eligible.

“I forged my own path, which others found to be unorthodox and downright crazy,” Bollettier­i said in his induction speech at the hall in Newport, RI. “Yes, I am crazy. But it takes crazy people to do things that other people say cannot be done.”

The Bollettier­i Tennis Academy opened, in 1978, in Bradenton, Fla., and was purchased by IMG, in 1987.

The IMG Academy now spans more than 600 acres and offers programs in more than a half-dozen sports in addition to tennis.

Bollettier­i was an educator who would brag he never read a book, never mind that he majored in philosophy in college and even gave law school a try, albeit for less than a year.

 ?? MICHAEL DWYER/AP PHOTO ?? Nick Bollettier­i holds his plaque as he waves to the crowd after his induction into the Internatio­nal Tennis Hall of Fame, in 2014, in Rhode Island.
MICHAEL DWYER/AP PHOTO Nick Bollettier­i holds his plaque as he waves to the crowd after his induction into the Internatio­nal Tennis Hall of Fame, in 2014, in Rhode Island.

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