Possible Questions:
- Tennis great
- Court figure
- Arthur of tennis
- Arthur of 1970s tennis
- Tennis great Arthur
- Tennis legend Arthur
- Queens stadium
- "Off the Court" author
- Tennis star
- 1975 Wimbledon champ Arthur
- 1975 Wimbledon champ
- Tennis legend
- 1975 Wimbledon winner
- '70s tennis star
- Wimbledon winner: 1975
- 1968 US Open winner Arthur
- Tennis name
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- Eponym of a Flushing Meadows tennis stadium
- Queens stadium name
- Court celebrity
- U.S. Open stadium
- County in N.C.
- 1968 U.S. Open champ
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- Queens's ___ Stadium
- Big Apple tennis stadium
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- Former Davis Cup captain
- Tennis's Arthur
- Stadium in Queens
- Noted netman
- North Carolina county
- New York stadium name
- Netman Arthur
- "Off the Court" autobiographer
- Wimbledon champ: 1975
- Tennis pro
- Former Davis Cup coach
- Flushing stadium
- "A Hard Road to Glory" author
- Tennis player
- Tennis Hall of Famer Arthur
- Tennis champ Arthur
- Gentleman of the court
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- Connors contemporary
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- U.S. Open stadium name
- Revolutionary figure
- New York City stadium name
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- Court star Arthur
- Big Apple stadium
- 1965 NCAA tennis champ
- Wimbledon great
- Tennis V.I.P.
- Tennis star Arthur
- Stadium near Citi Field
- New York tennis stadium
- Laver rival
- Davis Cup figure
- Davis Cup captain
- Court name
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- Court great
- Contemporary of Rosewall
- 1975 victor over Connors at Wimbledon
- 1968 U.S. Open winner
- "Norma ___," Glaspell novel
- "Hard Road to Glory" author
- Wimbledon champion
- Wimbledon champ Arthur
- Wimbledon champ
- Victor over Connors at Wimbledon
- US Open stadium
- She wrote "Moths"
- Queens tennis stadium
- New York's ___ Stadium
- Name in tennis
- Legendary tennis star
- He wrote "Off the Court"
- Glaspell's "Norma ___"
- Court champ
- Celebrated Wimbledon winner
- Borg contemporary
- Big name in tennis
- Arthur on the court
- Arthur of tennis fame
- Arthur of court fame
- "I don't want to be remembered for my tennis accomplishments" speaker
- "Days of Grace" memoirist
- "Days of Grace" author
- "A Hard Road to Glory" athlete-author
- ''Days of Grace'' memoirist
- ''Days of Grace'' author
- Wimbledon winner, 1975
- Wimbledon winner in 1975
- Wimbledon champion: 1975
- US Open tennis stadium
- US Open stadium name
- U.S. Open tennis champ: 1968
- U.S. Davis Cup captain
- U.S. court star
- Tennis's Arthur ___ Stadium
- Tennis star for whom a stadium is named
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- Tennis pro Arthur
- Tennis name of fame
- Tennis Hall of Fame inductee of 1985
- Sports Illustrated's 1992 Sportsman of the Year
- Retired tennis star
- Retired court star
- Queens' Arthur court?
- Onetime Davis Cup coach
- Legendary Wimbledon winner
- Legendary Arthur
- Legend with rackets
- Laver rival, once
- Late, great netman
- Late tennis star and apartheid opponent
- Late tennis great
- King Arthur of the courts
- High-ranked netman
- He rivaled Laver
- Grand Slam stadium
- Former court star
- Famed name in tennis
- ESPN's Courage Award is named for him
- Emerson contemporary
- Davis Cup captain, 1980-85
- Courtly Arthur?
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- Courage Award namesake
- County in N. C.
- Connors rival
- Connors defeater, 1975
- Athlete with a statue in Richmond, Va.
- Athlete who battled apartheid
- Arthur in the International Tennis Hall of Fame
- Arthur ___ Stadium
- Arthur ___ Courage Award (ESPY)
- Arthur of the courts
- Arthur of the court
- Arthur of tennis
- 1970s tennis champ
- 1968 US Open champ
- 1968 U.S. Open champ Arthur
- "Off the Court" writer
- "Off the Court" author Arthur
- "Days of Grace" author Arthur
- "But, ___ was ambitious, I slew him": Brutus
- '80s Davis Cup captain
- ''Off the Court'' autobiographer
- ''Days of Grace: A Memoir'' author
- ___ Stadium, sports venue since 1997
- ___ Stadium in Queens
- Winner of three Grand Slam events
- Winner of the 1968 U.S. Open
- Winner at Wimbledon: 1975
- Wimbledon winner of 1975
- Wimbledon winner immediately before Borg's five in a row
- Wimbledon winner Arthur
- Wimbledon V.I.P.
- Wimbledon singles winner of 1975
- Wimbledon name of fame
- Wimbledon name
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- Wimbledon Hall of Famer
- Wimbledon champ, 1975
- Wimbledon champ in 1975
- Victor over Connors, 1975
- US Open finalist of 1972
- UCLA's Arthur ___ Student Health & Wellness Center
- U.S.T.A. champ: 1968
- U.S.T.A. champ in 1968
- U.S. tennis star barred from South Africa
- U.S. tennis man
- U.S. tennis legend on a 37¢ stamp
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- U.S. Open's ___ Stadium
- U.S. Open tennis stadium
- U.S. Open champion: 1968
- U.S. Open champ, Arthur
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- U.S. court V.I.P.
- U.S. court legend
- U. S. Davis Cupper
- Trailblazing tennis champ
- Trailblazer on the court
- Touring-pro Arthur
- The world's largest tennis stadium
- The cover photo of him from the 1992 Sports Illustrated Sportsman of the Year issue was used in 2005 as a postage stamp
- The Arthur ___ Foundation for the Defeat of AIDS
- Tennis' Arthur
- Tennis-tour name
- Tennis V.I.P. Arthur
- Tennis star/anti-apartheid activist Arthur
- Tennis star who won each grand slam tournament except the French Open
- Tennis star who was an outspoken apartheid foe
- Tennis star once denied a visa to South Africa
- Tennis star on a 2005 postage stamp
- Tennis star of the 70's
- Tennis star honored on Richmond's Monument Avenue
- Tennis stadium in Queens
- Tennis player Arthur
- Tennis legend for whom the U.S. Open's stadium is named
- Tennis immortal Arthur
- Tennis icon Arthur
- Tennis great who wrote "Days of Grace"
- Tennis champion Arthur
- Tennis champ with a namesake stadium
- Tennis champ who played for U.C.L.A.
- Tennis ace who wrote "Days of Grace"
- Tarheel county
- Subject of four Sports Illustrated covers between 1966 and 1993
- Stadium that opened in 1997
- Stadium next to Louis Armstrong, in Queens
- Stadium near the Unisphere
- Stadium near Shea
- Stadium named for a tennis great
- Stadium in which to see Venus?
- Stadium in which the U.S. Open finals are played
- Stadium in the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center
- Stadium in Flushing Meadows
- Sports legend Arthur
- Sports Illustrated's Sportsman of the Year between Jordan and Shula
- Skin care and cosmetics company that looks to be unrelated to Arthur
- Rival of Laver and Nastase
- Revolutionary War commander John
- Revolutionary general: 1720-81
- Retired netman
- Retired court figure
- Racquet pro
- Racketer Arthur
- Racket-raising Arthur
- Queens stadium named for a tennis legend
- Queens stadium named for a tennis great
- Pro-circuit man
- Present-day netman
- Pornstar Danielle with 32FF-sized breasts
- Opponent for Laver
- Only African-American male to win Wimbledon
- One-time Wimbledon winner
- One-time Davis Cup captain Arthur
- One who had a high net income?
- Noted "racketeer"
- Notable netman
- North Carolina governor for whom a county and two cities are named
- North Carolina county on the Blue Ridge Parkway
- North Carolina county named for an early governor
- North Carolina county named for a Revolutionary War commander
- North Carolina county bordering Tennessee and Virginia
- New York stadium that was the site of the first professional outdoor basketball game
- New York stadium honoree Arthur
- Netman of note
- Net great Arthur
- National Junior Tennis League co-founder
- Nastase rival in the 70's
- Nastase contemporary
- Namesake of the ESPY Courage Award
- Namesake of a Queens stadium, and an anagram of another Queens stadium
- Name on a U.S. Open stadium
- N.C. county
- N. C. county
- Men's Singles champ: 1968
- Memorable U.S. tennis champ
- Memorable tennis great
- Memorable court star
- Memoirist Arthur
- Man of the courts
- Loser to Nastase at the 1972 U.S. Open finals
- Legendary tennis star, Arthur
- Legendary name in tennis
- Laver's erstwhile rival
- Laver opponent
- Laver contemporary
- Late tennis V.I.P. Arthur
- Late tennis star Arthur
- Late opponent of apartheid
- Late great of tennis
- Late court star-commentator
- Late apartheid opponent
- King Arthur of tennis
- Inspirational tennis champ
- Immortal name in tennis
- HIV activist Arthur
- His racket is in the Smithsonian
- He got a tennis scholarship from U.C.L.A.
- He defeated Connors for the 1975 Wimbledon championship
- He defeated Connors at Wimbledon in 1975
- He burned up the courts in the 70's
- He beat Okker to win the 1968 U.S. Open
- He beat Connors to win Wimbledon
- Governor for whom a North Carolina city is named
- Gentlemanly Arthur
- Former Wimbledon champ
- Former open winner
- Former Davis Cup figure
- Former Davis Cup captain Arthur
- Forest Hills performer
- Forest Hills name
- Foe of Laver and Newcombe
- Flushing venue
- Flushing Meadows stadium honoree
- Flushing Meadows stadium
- Flushing Meadow stadium name
- First recipient of the Harvard AIDS Initiative Leadership Award
- First black player on the US Davis Cup team
- First African-American US Open champ
- First African-American selected for a U.S. Davis Cup team
- Famed netman
- ESPN's Award for Courage is named for him
- ESPN's Arthur ___ Courage Award
- Eponym of a Southern "-ville"
- Eponym of a North Carolina "-ville"
- Eponym of a Flushing Meadows stadium
- Early N. C. patriot
- Early Carolina governor for whom a county and city are named
- Days of Grace co-author
- Courts' Arthur
- Courtly name?
- Court V.I.P. Arthur
- Court star in the 70's
- Court retiree
- Court hero
- Court contender
- Court ace in the 70's
- County in the Tar Heel State
- Contemporary of Emerson
- Contemporary of Borg and Laver
- Contemporary of Borg
- Connors rival who was a protégé of Gonzales
- Connors opponent
- Connors lost to him in the 1975 Wimbledon final
- Connors adversary
- Commander at Briar Creek, in the Revolutionary War
- Civil rights promoter with lots of court experience
- Carolina county
- Borg rival
- Big man on the court
- Author of "A Hard Road to Glory"
- Australian Open winner after Laver
- Athletic Arthur born in Richmond
- Athlete who wrote the children's book "Daddy and Me"
- Athlete who wrote "Off the Court"
- Athlete who wrote "A Hard Road to Glory"
- Athlete who said: "I don't want to be remembered for my tennis accomplishments"
- Athlete who posthumously won the Presidential Medal of Freedom, 1993
- Athlete on a 2005 U.S. postage stamp
- Athlete honored on a 2005 postage stamp
- Arthur, of Wimbledon
- Arthur with a racket
- Arthur with a Queens stadium named after him
- Arthur with 33 singles titles
- Arthur who wrote "A Hard Road to Glory"
- Arthur who won three Grand Slam titles
- Arthur who often raised a racket
- Arthur pictured on a 37-cent stamp
- Arthur pictured on a 2005 postage stamp
- Arthur of Wimbledon
- Arthur of Davis Cup fame
- Arthur of court history
- Arthur from Richmond
- Arthur for whom a tennis stadium is named
- Arthur for whom a stadium is named
- Arthur --- Stadium
- Arthur ___ Stadium in Queens
- Arthur ___ Stadium (U.S.T.A. facility)
- Arthur ___ Stadium (Queens landmark)
- Arthur ___ for Courage Award (ESPY)
- Arthur ___ Courage Award (ESPY Awards honor)
- Arthur __ Stadium (US Open site)
- Arthur __ Stadium (tennis venue)
- American tennis icon Arthur
- American Revolution general John
- AIDS activist Arthur
- Ace-serving Arthur
- A Wimbledon winner: 1975
- A Wimbledon champ: 1975
- A U.S. Open champ: 1968
- A rival of Laver
- A Connors' rival
- 7/5/75 winner over Connors
- 1985 Tennis Hall of Fame inductee
- 1980s U.S. Davis Cup captain
- 1980's U.S. Davis Cup captain
- 1980's Davis Cup captain
- 1980 tennis retiree Arthur
- 1975 Wimbledon winner Arthur
- 1975 Wimbledon victor
- 1975 Wimbledon champion
- 1972 U.S. Open finalist
- 1970s Wimbledon victor over Connors
- 1970 Australian Open winner
- 1968 US Open champ Arthur
- 1968 U.S. Open champion
- 1968 champion at Forest Hills
- 1967 U.S. clay court champion
- 1965 NCAA tennis champ Arthur
- "That ___ is, so was he made": Bridges
- "Norma ___" (Susan Glaspell novel)
- "Naked Came the Stranger" author Penelope
- "Hard Road to Glory" writer
- "Days of Grace" author/athlete
- "As Long _____ Needs Me" ("Oliver!" song)
- "As Long ___ Needs Me" ("Oliver!" song)
- "A Hard Road to Glory" writer
- '75 Wimbledon winner
- '75 Wimbledon champ
- '70s tennis champ
- ''A Hard Road to Glory'' author
- ___ Stadium, home of the U.S. Open
- ___ Stadium (Queens landmark)
- ___ Stadium (facility near Citi Field)
- ___ Stadium (Big Apple tennis locale)