Dave Hyde: Renovated Holiday Park re-opens, the place Chris Evert says ‘changed my life’
Chris Evert remembers her first trip to Fort Lauderdale’s Holiday Park.
She recalls her father, Jimmy, picking her up from school that day, ending her fun routine of going to classmate Kara Bennett’s home for daily swimming and barbecuing.
“I was really upset at my dad,’’ she says.
She was 5 and the anger lifted. She began hitting tennis balls at Holiday Park.
“That place changed my life,’’ the tennis legend, now 70, says.
Holiday Park could be a shrine for what it has meant to Fort Lauderdale and international tennis, but it’s something better than that today. The park’s tennis center has reopened. It underwent a yearlong, $ 9.5 million renovation of the Jimmy Evert Tennis Center to upgrade the 20-court venue, build a 700-seat stadium named for Chris Evert and reopen in time for the annual junior Orange Bowl International Tennis Championships this weekend. There is a ceremony Monday.
It’s a public court, too, meaning anyone can play on Court 10, which was Jimmy Evert’s office for 49 years. You can hit tennis balls there like the five Evert kids, Hall of Famer Harold Solomon and his brother, Brian, Jennifer Capriati, Laurie Fleming or so many others did as a youth. Well, you can try anyhow.
What you should understand is the history underfoot. Holiday Park was such a rare intersection of time and place that six teenagers who trained on its courts played at Wimbledon in 1976.
“It was the Mecca of tennis in the 1970s,’’ Evert says.
It was her father’s creation in spirit as much his students’ success. He took over the city’s courts at Holiday Park in 1958 as a one-man force — giving lessons, stringing racquets, booking court reservations, all with the same love, grace and humor that he managed his family.
“He had all of us kids play there — not with the idea of becoming champions,’’ Evert says. “He wanted to keep his family all together.”
You can see the idea of who Jimmy was and the Holiday Park he built through the lens of his daughter’s grand tennis life. Holiday Park is where as a youth, without the strength to hold the racquet for the normal, one-handed backhand shot, she created a two-handed backhand that became a signature of her game.
Holiday Park was where the 13-year-old Evert had a tennis epiphany after losing to fourth-ranked Mary-Ann Eisel in the annual Austin Smith Championships. “I won a set off her and remember thinking, at 13, ‘Wow, there’s not a big difference between us,’ ’’ she says.
Holiday Park is where dad took phone calls from his daughter from around the world to hear how she did in a match. He didn’t like to travel, or watch in person, so that was left to his wife, Collette. The first call from Chris came in 1970, when she was 15, and had just beaten two-time Grand Slam champion Margaret Court in the Charlotte Open. She had to repeat the result to him.
“He didn’t know what to say,’’ Chris says. “He goes, ‘I’ve got to get off the floor.’ ”
This was a time when agents and promoters began throwing money at the Everts. Jimmy once told a promoter who opened a briefcase holding $ 25,000 to leave his house. He had Chris remain an amateur and graduate from St. Thomas Aquinas High before turning pro.
He was the original tennis dad, the best version of that idea, the one future generations could have followed if they had the principles and discipline for more than chasing fame and money. None of this is necessary to know to hit tennis balls at Holiday Park. But you need it to grasp the spirit of the place and appreciate its value all these years later, 10 years after Jimmy Evert died.
Look at Chris Evert in her third chapter, as she calls it, to see her father, too. Her first 30 years were laser-focused on her tennis career. Her next 15 or so were spent raising her children (“the peak of my existence,’’ she called it). Now she’s in her “giving back,” chapter, as she said.
She’s gone beyond the annual pro-celebrity tournaments that raised more than $ 20 million for charities. As a cancer survivor, she works on getting the word out on early detection. As chairperson of the United States Tennis Association’s foundation, she helps 250 programs offer tennis to under-resourced youth, like current pros Hailey Baptiste and Frances Tiafoe.
As a namesake on the Evert Tennis Academy in Boca Raton, which is run by her brother, John, she spends mornings watching and working with youth players.
“When John came up with the idea, he wanted to have the same philosophy and mission statement we had growing up at Holiday Park,’’ Evert says. “It was obviously to work hard, but also be a good person with good sportsmanship, to support one another with camaraderie — we honored my dad with that ideal.”
As time moves on, so much of South Florida’s sports history is discarded. The Orange Bowl is gone. Golf tournaments that were once a destination for the PGA Tour don’t exist. The list is long. But here’s a renovated gem in the heart of Fort Lauderdale that will officially be welcomed back with Monday’s 10 a.m. ceremony.
Evert has purposely not gone to see the renovated Holiday Park.
“I want it to be a surprise,’’ she says.
It’s been a surprise, all the wonderful way, this park that raised so many youth that Evert is often stopped by people who tell her dad taught them lessons. She can relate, this 5-year-old taken there one day after kindergarten and then climbing the highest part of the sports world.
And now she’s back — if she ever really left.
“It was always a part of me, all the memories,’’ she says, “And now to have the renovation of the Jimmy Evert Tennis Center, and have my name on the center court, it brings everything full circle.”









