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Wednesday, January 22, 2025

Annabel Ellwood inducted into Tennis ACT Walk of Fame

A commemorative plaque honouring born-and-bred Canberra tennis star Annabel Ellwood was unveiled today at the Lyneham Tennis Centreโ€™s Tennis ACT Walk of Fame.

The 43-year-old former no. 1 ranked Australian female player said the acknowledgement gave her an opportunity to reflect on the opportunities she was afforded as a junior in Canberra.

โ€œYou donโ€™t really know it at the time how fortunate you are,โ€ she said, โ€œI was really lucky to have the opportunities I had.

โ€œAt the time you donโ€™t realise thereโ€™s only four countries that hold a grand slam, so just the fact they have a grand slam, theyโ€™ve got the funding, the opportunity to have junior players travel overseas.โ€

The ACTโ€™s highest ever world ranked female player, Ellwood retired from the tour in 2002 aged 24 after winning nine ITF singles titles and 14 doubles titles.

Her name now fittingly sits alongside previous inductees Wally Masur, Keith Carnall, Ken Willis, Alison Ide, Ros Balodis, Thomas Charles Boag, Bruce Larkham, Peter Roberts and Graham Bartlett OAM at the entry to the Lyneham Tennis Centre.

Coming from a sport-mad family with four older brothers, her father, 1950s and 60s Wallabies centre Beres Ellwood, built a tennis court to encourage his children.

โ€œIt snowballed from there,โ€ she said.

Growing up in the Canberra region, Ellwood honed her skills competing locally while training at the AIS and representing both the ACT and her country.

Now today with vastly improved facilities and pathways, Ellwood strongly believes Canberra โ€œpunches well above its weightโ€ in producing elite tennis talent.

โ€œObviously with Nick Kyrgios, heโ€™s exceptional, and weโ€™ve got a young junior Charlie Camus.

โ€œConsidering weโ€™re a smaller population and I guess we donโ€™t have the depth in competition that the other states have I think weโ€™re doing very well.

While she rarely hits the court these days, Ellwood gets great joy out of working as a tennis coach at Radford.

โ€œJust seeing the confidence that kids get, even if they donโ€™t continue with the tennis, I think itโ€™s a good sport to learn some good skills and get some confidence in,โ€ she said.

Reflecting on her pro career, Ellwoodโ€™s personal highlights include a Federation Cup tie in South Africa, her last match at Melbourne Park centre court for a mixed doubles game in the AO, and a straight sets victory over Jennifer Capriati in the first round of the 1996 US Open.

โ€œThe Capriati win, it didnโ€™t dawn on me until I sat in my hotel room watching ESPN and they said, โ€˜Jennifer Capriati has lost to this unknown Australian,โ€™ and I thought โ€˜thatโ€™s me!โ€™.โ€

Annabel Ellwood Tennis ACT
43-year-old former no. 1 ranked Australian female player Annabel Ellwood strongly believes Canberra โ€œpunches well above its weightโ€ in producing elite tennis talent.

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