The Fan Teaser: Week 142 Solution

A now golden moment to be sure. Who’s
shaking hands here and why?

Sometime today, the All English Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club will crown its 2025 Wimbledon Gentlemen’s Singles Champion. And, for the 50th consecutive year, it will not be a black man.

On July 5, 1975, American Arthur Ashe became the first and to the moment, only, man of color to win this prestigious tournament.

Ashe defeated top seed and defending champion, Jimmy Connors, 6-1, 6-1, 5-7, and 6-4, to claim the final of his three Grand Slam singles titles (also the U.S. Open, 1968, and Australian Open, 1970).

Jimmy Connors and Arthur Ashe
Jimmy Connors, left, shakes Arthur Ashe’s hand following Ashe’s 1975 Wimbledon Gentlemen’s Championship. (Photo from Mirropix/Getty Images).

The photo for this week’s Fan Teaser was captured at the net following Ashe’s victory. It was the first all-American men’s final since 1947.

As defending champion and nearly 10 years younger than Ashe, Connors was a heavy favorite. In fact, he’d never lost to Ashe in their prior head-to-head meetings and Connors had not lost a set in any of his six Wimbledon matches leading up to the final. Tennis observers have long said Ashe played an almost perfect match from a tactical perspective.

Additionally, there was bad blood between the two players. Connors was embroiled in a $10 million “restraint of trade” lawsuit against the American Tennis Professionals (ATP) – of which Ashe was president at the time – for its refusal to allow him to participate in the 1974 French Open as a contracted member of the World Team Tennis organization. Adding more fuel to the fire, Connors filed a $5 million libel suit against Ashe two days before Wimbledon began. The libel suit was for comments Ashe had written to ATP members in his role as president criticizing Connors’ derogatory comments toward Davis Cup Captain Dennis Ralston as well as Connors’ “unpatriotic boycott” of Davis Cup after he was not selected for the team in 1972. In the video highlights of their 1975 finals’ match below, you’ll notice Ashe wore red, white, and blue wrist bands as well as his USA Davis Cup warm up as a not-so-subtle rebuke of Connors.

Highlights from the Arthur Ashe-Jimmy Connors 1975 Wimbledon Gentlemen’s Singles Championship.
A look back at the importance of Arthur Ashe.

Just to review, The Fan Teaser was the creation of former Ann Arbor News Sports Editor Geoff Larcom. Longtime friend and fellow Ann Arbor News alum, Pat Schutte, took it to heights previously unknown. We aim to keep it alive here at The Sports Fan Project. The cropped photo and the accompanying clue give you an idea as to who or what the image is of. We invite you to use the Comment option to take a crack at solving the Teaser and, if you’re so inclined, participate in some good-spirited banter with your fellow sports fans. The Fan Teaser will appear each Friday morning with the reveal coming to you Sunday.

2 thoughts on “The Fan Teaser: Week 142 Solution

  1. Jerry Hill July 13, 2025 / 6:27 pm

    When viewing the hint……the photo…..I thought the one arm was
    darker than the other.

Please join the discussion by leaving a comment.