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Called by some as the best tennis player
Saskatchewan has produced, Bill Jenkins played at an American college
level, won a gold medal for Canada at the World Student Games, played
for Canada on international tours and then became a professional in
Europe in 1992.
Bill was born in Saskatoon on June 4, 1961,
where he was a student at Hugh Cairns elementary school and later Walter
Murray Collegiate. He learned his basics through the Saskatoon Youth
Tennis program and while playing at the Riverside Tennis Club.
Between the ages of 12 to 15, Bill was able
to hone his skills playing the game year-round in Nigeria while taking
three grades by correspondence course.
He captured his first provincial junior
title in the mid-1970s and won several Saskatchewan and Prairie regional
championships, both in singles and doubles.
Bill became the Saskatchewan open men's
singles champion for the first time as an 18-year-old in 1979, the same
season he achieved a No. 5 ranking in Canada for the under-18 age class.
He accepted a
four-year scholarship at Southwest Texas State University in San Marcos,
Texas, between 1980 and 1984, and during the 1983 season, he helped the
Bobcats become American runners-up in NCAA Division II play.
Bill was chosen to
play for Canada on tours of Australia and Czechoslovakia in the 1980s
and was a gold medallist, playing alongside Jill Hetherington for Canada
at the World Student Games at Edmonton in 1983.
He coached the
SaskFirst tennis program between 1987 and 1992 before leaving for Europe
to join the professional tour in France, Germany, Spain and Portugal. A
multiple champion in the Riverside Tennis Club’s annual Amok
professional tournament, both in singles and doubles, he has often
returned to play in the event.
At the time of his
induction, Bill was living in Stirling Wendel, France, where Bill
continued to teach, coach and play competitive tennis on a full-time
basis in France and Germany. |