Monday, July 7, 2003

Sports

Not quite a chip off the old block
Former pitcher tutors tennis-playing daughter

Filip Bondy
New York Daily News

photo
Associated Press
Carly Gullickson makes a no-look return during first-round play at Wimbledon.

WIMBLEDON, England -- If you were looking for the former baseball player around Court 14 on Friday at the All-England Club, he wasn't hard to spot. Bill Gullickson was the only one on these grounds, maybe ever, spitting chewing tobacco into a Styrofoam cup in his hand.

Gullickson pitched for five major league teams. From 1979 until his retirement in 1994, he won 162 games in the majors, with a 3.93 ERA -- not a bad little career. Ever since quitting, Gullickson has been chasing around his athletic kids, who are slowly becoming more famous than himself.

His second-oldest daughter, Carly, 16, was here at Wimbledon these last two weeks, in both the women's and girls' draws. She won three qualifiers to get into the main draw, a great success, then lost in the first round. She was seeded No. 2 in the girls' draw, before falling in the quarterfinals to Emma Laine of Finland.

Bill attended all of Carly's matches, including the mess against Laine, when her serves were sp
raying all over the court.

"There are a lot of hills and valleys. Big ones, low ones," Bill said. "When I retired, I swore I was done with traveling. But I'm here to teach her how to live on the road, to accept defeat along with the victories."

Carly may have inherited the competitiveness from Bill, but her tennis comes from her mother, Sandy, who played for Western Kentucky on scholarship. The couple has six kids, all of them active in sports, all of them with names that start with the letter "C," five of them born in different cities during their father's meandering career.

Another daughter, Chelsey, 12, is quickly working her way up the tennis junior ranks. The family recently moved from a suburb of Nashville, Tenn., to Palm Beach Gardens, Fla., in order to nurture the children's careers.

Carly vaguely remembers the end of her dad's baseball career in Detroit, being dragged to games at age seven with her mother and siblings.

"Mostly, I told them I wanted to hurry up and go home," Carly said.

Carly is America's most promising junior right now, with an attacking game that feels most comfortable on grass. She is hoping for a wild card into the main draw at the U.S. Open next month, though she will go through qualifying if necessary. She will also play in her third juniors event at Flushing Meadows.

Her favorite tournament, though, is Wimbledon.

"This is just so much more relaxed," she said. "After the matches in New York, there's always a press conference, even for the juniors. But I like it there."

Her ranking will be around No. 200 after Wimbledon, and she has set her goal for No. 50 by this time next year.

"I want to be able to get into tournaments on the strength of my record, on my own," she said.

In her loss to Laine, 6-4, 6-0, Carly slapped her thigh often and kept yelling at herself to get going. When it didn't happen, she was gracious in defeat, praising her opponent and smiling about the upset loss. Her father walked with her to the players' lounge, where they would try to make sense of the disappointing ending.

Bill will accompany Carly to New York for the Open, too. Though he won only four games with the Yanks, he follows their progress.

"I played with Wells (in Detroit), so I root for Boomer," he said. "When the Yanks go on a hot spell, they can beat up anybody."

In baseball, it's the Yanks. In tennis, it's the Williams sisters. It's always someone.

"There's not so much travel in tennis, not so much socializing," Bill said, comparing the two sports. "But in both cases, when things aren't working you have to live with it."


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