As royalty and sporting greats gathered in the Royal Box on
    Centre Court once again today, it is impossible not to remember one
    of Wimbledon’s most beloved royal figures – the late Duchess of
    Kent.

    While King Frederik X of Denmark made a low-key appearance among
    Sunday’s distinguished guests, for many tennis fans the royal
    most closely associated with Wimbledon will always be the Duchess
    of Kent.

    For more than three decades, she became an iconic presence at
    The Championships, presenting trophies to champions with warmth,
    dignity and genuine affection. Yet away from the cameras, she also
    used her position to change lives.

    One of the most remarkable examples came when she quietly helped
    reunite tennis legend Martina Navratilova with her mother after
    years of separation during the Cold War.

    A champion forced to leave home

    When Martina Navratilova defected from communist Czechoslovakia
    to the United States in 1975, she was just 18 years old and already
    one of tennis’s brightest talents.

    Her decision to seek political asylum came at an enormous
    personal cost. She was stripped of her Czechoslovak citizenship and
    prevented from returning home, leaving her separated from her
    family, including her mother, who remained in Prague.

    Although Navratilova went on to become one of the greatest
    players in tennis history, winning 18 Grand Slam singles titles and
    31 women’s doubles crowns, the separation from her family remained
    a deeply personal heartbreak.

    A royal ally behind the scenes

    The Duchess of Kent, who presented the Wimbledon trophies from
    1969 until 2001, developed close relationships with many of the
    sport’s leading players.

    She is perhaps best remembered for comforting Jana Novotná after
    her emotional defeat in the 1993 Wimbledon final, but her support
    extended far beyond the public moments witnessed on Centre
    Court.

    Deeply moved by Navratilova’s circumstances, the Duchess quietly
    used her influence behind the scenes in an effort to help reunite
    the player with her mother.

    While the full diplomatic details have never been publicly
    disclosed, it is widely understood that discreet approaches were
    made through both British and Czech channels in support of the
    tennis champion.

    Those efforts proved successful.

    More than a decade after leaving her homeland, Navratilova was
    finally reunited with her mother in the late 1980s – an outcome
    widely credited, in part, to the Duchess of Kent’s quiet
    intervention.

    Duchess Of KentDuchess Of KentPicture by Stephen Lock /
    i-ImagesMore than a trophy presenter

    Today’s royal guests at Wimbledon are a reminder of the close
    links between the monarchy and The Championships.

    But few members of the Royal Family left as profound a mark on
    the tournament as the Duchess of Kent.

    For generations of tennis fans she was the elegant royal handing
    over the trophies on Centre Court. For Martina Navratilova, she was
    something far more important – a compassionate friend whose quiet
    determination helped reunite a family divided by politics.

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