% replaces any number of letters (la% - lake, lamp)_ replaces one letter (ca_ - car, cat)

Other crossword clues for answer "ASHE"

ASHE
Off the Court author
1968 U.S. Open winner
1975 Wimbledon winner
Arthur of tennis
Connors opponent, once
Former Davis Cup captain
Net notable
Tennis great Arthur
Arthur of the courts
Connors contemporary
Late tennis great Arthur
Tennis great
Court's Arthur
Davis Cup captain, once
Flushing stadium eponym
New York City stadium name
Tennis stadium
He beat Connors in the 1975 Wimbledon final
Arthur with three Grand Slam singles titles
Queens-tennis-venue namesake
HIV activist Arthur
See 50-Across
Arthur who made millions off a racket
Namesake of a Courage Award won by Caitlyn Jenner
U.S. Open stadium namesake
Queens stadium with swings
ESPN's Arthur ___ Courage Award
Tennis legend Arthur
Arthur with a posthumous Presidential Medal of Freedom
Queens's Arthur ___ Stadium
Queens tennis stadium
Big Apple tennis stadium
Off the Court writer
Queens stadium
Arthur ___ Courage Award (ESPY)
Arthur ___ for Courage Award (ESPY)
Athlete who wrote the children's book "Daddy and Me"
First black athlete for the US Davis Cup team
New York stadium that was the site of the first professional outdoor basketball game
Pornstar Danielle with 32FF-sized breasts
Skin care and cosmetics company that looks to be unrelated to Arthur
Sports Illustrated's 1992 Sportsman of the Year
Stadium in 39-Down
UCLA's Arthur ___ Student Health & Wellness Center
Court icon Arthur
Social activist Arthur
Arthur ___ Courage Award
Days of Grace memoirist
Citizen ___ (2021 tennis documentary)
Leader of the Deadlock Gang in the video game Overwatch
North Carolina county
Arthur of the court
1968 US singles champ
US Open champ of 1968
Wimbledon winner of 1975
Former Davis Cup coach
Author of tennis
Tennis champion
Wimbledon champ, 1975
Tennis stadium name
New York stadium name
Carolina county
N.Y. stadium name
Queens stadium name
U.S. Open stadium
U.S. Open stadium eponym
1975 Connors foe
1975 Wimbledon champ
Connors rival
Tennis arena name
U.S. Open stadium name
Name on a Queens stadium
Queens stadium eponym
1968 U.S. Open champ
Rival of Connors
Early Carolina governor for whom a county and city are named
1975 Wimbledon winner Arthur
Former Wimbledon champ Arthur
'70s Wimbledon champ Arthur
Wimbledon champ Arthur
U.S. tennis stadium
1970 Australian Open winner
Athlete whose memoir was "Days of Grace"
US Open finalist of 1972
1968 U.S. Open tennis champ
UCLA's Student Health & Wellness Center is named for him
North Carolina county that borders both Virginia and Tennessee
Arthur ___ Courage Award (ESPY Awards honor)
Arthur ___ Stadium (Queens landmark)
Flushing Meadows stadium honoree
Tennis stadium honoree
1992 Sports Illustrated Sportsman of the Year
Big name in AIDS activism
Billie Jean King and Nelson Mandela have won the sports award named in his honor
Athlete who established Brooklyn's Institute for Urban Health in 1992
Member of four Davis Cup-winning teams
1970 Australian Open champ
Arthur ___ Stadium
Namesake of a major US Open venue
1966 NCAA men's singles and doubles tennis champion
First black American Davis Cup team member
Surname that might raise suspicions in an arson investigation?
US athlete who was a noted anti-apartheid activist
As Long ___ Needs Me ("Oliver!" song)
Days of Grace author Arthur
Late tennis star Arthur
Arthur of tennis fame
Netman Arthur
Queens' ___ Stadium
Tennis's Arthur ___ Stadium
1975 Wimbledon champion
Arthur ___ Stadium (site of the U.S. Open)
Big name in tennis
Connors adversary
Tennis's Arthur
1965 NCAA tennis champ Arthur
Athletic Arthur born in Richmond
ESPN's Award for Courage is named for him
Tennis star Arthur
Off the Court autobiographer Arthur
1970 Australian Open singles champ
First tennis player to earn $100,000 in one year
Foe of Connors and Borg
A Hard Road to Glory author
1975 Connors conqueror at Wimbledon
Arthur of Wimbledon
NYC stadium dedicatee
Wimbledon singles winner of 1975
Tennis stadium near Shea
Flushing Meadows stadium
Stadium near Shea
'70s tennis star Arthur
Former Davis Cup captain Arthur
One of two Big Apple stadiums that are anagrams of each other
Court figure Arthur
New York tennis stadium
One-time Wimbledon champ Arthur
Grand Slam stadium
One-time Davis Cup captain Arthur
Stadium in Flushing Meadows
Hard Road to Glory author
1980 tennis retiree Arthur
U.S. tennis star barred from South Africa
1970s tennis champ
Stadium near Citi Field
Tennis legend for whom the U.S. Open's stadium is named
Days of Grace author/athlete
Off the Court author Arthur
1975 Wimbledon champ Arthur
1985 Tennis Hall of Fame inductee
Arthur on the court
Arthur who won three Grand Slam titles
Civil rights promoter with lots of court experience
Netman of note
New York stadium honoree Arthur
Tennis ace who wrote "Days of Grace"
Wimbledon legend Arthur
1968 US Open winner Arthur
Arthur of 1970s tennis
Contemporary of Borg
Contemporary of Laver and Borg
Eponym of a Flushing Meadows tennis stadium
He defeated Connors at Wimbledon in 1975
Arthur in the International Tennis Hall of Fame
Arthur pictured on a 2005 postage stamp
Arthur with 33 singles titles
Contemporary of Borg and Laver
First recipient of the Harvard AIDS Initiative Leadership Award
Tennis Hall of Famer Arthur
Connors rival who was a protégé of Gonzales
Tennis champ with a namesake stadium
Tennis stadium in New York
Trailblazing tennis champ
1975 victor over Connors at Wimbledon
Arthur pictured on a 37-cent stamp
First black player on the US Davis Cup team
Tennis great who wrote "Days of Grace"
Arthur on a tennis court
Arthur with a racket
Connors's 1975 vanquisher at Wimbledon
Court notable
Late tennis great
Queens stadium dedicatee
Queens tennis stadium honoree
Sports legend for whom the world's biggest tennis stadium is named
1992 Sportsman of the Year Arthur
Arthur with a stadium named for him
King Arthur of the court
Arthur with a tennis stadium named after him
Last name in courage
Tennis star with a statue on Monument Avenue in Richmond
Court great
Memorable tennis player Arthur
Tennis immortal
Days of Grace author
Memorable tennis name
Wimbledon winner: 1975
Author Arthur
'75 Wimbledon winner
A Queens stadium
U.S. tennis great
Off the Court autobiographer
'75 Wimbledon champ
1965 NCAA tennis champ
1972 U.S. Open runner-up
Immortal name in tennis
Tennis legend
No. 1 tennis player of 1975
#1 tennis player of 1975
Big Apple stadium
New York stadium
Northwesternmost North Carolina county
First African-American US Open champ
Flushing stadium
Queens stadium named for a tennis great
Stadium that opened in 1997
Tennis champ Arthur
Tennis immortal Arthur
1968 US Open champ Arthur
Connors lost to him in the 1975 Wimbledon final
Court great Arthur
Court star
North Carolina county bordering Tennessee and Virginia
Stadium in Queens
Arthur for whom a tennis stadium is named
Tennis star for whom a stadium is named
Tennis star who won each grand slam tournament except the French Open
I don't want to be remembered for my tennis accomplishments speaker
He beat Okker to win the 1968 U.S. Open
Tennis star/anti-apartheid activist Arthur
First African-American selected for a U.S. Davis Cup team
Court legend
Legend with rackets
Tennis icon Arthur
Queens stadium named for a tennis legend
Stadium named for a tennis great
A Hard Road to Glory writer
Amateur who won the 1968 US Open
Off the Court memoirist
Tennis legend who wrote "Days of Grace"
1993 Presidential Medal of Freedom awardee Arthur
Court immortal
Namesake of the sports-oriented Courage Award
Tennis great with three Grand Slam titles
Tennis legend for whom a "Courage Award" is named
'60s-'70s tennis great Arthur
Athlete who wrote a history of African-American athletes
Second African-American inducted into the Tennis Hall of Fame
Tennis great Arthur who wrote "A Hard Road to Glory"
US Open stadium named for a US Open winner
Court legend Arthur
ESPY Courage Award namesake
Queens stadium namesake
Queens tennis venue honoree
World's largest tennis stadium
Activist and tennis legend Arthur
Eponym for a Queens stadium
He beat Connors at Wimbledon in 1975
Queens, New York, stadium namesake
Tennis great profiled in ESPN's "30 for 30" special "Arthur and Johnnie"
Arthur __ Stadium: world's largest tennis venue
Arthur who authored "A Hard Road to Glory"
Tennis legend who wrote a history of African-American athletes
'70s tennis champ
Medal of Freedom athlete (1993)
__ Stadium (Big Apple tennis site)
Legendary Arthur
Tennis great Arthur posthumously awarded a Presidential Medal of Freedom
Tennis great with a namesake stadium
Wimbledon winner Arthur
Onetime Davis Cup coach
Tennis titan Arthur
Court king Arthur
'82 Davis Cup captain
Five-time Davis Cup captain
'70s tennis star
Emerson contemporary
Nastase contemporary
Roy Emerson contemporary
Stadium near the Unisphere
'80s Davis Cup captain
Contemporary of 29 Across
Wimbledon winner of '75
Arthur __ Stadium
His racket is in the Smithsonian
Noted netman
U.S. Open tennis stadium
Big Apple 4 Down stadium
Arthur __ Stadium (US Open site)
Davis Cup captain, 1980-85
Arthur __ Stadium (US Open venue)
Arthur __ Stadium (tennis venue)
Inspiration for Adidas Match Play sneakers
US Open's Arthur __ Stadium
Arthur __ Stadium (pro tennis venue)
Rod Laver rival
Big Apple's Arthur __ Stadium
Pro tennis 45 Across
Richmond-born tennis great
Laver contemporary
Tennis great on a 2005 stamp
Arthur __ Stadium (tennis tourney venue)
ESPN's Arthur __ Courage Award
Bjorn Borg contemporary
He was mentored by Althea Gibson's coach
Frequent opponent of Laver
Rod Laver contemporary
US Open finals stadium
Major court venue
Robinson was "Proud of [his] greatness as a tennis player" (1968)
Medal of Freedom tennis pro (1993)
Stadium next to Shea
He outlasted Okker at Forest Hills in 1968
Stadium that's a neighbor (and anagram) of Shea
Tennis king Arthur
North Carolina county that borders Virginia and Tennessee
North Carolina county whose seat is Jefferson
Stadium next to Armstrong Stadium
U.S. Davis Cup captain of the 1980s
Norma ___ (Susan Glaspell novel)
He defeated Connors for the 1975 Wimbledon championship
Loser to Nastase at the 1972 U.S. Open finals
One who had a high net income?
Tennis stadium in Queens
The world's largest tennis stadium
Wimbledon winner immediately before Borg's five in a row
Athlete honored on a 2005 postage stamp
Australian Open winner after Laver
Stadium in which the U.S. Open finals are played
Trailblazer on the court
Winner of three Grand Slam events
American Revolution general John
Stadium in the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center
The cover photo of him from the 1992 Sports Illustrated Sportsman of the Year issue was used in 2005 as a postage stamp
Winner of the 1968 U.S. Open
Sports Illustrated's Sportsman of the Year between Jordan and Shula
Author of "A Hard Road to Glory"
County in North Carolina.
County, NW North Carolina.
English poet (1836–89).
County in N. C.
Revolutionary patriot, 1720–81.
Revolutionary patriot of N. C.
North Carolina Revolutionary hero.
County in NW corner, N. C.
Early Governor of North Carolina.
North Carolina patriot.
Revolutionary patriot.
Revolutionary general.
County in No. Carolina.
English poet of 19th century.
N. Carolina county.
Famous name in North Carolina.
N. C. county.
N. Carolina patriot.
Famous North Carolinian.
Big name in N. C.
North Carolina name.
Patriot of N. C.
Carolina name.
Historic name in North Carolina.
N. C. name.
Tennis luminary.
Member of Davis Cup team.
Name in tennis.
Tennis star
Commander in Revolution.
Forest Hills V.I.P.
Tennis champ.
Tennis name.
U.S. tennis star.
Present-day netman
Revolutionary figure
Tennis ace
Big man on the court
Court champ
Laver opponent
Noted "racketeer"
Tennis player
U. S. Davis Cupper
U.S. tennis man
Forest Hills name
Opponent for Laver
Tennis pro
Tennis-tour name
Touring-pro Arthur
Arthur of court fame
Court man
U.S. court V.I.P.
Pro-circuit man
Racquet pro
Tennis V.I.P.
Early N. C. patriot
Wimbledon champ
High-ranked netman
Wimbledon V.I.P.
Court ace
Court celebrity
Court contender
Forest Hills performer
She wrote "Moths"
Court figure
Wimbledon name
Wimbledon winner in 1975
County in the Tar Heel State
Court retiree
Racketer Arthur
Retired court star
Retired netman
Davis Cup figure
Famed name in tennis
Laver's erstwhile rival
Retired court figure
Retired tennis star
Court name
Davis Cup captain
Man of the courts
Tarheel county
Wimbledon great
He rivaled Laver
Tennis star of the 70's
U.S. Davis Cup captain
U.S.T.A. champ in 1968
Wimbledon champ in 1975
A rival of Laver
Arthur of Davis Cup fame
Famed netman
Arthur from Richmond
Court ace in the 70's
Court star in the 70's
Laver rival, once
U.S.T.A. champ: 1968
Laver rival
Nastase rival in the 70's
Wimbledon champion: 1975
A Wimbledon champ: 1975
Men's Singles champ: 1968
Notable netman
Winner at Wimbledon: 1975
Norma ___, Glaspell novel
U.S. Open tennis champ: 1968
Former Davis Cup figure
A U.S. Open champ: 1968
Former court star
Glaspell's "Norma ___"
He wrote "Off the Court"
Wimbledon name of fame
He burned up the courts in the 70's
Revolutionary general: 1720-81
U.S. Open champion: 1968
That ___ is, so was he made: Bridges
A Wimbledon winner: 1975
Courtly name?
Late court star-commentator
Late tennis V.I.P.
Memorable U.S. tennis champ
Memorable court star
Hard Road to Glory writer
Contemporary of 22 Down
Court V.I.P. Arthur
Court hero
Late apartheid opponent
Late opponent of apartheid
As Long _____ Needs Me ("Oliver!" song)
Ace-serving Arthur
Court star Arthur
Foe of Laver and Newcombe
Late tennis V.I.P. Arthur
Tennis V.I.P. Arthur
Arthur___
Author on mythology Geoffrey___
Connors defeater, 1975
Tennis name of fame
A Hard Road to Glory athlete-author
1972 U.S. Open finalist
Athlete with a statue in Richmond, Va.
Connors opponent
Gentleman of the court
North Carolina county on the Blue Ridge Parkway
Tennis champ who played for U.C.L.A.
1967 U.S. clay court champion
Arthur ___ Stadium (U.S.T.A. facility)
Commander at Briar Creek, in the Revolutionary War
Queens's ___ Stadium
Revolutionary War commander John
North Carolina county named for a Revolutionary War commander
1968 U.S. Open champion
Flushing Meadow stadium name
Governor for whom a North Carolina city is named
He beat Connors to win Wimbledon
King Arthur of the courts
1968 champion at Forest Hills
1980's Davis Cup captain
1980's U.S. Davis Cup captain
Arthur ___ Stadium, U.S. Open locale
Lead-in to a Southern "-ville"
North Carolina county near the Tennessee border
Tennis great posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom
Courtly Arthur
New York's ___ Stadium
Arthur ___ Stadium in Queens
Contemporary of Emerson
North Carolina county named for an early governor
___ Stadium in Queens
But, ___ was ambitious, I slew him: Brutus
Contemporary of Rosewall
See 46-Across
___ Stadium (Queens landmark)
___ Stadium, home of the U.S. Open
___ Stadium, sports venue since 1997
Champ just before 36-Down
Eponym of a North Carolina "-ville"
Arthur who wrote "A Hard Road to Glory"
Only African-American male to win Wimbledon
New York stadium eponym
U.S. Open's ___ Stadium
U.S. tennis legend on a 37¢ stamp
7/5/75 winner over Connors
Arthur who often raised a racket
Arthur with a Queens stadium named after him
Athlete who posthumously won the Presidential Medal of Freedom, 1993
Athlete who wrote "Off the Court"
___ Stadium (Big Apple tennis locale)
1968 winner of the 43-Down
1970s Wimbledon victor over Connors
Borg rival
He got a tennis scholarship from U.C.L.A.
Subject of four Sports Illustrated covers between 1966 and 1993
___ Stadium (facility near Citi Field)
Athlete who wrote "A Hard Road to Glory"
Eponym of a Southern "-ville"
26-Across of a North Carolina "-ville"
King Arthur of tennis
National Junior Tennis League co-founder
Arthur who was king of the court?
Court giant Arthur
Sports great with the 1993 memoir "Days of Grace"
Tennis player who posthumously received a Presidential Medal of Freedom
Eponym of a North Carolina city
Name attached to a North Carolina "-ville"
Arthur with a namesake stadium
Athlete honored on Richmond's Monument Avenue
Athlete posthumously awarded a Presidential Medal of Freedom
Longtime athlete on the U.S. Davis Cup team
Name on the ESPY Courage Award
North Carolina county ... or lead-in to "-ville"
Trailblazing athlete of the 1970s
Days of Grace memoirist Arthur
1980s U.S. Davis Cup team captain
Arthur with a stadium named after him
Eponym of a U.S. Open stadium
Eponym of the Courage Award given at the ESPYs
Eponym of the world's largest tennis stadium
Lead-in to "-ville"
Arthur who wrote "Days of Grace"
First African-American Davis Cup player
He beat Connors in the Wimbledon final in 1975
He was named 1992's Sportsman of the Year, despite retiring from tennis 12 years earlier
World's largest tennis stadium, familiarly
Arthur ___, 1975 Wimbledon winner
___ Stadium, U.S. Open tennis locale
Recipient of the inaugural A.T.P. Player of the Year award
U.S. Davis Cup player for 10 years
Off the Court memoirist, 1981
Arthur who won Wimbledon in 1975
Arthur with a statue on Richmond's Monument Avenue
Athlete Arthur
Flushing venue
Namesake of a Queens stadium, and an anagram of another Queens stadium
Tennis star honored on Richmond's Monument Avenue
Namesake of the ESPY Courage Award
Eponym of a Flushing Meadows stadium
Arthur for whom a stadium is named
'68 US Open winner
Arthur -- Stadium
NYC stadium name
Tennis player Arthur
Tennis' Arthur
Tennis pro Arthur
Court champ Arthur
Racket-raising Arthur
Tennis champion Arthur
Arthur who made it big with a racket
Arthur who won Wimbledon in '75
First African-American man to win a Grand Slam singles title
Queens tennis venue name
Tennis great who wrote "A Hard Road to Glory"
Wimbledon champion of 1975
One-time opponent of Connors
For whom a famed Brooklyn stadium is named
Former North Carolina governor after whom a city is named
Richmond-born sports star
1982 Davis Cup captain
Arthur of aces
Athlete who wrote the 1993 memoir "Days of Grace"
Tennis legend with an eponymous stadium in Queens
Tennis star with an ESPY named for him
Author of "A Hard Road to Glory: A History of the African-American Athlete"
International Tennis Hall of Famer Arthur
Namesake of the world's largest tennis stadium
Tennis star who was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom
Arthur _____ Stadium
Celebrated Wimbledon winner
Memoirist Arthur
Victor over Connors at Wimbledon
Legendary tennis star, Arthur
Queens' Arthur court?
Sports legend Arthur
Stadium in which to see Venus?
A Connors' rival
Legendary name in tennis
Victor over Connors, 1975
Legendary tennis star
Inspirational tennis champ
Net great Arthur
Legendary Arthur of the courts
Arthur the tennis legend
Activist and athlete Arthur
Arthur who won the Open Era's first U.S. Open
Tennis great whose name sounds like a tree
Three-time Grand Slam winner Arthur
1968 U.S. Open champion Arthur
Arthur who won three Grand Slam singles titles
A Hard Road to Glory author Arthur
Arthur who ruled the court?
Namesake of the world's biggest tennis stadium
Queens tennis stadium name
Tennis great found in "smashes"
Arthur ___ Stadium (tennis arena)
Arthur ___ Stadium (US Open venue)
Arthur in tennis history
Fireplace remnants*
Wimbledon Hall of Famer
Days of Grace co-author
Gentlemanly Arthur
Memorable tennis great
Late great of tennis
Former open winner
1968 Men s US Open tennis champ
Net success
Newcombes nemesis
Arthur ___ Kids' Day (tennis event)
Arthur ___ Stadium (major tennis venue)
Stadium named for a tennis player
Former tennis great
Memorable tennis star
US Davis Cup captain, 1981-82
First $100,000/year netman
New York City stadium
Former Wimbledon champ
Legendary Wimbledon winner
U.S. court legend
First-ever winner of 54-Across
Late, great netman
U.S. court star
American tennis icon Arthur
U.S. Open champ, 1968
U.S. Open champ, Arthur
Courage Award namesake
Days of Grace: A Memoir author
Late tennis star and apartheid opponent
Arthur with four Davis Cup wins
Foe of Connors and Lendl
Tennis great who wrote "Off the Court"
Arthur on four Davis Cup winners
Arthur with three Grand Slam titles
ESPN's Courage Award is named for him
Netman who wrote "Days of Grace"
Tennis stadium near Citi Field
Tennis star on a U.S. stamp
Arthur who wrote "Off the Court"
Big Apple stadium namesake
Big Apple tennis venue
ESPN Courage Award namesake
ESPN's Courage Award namesake
Foe of Laver and Nastase
NYC tennis venue
Namesake of ESPN's Courage Award
1970 Australian Open winner Arthur
1981-86 Davis Cup captain
Arthur on a 2005 postage stamp
Arthur on a U.S. stamp
Stadium near 46-Across
Tennis great on a postage stamp
USTA stadium namesake
World's largest tennis venue
A Hard Road to Glory: A History of the African-American Athlete author Arthur
Moral of the Story singer
Arthur who won the 1968 US Open
Tennis stadium namesake Arthur
First Black man to win the U.S. Open
Person for whom the largest tennis arena in the world is named
115. 1975 Wimbledon champ
U.S. tennis singles champ, 1968
Connors foe
Borg contemporary
North Carolina governor for whom a county and two cities are named
Stadium from which you can see the Unisphere
1970 Australian Open champ Arthur
BYOB or MYOB part
One-named singer of the 2019 single "Moral of the Story"
17-time opponent of Borg in the 1970s
Name on a U.S. Open stadium
Athlete commemorated on Wheaties boxes in 1998
First U.S. Open winner
First amateur to win the U.S. Open
Top-ranked tennis player of 1974
Top-ranked tennis player of 1975
One-time Wimbledon winner
Stadium near 75-Across
Athlete who battled apartheid
Tennis Hall of Fame inductee of 1985
Rival of Laver and Nastase
Tennis star on a 2005 postage stamp
Athlete on a 2005 U.S. postage stamp
Recipient of a tennis scholarship from UCLA in 1963
First U.S. Open champ
U.S. Open stadium dedicatee
U.S. Open tennis stadium honoree
Winner of the first ATP Player of the Year award
1975 winner over Connors at Wimbledon
Wimbledon winner with a wooden racket
Athlete on a 2005 U.S. stamp
Australian Open champ of 1970
First recipient of the ATP Player of the Year award
First winner of the ATP Player of the Year
Davis Cup captain of the 1980s
Name on the world's largest tennis stadium
The ATP's humanitarian award is named for him
The ESPY Award for courage is named for him
Flushing Meadows stadium eponym
Tennis pro awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Clinton
Namesake of the ATP's humanitarian award