Richard Norris Williams survived the sinking of the Titanic and went on to become an Olympic gold-medalist tennis player.George Rinhart/Corbis/Getty Images; Bettman/Getty Images
Richard Norris Williams was an accomplished tennis player who competed in the 1924 Paris Olympics, but he’s most famous for his incredible survival of the Titanic.
The RMS Titanic, a British passenger ship operated by the White Star Line, set sail on its infamous voyage on April 10, 1912.
Over 2,000 people were aboard the ship when it collided with an iceberg and sank during the early hours of April 15, 1912.
Of all the passengers aboard the Titanic, about 700 people made it into lifeboats. Most of the Titanic victims who did not make it onto a lifeboat either drowned, went down with the ship, or froze to death in the Atlantic Ocean as they waited to be rescued.
The survival rate for first-class male passengers aboard Titanic was just 33%, according to the study “Titanic: A Statistical Exploration,” making Williams’ story of survival all the more extraordinary.
American captain Bob Bryan has been ribbed by tennis fans for a selection gamble that backfired massively as Australia reached the Davis Cup semi-finals for the
Serena Williams and her sister, Venus Williams, burst onto the scene as teenagers-both being 14-year-old. Breaking numerous glass ceilings over the years, the t
“I just want to be good enough so I don’t have to collect all the balls in the bushes,” Roger Federer said, as he found his new hobby in the form of golf
The stage is set! Spain will take on the Netherlands in just a few hours from now at the Davis Cup Finals. However, irrespective of who’s facing whom, the ten