After two years training with Edwards in Sydney, Goolagong played at
Wimbledon for the first time in
1970, when she was 18. In
1971, she won the women's singles titles at both the
French Open and Wimbledon, creating a sensation and becoming an instant celebrity in Australia and around the world. In the Wimbledon final, she defeated
Margaret Smith Court, the only other Australian woman ever to win the title. She was the first Australian Aboriginal woman to achieve international fame in sport and the first Aboriginal person to do so in any sport other than football or boxing. In 1971, she was named
Australian of the Year and the
Associated Press Female Athlete of the Year.
During the 1970s, Goolagong won the women's singles title at the
Australian Open four times. She was also the runner-up at Wimbledon three times. At the
U.S. Open, she lost in the final four consecutive years (
1973-1976), never winning the title.
Goolagong's final
Grand Slam title came at Wimbledon in
1980. By this time, she was a 29-year-old mother and surprised the tennis world by beating
Tracy Austin in a semifinal and
Chris Evert in the final, to win her second Wimbledon and seventh Grand Slam singles crown. She was the first mother in 66 years to win the Wimbledon singles title, the previous one being English woman
Dorothea Lambert-Chambers in 1914.
Goolagong was also a member of the Australian teams that won the
Fed Cup in 1971, 1973, and
1974. Other notable career achievements included winning the
WTA Tour Championships in 1974 and 1976 and the
Italian Open in 1973.
Goolagong had excellent physical attributes for a tennis player. She was light, fast, and long-limbed, with lightning reflexes and the ability to cover the court with great agility. At her peak, she was regarded as one of the most graceful and subtle exponents of the women's game ever seen. She was frequently faulted, however, for lapses of concentration that cost her several titles. In the Australian press, this was referred to as "Evonne going
walkabout" – an Aboriginal term meaning to wander off into the bush. She relied more on skill and speed than strength and was vulnerable to opponents with big serves and greater power, such as Evert and
Billie Jean King.
Goolagong reached the final in 16 of the 24 Grand Slam singles tournaments that were held from 1971 through 1976, winning five of them. Her win-loss record in those finals against the other three then-dominant players was 0-4 against King, 1-3 against Court, and 1-3 against Evert.
Goolagong retired in
1983. Over the course of her career, Goolagong won 43 singles titles and 9 doubles titles. Her career prize-money totalled U.S. $1,399,431.
Following her marriage to Roger Cawley in 1975, Goolagong settled in the
United States (in
Naples, Florida). This led to some criticism in Australia. After living in the U.S. for eight years, the couple bought a home at
Noosa Heads, Queensland, in
1991, where they settled with their two children — daughter Kelly (born
1977) and son
Morgan (born
1981).
In
1988, Goolagong was inducted into the
International Tennis Hall of Fame.
Goolagong was awarded an
MBE in
1972 and made an Officer of the
Order of Australia (AO) in
1982.
Goolagong was a member of the Board of the
Australian Sports Commission from
1995 to
1997 and since
1997 has held the position of Sports Ambassador to Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander Communities.
Since
2000, Goolagong has made an increasing commitment to Australian women's tennis, which has fallen on hard times in terms of the glamour international events, and was appointed captain of the Australian Fed Cup team in
2002. In
2003, she was winner for the
Oceania region of the
International Olympic Committee's 2003
Women and Sports Trophy.