Jessica Pegula recently found herself facing a humorous question from Zheng Qinwen about why she chose to play a difficult sport like tennis when she could be living a “high class life” due to her generational family wealth. This is a topic that often comes up in discussions about the American star.
However, despite being the daughter of billionaires Terry and Kim Pegula, owners of the Buffalo Bills and the Buffalo Sabres, Pegula has been deeply dedicated to her tennis career. Her drive to succeed, rather than relying on her status as an heiress, has earned high praise from Andrea Petkovic.
Why Andrea Petkovic Praises Jessica Pegula’s Resilience
In a Substack essay, Petkovic hailed Jessica Pegula’s resilience and “stubbornness,” highlighting how she battled through injuries and setbacks to emerge as an elite, top-10 player later in her career.
“Jessica Pegula is emotionally stable, extremely (pain-)resilient, probably a little stubborn and above all: curious. People call her a late bloomer because her breakthrough into the Top 10 came when she was 28 years old. Not everyone knows, however, that Jess’ early career was haunted by injuries and surgeries. She kept coming back and kept trying to make it and kept wanting it (this is the good kind of stubbornness I just speculatively attributed to her),” Petkovic wrote.
The German noted that, given her family wealth and sharp intellect, Pegula could have found success in many other fields, but instead she chose the grind of professional tennis.
“I don’t think it’s a secret that her family is wealthy. I don’t think it’s a secret that Jess is very intelligent,” the German wrote. “She could’ve and would’ve found a way to be successful with or without tennis. But she chose this sport – our sport.”
Petkovic also distinguished the 32-year-old from many of her fellow players who had extreme emotional responses to the ups and downs of tennis. She expressed her belief that Pegula possessed the “perfect” temperament for a long and successful career.
“She seems not to get too high when she wins and not too low when she loses and that is a huge asset and the perfect disposition for a sustainable career in tennis which can sometimes feel a little bipolar in its extremes when you’re an emotional person. She stays, mostly, stable. She doesn’t lose her mind when she loses early or when she wins big titles. Her temperature remains the same,” she added.
Jessica Pegula Explains Her Tennis Drive Despite Generational Wealth
When asked why she bothered to play tennis despite the comfort of family wealth, Pegula explained that her love for the sport began in childhood, long before she was even aware of her parents’ billionaire status.
“It’s something I’ve loved to do since I was a kid, since before I had anything about my family or money or the teams or stuff like that,” Pegula told The Second Serve earlier this year. “I wanted to be No. 1 in the world when I was, like, 6 years old. It’s been my dream for as long as I can remember to be No. 1, to be able to play on tour, to be able to win Slams. I mean, it’s pretty cool that I can look back and say that I’m putting myself in contention to do that, living out my dream.”
On the tennis front, Jessica Pegula has made a strong start to her clay-court season by successfully defending her title at the Charleston Open. Following her victory, the American disclosed her intention to enjoy a much-needed break at home before embarking on the taxing European clay-court swing.
