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USTA Pro Circuit record-holder Julie Ditty Qualls has scholarship named in her memory

Victoria Chiesa | March 26, 2024


Over the course of a 10-year professional tennis career that began in 2002, Julie Ditty Qualls won a record 38 titles on the USTA Pro Circuit, played in all four Grand Slam tournaments, represented her country on the U.S. Fed Cup (now Billie Jean King Cup) team, and ranked inside the world’s Top 100 in both singles and doubles. After her 2012 retirement from tour life, the Ashland, Ky. native turned her experiences into impact closer to home as a coach, and introduced countless young people to her favorite sport through free clinics at the Ashland Tennis Center.

 

And now, after Ditty Qualls’ death at age 42 in 2021 following a six-year battle with breast cancer, those who knew her best and leaders in the USTA’s Southern section are hoping that her spirit will live on through a newly-dedicated scholarship for college-bound student-athletes that’s been named in her honor.

 

“This is the culmination of Julie’s lifetime journey,” her father, Dr. Jack Ditty, recently told usta.com.

 

It’s a journey that took Ditty Qualls—the fourth of sixth children born to Jack and his wife, Juanita Ditty—from small-town tennis in Ashland to national recognition for Vanderbilt University and further still to the sport’s biggest world stages like Wimbledon, the US Open and beyond. It’s also one that will continue on in perpetuity, as her name will now be intrinsically linked to future generations of tennis players: Once funded, the Julie Ditty Qualls Memorial Scholarship—announced in January—will be one of the more than 20 scholarships given out by the Southern Tennis Foundation, the charitable arm of the USTA’s Southern section, to deserving students who need financial assistance to pursue a post-secondary education. Students who maintain a 3.0 GPA or higher will be eligible to receive $1,000 a year for four years if selected for the scholarship. Recipients must have participated in at least two years of high-school tennis, but being a nationally-ranked junior or blue-chip collegiate recruit is not a requirement. In fact, winners will not even be expected to play college tennis at all.

 

That’s just the way Ditty Qualls would’ve wanted it, her father says. 

 

“I think the main thing that would appeal to her is the fact that this is open to anybody,” he said. “When Julie got to do anything where she helped out or made a difference, she loved it. But she was extremely humble. She was somebody who did not look for personal attention or recognition. She was embarrassed by it, but she loved being able to do things for people.

 

“She wanted to see people get better, and most importantly, she wanted them to see that they could get better."

Survived by her husband, Josh, and son Atreyu, Ditty Qualls’ eponymous scholarship came to be with the blessing of many in her inner circle including her parents and siblings, all of whom played tennis at some level, as well as the advocacy of former USTA Kentucky President Mike Eden. A member of the Southern Tennis Foundation board, Eden is also on the 13-person board for the Julie Ditty Qualls Foundation—which was formed two years ago and continues to host the free-to-attend youth tennis clinics that Ditty Qualls herself once piloted.

 

Calling it a fitting tribute to one of USTA Southern’s “most beloved” people, Eden teamed with Jaime Kaplan, the Southern Tennis Foundation’s director of development, to officially bring the scholarship to life. 

“While some people might not consider $1,000 to be a big number,” Kaplan said, “to some kids, it’s a huge number. These kids know that there is someone out there who cares about them, and that goes a long way.”

 

The scholarship will officially launch for applications when $30,000 is raised. The group has already seen, and hopes to continue to see, financial backing from the communities Ditty Qualls touched throughout her life. There are so many of those, including the people who first met her as a soft-spoken, but precocious, youngster who was talented enough to join the high school tennis team in second grade but was, her sister Jenny Ditty Kang recalls, “so shy, she could hardly even talk to people.” There are also her former teammates at Vanderbilt, where she grew into a leader, and from which she graduated in 2002 ranked second in team history in wins with 114 (to date, she is fourth). More still? The families of the players she eventually coached—first as an assistant coach at her alma mater, and later, at home in Ashland—and people in her backyard and beyond who were impacted in ways big and small by her kindness, generosity, and willingness to always go the extra mile. 

 

Take, for example, Ditty Qualls’ first official, organized free tennis clinic in 2019, which had 150 young attendees from ages 6-18. That day, she learned her cancer had metastasized, but those close to her say she never once thought of canceling the event. She continued to coach as much as she was able to, even while undergoing chemotherapy. In the two summers since her passing, more than 300 youth have hit the courts at similar clinics organized by Ditty Qualls’ family, friends and other volunteers with her namesake foundation.

 

Many of those kids have never even held a racquet before, Ditty Kang says, and the family expects to see similar interest for this year’s clinics, which are scheduled to be held from June 3-7 and June 10-14.

 

At the time of Ditty Qualls’ passing in 2021, the WTA Tour hailed her career as “a stellar example of … determination”—just one lesson among the many that tennis can teach players of any age. And if there’s one thing all involved in commemorating Ditty Qualls’ memory on and off the court, it’s that “playing like Julie”—which has become something of a rallying cry for all whom she touched—means much more than just possessing a wicked left-handed forehand, or winning a hard-fought tennis match.

 

“I really feel like some of the most special things about Julie were not just how great she was at tennis, but how important it was for her to help people love it and enjoy it as much as she did, and giving people access to it,” Ditty Kang said.

 

“I think that made a huge difference in terms of her impact, and just the idea that people are going to be able to get scholarships who likely are people who really need them, and people who want to be able to continue tennis and may not have the resources for it … this is an incredible way to be able to see her impact continue.

 

“I can't imagine anything else more that we would want—for her impact to continue, and for her to remain a positive influence on people that she would have loved to have helped herself if she could have.”

 

Those interested in donating to the Julie Ditty Qualls Memorial Scholarship can find more information here.

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