Peanut Louie Harper
Peanut Louie Harper is a retired American tennis player, born in San Francisco, California to Ron and Alice Louie. She was a top-ranked junior tennis player and professional tennis player on the WTA tour. She reached a career high singles ranking of 19 in the world in 1985 and doubles ranking of 31 in the world in 1992. She is currently the co-founder and program director of Harper for Kids, a youth character development program.
Professional tennis career
During her career, she won 14 USTA National Junior titles and was the #1 ranked 16-and-under and 12-and-under tennis player in the United States. Peanut was the Junior Wimbledon finalist in 1977 and a semifinalist in 1978. She was also the #1 ranked junior in NorCal in all age divisions.After a successful junior career, she turned pro in 1978. In her 16-year career, she won four singles titles and reached a career high ranking of No. 19 in the world. She also won five doubles titles and reached a career high ranking of No. 31 in the world. At the Grand Slams, her best results were reaching the round of 32 in singles and the round of 16 in doubles several times. Among her best wins were victories over Gabriela Sabatini, Zina Garrison, Mary Joe Fernandez, Helena Sukova, Wendy Turnbull, Stephanie Rehe and Andrea Jaeger.
Louie was honored with the WTA Karen Krantzcke Sportsmanship Award in back-to-back years in 1985 and 1986 from the Women's Tennis Association. In 1986, she was also named Tennis magazine's Comeback Player of the Year. During her junior career, she was presented with the USTA Girls’ 18 National Championship Sportsmanship Award in 1977.
Personal life and post-tennis career
Her older sister Marcie also played on the WTA Tour, and her sisters Cici and Marisa, and brother Ronnie, all played at the University of San Francisco. She, along with her siblings, trained on the tennis courts of Golden Gate Park. She was given the nickname Peanut by her father because she was the youngest of the five children.She was inducted into the USTA Northern California Hall of Fame in 2000, the Multi-Ethnic Sports of Fame in 2017, the San Francisco Prep Hall of Fame in 2010, and the George Washington Athletic Hall of Fame in 1991.
She married her husband Tim Harper in 1986. They live in San Francisco and have two kids, Casey and Jared. Jared, who is a singer-songwriter, auditioned on Season 18 of The Voice
Charity work
In 2008, she co-founded Harper for Kids, a children's nonprofit organization, with her husband Tim Harper. HFK's youth character development program is based on John Wooden's Pyramid of Success and teaches youth essential character traits that can help them achieve their personal best in life. HFK helps schools incorporate the Pyramid of Success into their character education. Before starting Harper for Kids, Peanut collaborated with John Wooden on his children's book Inch and Miles: The Journey to Success, with co-author Steve Jamison.Hall of Fame inductions
- Multi-Ethnic Sports Hall of Fame, 2017
- San Francisco Prep Hall of Fame, 2010
- USTA NorCal Hall of Fame, 2000
- George Washington High School Athletic Hall of Fame, 1991
Awards and honors
- The Chinese Historical Society of America, 1986 recipient
- Tennis magazine's Comeback Player of the Year, 1986 recipient
- WTA Karen Krantzcke Sportsmanship Award, 1985 ad 1986
- USTA Girls’ 18 National Championship Sportsmanship Award
- OCA East Bay Chapter
- Queen of Hearts Foundation, 2011 Honorary Chairperson
- OCA San Mateo Chapter
WTA Career finals
Singles (4 titles, 1 finalist)
Outcome | Date | Tournament | Surface | Opponent | Score |
Winner | 1 September 1978 | Avon Futures of Northern California, U.S | Hard | Ruta Gerulaitis | 7–6, 6–2 |
Winner | 2 March 1980 | Avon Futures of Columbus, U.S | Hard | Beth Norton | 6–2, 6–3 |
Finalist | 21 December 1980 | Tucson Open, U.S | Carpet | Tracy Austin | 2–6, 0–6 |
Winner | 29 April 1984 | Durban, South Africa | Hard | Rene Uys | 6–1, 6–4 |
Winner | 20 January 1985 | Virginia Slims of Denver, U.S | Carpet | Zina Garrison | 6–4, 4–6, 6–4 |