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Jul 15, 2025  |  
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Jesse McKinley


NextImg:Billionaire Bill Ackman Loses Pro Tennis Debut at Hall of Fame Open

Bill Ackman, the billionaire financier, has succeeded at pretty much everything he’s done, professionally and otherwise. He built his hedge fund, Pershing Square Capital Management, into a winner. He backed President Trump’s third campaign — and second term. And he’s a prolific poster on social media, regularly plopping long treatises on X, which helped him become internet-famous.

Tennis, however, is different.

That was the lesson seemingly taught on Wednesday afternoon when Mr. Ackman, 59, and his doubles partner, the retired professional Jack Sock, lost in straight sets to a pair of journeymen in front of a sweaty and well-heeled crowd at the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, R.I., a famed summer retreat for Gilded Age industrialists.

The loss came in the Hall of Fame Open, an official tournament of the lower-level ATP Challenger tour, which effectively made Mr. Ackman a tennis pro, if only for a day. It fulfilled a lifelong ambition — and, more than likely, he said, ended his career.

“I feel like maybe it’s one and done,” Mr. Ackman said, in the wake of his and Mr. Sock’s 6-1, 7-5 defeat, noting he wanted to support younger players getting their tournament slots — and shots. “But I figured one, in my life, that seemed fair.”

Some spectators, however, had different interpretations.

“Another mega-billionaire living out his own private dream,” said Lydia Chambers, a tennis fan from New Vernon, N.J., who was watching the match. “I hope he’s making a huge donation.”

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Mr. Ackman would have been among the oldest people to get ATP ranking points if he and Mr. Sock had won. But they lost in straight sets.Credit...Mark Higgins/International Tennis Hall of Fame

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