Saturday, June 25, 2011

Excerpt from my book to come later...Wimbledon!!

Wimbledon- The Grass is not all that green!!!
If you ask any player, they will have fond memories of their wins in tournaments even if it is in some obscure village. My thoughts on Wimbledon may be a bit muddled because I never had great results there. However,I just want to lay down some facts you may have never heard about Wimbledon.
I have played Wimbeldon twice as a junior,5 -6 years in womens’s event both as a qualifier and as a main draw player and later on as part of the media when I was a commentator.
As a junior, I was overawed by the entire club, its facilities, its traditions and of course watching some of my heroes up close and personal. I was in the salon once with shampoo all over my hair when Pete Sampras came in for a haircut. I pleaded with my stylist to please remove all that mess from my hair, so I didn’t look like a clown!!
Then came my years as a qualifier. For those who don’t know what that means, qualifiers are those who don’t have a direct entry into the main draw of Wimbledon.Main draw is usually the top 108 players as per ranking and the next 100 or so players will need to qualify through 3 rounds to gain an entry into the main draw.
Wimbledon’s qualifying rounds are not held in The All England Club. They are held in the Police Grounds at Roehampton which are a few miles away. Qualifiers who lose at Roehampton never even got to see Wimbledon even though they were actually playing the same tournament.
I also definitely need to take a dig at the hierarchical way they divided up the locker rooms. In no other Grand Slam was a locker room divided up by the top 8 seeds, followed by the next rung of seeds and so on. The All England club definitely didn’t care about being politically correct, that’s for sure!!
Wimbledon was in lot of scrutiny and finally became the last Grand Slam to offered equal prize money for men and women in 2007. US Open offered equal prize money starting in 1973!!!
I forget the year when this incident happened. I had lost in the final round of qualifying and had gone to Wimbledon to collect my prize money. The treasurer gave my check and said the official transport desk would take me to the bank up hill. My bags were ready and I lugged them on to the transport desk. When I went there, the liason looked at my badge that said qualifier and said” sorry – but we don’t provide transport for qualifiers”. I explained to him the treasurer told me so and the bank was just a mile away, but he said”Rules are rules,Maam”. I was pondering how I was going to carry my bags uphill to the bank when a bodyguard of Goran Ivanisevic barged in. He told the liason that he needed to go to central London. I knew that as per RULES that a coach,bodyguard or spouse could never get official transport on their own and had to be travelling with the player. Goran wasn’t there. But the same liason scurried and said"Yes sir-yes sir,right away,Sir.This way-sir”. I thought to myself “ what the hell””?? I can say that it was one of the lowest moments of my life.
I played in the main draw a few years later. All the wonderful treatment including free musical tickets, transport to wherever I wanted to go, didn’t flinch me one bit. My perspective was intact.

Even as a commentator which was the by the way, the best experience of Wimbledon overall, I took it always with a pinch of salt.
It was also here that I had a mini-tiff with Steffi Graf on the practice courts. She is the greatest woman player of all time, in my opinion. But that is for another day…….

Monday, June 13, 2011

Chinese Tennis System Vs Indian Tennis System Published Times of India June 11th.

It was the summer of 2002.I had just moved to California after my marriage. I got a call from a friend to practice with the Chinese tennis team that was in California for a short break. I had played against the girls many times in recent matches and so I went along to practice. There were about 7 to 8 girls including Jie Zheng, Li Ting and a few others ranked in the 300s to 400s on the WTA tour.
The Chinese team was in US for 3 months to play the US circuit and was travelling with 2 coaches. After about 3 hours of intense hitting, we all took a break and the Coach told me “We are preparing for the Olympics”. I assumed it was for Athens Olympics in 2004, but he quietly said “No-we are practicing for Beijing”. I looked at him incredulously and thought this man had gone mad!!
Our Indian National teams are announced a couple of weeks prior to an event and usually there is a small camp leading up to it. I had never heard of a country planning and practicing for an event 6 years in advance. Hell, even a year ahead, was like eons from where I came from!!
In 2004, just 2 years later, two of the girls I practiced with that day won the Gold Medal at Athens Olympics. Li Ting and her partner Sun TianTian created history and totally transformed the face of women’s tennis in China and achieved their goals much earlier than expected. After that gold, more money was poured into structured programs for grass root level tennis and for talented juniors .China has now nearly 30,000 tennis courts and an estimated 14 million people regularly play tennis.
Li Na popularized it more by entering into the top 20 in the World and being a serious contender for Grand Slam titles. With Li Na’s recent French Open title, tennis will assume more importance. It is already the 3rd most popular sport in China.
I was in China twice last year, first time to play some tournaments as a warm-up before the CWG and next for the Asian Games in Guangzhou. In the ITF events I played, I was the only foreigner in a qualifying draw of 64 entries. The level of tennis in that $10,000 Women’s event was higher than some of the $50,000 challenger tournaments in India. All the Chinese players travelled from various provinces as a team with a coach. There are so many advantages when travelling as a team as there are good practice partners, a coach to oversee the training and matches, security, cost effectiveness amongst many other factors. I have often wished for that when I travelled alone in Europe as an 18 yr old from one tournament to the next.
China has taken goal setting, planning and execution to a whole new level. It is obviously pure magic when all the elements in this equation like players, coaches, parents, tennis federation and Government are single-mindedly working towards a common goal. I am also sure that are some pitfalls and challenges that are associated with such a strict regime, but they seem to be able to overcome these quite effectively.
India has a long way to go to come close to China’s progress in tennis. When I first turned pro, everything I did was by trial and error starting from entering tournaments to choosing the right tournament to securing my own visas to buying my air tickets. We never had more than one pro tournament in India and due to this, I had to base myself in Europe, away from my family for 2 years.
I know as a junior, Sania’s parents have sacrificed a lot to give her the best possible training and opportunities. After her junior Wimbledon doubles title, she may have gotten more sponsorships, but in terms of training and practice, she has had to do it alone. In my opinion, she would have benefitted most if she were part of a team of girls when she had just transitioned to the Women’s tour. It’s always easier and more fun to do physical fitness like gym work, pliometrics, quickness drills, stamina and weight training when it’s done in a group. It’s also proven from the Chinese that when a competitive group practices with a systematic approach, miracles happen. Years ago, I was the only woman from India going from week to week on the pro tour and now a decade later, Sania is the only woman going places there.
In India, we have never had a proper structure to identify, guide and nurture youngsters in a completely professional environment with everyone working together towards one goal. There are some academies that are quite professional, but they work independently of the AITA or the Sports Ministry. It would also be great to see more sport persons involved in this entire process. But first and foremost, we need to accept the fact that big changes are needed. Only then can things fall into place.