Tomic
attracts indignation and concern Down Under
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[July 06, 2017]
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia
reacted with indignation and some concern on Thursday to Bernard
Tomic's admission after a lackluster first round defeat at Wimbledon
that he was struggling to care about his results at major
tournaments.
Tomic's comments came two days after the exit of Australia's other
main men's hope Nick Kyrgios, who has had his own struggles with
motivation and once said he did not even much like the game that
gave him his living.
Kyrgios cut short his opener at the All England Club because of a
hip problem but Tomic limped out with a listless 6-3 6-4 6-3
first-round defeat at the hands of Germany's Mischa Zverev.
His remarks afterwards sparked outrage among some of his
predecessors in the top echelons of the game in Australia, a nation
that has always prided itself on its mental toughness in the
sporting arena.
Some closer to Tomic's home on the Gold Coast, however, were more
concerned that the "mental issues" the 24-year-old admitted to
having on court were indicative of wider problems for the once child
prodigy.
Neil Guiney, who coached Tomic from the age of seven until his early
teens, was not surprised by Tomic's words, which he felt might
herald the end of his career.
"I've been expecting this for a long time," he told the Gold Coast
Bulletin. "I just got the feeling that this is how things would draw
to a close.
"He's never had the drive really since he was very, very young.
"He's talking about 'I'll play on for so many years
and that will set me up for life'... he won't get in the draw, his
ranking will drop down, down, down.
"The writing's been on the wall for a long time."
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Australia's Bernard Tomic reacts during his Men's singles second
round match against Victor Estrella Burgos of the Dominican
Republic. REUTERS/Jason Reed
Tennis Gold Coast president Mike Ford, who has also known Tomic
since he was a child, called for the player to be left alone.
"He's obviously going through a very dark period. He needs time and
he needs space," he told the paper.
"I heard a commentator say he's taking up the spot of someone else
-- no he isn't. He earned the spot, he's entitled to the prize
money.
"Not many realize the work he had to do. He trained at Queens Park
in Southport, was there every day with this dad, 11, 12, 13 years
old and grinded himself into the court, hour after hour... I don't
forget those sort of things."
(Reporting by Nick Mulvenney; Editing by John O'Brien) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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