Doubles glory no stepping stone to singles success, says Bopanna
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[June 16, 2017]
By Sudipto Ganguly
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Doubles has been the
source of Indian tennis pride since Mahesh Bhupathi partnered
Japan's Rika Hiraki to a grand slam title in 1997 but a lack of
coaching quality will ensure singles success remains out of reach,
Rohan Bopanna has told Reuters.
Bopanna, who joined Bhupathi, Leander Paes and Sania Mirza as the
latest Indian grand slam champion when he teamed up with Canadian
Gabriela Dabrowski at Roland Garros, said the country should not be
satisfied with winning doubles crowns.
And the 37-year-old disagreed with the theory that doubles glory was
a stepping stone to singles success.
"If playing doubles was a shortcut to success we would have had a
number of players ranked in the top 50," Bopanna said in an
interview.
"There was no system in place for players to come through. Whoever
did well in singles in the past did it on their own."
While Paes alone has amassed eight doubles grand slam titles to go
with 10 in mixed doubles, India has had only rare glimpses of joy in
singles.
In the early 1960s, Ramanathan Krishnan twice reached the singles
semi-finals at Wimbledon. His son Ramesh and Vijay Amritraj both
made the last eight there, as well as at the U.S. Open, and were
ranked in the top 25 in the world at one point.
Since then, however, the now-retired Somdev Devvarman's 62nd spot in
2011 is the highest an Indian player has been ranked in the singles.
"The players, the federation, the corporates, everyone has to come
together to help out for the future of Indian tennis," Bopanna said.
"That's how a sport will grow in India, when there is a system in
place.
"There are kids who have the potential, they only have to be guided
well and supported well and we will have singles players playing at
the highest level."
FOREIGN COACHES
Bopanna said Indian players had the skills to compete at the highest
level but often lacked the fitness to be successful.
"We need to have a system in place at the grassroots level for the
future of Indian tennis. That's one reason I have started my academy
in Bengaluru," he said, adding that he had also met India's sports
minister, Vijay Goel, this week to discuss how to promote tennis in
the country.
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India's Rohan Bopanna hits a return to Russia's Mikhail Youzhny
during their Davis Cup World Group first round tennis match in
Moscow March 5, 2010. REUTERS/Grigory Dukor
"I am also bringing a couple of coaches to my academy
in Bangalore from outside. One from the United Kingdom and one from
Serbia. They will be there for an year at least.
"I want the kids to have that opportunity to learn from experienced
foreign coaches in their own country. They often spend a lot of
money to get trained by foreign coaches for just one or two months,
which is not of much help."
Bopanna enjoyed some memorable singles wins, including the deciding
victory in the Davis Cup tie against Brazil in 2010 that brought
India back into the World Group after 19 years, before completely
focusing on doubles.
Prior to his French Open mixed doubles success, he partnered
Pakistan's Aisam-ul-haq Qureshi to a runner-up finish at the U.S.
Open men's doubles.
It took Bopanna 14 years to achieve his grand slam dream after
turning pro in 2003 but he said he never gave up hope.
"As a sportsman if you don't have the belief then you have no
motivation to really go out there and play," said Bopanna, an
ambassador of sportswear brand Zeven.
"It was truly a personal goal, so there was no number to it. It
didn't matter how many years it took.
"It has been many years of sacrifices, discipline and commitment.
Not only from my side, but from my coaches, family, friends and the
team, who are working throughout. Everyone has played a huge part."
(Editing by Peter Rutherford) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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