Forgotten 'newcomer' Coric still has time on his side
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[October 31, 2017]
By Martyn Herman
LONDON (Reuters) - The first surprise
is that Croatian Borna Coric is young enough to play in the ATP's
inaugural Next Gen Finals in Milan next week -- so familiar is his
face on the Tour.
The second is that the 20-year-old, with 159 ATP Tour matches to his
name, is not leading the charge of a new brigade trying to dislodge
the established hierarchy.
Coric, who made a name for himself three years ago by beating Rafael
Nadal at the Swiss Indoors, has not backed up the early promise
which drew comparisons with Novak Djokovic.
The fact that he only qualified for the eight-man showpiece event
for the world's top-ranked players aged 21 and under last week,
underlines his slow-burning progress.
In 2014 he finished the year as one of only two teenagers inside the
top 100, the other being Nick Kyrgios.
The following July he reached a career-high 33 in the rankings,
ended 2016 just inside the top 50 and slipped down to 79th in April,
before edging back to his current 51.
With 20-year-old world number four Alexander Zverev blazing a trail
to qualify for the prestigious season-ending ATP Finals (and
skipping the Next Gen event), Russian duo Andrey Rublev, 20, and
Karen Khachanov, 21, ranked 35 and 44 respectively and Canadian
teenager Denis Shapovalov tipped for great things, Coric is often an
afterthought when predicting future champions.
His game style -- patience and craft rather than spectacular
firepower -- is one reason for that.
Coric shrugs off the lack of attention, preferring to focus on the
long game rather than keeping pace with his peers. He still clearly
has time on his side.
"When I beat Rafa back then and got to the semi-final in Basel, I
didn't believe that was my level. I think my true level then was
maybe 60 or 70 (in the world); not in the 30s," Coric told Reuters
at the Swiss Indoors where he lost to compatriot Marin Cilic for the
third time this year.
"I had a bit of luck and was fighting for every point like it was my
last. No one knew how I played. The first year can be good for
everyone. It put me on the map but made the expectations higher but
my game was not there.
"That was the problem. It was only a matter of time that my ranking
would drop because you can't just win matches by fighting or by
luck," he added.
"I had to go away and gradually build my game, see what was good and
what was bad. I think I've done that well."
[to top of second column] |
Borna Coric of Croatia returns a shot to Alexander Zverev of
Germany on day three of the U.S. Open tennis tournament
at USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center.
Mandatory Credit: Jerry Lai-USA TODAY Sports/File Photo
While impressed by the strides Zverev has made and a keen follower
of the results of the younger players, Coric is not putting too much
pressure on himself.
"It's not about catching Alex," he said. "I'm just motivated by
working hard and focusing on my own career."
Coric needed knee surgery at the end of last year, hindering his
off-season training.
He lost his first three matches of 2017 but rebounded on the
claycourts where he beat then world number one Andy Murray on his
way to the last eight in Madrid having claimed his first ATP Tour
title in Marrakech.
At the U.S. Open he knocked out title dark horse Zverev but his form
again deserted him after that.
The highest-ranked player he has beaten since then is number 94
Henri Laaksonen in Basel last week.
"This year I had much bigger plans for sure. I wanted to finish in
the top 25," Coric said.
"The last few weeks I've been struggling and haven't played very
good. I've not had the best attitude, it's not been great. I've been
very nervous."
While Coric's progression may have stalled, the Next Gen Finals,
featuring shorts sets, no service lets and no advantage points,
offers a springboard into next year.
"If it was a normal tournament we would probably be thinking we
can't wait to finish the year," he said. "But this will bring
something new to tennis."
(Reporting by Martyn Herman, editing by Pritha Sarkar)
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