Serena coach happy to let her handle pressure points
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[September 29, 2017]
By Simon Cambers
LONDON (Reuters) - Next year's U.S.
Open is set to allow coaching during matches but the man who guides
Serena Williams has vowed to keep quiet for fear of making the
23-times grand slam champion too relianton him in high-pressure
situations.
Patrick Mouratoglou, who began coaching the American in 2012, went
on to say that offering advice to the 36-year-old during matches
could also stop her doing what she does best -- turn matches around.
The American in hoping to return to action in early 2018 following
the birth of her first child last month and has not ruled out
launching an audacious defense of her Australian Open title in
January.
"I don't want her to start thinking she needs someone to turn a
match when she's in trouble," Mouratoglou told Reuters in an
interview at the U.S. Open earlier this month.
"She's been doing this better than anyone for 20 years. I don't want
her to start to think like this. It would hurt one of her main
strengths and would be wrong." On-court coaching -- where players
can call their coach onto court once per set -- is currently allowed
on the WTA Tour but not at the four grand slams or on the men's ATP
Tour.
At this year's U.S. Open, players in singles qualifying were allowed
to consult their coach -- from the stands -- between points and at
the end of games, so long as they were ready for the next point.
Stacy Allaster, the United States Tennis Association's chief
executive for professional tennis, said during the event that she
hoped to bring "mid-match coaching", a shot-clock and time
restrictions for the warm-up into the main draw events in 2018.
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Serena Williams of the U.S. reacts next to her coach Patrick
Mouratoglou during a training session ahead of the Australian Open
tennis tournament in Melbourne, Australia, January 15, 2017.
REUTERS/Edgar Su
Mouratoglou said he felt discussing tactics with Williams during a
match would not be beneficial, however.
"Imagine your player has the best forehand in the world and you
would give technical advice on the forehand, they would start to
think that maybe it's not so good and it could hurt the forehand,"
the Frenchman said.
"When it's perfect I don't touch it. Nothing is perfect but her way
to change matches around is so close to perfect," he added before
saying there could be one exception.
"Maybe I would do it once in a while, if I feel she completely lost
it," he said. "Like during the (semi-final) match against (Roberta)
Vinci (at the 2015 U.S. Open, when she was trying to complete the
calendar year Grand Slam), maybe I would because I felt at some
point that she was panicking.
"When she reaches that stage, she doesn't have the keys anymore. But
it happens (so rarely)."
(Reporting by Simon Cambers; Editing by John O'Brien)
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