Mastering the mind games helped Swiatek reach perfection in Paris
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[November 21, 2020]
By Martyn Herman
LONDON (Reuters) - If a graphic example
were needed of the internal psychological warfare tennis players
often wage in their own minds, the first hour of Dominic Thiem's
U.S. Open final against Alexander Zverev would be a good place to
start.
Stifled by nerves and stress, the dazed Austrian stylist looked as
though his feet were trapped in cement and he was wielding a tree
trunk rather than a tennis racket.
Remarkably, having lost the opening two sets, he shed the mental
demons in the nick of time to come back and win a nerve-jangling
final in which Zverev finally buckled under pressure.
It was exhausting just watching Thiem finally crawl over the line to
a maiden Grand Slam title.
A few weeks later in Paris, Poland's 19-year-old Iga Swiatek made
the same life-changing breakthrough look as demanding as a stroll in
the park as she breezed past Sofia Kenin.
Swiatek free-wheeled her way to becoming the youngest French Open
women's winner for 28 years, going through the fortnight without
dropping a set.
The contrast between her victory and Thiem's was stark, although both
were equally admirable.
Tennis, with it's scoring system, thinking time and technical
difficulty, is arguably the most psychological of all sports. Which is
why Swiatek's mastery of her mind stood out.
"I don't think it's possible to become a champion without understanding
the psychology of tennis because it's an unusual sport," Swiatek told
Reuters.
"We're all alone and we have so much time to think, so many chances to
get unfocused. At the highest level everybody can play good tennis, have
good tactics and technique but there are only a few who are mentally
ready to be a champion."
In his acclaimed book The Inner Game of Tennis, Timothy Gallwey spoke of
players "fighting their own mind" at crucial moments, of trying "too
hard".
Swiatek, while insisting she is not especially interested in what's
going on between her ears, regards herself lucky to have sports
psychologist Daria Abramowicz in her camp.
Counter-intuitive perhaps, but Abramowicz taught Swiatek to walk on
court with a laissez faire approach to her matches.
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"She explained to me that I can't really play well if I'm just thinking
about if I'm going to win or not," Swiatek said.
"She explained it to me hundreds of times. Right before French Open I
just wasn't feeling really good on court and I decided that okay, I'm
going to give it a try.
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Poland's Iga Swiatek
kisses the trophy as she celebrates after winning the French Open.
REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes/File Photo
"I think that was the first moment I fully trusted that I don't need
expectations and I can just play my tennis and don't care if I'm
going to win or lose."
Abramowicz describes Swiatek's ability to process her thoughts in
the heat of battle as "unique".
"Iga really likes and needs to understand the process and a lot of
mechanisms and keys on how to achieve a high-quality performance,
how to manage stress," Abramowicz says.
"She is very open minded which is actually another great quality of
her."
While there is no doubt that greats Roger Federer, Novak Djokovic,
Rafa Nadal and Serena Williams boast personalities that help them
churn out Grand Slam titles, Abramowicz insists the brain, like a
forehand, can be trained.
"A winner's mentality is not just fully dependent on personality,"
she said. "You can create great routines, you can double up this
mindful attitude and this is kind of the foundation an athlete or
team can build winner's mentality."
With fine margins between any player in the top 100 these days --
nearly 30% of WTA players say they have targeted the mental aspect
during the COVID-19 lockdowns, according to a recent survey
https://www.wtatennis.com/
news/1857820/wta-teams-up-with-sap-and-qualtrics-to-discover-player-insights-and-motivations-surrounding-2020-return-to-play
conducted by Qualtrics, an SAP company.
Swiatek believes it is something that will help her withstand the
pressure of now being a target, as is the fact coach Piotr
Sierzputowski encourages her think for herself.
"He's not saying do this, do that," she said. "He shows me a few
ways and I have to choose which one is the best for my tennis and
for my opponent, to win."
On the evidence so far, she is choosing right.
(Reporting by Martyn Herman, editing by Pritha Sarkar)
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