The 25-year-old stayed home in Queensland in 2020 as COVID-19
spread around the world but she returned to the tour this year
to claim Wimbledon and four other titles.
Now in New York warming up for the U.S. Open starting Monday,
Barty will meet Vera Zvonareva in the first round.
With Australia's strict quarantine rules quashing any hope of a
quick trip home to recharge, Tyzzer said Barty's five months
away had been a struggle at times.
"It hasn't been easy. It's certainly been really tough to be
away for that long and continue to keep playing and be fresh,"
he told Reuters from New York on Friday.
"We've been trying to do our best to get all those things right.
Sometimes we have, sometimes we haven't.
"But she's been really consistent just in her ability to play
and front up for all the matches. She should be really proud of
what she's done so far this year."
In a departure from the norm of elite players who relentlessly
chase ranking points and prizemoney, Barty has taken two long
and voluntary breaks from the sport.
Fed up with the grind of touring as an 18-year-old, she quit for
a year-and-a-half and became a professional cricketer before
returning to tennis in 2016.
She came back strong from that break, too, winning her first WTA
singles title in Malaysia and soaring into the top 20 by the end
of 2017.
When asked if resting for long periods before returning to
dominate might be the ideal model for Barty's remaining tennis
career, Tyzzer said: "I think if she had another long time at
home, she probably wouldn't come back.
"She loves being at home, loves her family and the lifestyle of
Australia. (But) I don't think it's a great formula to have her
off for too long.
"When she's playing a lot of tennis, she's at her best."
TRUE NUMBER ONE
Though resting for almost all of 2020, Barty was able to hold on
to her world number one spot courtesy of a rankings rejig after
the WTA Tour was suspended for five months due to the COVID-19
pandemic.
As U.S. Open champion Naomi Osaka stormed to the Australian Open
title in February, questions were asked as to who was the true
number one.
There is no debate now. Barty is more than 3,000 points clear of
world number two Aryna Sabalenka in the rankings, with number
three Osaka further adrift after opting out of Wimbledon.
Barty's maiden Wimbledon title was the fulfilment of a girlhood
dream and she admitted on Sunday she was still processing it.
Tyzzer, however, said Barty was already setting other goals.
"Obviously she'd like to hang onto the number one spot and keep
pushing to hold onto it as long as she can," he said.
"We've got a Grand Slam around the corner so there's another
goal for her."
A Grand Slam winner on grass and clay, Barty will look to win
her first hardcourt major at Flushing Meadows, where the raw
power of Osaka has reigned two of the last three years.
Barty is more of an all-court player than a straight baseline
pounder like Osaka, but the Australian's game is also suited for
hardcourts, said Tyzzer.
She would relish a showdown with Osaka should both reach the
U.S. Open final.
"As matchups go, she loves those sort of challenges and loves
competing against the best players out there," said Tyzzer.
"Hopefully something like that works out here."
(Reporting by Ian Ransom; Editing by Himani Sarkar)
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