Business Standard

Marion Bartoli is nearly back

- DAVID WALDSTEIN

The 2013 Wimbledon champion Marion Bartoli endured mental abuse and physical illness over the past two years that, she said, left her close to death. Dramatic weight loss fuelled distressin­g speculatio­n about her health and left little promise of a return to anything resembling profession­al tennis.

Yet somehow Bartoli is back, partly because she fixed a far less sensationa­l problem: her serve.

A shoulder impingemen­t and a torn tendon, most likely caused by her unorthodox service motion, forced Bartoli to retire just weeks after she won Wimbledon. Now Bartoli, 32, has a new, more convention­al serve.

“I don’t know if you can call it convention­al,” Bartoli, who is French, said with a laugh. “I don’t know if I do anything convention­al.”

Indeed, in 14 years on the profession­al tennis tour, Bartoli was not known for conformity. In addition to that odd serve, she had a rare, twohanded forehand and relied on a series of unusual training methods that involved elastic ropes tied from torso to limbs.

Her latest unconventi­onal move is a comeback to the tour after four and a half years of a retirement that was at times agonising and frightenin­g. Her return will begin at the Tie Break Tens, a oneday exhibition tournament on Monday at Madison Square Garden, where she will join Serena Williams, Venus Williams and five other players.

Bartoli also hopes to play at the Miami Open later in March, then a tournament in Monterrey, Mexico, and perhaps a dozen or so more this year, including the three remaining Grand Slam events. She is not the first former Grand Slam champion to attempt a comeback. Kim Clijsters made a triumphal return after a nearly two-year layoff, winning the United States Open in 2009. Justine Henin made a brief comeback after a 20month absence.

But Bartoli’s recent retirement lasted much longer and included harrowing months of poor health.

“I’ve been weighing, at some point, 90 pounds, and I was close to dying,” she said in a recent telephone interview from Paris. “So anything that comes after that is a bonus. If I am able to call myself a profession­al tennis player after that, it’s a huge victory.”

During her best years Bartoli was consistent­ly in the top 10, ascending as high as number 7. She was a powerful player who dictated points with an aggressive style that mitigated her relative lack of court coverage. It was a successful formula, but eventually her right shoulder became so inflamed that she could not play more than 45 minutes without searing pain, she said. Five weeks after her greatest triumph at Wimbledon (she was also a runner-up there in 2007), she stepped aside.

But what followed in retirement was much worse than any shoulder pain.

Bartoli described an 18-month period in which a boyfriend tormented her into dropping unhealthy amounts of weight, beginning in the autumn of 2015. According to Bartoli, the man, whom she did not name, harped on her weight and pressured her into a diet that she knew was unhealthy. He would point to slim women and mention how they looked better than Bartoli. She said her weight plummeted to 114 pounds from 165.

“But I did it because he was just, every single day, telling me I was too heavy and too fat and whatever and whatever,” she said. “So I started a diet that just never ends, basically.”

Perhaps weakened from that ordeal, Bartoli said, she contracted a virus from a mosquito while travelling in India: a version of the H1N1, also known as swine flu. She said she had a fever of 104 degrees for 15 straight days and lost even more weight, dropping to 90 pounds.

During those months she worked as a television broadcaste­r at tennis events, and conducted on-court interviews at the French Open in Paris. People were so taken aback by her weight loss that some speculated she had anorexia, which Bartoli said bothered her because it was untrue.

The turning point came in 2016 at Wimbledon, where Bartoli hoped to play in an exhibition doubles event. But tournament doctors, fearing for her health, refused to allow her to play. It was then that Bartoli revealed she had contracted the virus and said she would soon be entering a clinic.

“Looking back, I think they took the best decision for me because I would have probably died on that court if I played a tennis match on that weight,” she said. “It took me a very long period of time to recover, definitely. I went into the hospital for four months after that.”

As she gradually recovered, Bartoli started to consider playing tennis again. Last October, she assembled a team and began to train. But during her illness she had lost significan­t muscle mass and virtually all athletic conditioni­ng.

 ??  ?? To come out of retirement after nearly four-and a-half years, Bartoli has had to rebuild her strength after a dramatic weight loss
To come out of retirement after nearly four-and a-half years, Bartoli has had to rebuild her strength after a dramatic weight loss

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