Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

{ SUMIT NAGAL } TENNIS PLAYER

Deciding to stay back in Germany when the pandemic broke out proved crucial as the Indian was able to get back on court sooner

- Rutvick Mehta rutvick.mehta@htlive.com TWITTER

My first Slam win. It was definitely a special moment

MUMBAI: Sumit Nagal was clear about why he wished to stay in Germany and not fly back home to India when the Covid-19 pandemic began to grip the world in March: Not only did he feel safer there, he also predicted that he would be able to return to playing tennis much sooner if he stayed put. He was right, and the decision was key to the 23-yearold Indian winning his maiden Grand Slam match at the US Open on Tuesday, the first time in seven years that an Indian singles player has crossed the first round at a Slam. In the second round, Nagal will face World No 3 and 2nd seed Dominic Thiem.

Nagal went back to the Nensel Tennis Academy in Peine, which he has made his training base, after India’s Davis Cup tie in Croatia ended in early March. It ensured he not only returned to his physical and tennis training as soon as lockdown restrictio­ns began to ease in Germany in May, but also gave him an opportunit­y to get back to playing competitiv­e matches across Europe even while the profession­al tour remained at a halt.

India’s highest-ranked singles player took part in an internatio­nal event as early as June, going on to win the Nord Open, a local German exhibition event. He then travelled to Basel in July for the Internatio­nal Crossklini­k Tennis Open before returning to the tour last month at the ATP Prague Open, where he lost to Stan Wawrinka in the quarters.

Thus, even as his compatriot­s in India—and indeed many players around the world—were forced to bide their time just to get back on court (most Indian players started training only from last month), Nagal was match ready since June. It showed in the way he played on Tuesday. Nagal was switched on from the get-go showing little signs of rust.

“For sure, that was the plan,” Nagal said when asked if playing competitiv­e matches in the lead up to the US Open played a role in his win. “The idea was to be ready for the big stage. Training and playing some exhibition matches as well as a Challenger (in Prague) before the US Open was the right choice. Especially the first two sets were solid. I came out playing good with a very high serve percentage. I stuck to my plan and did what I was told and kept doing the same things over and over,” Nagal said of his 6-1, 6-3, 3-6, 6-1 win against Bradley Klahn.

The last time an Indian singles player made it to the second round at a Slam was also at the US Open, when Somdev Devvarman won his first round in 2013.

“It’s been long,” Nagal said. “To be honest, I did not know that it has been seven years since we won a match here. We need to do better, really. We need to be winning more of these matches and have more players in the main draw of Slams.”

Someone who has done that over the last many years in doubles is Rohan Bopanna. And the 2017 French Open mixed doubles champion was present in Nagal’s corner, egging him on. With no crowd to help get the juices flowing, Bopanna played that underrated role.

“I needed that extra energy and it helped,” Nagal said. “It felt good having him (Bopanna), Milos (Galecic, trainer) and Gaurang Shukla (physio) at my corner. They were there last year as well against Federer.”

Nagal will need all of them— and perhaps something more— driving him again on Thursday, for his second-round match against Thiem. Nagal played on one of the many outer courts on Tuesday, and is likely to be bumped up to either of the two main courts against the Austrian.

But Nagal is used to that, having played Roger Federer here last year. The Indian took a set off the Swiss then and did the same against Wawrinka in Prague last month. He is hoping to put on a show again against another big fish. “I am ready and excited to play him (Thiem),” Nagal said. “It’s going to be fun and the match will give me a chance to see where I stand in terms of my tennis level.”

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 ??  ?? India’s Sumit Nagal, who faces second seed Dominic Thiem on Thursday, has centre court experience at the US Open where he played Roger Federer in the first round last year.
India’s Sumit Nagal, who faces second seed Dominic Thiem on Thursday, has centre court experience at the US Open where he played Roger Federer in the first round last year.

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