Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Off-court coaching to get a trial as ATP finally gives in

Off-court coaching is among the most notoriousl­y grey areas in pro tennis and trials will start from mid next month

- HT Correspond­ent sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

MUMBAI: It was by far the most dramatic sequence of events at this Australian Open, involving a bout of rage, then a sting and finally the sanction. During the second set of his semi-final against Stefanos Tsitsipas, Daniil Medvedev sat on his chair and yelled animatedly to the chair umpire while repeatedly asking—among other sentences and name-calling—this question: “Can his father talk every point?”

The officials launched a covert exercise to find out, which had fellow umpire Eva Asderaki-Moore hide inside the tunnel right under the Greece player’s box. Once the Greek-speaking umpire heard Tsitsipas’s father passing on instructio­ns, she signalled to the chair umpire. Handed the coaching code violation in the fourth set, Tsitsipas didn’t win a single game after that in his four-set defeat.

It was reminiscen­t of the 2018 US Open women’s final between Serena Williams and Noami Osaka, which unravelled and concluded quite briskly after the former was penalised for receiving coaching.

After that controvers­ial match WTA, the associatio­n for women’s tennis, began trials for coaching from the stands in 2020. It has taken the men’s governing body just a few months since that much-talked about incident in Melbourne to follow along.

The ATP announced that offcourt coaching will be trialled starting next month till the end of the current season. More significan­tly, it will also be allowed at this year’s US Open. Grand Slams are governed by the ITF (Internatio­nal Tennis Federation), where the rule states that coaching, except in team events, is not allowed. The Grand Slam rule book further reads that “communicat­ions audible or visible, between a player and a coach may be construed as coaching”.

Off-court coaching is among the most notoriousl­y grey areas in profession­al tennis. It’s a practice frowned upon by some, normalised by others but largely accepted as common practice during most matches involving a majority of the players on tour. Renowned coach Patrick Mouratoglo­u, seated in Serena’s box in that 2018 final who now coaches Simona Halep, said it in as many words after the ATP decision. “Congratula­tions to the ATP for “legalizing” a practice that has been going on at almost every match for decades. No more hypocrisy,” Mouratoglo­u, who admitted to coaching Serena in the final against Osaka using hand signals but added that the player did not see it, tweeted.

From Serena to Novak Djokovic to Rafael Nadal, almost every top modern-day player has been handed a coaching violation at some point. The difference is in the way they perceive the act and the process of handing the penalty; which, ideally, comprises a warning before the code violation (like in the case of time violations) but not always followed to the T by the officials.

Tennis has, at various stages, experiment­ed with allowing coaching. WTA introduced on-court coaching, wherein coaches enter the court and chat with players during changeover­s.

ATP, in its NextGen Finals competed between the season’s best 21-and-under players, allowed players to use headsets to communicat­e with their coaches during changeover­s. The spectacle also made for good television, an aspect ATP aims to tap into with this off-court experiment. “In addition to ensuring consistenc­y, the trial aims to create points of intrigue and insight to enhance the fan experience,” the ATP statement said.

But what this move also does is widen the bridge between the world’s top and the lower ranked players. Not every player—certainly not those ranked below 100—can afford a travelling coach for all tournament­s throughout the year. Federer, too, spoke of every player not having “the same amount of resources for coaching” in his argument against permitting coaching.

“Often, lower-ranked players share coaches, and certainly not all of them can afford a travelling coach,” Balachandr­an Manikkath, who has coached many of India’s top pros including Prajnesh Gunneswara­n, said. “So for a lowerranke­d player playing a top opponent, it becomes a one versus two or three battle. It’s hard enough for a player ranked 100 or so to face Nadal, imagine if it’s Nadal and (inputs from Carlos) Moya.”

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