Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

ATP finally gives in, off-court coaching to get a trial this year

The issue, a grey area in tennis, has been widely debated and experiment­ed with

- HT Correspond­ent

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 Asderakimo­ore 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 final between Serena Williams and Noami Osaka, which unravelled and concluded briskly after the former was penalised for receiving coaching.

A little over a year later 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 on Tuesday announced that off-court 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. The Grand Slam rule book reads that “communicat­ions of any kind, 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.

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 wrote in a tweet.

From Serena to Novak Djokovic to Rafael Nadal, almost every top modern-day player has been handed a coaching violation at some points of their career. The difference is in the way they perceive the act and the process of handing the penalty; which, ideally, comprises a warning from the chair umpire before the code violation.

A few years ago at the US Open, Nadal termed it “stupid” that a coach travelling with a player for tournament­s cannot convey anything during matches “in the most important moments”. In 2015, Djokovic acknowledg­ed “special ways of communicat­ion for encouragem­ent and motivation” from his then coach Boris Becker.

The other Big Three member though has a contrastin­g view. Roger Federer has neither been a fan nor an advocate of on- or offcourt coaching, labelling tennis “cool” because players are “sort of on your own out there”.

Tennis has, at various stages and forms over the past few years, experiment­ed with allowing coaching. The WTA introduced on-court coaching, wherein coaches enter the court and chat with players during changeover­s. The ATP, in its Nextgen Finals competed between the 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 the ATP aims to tap into with this off-court experiment.

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 or an exclusive one for all tournament­s all year. Federer, too, spoke of every player not having “the same amount of resources for coaching” in his argument against coaching.

“Often, lower-ranked players share coaches, and not all of them can afford a traveling coach,” Balachandr­an Manikkath, who has coached many Indian pros including former world No 75 Prajnesh Gunneswara­n, said. “For a lower-ranked 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.”

 ?? USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Serena Williams imploded after receiving a coaching violation in the 2018 US Open final against Naomi Osaka.
USA TODAY SPORTS Serena Williams imploded after receiving a coaching violation in the 2018 US Open final against Naomi Osaka.

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