The Borneo Post

Tomic boasts of ‘amazing’ achievemen­ts without trying

-

MELBOURNE: Under- f ire Australian tennis player Bernard Tomic has boasted of his “amazing” achievemen­ts in the sport and winning millions of dollars in prize money despite not really trying hard throughout his career.

In a candid interview with Australian broadcaste­r The Seven Network, the 24-year-old also said he felt ‘trapped’ in the sport and had no regrets about his Wimbledon admission of being ‘bored’ during his first round defeat, a comment which cost him a steep fine and his sponsorshi­p with racket manufactur­er Head.

“Throughout my career I’ve given 100 per cent. I’ve given also 30 percent,” Tomic said in the television interview from Miami.

“But if you balance it out, I think all my career’s been around 50 percent and I haven’t really tried and I’ve achieved all this,” Tomic said.

“So it’s just amazing what I’ve done.

“I never loved tennis. I am just going to go about it as a job.

“Wouldn’t anyone want to take a job in a profession­al sport in one of the biggest sports in the world and only give 50, 60 per cent and earn millions of dollars? I think everybody would take that.”

Once touted as a potential grand slam champion and a top 10 player, Tomic’s ranking has slid to 73 from a career-high of 17 at the start of 2016.

After a listless 6-3 6- 4 6-3 defeat by Germany’s Mischa Zverev at Wimbledon, Tomic said he felt a “little bored” on the court and had suffered from a lack of motivation for two years. The comments drew condemnati­on from former players and pundits across the globe.

“I don’t regret what I said,” he said.

“At the end of the day, it might sort of look bad ... and we Australian­s don’t like that.

“I’m an honest person and say what I feel. Expressing how I feel, and showing emotion in a different way ... they don’t like it,” he said of his detractors.

Tomic has won over 5 million in prize money on the ATP circuit and owns properties around the world but said he felt “confused” and a prisoner of the sport.

He said he would tell his 14-yearold self not to make a career of tennis, had he the choice.

“My position, I am trapped. I have to do it,” he said.

“Not many things can make me super happy,” Tomic added.

“If I ever get the chance to win a grand slam, I think only then will I feel the feeling of being really, really happy.”

The interview sparked a predictabl­e storm of criticism on social and mainstream media in Australia on Monday.

Tenni s Aus t ral ia’s high performanc­echiefWall­yMasursaid both Tomic and his tempestuou­s compatriot Nick Kyrgios needed to decide whether they wanted to play and then commit to being their best. “He’s battling. Bernie has been ultra-profession­al since he was 14 and it’s almost like he’s suffering some sort of burn- out at the moment,” Masur told local media in Sydney on Monday.

“It’s out of our jurisdicti­on to a large degree, but we have reached out ... He’s just got to start to enjoy the sport again.” — Reuters

 ??  ?? Bernard Tomic plays a return during his men’s singles match against Argentina’s Leonardo Mayer on the second day of the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne in this Jan 15, 2013 file photo. — AFP photo
Bernard Tomic plays a return during his men’s singles match against Argentina’s Leonardo Mayer on the second day of the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne in this Jan 15, 2013 file photo. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia