The Timaru Herald

More to Tomic than tennis brat

- ANDREW WEBSTER

OPINION: About 11 years ago, just before it was all about to start for Bernard Tomic, I got sideways in a beat-up old Mazda being driven by his father, John.

The streets of Surfers Paradise had been shut down and modified for the IndyCar race about to start in a few days, and as the Tomics drove me back to my hotel after two days of spending time with them for a magazine feature, John decided to make his Mazda corner like he was John Andretti.

Bernie, who was sitting in the back seat, loved it. I loved it. We all laughed as the wheels screamed and people on the side of the road looked around to see what was going on.

It was the same sort of moment you’d have with your own father, the type your mother would later get angry about if she found out. Driving really fast in your old man’s car. Doing dumb s.... How good.

Back then, life was normal for the Tomics. A boy chasing a dream with the help of his old man. Then it all went tits up.

That moment sprung to mind while watching the final three minutes of Tomic’s bizarre interview with Australian TV’s Sunday Night on Seven.

For the other 17 minutes, the 24-year-old could barely wipe that smug look from his face – the one that seems to really, really piss off most of Australia, almost the entire tennis world and one or two cranky bloggers.

But it was in those final three minutes that Tomic showed us there’s something more in there than the tennis brat who’s watched too many episodes of Entourage and is living his life accordingl­y.

‘‘I didn’t come from a rich family,’’ he said, voice quivering.

‘‘I was 12-13 years old, nobody knows the sort of life I had. We came to Australia with basically nothing. It was tough. We had a car, $200, $300, and now maybe going buying cars for half a million, a million, living in these lavish houses, property around the world, it’s my choice ... I’ve worked for it and I’ve earned it.

‘‘Being 24 and in my opinion achieving a lot in this sport, it’s affected me a little bit mentally and emotionall­y. Now it’s just about finding my balance and pushing on the next 10 years and being successful.’’

Then he said trapped’’.

Tomic has become such a punchline it’s easy to dismiss and criticise instead of sending some empathy his way. This column has been guilty of it as much as anyone as his career has turned into a slow-moving car crash between his canary yellow Ferrari and bright orange BMW. Today, I can’t condemn him. How sad that a 24-yearold can work so hard, can sacrifice so much, can do so much for his family who once drove around the Goldie in a beat-up old Mazda, and now feel so imprisoned by the life this: ‘‘I’m it’s brought him.

What does Tomic owe you? Me? Us? Some will say the A$4 million (NZ$4.3m) of funding from Tennis Australia that’s helped him live this miserable existence with homes in Miami, Monaco and Surfers Paradise.

Maybe. I’ve seen a lot more public money spent in worse ways.

If Tomic isn’t pulling on a green and gold tracksuit for Australia in the Davis Cup, or at the Olympics, he isn’t really representi­ng anyone but himself.

Go and live in the real world. Work in a factory. What about the fans who have paid for the courtside tickets? What about the history of the game? Wimbledon? Why can’t he be like Federer? Or Nadal? Or Rafter?

In truth, he’s more like Andre Agassi, who told us in his 2009 autobiogra­phy Open just how much tennis tortured him.

 ??  ?? Bernard Tomic
Bernard Tomic

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