Oman Daily Observer

Wimbledon targeting juniors to make sure future is green

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LONDON: Roger Federer would probably make tennis look easy on a court of broken glass so grass definitely holds no fears, as his 18 career titles on the greensward illustrate.

Such is Federer’s ease on the surface that had “lawn tennis” remained loyal to its roots and the sport was still played extensivel­y on grass then it’s likely he would have accumulate­d more than his 100 titles.

Eight-time Wimbledon champion Federer is a one-off though.

The vast majority of players on Tour do not possess his sleight of hand or his powers of improvisat­ion and for them grass remains a conundrum, especially when opportunit­ies to master the surface are rare.

Of the 58 ATP Tour events in 2019, a player can play a maximum of four on grass. Since the US Open switched from grass to hard in 1975 and the Australian Open followed suit in 1988, Wimbledon remains the only Grand Slam played on lawns.

It is a similar story on the WTA Tour which offers only five grasscourt tournament­s in a three-week block before Wimbledon.

For internatio­nal juniors opportunit­ies are even more scarce, which is why the All England Club, in collaborat­ion with the Lawn Tennis Associatio­n, is acting to protect and promote grasscourt tennis and ensure “the future is green”.

This year, a new ITF junior grass internatio­nal event will be hosted in Nottingham, the week before a similar event in Roehampton which until now had been the only lead-in tournament for players heading to the Wimbledon junior championsh­ips.

“It’s a really exciting developmen­t for junior tennis,” Leon Smith, Britain’s Davis Cup-winning captain and former coach of twice Wimbledon champion Andy Murray, said at the All England Club. “It’s a big step forward in giving more players the opportunit­y to learn the nuances of grasscourt tennis.”

From 2022 a new event for under 14s will be staged at the All England Club during the second week of the Championsh­ips.

Also, the Road to Wimbledon, a mass-participat­ion grassroots event played since 2002 by thousands of youngsters in parks, schools and local clubs and culminatin­g at the All England Club, has been expanded to Hong Kong, India, China and Japan.

It is all about keeping grasscourt skills alive in a world full of baseline bashers, says Smith, and ensuring Wimbledon remains the pinnacle of world tennis, not an anomaly.

“Make no mistake, when juniors play on grass they have an absolute ball,” Smith said.

“It’s unique and I can tell you if there were more grasscourt opportunit­ies juniors would love to play on it.

“They love to try different shots and grass has the nuances you don’t get on the other surfaces, the ability to throw in some serve and volley, the ability to use a bit more variety, keep the ball low, play on the front foot.

“We have seen the dominance of the baseline game, but people enjoy watching players with the ability to win in other ways. We have seen that here illustrate­d beautifull­y by Roger and when Andy won he brought a whole mix to the court.”

Lower-ranked players are already benefiting from an extended grasscourt season with a plethora of ATP Challenger­s and ITF events staged Britain in June after the French Open. But Smith says juniors, the majority drilled into baseline warfare on high-bouncing clay or hardcourts, also need a pathway on which to hone the required skills for grass.

“It’s about developing players so that grass is something on their mind,” Smith said.

 ??  ?? Switzerlan­d’s Roger Federer in action during his Wimbledon quarterfin­al against South Africa’s Kevin Anderson. — Reuters
Switzerlan­d’s Roger Federer in action during his Wimbledon quarterfin­al against South Africa’s Kevin Anderson. — Reuters

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