Business Day

Rune may be obstacle to own greatness

- Shrivathsa Sridhar of Your Life The Best Tennis

Holger Rune’s talent and drive are undoubted but the Dane remains something of a rough diamond heading into the meat of the 2024 season while fellow young guns Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner have sparkled their way to Major titles.

Observers of men’s tennis have developed an obsession with promising young talent as the sport negotiates the twilight of a golden era dominated by Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer and Rafa Nadal.

Rune thrust himself into the conversati­on as a teenager in 2022 by winning three titles, including a first Masters crown in Paris after beating four top-10 players and getting past Djokovic in the final.

Now 20, Rune has made three Grand Slam quarterfin­al appearance­s but former junior sparring partner Alcaraz has already captured two Majors while Sinner won his first at the Australian Open in January.

Rune ended his short coaching relationsh­ip with six times Major winner Boris Becker after his second-round loss to French wild card Arthur Cazaux in Melbourne, around him saying who he“needed have the people same vision and who I can trust to achieve my goals”.

Former player Jeff Greenwald, author of

and a sports psychology consultant, said Rune might be putting too much pressure on himself.

“Rune has enjoyed some excellent early success and he’s talented, driven and is great defensivel­y. He’s a perfection­ist, which is helpful to push himself,” Greenwald said.

“But I question the level of outcome pressure he puts on himself, contrasted with Alcaraz and Sinner, who seem to be more balanced and developmen­tally focused.

“Rune has the belief and drive, but perfection­ism can be a double-edged sword.”

Rune’s all-court game prompted greats such as Mats Wilander to mark him out as a future Grand Slam winner, but he had a patchy 2023, losing the Rome and Monte Carlo finals with his only title coming in a minor Munich clay court event.

That coincided with a string of changes in his coaching setup, splitting from, then reengaging, then parting company again from long-time coach Lars Christense­n as well as briefly working with Patrick Mouratoglo­u.

He added Becker to his coaching team last October and reached the season-ending ATP Finals for the first time before enlisting Federer’s former coach Severin Luthi in December.

Both are now gone, with the world No 7 giving every impression of a man searching for a silver bullet to turn his huge potential into a consistent world-beating talent.

Florida-based Patrick Cohn, who teaches psychologi­cal techniques to profession­al athletes, believes the coaching changes could actually be making things worse for Rune.

“Changing coaches for Rune must be challengin­g having been with one coach for 15 years,” said Cohn, who said coaching consistenc­y was critical to success.

Rune is not alone in failing to translate potential into Grand Slam success.

The Major titles have also proved elusive for hugely talented players such as Alexander Zverev and Stefanos Tsitsipas, who were once identified as the coming generation but have now reached their mid-20s without getting over the line.

Rune remains one of the most sought-after players in the men’s game and was recruited to take part in October’s “Six Kings Slam” exhibition tournament in Saudi Arabia, the only player involved who has not won a Grand Slam.

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