Daily Maverick

Djokovic ponders how he can help to grow tennis in Africa

Novak Djokovic says he intends to visit the continent to boost the sport. By Craig Ray

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There have been periods when tennis players from Africa have been listed high on world rankings or at major tournament­s. South Africa alone has produced many fine players, including Grand Slam-winner Johan Kriek as well as regular top 10-ranked players such as Wayne Ferreira, Kevin Curren, Kevin Anderson and Amanda Coetzer.

In doubles, the likes of Gordon Forbes and Frew Mcmillan and the great Sandra Reynolds excelled, and so did Zimbabwean siblings Cara, Byron and Wayne Black. Cara, for example, held the world’s doubles No 1 ranking for 163 weeks.

Further afield, Egypt’s Ismail El Shafai was the first man from North Africa to break through on to the world stage in the early 1970s, and Morocco’s Younes El Aynaoui reached a top ranking of 14 in the world in 2003.

It’s a smallish sample size from such a huge continent and it’s shrinking even further. Africa is languishin­g in a sport in which just about every other continent is thriving. Tunisia’s Ons Jabeur remains Africa’s highest-ranked tennis player – female or male – at No 9 in the world.

You have to go down to No 72 to find the next highest-ranked African player, Egypt’s Mayar Sherif. And that’s it in the top 100 in the world: two players from Africa in the women’s side of the sport.

As an example of how far behind Africa is falling, war-torn Ukraine has 13 female players in the top 400 in the world. Thailand, hardly a tennis superpower, has four players in the top 500.

On the men’s side, it’s worse. South Africa’s Lloyd Harris is the highest-ranked African player at 171. Tunisia’s

Aziz Dougaz is the second highest, at 241.

More involvemen­t

There are profession­al players from all over the world dotted across the world rankings, but flags of African countries are conspicuou­sly absent from the rankings ladder.

“There needs to be more involvemen­t from people within the tennis ecosystem with Africa and South Africa to help grow the sport,” Novak Djokovic told Daily Maverick at the 2024 Laureus World Sports Awards in Madrid, Spain, this week.

“Of course, there is huge potential in Africa and we know that we can’t compete with football. But tennis is a global sport with more than 100 years of history and played in more than 60 countries.

“I think it is important that there is an overall strategy towards growing tennis in

Africa from people in the game. But also, on a micro level, visits from myself, [Rafa]

Nadal, [Roger] Federer, Serena [Williams], whoever, are going to go a long way to helping grow the sport.”

Djokovic, winner of 24 singles Grand Slam titles and statistica­lly the greatest player of any era, admitted that Africa intrigues him, although he has never visited.

It’s something he wants to change.

“I intend to go in the very near future,” he said. “I have always been intrigued by

Africa and African countries, and I really want to explore and experience them. You never know, maybe through Laureus and with Laureus I can do something there – a foundation combining mine with another. I don’t have the answer but it’s a good thought. “Tennis deserves to be grown on the continent and particular­ly in South Africa, which has traditiona­lly had tennis and some big names. The most recent one is Kevin Anderson, whom I played in the Wimbledon final years ago. Hopefully it can change in a positive way.”

Build the infrastruc­ture

Although South Africa has a thriving club scene and a strong junior programme, where Tennis South Africa and the South African Tennis Associatio­n do a good job

of hosting and organising tournament­s, it’s still not widely accessible to all communitie­s.

And it’s a similar story throughout the continent. Courts and equipment are much harder to build and maintain compared with what’s needed to play soccer, for instance.

“I think every continent is really involved other than Africa, which still has some catching up to do. Ons Jabeur is literally the lone African pretty much on the men’s or women’s tour,” tennis legend Martina Navratilov­a said at the Laureus awards.

“Girls in countries that never thought about playing tennis, like China, are now succeeding, and now we have male players from China as well. TV has just brought it to the rest of the world and the rest of the world has caught up with their tennis.

“It shouldn’t matter that you’re from the African continent to make it in tennis, but it has to be affordable. If the infrastruc­ture is not there, it’s very difficult. It’s that simple.

“Why do we have so many amazing players from the Czech Republic? The infrastruc­ture is built in; it’s baked in. Every little village has two or three or four tennis courts. You can play for free practicall­y or … for a couple of hundred crowns, and then you have good coaching. And if you really love it and you progress, then the federation takes over and gives you the support.

“Opportunit­ies are there for the players in the Czech Republic, which is why I’ve seen some of the great ones out there. It’s a long-term knock-on effect. It highlights the importance of investing in grassroots tennis,” Navratilov­a said.

Three-time Wimbledon champion Boris Becker also weighed in on the situation in Africa. “I’m with you that Africa should have … a decent tournament as well, and I’m sure we’re going to get there,” he said.

“Tennis is very expensive. You need the support of federation­s and a sponsorshi­p early on to buy a couple of racquets and outfits, and travel. [But] ... tennis is a truly global sport. It doesn’t matter your religion and it doesn’t matter where you’re from. It’s just whether you’re good enough.”

If Djokovic follows through and visits Africa, and possibly creates a foundation, who knows what success it might reap in the future? For now, at least, top people in the sport recognise that there is a vast, untapped talent well waiting to be unleashed. It’s a start, but there is a long way to go for tennis in Africa.

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 ?? ?? Top: Novak Djokovic celebrates after a point against Daniil Medvedev during their men’s singles final match at the US Open in New York on 10 September 2023; Above: Tennis legends Boris Becker and Martina Navratilov­a at the Laureus World Sports Awards in Madrid, Spain. They all want to see tennis grow in Africa. Photos: Getty Images*
Top: Novak Djokovic celebrates after a point against Daniil Medvedev during their men’s singles final match at the US Open in New York on 10 September 2023; Above: Tennis legends Boris Becker and Martina Navratilov­a at the Laureus World Sports Awards in Madrid, Spain. They all want to see tennis grow in Africa. Photos: Getty Images*

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