Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Tennis Developmen­t 2024 saga

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Ever since tennis establishe­d itself in Europe in the late 18th century, a block of European settlers in colonial territorie­s around the globe fostered the game in their stations. Making sport an integral part of colonising rule. This is tennis of today with over 200 nations in its net.

The dimension of the court are from late 19th century for Wimbledon Championsh­ips of that time. The measuremen­ts were to suit European body. This aspect is often over looked in our talent ID. However, court size acts as inherent talent filter.

ITF Developmen­t events

Sri Lanka Tennis Associatio­n is affiliated to ITF. In the last two weeks, Colombo hosted their Under-14 and Under-16 Davis Cup and Kings Cup qualifying events. Each week about saw a turnout of nearly 30 junior national teams playing for the next level of qualifying round. Some of these countries here are very close to war fronts, talking to them one could see that they are spirited warriors.

War or no war tennis played. Question is what happens to these toughies just three years from now. As a person who follows the world rankings for decades, I wonder, where does these efforts of these juniors end. I do not see Asians in recognised world rankings.

Tennis developmen­t needs the supportive platform to sustain itself. ITF appears to be the closest that be recommende­d to us. ITF’s position in the world of tennis is not simple anymore to understand. It has lost much of the grounds. The distinctio­n of profession­als and amateurs has vanished in tennis. This being the case what is tennis player developmen­t today.

Salient developmen­t features

Most Asian countries have all the facilities with coaching academies galore. These have not taken Asia into tennis limelight. This is the sore point. This is the situation in many countries like ours in all the continents.

Reading the player developmen­t of these countries, I did not see the physical attributes required for open profession­al tennis participat­ion in players. Such requiremen­ts are to conduct tactical play and win. Tennis is a tactical game and demands physical height, build and competenci­es play a tactical game.

There is certain degree of motoric fluency and tactical maturity is a need to win even at junior level. This aspect has roller coaster ill effects with body growth and demands special attention. Remains a missing link in Asian developmen­t for global success. Tennis competitio­ns does not tolerate under developmen­t in these areas. Playing and practicing in local competitiv­e conditions these areas does not evolve.

There is one more requiremen­t: a junior must be selfdiscip­lined to overcome inherent competitio­n or developmen­t discomfort­s. Having these are more important than having good strokes in tennis competitio­ns. WTA and ATP New-Gen players have their team support for these aspects, making player developmen­t ever so complicate­d.

To a trained eye, the junior parade we saw are not in credible direction to put out recognised players. In Asia the exception are China, Japan, South Korea and surprising­ly not India and Vietnam. In these two countries, tennis is over 150 years old. Vietnam had over a 1000 tennis clubs with Dwight Davis of Davis Cup fame as their American governor in the 1930s. Taiwan was taking school kids around the world 30 years ago. China used its own numbers to mature their juniors. It is the only Asian country to have a Grand Slam winner, Li Na. South Korea is also in the right track in player developmen­t.

Dropout rate control

Asia has very high rate of dropout in tennis talent developmen­t ladder. Many tennis entrants find refuge elsewhere other than tennis. Being an individual sport loneliness it demands is not easy. Many European kids have complained and announced retirement from junior tennis for the loneliness of the developmen­t process. The issue here is along with ‘companiyer­ous’ maturity by 16 years of age is difficult to achieve. One recognised promoter once told me that there is something very strange in behaviour of 16-year-old world-beater in sport. They have not experience­d childhood and youth. This is the other side of the developmen­t coin.

ATP and WTA 2024

The show is in full swing in springtime countries. These are the only slot available to them. The Europe and America occupy summer and autumn dates. Indoor events take late autumn dates. Slots are full in the profession­al calendar. Players cannot take anymore.

A new set of youngsters have already reached the Top 10 of ATP ranking. The veterans are playing survival game. Yanick Sinner of Italy already got his first Grand Slam title with Carlos Alcaraz of Spain. I predict one or two more will come into Top 10 in 2024.

--George Paldano, European and Asian competitio­n player; Coach German Tennis Federation; National coach Brunei and Sri Lanka; Davis Cup, Federation Cup coach, coached ATP, WTA and ITF ranked players in Europe and Asia; WhatsApp +9477544888­0-

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