Gulf News

I’ve had much worse times, defeated Sharapova says

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Maria Sharapova laughed off suggestion­s that losing in the US Open fourth round represente­d the toughest period of her life. That, she insists, came when she arrived in the United States with her father — but without her mother — and just $700 in their pockets.

“What’s challengin­g is when you’re a teenager and you have a few hundred dollars and you’ve got no sense of the future, you don’t know where you’re going to end up. You just have a dream,” said Sharapova.

“I think that’s a lot tougher than being 31 years old and having the opportunit­y to do whatever I want in my life.”

Sharapova, speaking after losing 6-4, 6-3 to Carla Suarez Navarro, was referring to the time when at seven years old, she left Russia for Florida.

She and father Yuri spoke no English when they arrived in the United States while visa restrictio­ns prevented the young Sharapova from seeing her mother Yelena for two years.

Those traumatic days have long since given way to one of sport’s most powerful rags-to-riches stories, which has seen Sharapova earn a personal fortune estimated to be in the region of $200 million. But despite her sense of perspectiv­e on Monday’s defeat, there remain question marks over whether or not Sharapova will ever return to the peak of her powers.

The last of her five Grand Slam titles came at Roland Garros in 2014 with the period since interrupte­d by a 14-month doping ban. She made the fourth round at the US Open last year in her first Slam since her return, the third round in Australia in January and quarter-finals in Paris before a first round exit at Wimbledon in July.

That loss to Vitalia Diatchenko, the world No. 132 at the time, at the All England Club was her first opening round Wimbledon defeat and earliest Grand Slam exit in eight years.

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