The National - News

TENNIS ‘WE PLAYED THE WORST MATCH OF 2020 ... WE WERE BOTH BAD’

▶ After his win over Hurkacz in Dubai, colourful Kazakh Bublik talks about his love-hate relationsh­ip with the sport

- REEM ABULLEIL Alexander Bublik

When Alexander Bublik is told he might face Stefanos Tsitsipas in the second round in Dubai today, the Kazakh immediatel­y rolls his eyes.

“That’s the face you make when you play Stef. You’ll see it on court if Stef wins and I end up playing him; that’s the face,” Bublik told The National following his 6-2, 7-5 victory over Polish world No 30 Hubert Hurkacz on Tuesday.

It would be the second meeting in five days between Bublik and Tsitsipas, who was victorious in their Marseille semi-final last Saturday en route to a successful title defence. Would he do anything differentl­y if he got the rematch so soon after their last showdown?

“It’s the same, you play a top10 player, he’s good, he’s on a run. Not to shame yourself out there and play a good match,” Bublik, 22, mutters.

The entertaini­ng Russian-born Kazakh is quite the character. On court, he pulls out tweeners and underarm serves on demand, surprising his opponents with a mix of power and flair. Off court, he speaks his mind, which explains why he has generated many headlines, most recently for telling L’Equipe last week that he “only plays tennis for the money”.

Bublik is not the only one. Nick Kyrgios and Andre Agassi have also confessed that they hated tennis.

For Bublik, his main problem is with the grind, not with tennis itself. He admits he played a sloppy match against Hurkacz because he landed from Marseille on Monday morning, after a 12-hour plane delay at Istanbul airport; he then slept all day in Dubai before taking to the court on Tuesday for his opening match.

“I think we played the worst ATP match of 2020. We both were playing pretty bad. But I managed to be the better worse player today,” Bublik said. “I love tennis but I don’t like the competing part of it.

“It’s like I said, I arrived 10 o’clock on Monday morning and I’ve got to play and if I lose, I lose my spots in the ranking, I lose the money, and after that I get a ton of stupid questions and bullying on social media, whatever, people texting me. This is only in tennis I guess, you don’t see this in basketball. If I arrive later in the NBA team and I’m like, ‘Yo, coach, I can’t play, please’. I can play five minutes maybe and make my three-pointers and stuff.

“And then you feel better. Less injuries, you don’t have grey hairs at the age of 30 probably because you’re all the time here, it’s different.”

Bublik, who is at a career-high ranking of 47 this week, has had a strong 13 months, rising more than 100 spots in the charts. He reached his first two ATP finals last season – in Newport and Chengdu – and has been consistent­ly improving. But Bublik, who has a tattoo of a skeleton that signifies to him everything he has to endure in tennis – does not have a clear explanatio­n behind his ascent.

“I don’t believe in practicing and that practice makes you better. Practice makes you better but you never know when it’s going to happen.

“So you just keep practicing and then boom you’re top 50, or you are 350,” he says. “I haven’t changed so much.”

Bublik is playing his seventh event of the year this week in Dubai and says he feels the pressure of having to compete continuous­ly to maintain his place in the rankings.

He imagines a far more forgiving setup where players have contracts with the tour that guarantees them playing time.

“I feel like this is a bit of an old system because the players nowadays are different than before. We’re getting injured, the tennis itself has become very tough, so to be here, it takes so much,” he says.

“I got to play every week because you never know. I can skip a couple of tournament­s then come in and play first round against Novak. Maybe one time you beat him, you lose second round.

“You have to play every week, or at least you have to be very good as the guys in top 10 to play 15 events in the year and still manage to have 4000 points – which is tough for me.

“Imagine if you have a system where you sign a deal with ATP for three years, if you keep playing your level, you’re getting the money, you’re getting matches and then you’re good.

“Tennis would be a lot nicer and the crowd a little bit bigger because the players will not just go there and tank the matches because they’re tired and not having matches like the one I had with Hubert.”

Tsitsipas booked his second round spot with a 7-6, 6-1 win over Pablo Carreno Busta last night. The Greek world No 6 was runner-up in Dubai last year to Roger Federer.

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