The Sunday Post (Dundee)

It’s the rain that’s stopping play!

Judy says our terrible weather puts kids off

- By Alistair Grant agrant@sundaypost.com

JUDY MURRAY has called for a raft of indoor tennis arenas to be built across Scotland in order to secure its place as a “strong tennis nation” – and she says that the “terrible” Scottish weather is putting kids off the sport.

She said the country was “very short on public facilities” and insisted the £15 million being pumped into tennis by governing bodies is not enough on its own.

The long-serving tennis coach also told The Sunday Post that inspiring girls to pick up a racquet and get active was a particular problem.

She believes girls are less likely than boys to embrace the competitiv­e element of sport.

Judy, 57, is involved in a range of initiative­s to encourage youngsters to get involved in the game.

She said: “Sport is competing with so many other things for kids’ time. Things that are trendy for kids to play with nowadays tend to be sitting on your bum, twiddling your thumbs and sitting in front of a screen.

“It’s particular­ly a problem with girls. Tennis, like other sports, is competing with things girls like.”

Judy said some girls feel excluded from competitiv­e sport and so spend their free time at music or dancing clubs.

She added: “Girls are not as noisy, they’re not as competitiv­e as boys. So they like to do things with their friends, they like to do things in relatively safe environmen­ts.

“You know, the whole dancing thing – music, gymnastics, cheerleadi­ng. They can be girly girls, they can do it with their friends and it’s non-competitiv­e.

“So we have to make our sport fun and stimulatin­g and lively, which is why we need great content and we need great teachers.”

Her comments come as Andy and Jamie Murray prepare for the upcoming Davis Cup tie away to France next month.

Speaking at David Lloyd Edinburgh, where she was teaching a junior tennis masterclas­s, their mother said Scotland’s ‘terrible’ weather presented a particular challenge in getting more youngsters on board.

“You want to be able to play indoors,” she said. “Indoor facilities tend to be expensive, which rules out many households.

“So I think we need a lot more public facilities – indoor and outdoor – that are accessible and affordable.

“There are lots of towns and villages that don’t have any public courts or any tennis courts at all.” Judy, who is one of the backers of a sports complex including indoor tennis courts at Park of Keir near Dunblane which ministers are due to rule on, added: “There are far too many

pockets of the country that don’t have indoor courts. And until Scotland can become a 12-months-of-the-year sport, we’re not going to become a strong tennis nation.

“£15 million is being put into tennis via the Lawn Tennis Associatio­n and Sport-Scotland as a kind of a joint effort, but the reality of that is that it would probably build about 30 courts.

“And we need a lot more than that, because the country is huge. It’s about half a million [pounds] a court.

“So the key is to take that £15 million and turn it into £30 or £40 million by partnering schools, universiti­es, local authoritie­s, private sponsors, tennis clubs – so that the £15 million goes a lot further.”

“But we need to do it soon. We really need to get on to it now.

“Jamie and Andy won’t play forever, and when they stop playing we don’t have that leverage and we don’t have that incredible buzz that we’ve got now.

“When that’s gone, who knows when we’re ever going to see that again. So it’s so important to capitalise on that buzz now – and that’s really why I do what I’m doing.”

 ??  ?? Rainy days for Judy and Andy’s wife Kim.
Rainy days for Judy and Andy’s wife Kim.
 ??  ?? Judy has coached plenty of youngsters over the years, but believes more can be done in Scotland to get kids involved.
Judy has coached plenty of youngsters over the years, but believes more can be done in Scotland to get kids involved.
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 ??  ?? Brothers Jamie and Andy.
Brothers Jamie and Andy.

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