Gulf Today

That’s what I want, says Barty about winning Wimbledon title

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SYDNEY: World number one Ashleigh Barty won’t have a chance to fulfil her dream of winning Wimbledon this year, but she remains laser-focused on being crowned champion at the All-england Club.

The Australian won the junior Wimbledon title as a 15-year-old in 2011, but the expectatio­ns that came with that success took their toll and she made a shock decision three years later to ditch tennis for cricket.

“In short, I think I needed just to find myself,” Barty, who is skipping the upcoming US Open due to coronaviru­s fears, said in an interview Thursday with broadcaste­r ABC of her move to the Brisbane Heat cricket team.

“I felt like I got twisted and maybe a litle bit lost along the way in the first part of my career.”

While cricket gave her “a different perspectiv­e about sport”, the lure of tennis was never far away, driven by an ambition to taste success again at Wimbledon.

“My dream is winning Wimbledon. Without a doubt,” said Barty, who returned to tennis in 2016.

“It took a long time for me to say that out loud. It took a long time for me to have the courage to say that out loud, but that’s what I want. That’s what I want to work towards.

“Being able to win junior Wimbledon was really special, but it just gave me a taste of what it’s really like.”

She has been robbed of the opportunit­y this year, with the tournament cancelled for the first time since World War II due to the worldwide coronaviru­s outbreak.

The 24-year-old already has one Grand Slam title to her name, winning the French Open last year, which helped her surge to the top of the world rankings where she has stayed since.

But she can’t remember much about her breakthrou­gh at Roland Garros, where she beat Marketa Vondrousov­a in straight sets in the final.

“It doesn’t feel real, still,” Barty said. “That whole match is a bit of a blur, and the lead-up to that (winning) moment is a litle bit lost.

“The best thing was turning around and being able to look at my team, that moment I will never forget,” she added.

Barty admited to “ups and downs” during her extended layoff this year, but her decision to miss the US Open, which is set to start in New York on August 31, was an easy one given the unpredicta­bility of the pandemic.

“That was a massive part of it for our team -- accepting that this is something greater than what we can control, we can’t do anything about it,” she said.

“We just have to play our part and do the right thing. And then hope we get an opportunit­y some time in the year to get back to some kind of normal.”

A handful of other players have also opted out of the US Open, including top-10 players Kiki Bertens and Elina Svitolina, along with men’s defending champion Rafael Nadal.

Meanwhile, the second edition of the ATP Cup is still scheduled to go ahead in January and Tennis Australia is considerin­g adding more events alongside it to allow players to prepare for the Australian Open, TA Chief Executive Craig Tiley said.

The $15 million ATP Cup, a joint venture between the men’s tour and TA, debuted last year at the heart of a rejigged Australian Open warm-up schedule, which also included women’s events in Adelaide, Brisbane and Hobart.

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