Ottawa Citizen

Halep nervous about return to tennis tour

- HOWARD FENDRICH

Flying to Florida for the Miami Open, where she would be playing in a profession­al tennis match for the first time in 1 1/2 years after a doping ban was reduced on appeal, Simona Halep turned to her mother and offered a bit of a confession.

“I'm very nervous,” Halep, a two-time Grand Slam champion, recalled telling mom.

She wasn't sure what it would be like, on the court or off. And as she prepares to resume what she called her career's “second part” during a video interview with The Associated Press from her home in Bucharest, Romania, Halep is more comfortabl­e with her surroundin­gs but not quite certain how close she can get to her old self as an athlete.

“I felt like I don't know what to expect from people (in Miami). How it's going to be, to be in the locker-room again. Players' dining (area). All this routine that I didn't do for almost two years, it looked new for me,” said Halep, whose upcoming tournament­s are next week in Oeiras, Portugal, and the week after that in Madrid.

“And when I arrived on site, the love that I received from the people that are working for the tournament, the security, and all the people around, and also the players, helped me to just forget everything. And it felt like I never (was) away,” said the 32-year-old Halep, who has been working with new coach Carlos Martinez.

“So it was a great feeling, a great energy, and I was really happy deep down that I am, again, part of tennis and part of this sport that I love. So for me, it was a great experience, much better than I expected. And this made me feel that, OK, now I want to go back and do my best and see how good I can be, still.”

Halep once was among the best in the world at what she does. She knew it. Everyone else did, too. The WTA rankings said so — Halep reached No. 1 in 2017 (she is No. 1,144 this week). Halep was the runner-up at three major tournament­s before breaking through by winning championsh­ips at the French Open in 2018 and at Wimbledon in 2019.

Now it's harder for her to know what she's capable of with a racket.

There's the lack of matches, even if she was encouraged by the only one so far, a three-set loss to former No. 2 Paula Badosa in Miami on March 19. Questions about her fitness, a key component of her playing style. And while she worked while barred, it was not easy to find the motivation without knowing when or if she'd compete again.

“It's been a tough period . ... It was difficult to manage, but now it's a different story,” Halep said. “And I feel relief, I feel the freedom and” — here, she let out a laugh — “yeah, I am back in business.”

She thought her career might be finished when she was given a four-year penalty by the Internatio­nal Tennis Integrity Agency for testing positive for the banned blood-boosting drug Roxadustat at the 2022 U.S. Open, where she lost in the first round.

But the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport ruled in March that Halep's test result was unintentio­nal and caused by a contaminat­ed supplement. The ban was reduced to nine months, longer than she already had been out of the sport, so she was allowed to enter events immediatel­y.

“The WTA is very supportive of our anti-doping program and the process that it entails. It is an independen­t process we support, the findings that come from it, and so I'm very supportive of her return,” said Steve Simon, the head of the women's tour.

The enjoyment Halep gets from competing is what pushes her now, more so than any particular goals.

“There is baggage that probably will stay longer, and I cannot forget, like, one day (to the next) what happened. So I have to handle it better. I have to control my emotions coming back. So there is a (lot) that is not easy. But the joy, I hope, will help me.”

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