South China Morning Post

A winning formula to generate more regional success

New chief Polskiy cites Kazakhstan’s domestic programme in bid to herald in the ‘Asian era’

- Josh Ball joshua.ball@scmp.com

When tennis boss Kitsombat Euammongko­l stepped down from his role as head of the governing body for the game in Asia last December, the regional federation turned to Kazakhstan for its next leader.

Yuriy Polskiy, vice-president of his country’s tennis federation, was handed the task of building on Kitsombat’s tenure, and raising the profile of the game in the continent.

In one respect, Polskiy came in with an advantage the likes of Kitsombat and board member Philip Mok Kwan-yat, the former Hong Kong Tennis Associatio­n president, never had.

While Hong Kong has hosted the game’s best players from the ATP and WTA tours, it had, until recently, lacked the players to make an impact on the world stage.

Kazakhstan, in contrast, has a Wimbledon champion in Elena Rybakina, developed by a domestic programme that has grown rapidly over the past 20 years.

It has also produced highly ranked male players such as Alexander Bublik, who has won four ATP Tour singles titles and reached No 18 on the tour.

Polskiy believes it is that achievemen­t that led to him becoming the new president of the Asian Tennis Federation, and one he hopes to help others replicate during his time at the helm.

“From a country where tennis was just starting to develop, we became a country that was home to grand slam winners,” the 36-year-old said.

“We are trusted because we were successful in creating a functionin­g, sustainabl­e system for developing players and the sport, and we can share our expertise with others.”

Asia is not without its stars. China has had Li Na and Peng Shuai; before Naomi Osaka there was Kimiko Date from Japan; and Thailand’s Paradorn Srichaphan was the first man born in the region to crack the world top 10.

But the pipeline has not always enjoyed a constant flow, and until Coleman Wong reached the main draw of the Miami Open, no man from Hong Kong had reached that stage at a Masters 1000 tournament before.

Developing the game beyond the occasional success is at the heart of Polskiy’s role, and he believes his federation’s members need to start looking beyond their own borders as part of that growth. “Many large Asian countries such as Japan, China, India, Thailand and South Korea have traditiona­lly focused more on domestic, rather than internatio­nal, tournament­s,” he said.

“We are trying to change this. We are working to make countries more open, to get them to host more internatio­nal tournament­s and to send their players to other regions of Asia more often.”

He wants money focused further down the pyramid, as Kazakhstan did when it was taking tennis from being something considered “exotic and inaccessib­le” into the mainstream.

“One of our main objectives is to get other members of our Asian family to embrace the idea of creating and integratin­g a sustainabl­e system for the developmen­t of tennis, from the constructi­on of courts to the establishm­ent of a support and motivation programme for juniors,” he said. “This is the foundation that will make it possible to prepare new generation­s of players.”

China has made the growth of youth tennis one of its main priorities, and Hong Kong, where the federation has its headquarte­rs, has a strong infrastruc­ture built alongside its ability to host its Open tournament­s.

One of Polskiy’s main goals for the year is to try to secure an Asian qualifier for one of the game’s four grand slams. He and his team also have designs on building on the foundation for junior tournament­s in the region, doubling those available for under-14s and adding another 30 to the schedule for the best at the under-16 level.

“I believe that the Asian era in tennis is not far off, as Asia is already producing a large number of talented players,” he said. “I will consider it a huge success if we can make sure that every child playing tennis in Asia believes in their tennis dream and believes in what they can accomplish.”

We were successful in creating a ... sustainabl­e system for developing players YURIY POLSKIY, ASIAN TENNIS BOSS

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