Hindustan Times (East UP)

At Tokyo Games, one last dance for Sania

- Rutvick Mehta rutvick.mehta@htlive.com

MUMBAI: In June, Sania Mirza posted a picture on her Instagram stories—walking at the Wimbledon in her tennis kit, hand-in-hand with son Izhaan, their backs to the camera. The caption read: the last dance.

Five years ago, when she came tantalisin­gly close to winning an Olympic medal in Rio, the thought of her still flaunting her moves on the tennis court ahead of the Tokyo Olympics was a far-fetched notion for Mirza.

“If somebody had told me at the last Olympics that I’ll have another shot at it, I would have laughed it off,” Mirza said. “But, well, here I am.”

So here she is— gearing up for her fourth Olympic appearance at 34; shuttling between being a tennis pro and a mother of a two-year-old; giving her dreams of an elusive Olympic medal one last chance by entering the Tokyo Games with her protected doubles ranking of world No.9 partnering Ankita Raina.

It has been a physical and emotional roller-coaster for Mirza in the longer-than-usual period separating the two Olympics.

In October 2017, a knee injury forced her to take a prolonged time off tennis, a year into which she and husband Shoaib Malik welcomed their baby boy. Then, Mirza took baby steps herself in her return to the sport, getting back to the profession­al tour in January last year and winning her comeback tournament in Hobart.

Then, a calf injury during the Australian Open made her hit pause again. Then, Covid-19 pressed upon the entire world to stop. Then, Covid struck Mirza; she recovered from the virus and returned to the tour in March this year. Then, the second wave that had countries closing their borders on Indians saw Mirza scrambling to get a UK visa for her son to be with her as she tuned-up for Tokyo on the grass-court swing of the tour.

While she played the WTA Eastbourne ahead of Wimbledon, Mirza’ sister and Izhaan were in hotel quarantine, where Mirza did not get to see them for nine days.

“It’s just been difficult with the entire situation. I mean, it’s difficult enough not having a child to be in this and travel in a pandemic, but with a toddler it gets all the more challengin­g,” Mirza said.

Mirza will have to stay away from her son in Tokyo too, for Izhaan will not accompany Mirza in the restricted environmen­t of these Olympics.

Why, then, is Mirza willing to go the extra mile in the final few laps of an already celebrated career in which she has scaled the summit of the world doubles rankings and won six Grand Slam titles?

Part of the answer lies in the lone major title missing from the champion’s book, which Mirza was only a few good points away from scripting when she and Rohan Bopanna lost the mixed doubles semi-finals 6-2, 2-6, 3-10 against Americans Venus Williams and Rajeev Ram at Rio.

The Indians then went down in the bronze medal match to the Czech pair of Radek Stepanek and Lucie Hradecka.

Five years later, Mirza finds purpose in that pain.

“It was one of the most painful moments of my life, to not be able to win that (Olympic) medal having come so close to it. It was just extremely, extremely painful. Which in itself is motivating enough for me now,” Mirza said.

Men’s doubles and mixed have been India’s brightest Olympic medal hopes in tennis in recent times, with Mirza being the crucial cog in the latter.

However, she will not get a chance to better the bitter Rio memories this time, as Bopanna and Divij Sharan have failed to make the cut in men’s doubles.

In Tokyo, Mirza will be in the company of Raina, who has created a few firsts in doubles this year: a Grand Slam debut, a WTA title, a spot in the top-100 rankings.

It’s a territory none of Mirza’s previous three Olympic women’s doubles partners had managed to enter; Sunitha Rao (2008) had a highest doubles ranking of 108th, Rushmi Chakravart­hi (2012) 252nd and Prarthana Thombare (2016) 125th.

“Ankita is definitely, at least in ranking, the best that I’ve played with from India. She has been playing well over the last few years, and when she plays for the country, she tends to go up a few notches. Usually when we have gone in women’s doubles (at the Olympics), it’s more of a representa­tion rather than with any expectatio­ns to win. But this time, we have a fighting chance. We will be the underdogs, but it’s going to be fun. It’s great to go into something with a chance,” Mirza said.

The two have also made a conscious effort to gel well on and off the court, a welcome change from the great Indian tennis controvers­ies that have previously preceded the Games. Raina and Mirza spent a week together at the latter’s home in Dubai in April before the Billie Jean King Cup World Group play-offs tie (for which the Mirza-Raina combo played a role in earning India the historic qualificat­ion last March). The two also spent some time together in the UK while playing—and competing in mixed doubles—at Wimbledon.

With finer chemistry and a fighting chance, Mirza has an air of optimism around her last dance.

“There were a lot of champions at the Olympics that no one expected were ever going to win,” Mirza said.

“I do think that whenever we step on the court—whether it was Leander (Paes) and I or Mahesh (Bhupathi) and I or Rohan and myself—we always had a chance. Because we’ve been there, we’ve played at the highest level for a long time, we’ve won Grand Slams.”

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