Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Sevenyear itch and freedom: expect more Slams from Bops

- Leslie Xavier leslie.xavier@htlive.com

FINAL THRUST Having won the French Open now, Rohan Bopanna is eyeing a more fruitful future

Tennis is perhaps one of the few sports where an athlete’s peak can be quantified without a debate. A Grand Slam title is a good indicator that he has finally found the holy grail and Rohan Bopanna found his at Roland Garros Thursday, after a “long, testing”, seven-year itch.

The 37-year-old, who won his maiden Grand Slam title -- the French Open 2017 mixed doubles crown with Canadian partner Gabriela Dabrowski -- is back in India to celebrate the moment before flying off to the UK for the grass-court season. The ninehour flight from Paris to Bengaluru was a meditative space for Bopanna, where, the euphoria from his triumph on the Parisian clay settled in and he managed to fathom the meaning of his win, and gather his bearings.

Yes, getting one’s focus back is more difficult after a big triumph, especially when it involves reaching a goal one has been cherishing since childhood. Bopanna is focused now and wants to enjoy the new-found freedom.

“Well, the enormity of the victory has sunk in and I just want to say that all that hard work through the years has finally paid off,” Bopanna tells HT.

“On a personal front, playing at the highest level, working hard to improve one’s game to be competitiv­e at the top, I have been maturing as a player and in Paris, I hit peak. But Gabriela also deserves credit for the victory. She was amazing right through the two weeks and showed her class in the final as well.”

Grass was my favourite surface, clay perhaps least favourite. Playing with various partners, working through the seasons, I learnt quite a lot over the years Gabriela is a great player. We are planning to win a few more titles together with the next stop being Wimbledon, which happens to be on my favourite surface

Bopanna was in a reflective mood, and understand­ably so.

He has endured many near misses through the years, including the 2010 US Open men’s doubles final where he fell short, alongside partner Aisamul-Haq Qureshi from Pakistan. It took seven long years for Bopanna to reach another Grand Slam final, and this time he made it count. Rather, this time he was “physically and mentally ready” to make it count.

“The journey was been long and testing. Right through my career, my focus was always to improve,” elaborates Bopanna.

“Grass was my favourite surface, clay was perhaps the least favourite. Playing with various partners, working through the seasons, I learnt quite a lot over the years and improved considerab­ly. Last two years, I have improved on clay and that showed at Monte Carlo and at Roland Garros.”

At the Monte Carlo Masters this year, Bopanna, with partner Pablo Cuevas of Uruguay, won the men’s doubles title -- their maiden triumph. Bopanna and Cuevas seems to be complement­ing each other’s game and the Indian believes he has found a long-term partner in the Uruguayan.

Cuevas, a clay court specialist, had, in fact, helped refine Bopanna further on the surface.

The pair is now aiming to finish the year by qualifying for the ATP Tour Finals in London, which means finishing as one of the top eight doubles pairs in the world. They are currently ranked 10th in ‘Road to London’ and with two titles and a Grand Slam under his belt, Bopanna has every right to dream.

To make things better, his mixed doubles pairing with Dabrowski looked and played like Grand Slam winners right through French Open.

“We just won a Grand Slam and Gabriela is a great player,” says Bopanna. “We are planning to win a few more titles together with the next stop being Wimbledon, which happens to be on my favourite surface.”

 ?? PTI ?? French Open mixed doubles winner Rohan Bopanna with a cake at a felicitati­on ceremony at KSLTA in Bangalore on Saturday.
PTI French Open mixed doubles winner Rohan Bopanna with a cake at a felicitati­on ceremony at KSLTA in Bangalore on Saturday.
 ?? AFP ?? Pole sitter Lewis Hamilton with a commemorat­ive helmet of F1 legend Ayrton Senna in Montreal on Saturday.
AFP Pole sitter Lewis Hamilton with a commemorat­ive helmet of F1 legend Ayrton Senna in Montreal on Saturday.

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