Cape Argus

Maria will come back – Bollettier­i

- Paul Newman

OUTSIDE her own family, nobody in tennis has known Maria Sharapova longer than Nick Bollettier­i, who is sure of one thing. “If Maria says she will come back to tennis, she’ll be back,” said the veteran coach. “She’s not the sort of person who would throw in the towel. She will prove to the world that while it’s possible for anyone to make a mistake, she will come back showing all the strength that has made her the great champion she is today.”

Bollettier­i has known Sharapova, pictured, since she was nine, when her father, Yuri, brought her from the family home on Russia’s Black Sea coast to train at his academy in Bradenton, Florida. She was part of a talented group of young girls that included Jelena Jankovic and Tatiana Golovin. “When she was 12 or 13, Maria used to scare the shit out of them,” Bollettier­i recalled. “She intimidate­d them with her game and with the sheer force of her personalit­y.”

Sharapova will need all her legendary mental strength if she is to come back from the crisis that has engulfed her since she admitted two days ago that she had tested positive for a banned drug, Meldonium.

She insisted she had been taking it for medical reasons for 10 years after being diagnosed with the first signs of diabetes, a magnesium deficiency and irregular heart patterns.

The 28-year-old Russian admitted she was the only person to blame for failing to read a communicat­ion from the World Anti-Doping Agency at the end of last year informing all athletes that Meldonium had been added to its prohibited list. Wada has evidence that athletes have been using the drug “with the intention of enhancing performanc­e”. An Internatio­nal Tennis Federation hearing will determine the degree of Sharapova’s guilt and the length of her ban.

Whether or not Sharapova was taking the drug for genuine medical reasons or for performanc­e-enhancing purposes – and she insists she has always used it on medical advice – what is perhaps most surprising in this affair is her very carelessne­ss. How could someone as organised as Sharapova have failed to read the notice emailed to her in December outlining the changes in Wada’s banned list for 2016? The whole document is only nine sentences long.

Sharapova is usually meticulous­ly profession­al in everything she does. Her dedication to her recovery programmes when she has fought back from surgery and injury has been unswerving.

After undergoing shoulder surgery when she was 21, Sharapova had to make a long and painful journey back to the top. She did not play a singles match for 10 months and had to remodel her service action. Ever since then she has had to manage her shoulder constantly with exercises and careful treatment.

She has a reputation for turning up on time for meetings – even for press interviews, which is by no means the case with many players – and is painstakin­gly diligent in her business dealings. She likes to be in charge of all her own affairs, which may explain why she chose to “out” herself this week rather than wait for the news of her failed test to emerge from other sources.

Four years ago, on the morning after she completed her full set of Grand Slam titles by winning the French Open, she boarded a budget flight to Spain, where she spent two days putting the final touches to her most ambitious commercial operation yet, her Sugarpova confection­ery enterprise. The Russian has put her own money into the business, which has been very successful, rather than simply lend her name to someone else’s project.

In her spare time, even on tour, Sharapova loves to immerse herself in sales figures for products she is involved with, read consumer reports and talk to sales managers. She is not one for small talk.

“I don’t spend a lot of my time in the locker room,” she once said. “That’s my least favourite place in the world. I do my job at the site. I play my matches. I do what I have to do and I prefer to live my life away from the site rather than talk tennis all day.”

Bollettier­i said Sharapova was the same when she was practising. “Once her work is done, she’s gone,” he said. “She doesn’t like to hang around. There’s no bullshitti­ng afterwards with the other players. It’s all business.”

There is probably no player on the tour who would call Sharapova a close friend and there may not be much sympathy for her around the locker room this week. Many players find her aloof, even intimidati­ng.

The Russian’s will to win is second to none. She allows nothing to get in her way.

Neverthele­ss, Sharapova has always had a close and tight relationsh­ip with her working team. Max Eisenbud, the agent who has helped make her the world’s highest-earning female athlete for more than a decade, is especially close to her.

One of the reasons Bollettier­i cannot believe Sharapova has ever cheated deliberate­ly is the quality of those who have coached her. “I know... Robert Lansdorp, Thomas Hogstedt and Sven Groeneveld extremely well,” he said. “There is no way they would ever allow themselves to be associated with anything like that.”

Sharapova is one of the world’s most glamorous women, but her personal relationsh­ips with men have not endured. Last summer she split with her fellow player, Grigor Dimitrov, after they had been together for two years. She had previously been engaged to the basketball player Sasha Vujacic but they parted after two years, blaming the pressure of their profession­al schedules. She is also said to have had a relationsh­ip with Maroon 5 singer Adam Levine.

Corny as it may sound, Sharapova appears to have had no greater love than tennis. Given her many offcourt interests and her wealth, she could have given up the sport long ago without affecting her long-term wealth. However, despite numerous physical setbacks – for example she has been able to play only three tournament­s in the last eight months and is currently troubled by an arm injury – she cannot keep away from the court. To use a timely phrase, it is as if tennis has been a drug she cannot give up.

“I really love playing,” she said when asked at the end of last year how she kept her motivation. “There’s nothing else that really gives me that feeling and that competitiv­eness and the thrill, the emotion that I get on court.” – The Independen­t

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa