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Grunting – it could take years to turn down volume

- TENNIS

LONDON: Tennis authoritie­s will tackle the perennial problem of grunting players – but it could take years to turn down the volume.

So do not throw the earplugs away quite yet and if your daughter is a four-year-old tennis prodigy, make sure she keeps the noise down.

Talks are under way to arm umpires with hand-held “grunt-ometers” on court, so that they can assess how loud shrieks are.

Such devices are unlikely to be introduced any time soon, but the wheels have been set in motion so that future generation­s of tennis fans do not have to put up with that problem.

The Women’s Tennis Associatio­n (WTA) has recognised that there is a problem and decided on a grass-roots approach – “educate the youngsters before they go into ‘grunt overdrive’.”

“The WTA, ITF (Internatio­nal Tennis Federation) and Grand Slams aim to drive excessive grunting out of the game while ensuring that we do not drive our current generation of players – who were taught this way – out of the game,” said WTA chief Stacey Allaster.

“This is the start of a sportwide plan responsibl­y dealing with the issue through player education and objective rule changes,” she added.

Nine-time Wimbledon champion Martina Navratilov­a thinks that grunting is cheating. Serena Williams has said she does not even know she is doing it and Maria Sharapova has been doing it since she was four. But it is not a new issue. Jimmy Connors grunted his way to eight Grand Slam victories in the 1970s and ’80s and Ivan Lendl complained that Andre Agassi’s grunting put him off.

Today, however, it is woman players who are under the spotlight as the main “decibel demons”.

World No 1 Sharapova is all for the plan, but do not expect her to turn into a silent presence on Centre Court.

She was asked whether she could play more quietly.

“Certainly not now, as I have been doing it since I was four,” she said. “It’s definitely… impossible to do when you’ve played this sport for over 20 years.”

Sharapova, talking to reporters after making it into the Wimbledon third round yesterday, said she had talked to Allaster about the problem.

“It’s the first person actually who sat down with many people and coaches and sports psychologi­sts and analysts and really reviewed what could be done,” she said.

“I’m really happy with the system she put forward. Going to the juniors, going to the academies that are producing the young players and putting a system in place. I think it’s smart.”

But Ana Ivanovic was not so sure.

“It’s very hard to determine what is the limit,” she said. “I mean, how can you set that? Then you say you have to go a little less squeaky, a little less loud. I think it would be very hard to implement, to be honest.” – Reuters

 ??  ?? MARIA SHARAPOVA
MARIA SHARAPOVA

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