Sania Mirza stated on Tuesday she doesn’t see an Indian expertise rising on the prime echelons of ladies’s tennis within the speedy future, however is hopeful that may change down the highway.
The Indian tennis icon performed the ultimate match of her 20-year skilled profession earlier within the day, shedding alongside Madison Keys 6-4, 6-0 to Russian pair Liudmila Samsonova and Veronika Kudermetova on the Dubai Open.
A former doubles world primary and six-time Grand Slam champion in doubles and blended doubles, 36-year-old Mirza’s trailblazing journey has impressed numerous younger folks from her nation to take up tennis.
“Every time that we see a glimmer of hope, we see either they go to college, and after college they never sort of come back to competing, or they’re just not able to make that next jump,” Mirza informed reporters.
“If you’re talking about someone trying to achieve, not just me as a benchmark, but more than what I have, I honestly feel that it will probably be someone who’s maybe five or six years old today.”
The highest-ranked Indian lady in singles for the time being is 30-year-old Ankita Raina, who stands at 245 on the earth, and the one different participant within the top-300 is Karman Thandi at 265.
Apart from Mirza, there are simply two Indian girls within the top-200 in doubles.
“To see someone who is going to dominate at the highest level, I don’t know if I see that in the immediate five to 10-year future. That’s the honest truth,” stated Mirza, who was accompanied by her four-year-old son Izhaan in her last press convention.
Besides specializing in her tennis academies, Mirza has additionally taken on a mentorship position for the Royal Challengers Bangalore girls’s cricket workforce within the Indian Premier League.
Determined to assist the subsequent era of younger Indian women to “believe they can be champions”, Mirza sees this position as an awesome alternative to realize simply that.
“The whole concept of me being there has nothing to do with cricket. It actually has to do with the mental aspect of things with these younger girls,” she stated.
“They’ve never been in positions where they’ve had so much money, millions riding on them. Many of them haven’t been on TV, haven’t done ads, shoots.
“It’s so easy to get distracted from that stuff. It’s also very easy to tense up and feel the pressure because there’s so much expectation of you.
“I’ve obviously had that for the last 20 years of my life. So I feel that at least in that mental aspect I’ll be able to share my experiences in just having to make them feel more comfortable.
“It also gets me to do something where I’m able to share my experience in trying to make women’s sport better and more accepted, more acknowledged for the future in the subcontinent.”
Source: sportstar.thehindu.com