Moments after top-seed Chun Hsin Tseng received his opening spherical match towards Nino Serdarusic on the Chennai Open Challenger, his coach, Abraham Gonzalez, was on the centre courtroom.
He introduced alongside a field stuffed with tennis balls and had some intricate drills deliberate for his pupil.
On Thursday, a day after his exit from the competitors within the second spherical, Gonzalez and Tseng bludgeoned the ball forwards and backwards at one of many outer courts. For three hours straight.
“There is only one king – hard work,” says Gonzalez.
“It depends on the match (and) how he finished. (It depends on) How he was feeling, or if I see that he has to do something after the match.
“I stepped on the court because I saw a couple of things he could have done better in the day and right away we did it for 15 minutes. He likes to practise with a lot of intensity,” he says in regards to the impromptu post-match coaching session.
The unbending strategies could be Gonzalez’s solution to emulate how he had progressed along with his former pupil, Andrey Rublev.
Starting below Gonzalez and Fernando Vincente on the 4Slam Tennis Academy in Barcelona in 2016, Rublev jumped from 158th within the ATP rankings to the highest 10 in December 2020.
“He’s a really nice guy. He’s a real hard worker. He used to train with the two of us,” Gonzalez says about Rublev.
Save for 2 weeks in August 2022, Rublev’s been a everlasting there. Together, they received 12 ATP titles. But the journey had its lows too.
“There were a lot of ups and downs. He got a stress fracture (in July 2018) in the L4 when he was around 30-40th (in the rankings) and then he went out of the 100 again. It was a tough moment.”
Gonzalez left the 4Slam Tennis Academy in December 2022 and that introduced an finish to his partnership with Rublev. “Rublito, it has been a real pleasure to watch you grow into one of the best players in the world,” he posted in a farewell message on Instagram.
“We have a very good relationship; we love each other and he’s a very good kid. I told him I need a change and something different. New goals and new challenges,” says Gonzalez about going separate methods.
This is when Tommy Rebredo, a former World No. 5, informed him about Tseng. It didn’t take lengthy for Gonzalez to be satisfied of Tseng’s skills.
“Tommy Robredo called me and said ‘why don’t you work with him’. I asked who the kid was. I took a look at him and liked it. He is a hard worker. That is really important. He listens. Nowadays, not a lot of players listen,” he says.
Gonzalez first dabbled with teaching as a 22-year-old when enjoying tennis proved too expensive for him.
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It was solely after becoming a member of Carlos Moya’s academy in Barcelona that Gonzalez’s journey as a correct coach started. At 26, he was with Rublev.
His first tour-level pupil made it massive and set the usual excessive. Gonzalez sees the identical potential in Tseng and thinks he may meet it.
“He is a really fast player. He does everything very well. He needs to keep going and believe that he belongs in the top 100 and it will come,” he says.
Source: sportstar.thehindu.com