Never earlier than has Bjorn Borg appeared as free-spirited as he has within the latest previous. For a person who was so rigidly self-controlled on the pinnacle of his profession within the Nineteen Seventies – folklore has it that he wouldn’t shave for the 2 full weeks throughout Wimbledon – watching him captain Team Europe within the Laver Cup, journey the world, coach on-court and provides interviews is a nice shock.
On Tuesday, at The Leela Palace right here, Borg was as relaxed and uninhibited, sporting informal cotton shorts and a navy blue shirt with sleeves rolled as much as the elbow.
With Vijay Amritraj, his buddy of fifty years and a speaker-par-excellence, by his aspect, Borg reminisced about his enjoying days, the good rivalry with John McEnroe and the choice to stroll away from the sport at 26.
“Back then I was a very famous person,” Borg stated. “At hotels, restaurants, wherever I went, there were always hundreds of people. At the beginning of your career, you will love that. But after some years, you would want some private life. That’s why I stepped away. If like [Roger] Federer and [Rafael] Nadal I had more security, I may have played for more years.”
While Borg’s battle was with the surface world – in Amritraj’s phrases, Borg was ‘as popular as the Beatles and more popular than ABBA’ – McEnroe’s was with the Swede. For the Americans, Borg was the gold commonplace and when that measuring stick disappeared all of the sudden, McEnroe was like fish out of water.
“After I stepped away, we played an exhibition in Tokyo,” Borg recalled. “He [McEnroe] got here to me and stated ‘you cannot stop playing’. I requested ‘why not’. He stated ‘because I need you there’. He appreciated to maintain pushing me. He loved it and that was crucial to him.
For Amritraj, it was Borg’s comeback in that 1980 closing, after dropping the fourth-set tiebreaker 16-18, that stands out to today.
| Photo Credit: Murali Kumar Ok / The Hindu
“We became very close after the 1980 Wimbledon final. Before that, as everyone knows, he was a bit crazy on the court and expressed his feelings more. But in that particular match, he didn’t say a word. He got so much respect from people all over because that was a different side of him. It was not only great for us, but for tennis. We did something really big for the sport.”
For Amritraj, it was Borg’s comeback in that 1980 closing, after dropping the fourth-set tiebreaker 16-18, that stands out to today.
“How do you recover after losing seven match points in the fourth set and then pull yourself together mentally? That’s the greatness of our sport. It has taught us that we are capable of more than what we think. It pushes you to the brink, throws you over the precipice and brings you back again. If you are able to live through that, you become a better person.”
Source: sportstar.thehindu.com