Tennis News

From around the world

Australia fires: How poor air quality affects tennis players

  • Posted: Jan 16, 2020
2020 Australian Open
Venue: Melbourne Park Dates: 20 January to 2 February
Coverage: Listen on BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra and online; Live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website and app.

Coughing fits, retirements and player anger – this week’s Australian Open qualifying has been repeatedly affected by the country’s ongoing bushfire crisis.

So how does the “very poor” air quality affect elite athletes?

Professor of sport and exercise science John Brewer explains.

  • A visual guide to Australia’s bushfire crisis
  • Tennis greats raise bushfire appeal money
  • ‘It boils my blood’ – GB’s Broady on air quality email

The quick science bit

When we exercise and we take air into our lungs, there are minute sacks in our lungs called alveoli. They extract oxygen from that air and take that into the blood stream and then into the muscles to help provide the body with the energy it needs.

If that air going into their lungs is contaminated with other particles from the bush fires, then that can really impact on the ability of the sacks to transport the all-important oxygen into the blood stream.

For tennis players, that can cause extra fatigue, perhaps the loss of concentration, plus headaches and nausea, as well as slow their recovery rate afterwards.

The numbers

At rest, most people will breathe in, and out, around 10 litres of air per minute.

Just under 21% of this consists of oxygen.

During exercise this demand for energy, oxygen and air increases significantly, and in a sport such as tennis where players need to perform repeated bursts of high-intensity activity, the amount of air going into and out of the lungs can often approach 100 litres per minute, a 10-fold increase.

What about players with asthma?

For players who have pre-existing conditions such as asthma, the irritation caused by the particulates in the air could trigger a reaction that narrows the airways, and makes breathing and oxygen uptake even harder.

In some cases this could prevent them from playing altogether, causing significant respiratory distress, which if untreated could pose a risk to the player.

  • Air quality: How bad is Sydney’s smoke for health?
  • Australian Open 2020 draw – Coco Gauff faces Venus Williams
  • Watch – Australian Open weather forecast

Don’t forget the heat

High levels of heat and humidity are a routine challenge for players at the Australian Open, and will result in higher heart rates and breathing frequency as players cope with the physiological demands of keeping cool and preventing their body temperature from rising too high.

In those conditions, the heart has to work much harder to pump blood to the skin so that body heat can be lost, and this extra load on the heart will be even greater when air in the lungs is of a poor quality.

Players will find themselves fatiguing rapidly as they cope with a lack of oxygen in the blood, and the high heart rates they will experience as the body combats the effects of heat and dehydration.

Any longer-term impact?

The poor air quality and smoke particles will affect spectators as well as players, and some of the air quality levels that have been recorded equate to smoking large numbers of cigarettes a day.

As well as restricting breathing and oxygen transport capacity, prolonged exposure to smoke-polluted air is almost certainly going to impact on the health of the general population, with the potential for harmful chemicals and particulates to enter the lungs and cause long-term damage.

Spectators who are concerned should be advised to wear face masks that will help filter the harmful particulates from the air that they breathe in.

Source link

'The tournament will happen' – Australian Open to go ahead, says Tiley

  • Posted: Jan 16, 2020
2020 Australian Open
Venue: Melbourne Park Dates: 20 January to 2 February
Coverage: Listen on BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra and online; Live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website and app.

Australian Open organisers are confident the tournament will start and finish on time despite continuing health concerns over Melbourne’s air quality from bushfires in the country.

Some players have complained about having to play qualifying matches in smoky conditions.

“There is a lot of speculation about the Australian Open not happening, or starting later,” said tournament director Craig Tiley.

“The Australian Open is happening.”

  • How does air quality affect athletes?
  • ‘It boils my blood’: GB’s Broady furious about air quality email
  • Gauff, 15, to face Venus Williams again in first round
  • Can Williams win elusive 24th Grand Slam? Australian Open preview
  • How to follow the Australian Open on BBC TV, radio & online

Slovenia’s Dalila Jakupovic had to be helped off court when she retired from her qualifying match on Tuesday because of the “unhealthy” air quality.

British player Liam Broady said having to play his first-round qualifier on the same day “made his blood boil”, adding he was “gasping for air” as he lost to Belarusian Ilya Ivashka.

People in Melbourne were advised to stay indoors and keep pets inside on Tuesday.

A number of players have also criticised the tournament for not postponing the matches, with American Noah Rubin saying he had “blood and black stuff” coming out of his nose following his match on Wednesday.

Tiley says he understands the anger of the players, adding he believes it stems from the confusion of seeing different measurements of air quality depending on the app or website they used.

Rubin, a former Wimbledon junior champion, also told BBC Sport he was unhappy with the communication from tournament officials, saying they were reluctant to explain the figures to the players.

“Air quality is a very complex and confusing issue which relates to a number of different factors,” said Tiley.

“There are number of different air quality measures and it is made more complex by going on an app. There are different apps and websites which give you different readings.

“This is about trusting the medical advice and trusting the expertise and scientific advice of the people who analyse this every day.

“The safety, the wellbeing and the health of the players is the priority for us, as with our staff and our fans.”

Tiley said the tournament decided to use a ‘PM2.5 concentrate’ measure to monitor the air quality levels after receiving advice from environmental and medical experts.

A PM2.5 reading is being taken every four minutes at Melbourne Park. If the reading exceeds 200, Tiley said it would be deemed hazardous and play would be suspended.

He says no reading has exceeded the 200 mark while matches have been in progress at Melbourne Park. However, it did exceed that mark – rated as ‘very unhealthy’ – on Tuesday, when qualifying was delayed by an hour.

If play is suspended, the Tennis Australia chief executive says the tournament will continue indoors under the roofs on Rod Laver Arena, Margaret Court Arena and Melbourne Arena.

“We do have three indoor arenas in which we can compete. It may look differently but the tournament will happen,” Tiley said.

“We are speculating if that would happen but if we had to work it out we would.

“We don’t expect that to happen because we haven’t yet seen anywhere in the world where there has been above that 200 on the PM2.5 concentrate consecutively over two weeks.”

The first Grand Slam of the year gets under way on Monday.

Hear more from Craig Tiley on 5 live Sport from 19:00 GMT on Thursday

  • What is being done to fight the bushfires?
  • A visual guide to Australia’s bushfires

Source link

Britain's Dart one match from main draw in Melbourne

  • Posted: Jan 16, 2020
2020 Australian Open
Venue: Melbourne Park Dates: 20 January to 2 February
Coverage: Listen on BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra and online; Live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website and app.

British number three Harriet Dart reached the third round of Australian Open qualifying with a straight-set win over American Nicole Gibbs.

The 23-year-old world number 169 won 6-2 6-3 and faces Italy’s Giulia Gatto-Monticone for a place in the main draw.

However, fellow Briton Samantha Murray Sharan, 32, lost 2-6 6-4 6-4 in the opening round to China’s Yue Yuan.

Canada’s Eugenie Bouchard also reached the third round with a 6-3 6-1 victory over Australia’s Maddison Inglis.

The former Australian Open semi-finalist will play Italian Martina Trevisan next.

In the men’s draw, Belgian Steve Darcis played the final match of his career in a first-round defeat.

The 35-year-old, who beat Rafael Nadal in the 2013 Wimbledon first round, lost 7-5 7-5 to France’s Elliot Benchetrit.

“A wonderful page in my life turns,” said Darcis on Twitter following his exit.

“Thank you all for your support and thank you also to those who by demolishing me made me stronger.”

  • Teenager Gauff draws Williams again
  • ‘The tournament will happen’ – Australian Open to go ahead, says Tiley
  • ‘It boils my blood’: GB’s Broady furious about air quality email
  • Can Williams win elusive 24th Grand Slam? Australian Open preview
  • Live scores, schedule and results
  • Alerts: Get tennis news sent to your phone

Source link

Heather Watson reaches Hobart International semi-finals after rain-delayed win

  • Posted: Jan 16, 2020
2020 Australian Open
Venue: Melbourne Park Dates: 20 January to 2 February
Coverage: Listen on BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra and online; Live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website and app.

British number two Heather Watson made it through to the semi-finals of the Hobart International with a 6-7 (5-7) 6-4 7-5 win over Elise Mertens.

Following a rain delay at 4-4 in the second set, Watson broke the Belgian and held serve to level the match.

There were seven breaks of serve in the third set, with the decisive one coming when Watson went 6-5 up.

The 27-year-old held serve for victory in three hours 33 minutes to progress in an event she won in 2015.

During the match, the draw for the Australian Open, which will take place between 20 January and 2 February, took place and Watson, ranked 101st in the world, will play Czech world number 62 Kristyna Pliskova – twin sister of second seed Karolina – in the first round.

  • Australian Open 2020: Coco Gauff to play Venus Williams in first round
  • ‘It boils my blood’ – GB’s Liam Broady on air quality email
  • Live scores, schedule and results
  • Alerts: Get tennis news sent to your phone

Source link

Gauff, 15, to face Venus Williams again in first round

  • Posted: Jan 16, 2020
2020 Australian Open
Venue: Melbourne Park Dates: 20 January to 2 February
Coverage: Listen on BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra and online; Live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website and app.

American teenager Coco Gauff will again face Venus Williams in the first round of a Grand Slam after the pair were drawn together at the Australian Open.

Gauff, 15, announced her arrival on the biggest stage by beating 39-year-old Williams, a seven-time Grand Slam singles winner, at Wimbledon in July.

Britain’s Johanna Konta, seeded 12th, will play Tunisia’s Ons Jabeur.

In the men’s draw, British 30th seed Dan Evans meets American Mackenzie McDonald in Melbourne.

Evans, 29, is playing in his first Slam as Britain’s leading male player and could face Serbia’s defending champion Novak Djokovic in the third round.

Djokovic, who is aiming for a record-extending eighth title, does not have the easiest opener after being drawn against Germany’s world number 37 Jan-Lennard Struff.

The first Grand Slam of the year begins on Monday.

  • ‘It boils my blood’: GB’s Broady furious about air quality email
  • Can Williams win elusive 24th Grand Slam? Australian Open preview

Swiss great Roger Federer has been drawn in the same half as second seed Djokovic, meaning the pair could meet in the semi-finals.

Federer, 38, starts against American Steve Johnson and has a favourable-looking draw, although Bulgaria’s Grigor Dimitrov – who memorably beat the Swiss in the US Open quarter-finals in September – and Canada’s exciting talent Denis Shapovolov are potential opponents before the quarter-finals.

Spanish top seed Rafael Nadal plays against Bolivia’s Hugo Dellien in the first round, with the possibility of a blockbuster fourth-round match against Australia’s Nick Kyrgios.

The pair have not always seen eye-to-eye and met in a dramatic second-round match at Wimbledon last year, where Kyrgios tried to rattle Nadal with constant complaints about the Spaniard’s slow play.

British number two Cameron Norrie plays Frenchman Pierre-Hugues Herbert in his opening match, while Kyle Edmund – who reached the semi-finals in Melbourne two years ago but has dropped to 69th in the world – has a tough opener against Serbia’s 24th seed Dusan Lajovic.

Russian fourth seed Daniil Medvedev, looking to win his first Grand Slam after reaching the 2019 US Open final, has been pitched against dangerous American floater Frances Tiafoe, who reached the quarter-finals last year.

  • How to follow the Australian Open on BBC TV, radio & online
  • Live scores, schedule and results
  • Alerts: Get tennis news sent to your phone

Source link

Djokovic, Federer In Same Half Of 2020 Australian Open Draw

  • Posted: Jan 16, 2020

Djokovic, Federer In Same Half Of 2020 Australian Open Draw

ATPTour.com breaks down the draw of the first major of 2020

Novak Djokovic, the seven-time Australian Open champion, has been drawn in the same half as six-time former titlist Roger Federer and Stefanos Tsitsipas. World No. 1 Rafael Nadal, who picked up the 2009 title at Melbourne Park, shares the top half of the draw with Daniil Medvedev and Dominic Thiem.

Djokovic, who took part in the draw ceremony on Thursday night, reflected on his 2019 final performance against Nadal, admitting, “It was probably the best performance I’ve had in a Grand Slam final in my career. I’ve had some great matches, including the 2012 final that almost went for six hours and last year at Wimbledon, another five-set thriller, but last year’s final against Rafa was probably my most complete performance. He was in great form and hadn’t dropped a set all tournament. It was one of those days where everything worked perfectly. I could feel a lot of confidence, after beating Lucas Pouille in the semi-finals.”

Djokovic, with a 68-8 record at Melbourne Park, has a tricky opener against Jan-Lennard Struff, with a potential quarter-final against sixth seed Tsitsipas or ninth seed Roberto Bautista Agut. Tsitsipas, who beat Federer in the 2019 fourth round, starts his campaign against Salvatore Caruso, while Bautista Agut faces his ATP Cup team mate Feliciano Lopez. Djokovic has a 2-2 record against Tsitsipas, with victory in their last meeting at the Rolex Shanghai Masters, while the World No. 2 is 8-3 against Bautista Agut.

Outside of his main rivals, Djokovic sees a small group of players as potential contenders for the first major of 2020. “Daniil is playing great tennis, he had a close five-set match against Nadal in the US Open final,” said the Serbian. “He was two sets down, so it was impressive to look strong over five hours. He is in a small group of players that are getting close, in addition to Dominic Thiem, who has reached a couple of Roland Garros finals; Tstisipas won the [Nitto] ATP Finals a couple of months ago and [Alexander] Zverev. We [the Big Three] hope this isn’t going to be the year that they win, but there is a good group of players coming up.”

View Singles Draw

Nadal in Melbourne

World No. 1 Nadal, the 2009 champion, opens his quest for a record-equalling 20th Grand Slam championship crown against Hugo Dellien. The Spanish superstar has a 61-13 record at the Melbourne major, including four runner-up finishes in 2012 (l. to Djokovic), 2014 (l. to Wawrinka), 2017 (l. to Federer) and 2019 (l. to Djokovic). Nadal may face No. 16 seed Karen Khachanov or No. 23 seed Nick Kyrgios in the third round, with a potential quarter-final against fifth seed Thiem, who begins against Adrian Mannarino. Nadal has a 4-3 record against Kyrgios, splitting two meetings last year in Acapulco and Wimbledon, 7-0 against Khachanov and 9-4 versus Thiem.

Third seed Roger Federer, who has recorded 97 match wins at the Australian Open (97-14), could play No. 13 seed Denis Shapovalov or No. 18 seed Grigor Dimitrov, who beat the Swiss at the 2019 US Open, in the third round. Federer, who starts against Steve Johnson, is projected to meet eighth seed Matteo Berrettini in the quarter-finals, and then Djokovic.

Fourth seed Daniil Medvedev, who compiled a 59-21 match record in 2019, including a runner-up finish at the US Open in September, faces Frances Tiafoe in the first round. If he is to better his 2019 fourth-round run, he may need to beat No. 15 seed and 2014 champion Stan Wawrinka in the fourth round. Wawrinka, who plays Damir Dzumhur in the first round, is 0-2 against Medvedev.

In other first-round match ups, seventh seed Alexander Zverev plays Marco Cecchinato and could face No. 11 seed David Goffin or last week’s Qatar ExxonMobil Open champion Andrey Rublev, the No. 17 seed, in the third round. Former World No. 4 Kevin Anderson, who is on the comeback trail from injury, could face No. 29 seed Taylor Fritz in the second round, should both beat qualifiers.

In 2019, the Australian Open began to feature deciding set tie-breaks at 6-6, with the first player to scores 10 points – and leading by two points – winning the match. The men’s draw will also continue to implement its heat policy, with the potential for a 10-minute break for the heat after the third set. Main draw play will get underway on 20 January.

Source link

Dan Evans & Kyle Edmund lose Adelaide and Auckland quarter-final matches

  • Posted: Jan 16, 2020
2020 Australian Open
Venue: Melbourne Park Dates: 20 January to 2 February
Coverage: Listen on BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra and online; Live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website and app.

British duo Dan Evans and Kyle Edmund were both beaten at the quarter-final stage of different warm-up events for the Australian Open.

Evans got to the last eight of the Adelaide International before losing 6-4 3-6 6-3 to Russian Andrey Rublev.

Edmund suffered a 7-6 (7-5) 7-6 (7-5) defeat by American John Isner at the Auckland Classic in New Zealand.

Isner’s serve was key as he sent down 25 aces during the match and had a first-serve percentage of 75%.

The Australian Open – the first Grand Slam of the year – takes place between 20 January and 2 February.

  • Live scores, schedule and results
  • Alerts: Get tennis news sent to your phone

Source link

Hijikata, 18, Stuns Second Seed In Australian Open Qualifying

  • Posted: Jan 16, 2020

Hijikata, 18, Stuns Second Seed In Australian Open Qualifying

#NextGenATP Ruusuvuori advances on Thursday

Aussie teenager Rinky Hijikata punched well above his weight on Thursday in Australian Open qualifying. The 18-year-old, No. 734 in the FedEx ATP Rankings, delighted the home crowd with a 7-6(0), 7-6(3) win over second-seeded Swiss Henri Laaksonen in their opening-round match.

Two other #NextGenATP players also enjoyed first-round qualifying wins. Fourth-seeded Finn Emil Ruusuvuori defeated Argentine Facundo Mena 7-5, 6-2 and inched closer to making his Top 100 debut. Seventeen-year-old Italian Lorenzo Musetti, last year’s boys’ singles champion in Melbourne, eased past Israeli Amir Weintraub 6-2, 6-1.

You May Also Like:

Novak Marches On In Australian Open Qualifying

Belgian Steve Darcis played the final match of his career in a 7-5, 7-5 defeat to Frenchman Elliot Benchetrit. Darcis, who competed for Team Belgium last week in the ATP Cup, peaked at No. 38 in October 2017 and is perhaps best known for beating Rafael Nadal in the first round of 2013 Wimbledon.

Several second-round qualifying matches also took place on Thursday. Tenth-seeded Slovakian Norbert Gombos and Aussie Max Purcell were among the players to move within one match of the main draw.

The placements for this year’s qualifiers were revealed during the live draw ceremony on Thursday evening. They will hope to land one of two all-qualifier matchups in the first round and avoid treacherous openers that include No. 16 seed Karen Khachanov of Russia.

Click here to view all the results from Day 3 of qualifying.

Source link

Qualifier City: Harris, Paul Reach Adelaide Semi-finals

  • Posted: Jan 16, 2020

Qualifier City: Harris, Paul Reach Adelaide Semi-finals

Rublev maintains unbeaten streak on Thursday

Lloyd Harris sports a tattoo on his left forearm that reads, “Keep dreaming, keep believing no goal is unreachable.” The South African qualifier has plenty of belief at the Adelaide International, continuing his inspired run on Thursday with a 6-3, 6-3 upset over fourth-seeded Spaniard Pablo Carreno Busta to reach the semi-finals.

Harris, No. 91 in the FedEx ATP Rankings, racked up nine break points and converted three. He dropped just seven points on serve to prevail in 67 minutes. Harris matched his best tour-level result when he advanced to the semi-finals as a lucky loser last year in Chengdu.

Adelaide is guaranteed to have a player move into their first ATP Tour final when Harris meets fellow 22-year-old qualifier Tommy Paul. The American moved into his maiden tour-level semi-final with a convincing 6-3, 6-4 victory against Spaniard Albert Ramos-Vinolas. Paul broke into the Top 100 last year on the back of winning three ATP Challenger Tour titles and his first ATP Masters 1000 match in Montreal.

Third seed Andrey Rublev kept up his winning ways by holding off Brit Daniel Evans 6-4, 3-6, 6-3. The Russian moved to 6-0 this season after capturing his third ATP Tour title last week in Doha (d. Moutet), pushing him inside the Top 20 of the ATP Rankings for the first time.

Awaiting him in the semi-finals is second-seeded #NextGenATP Canadian Felix Auger-Aliassime or Aussie wild card Alex Bolt.

Murray/Skupski Save 1 M.P. To Advance
Jamie Murray/Neal Skupski came out on top in a wild 6-3, 1-6, 13-11 quarter-final against Jurgen Melzer/Edouard Roger-Vasselin. Murray/Skupski saved a match point at 10/11 in the Match Tie-break before prevailing in one hour and 20 minutes. Next up for the British pair are fourth seeds Ivan Dodig/Filip Polasek.

Rajeev Ram/Joe Salisbury encountered few problems in their 6-4, 6-3 victory against Wesley Koolhof/Nikola Mektic. They’ll take on Maximo Gonzalez/Fabrice Martin for a place in the final.

Watch Live

Source link

Clijsters on second comeback, Australian Open air quality & doing the splits

  • Posted: Jan 15, 2020
2020 Australian Open
Venue: Melbourne Park Dates: 20 January to 2 February
Coverage: Listen on BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra and online; Live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website and app.

She has been retired for more than seven years, has a hectic life as a mum of three and is not as “fit and fast” as she used to be, but Kim Clijsters believes she will still be competitive on her return to tennis.

The former world number one, 36, is making her comeback in March after a knee injury put the brakes on plans to return at next week’s Australian Open.

In a wide-ranging interview with BBC Sport, she explains what motivated her to take to the court once again, which players she is looking forward to facing and what she makes of the air quality issues the players are facing at the Australian Open.

She says a lot has changed while she has been away – but can she still do the splits?

‘I would be vocal’ on air quality issue

The media day at her academy in her hometown of Bree in Belgium was supposed to be all about the four-time Grand Slam champion’s much-anticipated return to tennis, but Clijsters inevitably found herself being asked about the air quality issues in Melbourne, where qualifying has been delayed because of poor air quality due to bushfires and players have had breathing problems.

Clijsters says if she was at the Australian Open she would be “vocal” in getting organisers to explain how they are going to deal with the issue when the main draw starts on Monday.

“If it’s not possible to play in then what’s the point?” she said.

“If you can’t play and bring good tennis and be fit enough to play two hours, or even the guys 4-5 hours in this environment. You can’t avoid or ignore it.

“They have delayed matches but it’s not going to solve the air quality. On the centre and show courts there is not an issue – they can close the roof and they can have the ventilation on but on the outside courts… you can’t play a whole event just on a few show courts that have a roof.

“If I would have been there I think I would have been very vocal and at least talk to the board and the tournament directors to try to think about solutions.”

She said some of the players from her academy are involved in the qualifying event and have been talking about how hard it has been.

They feel the struggles at night, the coughing,” Clijsters said. “It’s a tough situation to be in. It’s something that’s out of anyone’s control. It’s important that players stay healthy.”

She praised player efforts to raise money for the relief fund to help the crisis, in which at least 28 people have died and an estimated 10 million hectares (100,000 sq km) of land has burned since 1 July.

“Tennis is a sport that has always come together very well to try and make money for [disasters],” said Clijsters, speaking hours after tennis greats Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal were among a number of players to feature in a charity match for the bushfire appeal.

“Everybody cares about it, they all love the Australian Open, we just have to make sure that the people stay safe and healthy.”

What made Clijsters come out of retirement (again!)?

Clijsters, who first retired in 2007 at the age of 23 to start a family, hung up her racquet for a second time in 2012 and has since thrown herself into being a busy mum as well as working as a TV pundit and playing at various Legends events.

But while she commentated on players like Serena Williams, who is still winning titles at the age of 38, she had a nagging feeling that she might not quite be done.

“Whenever I went to a couple of tournaments, even if I was doing commentating or if I was playing some legends, at the back of my mind at times I still felt I could still be a player – I’m not saying win Grand Slams, but be a player and not be among the legends or not doing commentary – still being competitive,” she said.

“Then I would come home and be in craziness of the hectic life with kids and be like ‘yeah, it’s not possible’.”

That was until her youngest son started school.

“I thought this will maybe give me some time and maybe I should just see how far my body can go and just go from there,” she said.

“Maybe this can lead to coming back or playing a few tournaments a year, see how I will react. It very easily could have gone the other way.”

The other key element was the rule that as a former world number one, Clijsters is eligible for unlimited wildcards at WTA tournaments. And there is no prescribed number of events that she has to play at.

“If they told me I had to play 16 tournaments a year and I have to go here, here and here, I would have said it was impossible to combine it but in this situation I can combine it,” she said.

She is due to make her comeback in March and has wildcards for the events in Monterrey, Indian Wells, and Charleston.

Asked if anyone had tried to talk her out of returning, she laughed: “At least not to my face, behind my back maybe a little bit.”

How will she fare against the new generation?

Clijsters, who won 41 WTA titles and spent 20 weeks as world number one, has not set herself – publicly – any goals for her comeback in terms of rankings or results.

But she is looking forward to mixing with a new generation of players, who she has been observing from afar.

“Simona Halep is not a young player but is someone I’ve never played against – the way she played against Serena [Williams] in that Wimbledon final [last year] was incredible to watch,” she said.

“Bianca Andreescu – what she did at the US Open [when she beat Williams in the 2019 final]. Naomi Osaka is a player I enjoy watching – not just on the court but her press conferences. [American 15-year-old] Coco Gauff is definitely a girl I have my eyes on, especially in the big events. Fun girls, interesting.”

It is not just the players who have changed since she played her last competitive match at the 2012 US Open.

“There is more and more science behind things these days, for my trainer and my osteopath – they also look at treatments differently. There is the cold therapies, so many new approaches to help,” she said.

“I’ve been trying to go more – not fully vegan – but trying to be more healthy. You look at food that triggers inflammation differently. [But] there are things that haven’t changed – I was a big believer in deep tissue massage back in the day – and I still do that.”

Can she still do the splits?

Clijsters was always well known for her agility on court – often doing the splits when trying to get to shots. Unsurprising, perhaps, given that her mother was a gymnast.

And it sounds like we can expect to see some more.

“A few weeks ago when I was on training camp I did [the splits] out of the blue. Everybody on the sideline stopped and was kind of like ‘why did you do that?’, I was like ‘sorry, I don’t know, how it happened’,” she smiled.

“I should be able to, just make sure I’m fit enough to get back up again with no pulled muscles.”

Despite her return already being postponed because of a knee injury, she has not been put off by the physical pressures.

“The knee was an out-of-the-blue bad luck thing. If you put in the time, and you look at everything around you – the diet, the sleep, then you are capable of doing a lot of things,” she said.

“If I do all that – I’m not saying I’m going to be as fit and as fast and do the splits like I used to do – I do think I’m capable of getting to a certain level that I feel happy with. It doesn’t have to be a contender for a Grand Slam but to put myself for a level where I’m happy – that’s the goal.”

But before all that, though, she tells us she needs to take her daughter to basketball practice.

“But I like that, it’s my life.”

Source link