A final report into corruption in tennis says there should be no live streaming, or scoring data provided, at the lowest tier of professional tennis.
The Independent Review Panel has also reiterated its view that betting companies should no longer be able to sponsor tournaments.
But it has watered down a suggestion in April’s interim report that players’ appearance fees should be published.
The report was set up after concerns were raised about betting in tennis.
A joint BBC and BuzzFeed News investigation uncovered suspected illegal betting in January 2016.
The panel says it has been “impressed with the level of assistance and cooperation provided to it throughout”.
The sport’s various governing bodies have committed to implementing the recommendations in full, and the panel says it “considers the sport is well-positioned to address the integrity challenges that it faces”.
The ban on live scoring data was initially proposed for all events offering up to $25,000 in prize money.
But following a period of consultation, the panel has decided it should just apply to $15,000 events, as evidence suggests the problem is significantly greater at this lower level.
The International Tennis Federation (ITF) currently has a contract in place with Sportradar, which allows the Swiss based company to act as the official distributor of all its data.
During the consultation period Sportradar argued preventing the sale of official data would open up a black market.
David Lampitt, Sportradar’s managing director group operations, said the company “welcomed” the decision to lower the ban to $15,000 events.
“However we believe that they could and should have gone further. The panel’s approach remains disproportionate,” he added
The contract, worth in the region of $70m, still has three years to run.
The panel says the ITF should not “enter into any new contract or extend the term of any current arrangements” – but stresses the other governing bodies should compensate it for the loss of vital future revenue.
The report adds that “as yet, the international governing bodies have not established a basis, or even a clear commitment, to provide the funding”.
On appearance fees, the panel has accepted a proposal that a confidential report should instead be sent to the Tennis Integrity Unit. It says it recognises the practical difficulties in publishing fees, or imposing limits on the amount a tournament is able to pay.
Independent Review Panel Finalises Route To Combat Betting-Related Corruption In Professional Tennis
Dec192018
A statement issued on behalf of the sport’s governing bodies
Delivering a world-class anti-corruption regime for professional tennis remains a paramount priority for the international governing bodies of tennis.
The Independent Review Panel’s Final Report, published today (19 December 2018) at www.tennisirp.com maps out a comprehensive route for the sport to follow in combatting betting-related corruption, particularly the vulnerabilities highlighted at the lower levels of the game.
It also confirms that the Panel has seen no evidence of any institutional corruption or cover-up by the international governing bodies or the Tennis Integrity Unit (TIU).
Having already confirmed our agreement in principle to the draft recommendations contained in the IRP’s Interim Report of April 2018, we will now work collectively to prioritise timely implementation of the Panel’s final integrity and governance recommendations.
The Panel acknowledges and credits progress already made in important areas, such as the number of successful prosecutions secured by the TIU; its expanded relationships with the betting industry; a major commitment to education and increased staffing levels. There is also recognition of structural changes made to improve the player pathway by the ITF and ATP.
Alongside the continued development and increased funding of the TIU, the sport has also acted on the Panel’s governance recommendations, and the recruitment process for a Chair to lead the new, independent Supervisory Board that will provide the highest quality strategic oversight, direction and guidance for the TIU is under way.
We aim to make this important appointment in early 2019, to be closely followed by selection of the remaining Board members.
Statement issued on behalf of: Steve Simon, Chief Executive Officer of the WTA and Chairman of the Tennis Integrity Board Chris Kermode, Executive Chairman and President of the ATP David Haggerty, President of the ITF Philip Brook, Chairman, Wimbledon Katrina Adams, Chair, US Open Bernard Giudicelli, Chairman, Roland Garros Jayne Hrdlicka, Chair, Australian Open
Continuing our Season In Review series, ATPTour.com pays tribute to six players who retired in 2018. In part one, we looked back at the careers of five other players, including Tommy Haas.
Mikhail Youzhny (Retired: 21 September), career-high No. 8 The Russian finished his career one victory shy of 500 match wins, but it didn’t matter to Youzhny, who spent 13 straights seasons in the Top 50 of the ATP Rankings. As the son of a Soviet Army Colonel, his salute celebration at the end of his 499 match wins became his trademark. Arguably, the match that made him came in November 2002, when he rallied from two sets down to beat fellow 20-year-old Paul-Henri Mathieu in the fifth rubber to give Russia its first Davis Cup trophy.
Having won his first ATP Tour title earlier that year on Stuttgart clay, Youzhny grew in confidence winning a further nine trophies from 20 finals. He reached his first Grand Slam championship semi-final at the 2006 US Open (also 2010) and 18 months later rose to No. 8 in the ATP Rankings (on 28 January 2008). Youzhny also advanced to the quarter-finals of the three other major championships. Read & Watch Tribute
Florian Mayer (Retired: 27 August), career-high No. 18 With long backswings, the German’s style of play was unorthodox but effective. The 2004 ATP Newcomer of the Year and a two-time Wimbledon quarter-finalist rose to a career-high No. 18 in the ATP Rankings on 6 June 2011. Last month, Mayer told ATPWorldTour.com, “Having gone 0-4 in my first four finals, I began to question whether I was good enough to win a coveted ATP title. I needed to wait until 2011 in Bucharest to lift a trophy, but my final victory over Alexander Zverev in 2016 [at the Gerry Weber Open in Halle] will be the one I always remember as it was on my comeback from injuries, after almost two years on the sidelines.”
In 2009, Mayer fell as low as No. 450 in the ATP Rankings, but finished the year at No. 61. He recorded 12 Top 10 wins during his career and went 2-5 in ATP Tour finals. The German also won 14 titles from 25 finals on the ATP Challenger Tour.
Gilles Muller (Retired: 27 August), career-high No. 21 In order to succeed as a tennis player, Muller had to leave his native Luxembourg. He did so of his own violation (his parents did not push him) and he would later finish 2001 as the year-end junior World No. 1. Thereafter the serve-volleyer forged a career that was centred on a strong work ethic, which included quarter-final runs at the 2008 US Open (as a qualifier) and 2017 Wimbledon (including a 15-13 fifth set win over Rafael Nadal in the fourth round).
Having reached his first ATP Tour final in July 2004 at the Citi Open (l. to Hewitt), Muller needed to wait 13 seasons until he snapped a five-final losing streak. In an emotional 2017 Sydney International final, with his family courtside, 34-year-old Muller beat Daniel Evans to lift the trophy and later, in June, he captured his second crown at the Libema Open (d. Karlovic). Read & Watch Tribute
Julien Benneteau (Retired: 26 October), career-high No. 25 The softly spoken Frenchman was a throwback to a bygone era, who played as he dressed – with great style and flair – to rise to a career-high No. 25 in the ATP Rankings (17 November 2014). His 0-10 record in ATP Tour finals is an unwanted Open Era record, with his closest shot coming at Kuala Lumpur in 2013 when he failed to convert a match point against Joao Sousa. But Benneteau troubled all-time greats, with victories over Roger Federer, Nadal and Novak Djokovic among 18 Top 10 wins on all surfaces.
His 12 doubles crowns from 21 finals included ended France’s 30-year title wait at 2014 Roland Garros (w/Roger-Vasselin) and two crowns at ATP Masters 1000s, at the 2009 Rolex Shanghai Masters (w/Tsonga) and the 2013 Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters (w/Zimonjic). The former doubles World No. 5 also secured the bronze medal for France with Richard Gasquet at the 2012 London Olympics at Wimbledon and helped his nation win the 2017 Davis Cup crown. Benneteau will now focus on his role as France’s Fed Cup captain. Read & Watch Tribute
Max Mirnyi (Retired: 29 November), career-high doubles No. 1 Nicknamed “The Beast”, Mirnyi had everything to succeed as an athlete: a strong work ethic and great physical attributes. Mirnyi climbed to the top of the ATP Doubles Rankings for the first time on 9 June 2003, and he would spend 57 weeks atop the doubles mountain, good enough for 15th all-time. The Belarusian won 52 tour-level doubles titles (52-46), and Mirnyi recently finished his 20th consecutive doubles campaign inside the Top 100.
As a singles player, he ascended as high as No. 18 in the ATP Rankings, and won 244 tour-level matches, including 16 victories against Top 10 opponents. He also captured the 2003 ABN Amro World Tennis Tournament crown. The six-time men’s doubles Grand Slam winner and 2012 mixed doubles Olympic gold medallist (w/Victoria Azarenka) qualified for the Nitto ATP Finals 10 times, lifting the trophy in 2006 with Jonas Bjorkman and in 2011 with Daniel Nestor. ‘The Beast’ also captured 16 Masters 1000 doubles titles, including the 2003 Miami crown with Roger Federer. Read & Watch Tribute
Ram was the first ATP Tour player to enroll at IU East under the educational agreement
Most tennis players on the ATP Tour think about success in terms of match wins, titles, or meeting an ATP Ranking goal. But recently, Rajeev Ram accomplished something that has been more than 15 years in the making, receiving his college degree from Indiana University East, a partner of the ATP Tour in supporting Tour members in their pursuit of higher education opportunities.
“It was always something I knew I wanted to do. I wasn’t sure how I was going to do it. I actually explored a couple of options like community college. I knew I wanted to do it online obviously because while I’m playing I had no chance to actually be a regular student,” Ram said. “It just seemed like it was always the right fit, the perfect timing and everything, so I took advantage of it.”
Ram attended the University of Illinois for one semester in 2003, winning the NCAA Doubles National Championship with Brian Wilson. He then left school to embark on his career as a professional tennis player, but never left the hopes of earning a degree behind.
“It’s a big deal in our family. It was actually a big deal for me to leave school early to start with to pursue professional tennis. It’s always been a thing that my parents made pretty clear, that [getting a degree] would be something beneficial for me to have,” Ram said. “So I think it’s always been in the back of my head, not knowing how I was actually going to go about it. I wasn’t sure about that and when the ATP came up with this program with IU East, it seemed like a pretty good fit.”
Ram was the first ATP Tour player to enroll at Indiana University East under the educational agreement, which provides several options for players to complete their degree online. Ram, who has won 17 tour-level doubles titles and lifted two singles trophies, earned a General Studies Degree with a concentration in humanities and behavioral science.
“I enjoyed some of the psychology classes because obviously with tennis there’s a big psychological component and I think learning even a very basic level of psychology was pretty interesting because I could relate to it via what I do on the court.”
For some, school may seem like a burden with all the work that comes with it. It may appear especially difficult for a player on the ATP Tour to handle. But Ram, who began at Indiana University East in fall 2015, enjoyed the experience.
“I didn’t mind it at all. It was kind of a nice way to focus on something else. A lot of times with tennis we get so revved up in these types of things: matches, training and traveling. It was a really nice way to put my brain to work in another arena and I did some of my best schoolwork on long plane flights,” Ram said. “I had nothing else to distract me, I’d download a couple of assignments and on an international flight, it was quite conducive to that.
“I think it was a great distraction, almost. It was something I could concentrate on that was not tennis, especially if for some reason if I had a tough match or a tough week or a tough stretch, it was something outside of that to focus on and to immerse myself in, if you will. But I just feel like I was able to do it at my pace and I was able to do it pretty much how I wanted, which made it nice.”
Ram had especially high praise for the staff at Indiana University East and its work to make the process seamless for him.
“They really understood and appreciated the fact that I was a tennis player, I travel a lot and I’m still attempting to do this. They worked with me, especially my scheduling advisor,” Ram said. “It was nice to have that guidance to make it not be an incredible burden. I never thought about it being too much or that I didn’t want to do it anymore. I did it at my own pace and it was never something I felt so much pressure about.”
And now, more than 15 years after leaving Illinois, Ram has accomplished a longtime goal.
“It’s nice. It’s definitely rewarding and there’s definitely a sense of accomplishment with it, too,” Ram said. “It’s just a sense of closure, almost. I started college, I left early and it was always there in the back of my mind, maybe even moreso if I had not gone to college at all in the first place.”
Did You Know? – In conjunction with Indiana University East, scholarships are available to ATP members who meet the criteria for admission and enroll in a degree program at the University. Indiana University East’s online degree completion programs offer the flexibility to fit studying around a tournament schedule.
Marian Vajda was named the ATP Caoch of the Year in the 2018 ATP World Tour Awards presented by Moët & Chandon, in recognition of his efforts to help Novak Djokovic climb from No. 22 in the ATP Rankings in June to World No. 1 to finish the year.
“I would like to really dedicate this to all of our team,” said Vajda, who returned to Djokovic’s team along with fitness coach Gebhard Gritsch in April after a one-year split.
Djokovic got off to a slow 6-6 start to 2018, undergoing a right elbow procedure after the Australian Open. But once reunited with Vajda, Djokovic’s season took off. Grand Slam victories at Wimbledon and the US Open, as well as ATP World Tour Masters 1000 crowns in Cincinnati and Shanghai highlighted his efforts, as Djokovic finished atop the year-end ATP Rankings for the fifth time.
You May Also Like: Read & Watch: Djokovic Presented Year-End ATP World Tour No. 1 Trophy
“I’m really glad that after coming back, he reached No. 1 in the world,” Vajda said of his pupil’s run of form.
The award was nominated and voted on by fellow ATP coach members. Fellow finalists were Jan de Witt (Nikoloz Basilashvili), Carlos Moya (Rafael Nadal), Sebastian Prieto (Juan Martin del Potro) and Simone Vagnozzi (Marco Cecchinato).
ATPTour.com pays tribute to Max Mirnyi after his retirement
The day before his 10th birthday, Max Mirnyi sat in front of his family’s black and white television in Minsk, Belarus. It was around 10 pm — well past the youngster’s bedtime — but Mirnyi’s parents let him stay awake to watch highlights of that day’s 1987 Wimbledon final, in which Pat Cash upset Ivan Lendl to lift the trophy.
It was Mirnyi’s first exposure to tennis on television. You can say that evening’s sports news show changed his life forever.
“I saw this checkerboard bandana and I saw him move like a cat at the net and I was fascinated,” Mirnyi told ATPTour.com. “I remember one of the shots that he hit was behind the back. Lendl hit a smash and he made a reflex behind the back and I said, ‘Wow, that’s cool!’ It was on a black and white TV, but nevertheless I had the imagination of the grass being green.”
Mirnyi was hooked, and suddenly that young boy — who probably should have been asleep — had a dream. And he certainly made it come true.
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Just more than a decade later, Mirnyi began to find his footing as a professional. Still just No. 228 in the ATP Rankings in April 1999, the Belarusian played Jim Courier at two ATP World Tour events in Florida (Orlando and Delray Beach) within the space of a month. Mirnyi molded his game as a teenager at the IMG Academy in Florida, under the guidance of Nick Bollettieri. It was at that same facility that Courier grew up, eventually becoming a World No. 1.
“I remember that early in the match I was getting a sense of confidence, even though I was maybe trailing or being even on the scoreline. I was feeling that, ‘Wow, if it’s 4-4 in the first set or if I’m still competing with Jim Courier, it means that I’m doing something that’s causing him discomfort’,” Mirnyi remembered. “Beating him there, those two weeks, I felt like that’s some sort of a sign for me to really believe that I belong and it definitely gave me the push from within to continue and try to make it a career.”
And that Mirnyi did. He would earn his first Top 10 win the next year against Lleyton Hewitt at the Sydney Olympics, and he’d eventually tally 16 victories against Top 10 opponents in singles.
Mirnyi’s two greatest singles accomplishments were winning his lone singles title at Rotterdam in 2003 and reaching the 2001 Stuttgart final, beating four legends — Gustavo Kuerten, Goran Ivanisevic, Pete Sampras and Yevgeny Kafelnikov — en route to the championship match before losing to fellow Bollettieri pupil Tommy Haas.
“This is what I was training for and believing in since I was a kid. When I was growing up and starting to watch some tennis matches on TV, the Beckers and Edbergs, Pat Cash winning Wimbledon, I modeled my game after them and I believed that that was something I would like to do,” said Mirnyi, who climbed as high as No. 18 in singles. “I really enjoyed the top level of tennis and when I had those wins early in my career. I started believing.”
What people might not realise is that Mirnyi defeated Roger Federer twice in their first four FedEx ATP Head2Head meetings on the singles court (Federer won the series 7-2). And not only that, but they won three doubles titles together, including an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event at Miami in 2003.
“It’s incredible, because I felt like Roger was one of my rivals, but I was a little bit older than him. When he was coming up, I felt like I had to beat him,” said Mirnyi, whose biggest victory against Federer came in the Round of 16 of the 2002 US Open. “I beat him in straight sets [in New York] and I didn’t think much of [the victory]. I walked off the court winning in straight sets and thought, ‘Who’s next?’… it was incredible that less than a year later, the guy was winning Wimbledon.”
And while Mirnyi didn’t win that US Open quarter-final against Andre Agassi, he certainly made an impact on the legendary American. Agassi won all four of their FedEx ATP Head2Head matches, but that one meeting resonated enough for the icon to write about the Belarusian in his book, “Open”.
“They call him ‘The Beast’, and it’s an understatement,” Agassi wrote. “He’s 6’5” and hits a serve that’s among the scariest I’ve ever faced. It has a burning yellow tail, like a comet, as it arcs high above the net and then swoops down upon you. I have no answer for that serve.”
While Agassi didn’t coin the nickname, it followed Mirnyi throughout his career. But perhaps what he became most known for was not how physically imposing he was, but how hard he worked at his craft.
“I definitely don’t consider myself a talented tennis player. I think from an early age, my parents developed this behaviour around me and for me that whatever I put my hands on, I had to be committed, be disciplined, give 100 per cent, be respectful,” Mirnyi said. “I never felt like it came easy to me. I felt that by putting in the work, this is how I would get results.”
Over a career that spanned more than two decades in which Mirnyi played a combined 1,711 singles and doubles matches, he never withdrew or retired from a match — his doubles partners were forced to retire just twice. And credit for that goes to taking care of his body day-in and day-out, during the most exciting highs and the most deflating lows.
It’s taking care of what he could control that led Mirnyi to win a combined 1,024 matches (244-242 in singles, 780-445 in doubles), 53 titles (from 102 finals), and reach No. 1 in the ATP Doubles Rankings. Mirnyi is one of just 19 players to reach World No. 1 in doubles and crack the Top 20 in singles. The Belarusian claimed the Nitto ATP Finals doubles title twice, six men’s doubles Grand Slam trophies, four majors in mixed doubles and the 2012 Olympic mixed doubles gold medal with Victoria Azarenka after carrying the flag for Belarus at the Opening Ceremony.
Even in his final season on the ATP World Tour, at 41, Mirnyi grinded away. He won two titles alongside Philipp Oswald, and they finished the season at No. 18 in the ATP Doubles Team Rankings.
“He walks the talk. I’ve never met any other person in my tennis career whose actions were as reliable as his word. He is the real deal and far away from fake,” Oswald said. “Staying disciplined and being positive in every crucial moment is just natural to him and won him many matches. He was the leader in our partnership and I was trying to listen and learn on every move along our path. I’m really thankful to have had this opportunity to get so close to a player I‘ve always looked up to.”
But as you might expect, Mirnyi respected everyone around him, not just his partners. At 12, his father took him from Belarus to Brooklyn, New York, before moving to Florida almost a year later just to get a chance to have International Tennis Hall of Famer Bollettieri watch him play. Bollettieri says that after one minute, he knew he would offer that 13-year-old a scholarship. And to this day, Mirnyi, who will turn his attention to his family — he has four children — and his Max Mirnyi Center in Belarus, still helps youngsters at the academy, no matter if he knows them or not.
“He would never put the blame on his partner. He got the maximum out of what he had,” Bollettieri said. “When you work with a human being like this who is so humble, and works with all the juniors at the IMG Academy, he gives them advice, he asks about my family, he’s a family man. If the world had more Max Mirnyis, there would never be war.”
Mirnyi came a long way from sitting in front of his television as a kid in Belarus. The player he was in awe of that day, Cash, has gained just as much respect for Mirnyi since.
“I think more than anyone on the circuit today, Max led by example. I love the fact that he had old-school principles of fair play and respect but went as hard as he could as a competitor. He really got the best out of himself and that showed as a very fine singles player who excelled in doubles,” Cash said. “His work ethic on and off the court was really impressive right to his last days but to me but the most impressive thing was despite having competitive fire he was a really genuine, good guy. With his knowledge I believe he has a lot to offer the world of tennis and I hope we’ll see him again in a different role.”
Did You Know? Mirnyi was ranked in the Top 50 of the year-end ATP Rankings six straight years (2000-05). He also finished 19 consecutive seasons (1999-2017) inside the Top 50 of the ATP Doubles Rankings.
Tributes To ‘The Beast Mike Bryan “Max was an incredible talent and an amazing athlete. He was an absolute beast on the court and could hurt his opponents with so many weapons including his huge serve and blanketing coverage of the net. More importantly, Max played the game with class and is one of the nicest guys you’ll ever meet. He epitomises professionalism in every way and worked extremely hard to maximise his potential. It was a pleasure competing and sharing the Tour with this legend for so many years. I’m wishing him and his beautiful family the very best and I know he’ll be successful in anything he decides to do in this next phase of life.”
Bob Bryan “It was an honour to spend 20 years on tour with ‘The Beast’. There isn’t a more professional, hard-working, or nicer player out there. He was a nightmare to play against but a pleasure to be around. I wish Max and his family success and happiness in their next chapter.”
Daniel Nestor “Sad to see Max retire. Thought he still had a lot of good tennis left in him. Really enjoyed our time together on court and wish we could have played longer together. One of the best all-around players in singles and doubles in the history of our sport.”
Jonas Bjorkman “I’m so happy for Max, for what he has achieved in his great career and I think he really maximized his tennis — both in singles and doubles — purely because of his extraordinary professionalism as an athlete. I’ve never seen anyone so disciplined when it comes to preparation, focus on practice, and focus and positive energy on the court in matches. It was such a privilege to play doubles with him because you always had fun on court, no matter whether you were winning or losing. There was always positive energy.”
“He was always dangerous for any player on any surface with the type of gameplay he had in singles. In doubles he was obviously a monster on court with his flexibility, his athleticism, but also the weapons he had in doubles were perfect with his big serve, his reach at the net and being very aggressive… He had an unbelievable career and I think he was a phenomenal ambassador for the sport of tennis and a phenomenal ambassador for Belarus. I was there playing Davis Cup against him and he took care of the whole Swedish team in a phenomenal way and I know how appreciated he is back home because of what he has achieved, but also because of how he has promoted his country throughout his career and I’m so happy to see that he got the chance to carry the flag in the Olympics. He really will be missed by many on the ATP circuit, no doubt. I would be surprised if he has any enemies out there, because he has treated people the same way for all these years.”
“During our partnership, we had a lot of great success. It’s obviously going to be a special memory always for me that we managed to win the French Open together, which was the last Grand Slam that I hadn’t won in my career, so to fulfill my dream of winning all four Grand Slams, and to do it with Max, it was amazing. And to come back and win again was even more of a great feeling to be able to do that. Obviously we can look back to a lot of great victories. I think we really had a great partnership. We really helped each other to support our weaknesses and strengths as a doubles team. With his big serve to my weapon of returning, I think that combo was a perfect matchup and always made it hard for our opponents to play us and that we always were positive on the court. We never gave up, no matter what the score was. I think that was tough for anyone to know, that physically it took a lot to beat us. Only great memories from that time with Max.”
Mark Knowles “’The Beast’ is one of the most professional players that I have ever seen. He achieved absolutely everything on the court. I had some great matches with him, but was also fortunate enough to have had the honour to play with him! His humility, grace, athleticism, talent and most of all, his flexibility make Max one of the most admired players on Tour. He is a great family man and I know that Max will go on to continued success off the court. Wishing you and your family all the best. Congrats, Beast!”
Philipp Oswald “I‘ve got lots of stories and quotes to tell about one of the greatest in our sport. I’m actually really sad that I won’t see him anymore on a daily basis, but also happy for him that he is able to call it a day without any regrets and without a big show. Because that’s how he is, a clean-cut guy with both feet on the ground and an authentic personality.
I think what I admire most about the Beast is besides all the success he had, that he is such a polite and respectful personality who treats everyone the same and never from above. He never shows off with his big career, he rather chooses to listen in conversations and would remember every name or story being told. He never leaves a question unanswered and I witnessed his human qualities on so many occasions. The way he interacted with children on those “kids’ days” at tournaments or the way he handled my coaches, friends and family was just top class. He is a very fine person — a real Sir and gentleman…
His professionalism is just outstanding and he’s a great ambassador for the doubles tour and our sport in general.
His nickname ‘The Baest’ I guess is based on his athleticism, because besides that I got to know him as very careful human being with great values and this outstanding personality… I can’t even thank him enough for his commitment and dedication at this stage of his career towards our partnership and this job. He is a great role model and will always be the greatest mentor I´ve shared the court with and a great inspiration.”
Nick Bollettieri “He was a big, dangly boy. Coordination only fair. But what shows beyond a shadow of doubt is that he overcame those obstacles by his mindset and determination to be the best that he could be and that is what makes Max Mirnyi. He knows what he could do, and what he can’t do. He knew the longer he stayed on the baseline, his chances dropped down tremendously. He knew what he had to do: develop a serve, get confident on the volley and get his behind into the net, and that’s what he did.
He offset some limitations — not having a big forehand — he offset those limitations by coming into the net and that’s what helped him become a tremendous player.”
Tommy Haas “I’ve known him since I was 13 years old. I remember the old days at Bollettieri’s. One thing that always stuck out about Max is he was very respectful. One of the hardest workers that I’ve known, always doing his work that he needed to do to be the best player he could possibly be. He’s had a tremendous career. People also forget he had a great career in singles. He managed to go to No. 18 in the world. I remember winning my first Masters 1000 title on my home soil in Stuttgart, Germany, I beat him in the final where he beat Kafelnikov and Pete Sampras. So he was obviously a very dangerous, good player. Old school, serve and volley. But he was a tremendous, tremendous athlete and until the end he played some very good tennis. Even looking at him now, he’s 41 years old, but still in tip-top shape. He has such a respect for the game, and he’s going to leave a mark with whatever he does in tennis, if he’s helping out coaching or running an academy or a camp. What a career he’s had… it’s good to see people like this succeed.”
Victoria Azarenka “Congratulations on an amazing career, Max! Thank you for all the memories, both on and off the court. Thank you for being a role model in our sport for many kids in our country and around the world. Congratulations again and I am so proud of you and grateful for sharing amazing moments together.”
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