For a while now, we have been wondering when the next Leander Paes or Mahesh Bhupathi will hit the Indian tennis scene, or who will follow in Sania Mirza‘s footsteps and break through on the women’s circuit. It looks like we have been asking the wrong questions all along. What we should be wondering is when Indian tennis will get its own Gopichand.
While the nation swayed side to side with each shuttle that Saina Nehwal hit across the net in London and celebrated with fervour Saina’s achievements, India owes as much to Gopichand as it does to Saina for its first ever Olympic medal in badminton. Gopichand is one of those rare breeds in Indian sport – a former top player who has taken an active interest in the future of the sport, helping nurture young talent in the nation.
Gopichand has been India’s most successful male badminton player since Prakash Padukone – winning the All England Club title in 1991 (badminton’s equivalent of Wimbledon) and peaking at no. 5 in the rankings before injuries brought an end to his career. Since then, Gopichand has opened a coaching academy where many of India’s top present and future badminton players train and is also India’s national badminton coach.
A coach can only be as good as his disciple. And while Saina is lucky to have Gopichand by her side, Gopichand is equally lucky to have the talented, hard working and determined Saina by his. Saina has been Gopichand’s pet project, and with her, he has executed a plan that goes beyond the badminton court. Right from tactics to diet to fitness to weight, Gopichand has worked on Saina with a single goal in mind – an Olympic medal. That goal is now a reality and as Gopichand himself said, he now has to think of new goals for his life.
That new goal is not too difficult to envision. A gold medal for Saina in the 2016 Rio Games, and perhaps taking P. Kashyap and PV Sindhu to the next level. Indian badminton is fortunate to have Gopichand steering it. In contrast, India’s most successful tennis players in the last few decades have stayed away from assuming a larger role in Indian tennis.
Neither Vijay Amritraj nor Ramesh Krishnan – India’s only noteworthy tennis players in the late 1970s and 1980s – have taken a similar role in Indian tennis (though Amritraj did open his own tennis academy which has since closed). And it doesn’t look like India’s current crop of tennis veterans are ready to don the mantle either. Both Mahesh Bhupathi and Leander Paes are coming close to the end of their careers but it seems unlikley that either are ready to play the part. Paes will surely be India’s Davis Cup captain/coach one day. But it’s hard to mould a generation of champions if you’re involved with them for just a few weeks every year.
Bhupathi already has his future set out through his sports and event management company Globosport. And both Bhupathi and Paes have their eyes set on the celluloid – with Bhupathi producing movies and Paes acting in them (obviously not in the same ones!!). And Sania Mirza will sooner or later settle down to nurture Shoaib Jr. and will not have time to focus on India’s juniors.
What Anil Khanna and the rest of the Indian tennis administration need to do, is find their own Gopichand and hand over the reins to him. Until then, we shall continue to wander on the outer fringes of tennis, living perpetually in hope and looking back perpetually on what could have been.
8 Comments
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Ketki Kolhatkar Joined 0 pointscompletely agreed…its a success of Gopichand and his excellent training for the way Saina and Kashyap have performed in London and will do even better at Rio. on the other hand , I cant see any future of Indian tennis after Lee-Hesh step away from tennis. There’s a very strong need of Some die hard devoted teacher like Gopichand if India wants to shine in tennis like badminton.
commented on 17th Aug 2012 at 5:52 pm -
Harsha Midathala Joined 0 pointsBefore finding their own Gopi Chand…Indian Tennis should first produce a Gopi Chand. A Gopi Chand who is capable of playing and performing in Singles.If the Junior Development programme in India starts today, then we can hope for some one to perform in 2020 Olympics. Lets hope for the best!
commented on 12th Aug 2012 at 11:07 pm -
Ram Narayanan Joined 0 pointsto get a gopi in tennis coaching players, u need to get a gopi as a player in tennis. it is unlikely that we would get one. not to forget badminton is all about quick movements and not sprintings. whereas tennis is all about running hard with great stamina. that is one weakness as we indians are not natual athletes. so, it is not easy or I would say damn impossible to have a great singles player originating from the subcontinent. when vijay and ramesh played tennis had not been so energetic and they were playing with wooden racquets too. things have changed. so it is high time we does not mourn about what has happened in olympics. we should face the reality.
commented on 12th Aug 2012 at 1:44 pm -
Vishal Singh Joined 0 pointsI want be a profesional player of badminton and I will become a world’s no.1 player.
commented on 12th Aug 2012 at 12:49 pm -
Ashwin Panemangalore Joined 0 pointsGopichand’s and Prakash’s academies are at the apex where players go after reaching a certain level What you don’t see is the small army of dedicated coaches across many cities and towns who work selflessly to bring up a cadre of middle class hopefuls Witness the participation in state and district badminton tourneys for under 12 and above This is missing in tennis and that is the essence of the difference Tennis is played and followed by the rich class in India where for most youth it is recreation The few successful players are not keen to settle down into a ‘retrograde’ step like coaching as you have yourself pointed out Badminton on the other hand has middle class people following it where aspirations go higher and throw up champion material Few know we have 11 players in the world top 100 badminton singles despite the strong Asian domination For all its media attention Tennis has not a single Indian in the top 200 singles and only two in the top 500.
commented on 12th Aug 2012 at 10:43 am
Nice article Hareesh – the only correction being that you don’t seem to have given enough credit to Mahesh for the tremendous work he has done over the last few years with MBTA as well as his contribution towards grooming and facilitating the development of Junior players. Agreed he is not a hands on coach like Gopichand but we should not undermine Mahesh’s contribution in facilitating growth of a majority of junior players in the last decade or so. If any of us are involved or have worked so hard to find sponsors and traveling coaches for young tennis players – we will realize that its a thankless job especially when AITA is hell bent on sabotaging the work to settle personal scores!