Psychology, more than natural athleticism, has made the Williams sisters so successful

IANS
Serena (L) and Venus Williams

Nairobi, Aug 10 (IANS): Venus Williams turned back the clock yesterday to defeat younger sister and World No. 1 Serena Williams in the Rogers Cup semifinal, winning 6-7, 6-2, 6-3. And the fact that Venus, 34, and Serena, 32, are still going so strong in a traditionally young player’s game like tennis is down as much to their physical gifts as to their unshakeable mental strength.

The coach who trained Serena and Venus Williams to tennis stardom said on Sunday that their father Richard Williams put a lot of emphasis on psychology to prepare his girls.

Bill Murray, who has coached a lot of national and world class tennis players including 19 national junior champions, told Xinhua here that Williams instilled in his daughters that tennis is life and they had to be tough to succeed.

"He would take them to where the underprivileged Americans were living and while pointing at them would say to them: 'Society got them to be like that. Society wants you to be like them and if you are not successful here you will be like them'," Murray said.

The celebrated coach is in Kenya for the 2014 East Africa Safari Junior Tennis Camp that is taking place at Sadili Oval Sports Academy in the Kenyan capital where he is training a group of selected tennis junior players.

Saying that he has known Williams since he was 10 years old where they live in Florida, Murray said Richard Williams believed that if the girls were to perform well in the game they had to have own coaches.

"Williams came to me in 1991 and told me to focus basically on techniques while coaching the sisters," Murray said.

He said there is an unwritten rule within the Williams' household never to let the siblings play seriously against each other, in order not to develop a rivalry, which he says could grow into hatred between the two superstars.

"They were trained to last for a long time. Most of their practice was secret training. We didn't have a lot of money but we had a lot of talent," Murray said.

Pointing at the difference in playing styles between Serena and Venus, Murray said the latter starts working up well but something takes her energy away as the tournament progresses.

Murray founded Bill Murray Tennis Academy in Delray Beach, Florida in 2002 after retiring from a successful 30-year career as a Professional Tennis Registry (PTR) coach.

He is currently working with 20 athletes, including Britnee, the 10-year-old niece of Venus and Serena Williams, and Natalie Cedano (19) who has turned professional and already started to win prize money events.

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