Showing posts with label Tennis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tennis. Show all posts

Tuesday, 28 December 2010

Andre Agassi: Sport in print.

Over the past few years the internet and increasingly tablets/kindles are revolutionising the way we read books and the choice on the market. The sports book genre has expanded hugely. Twenty years ago, one could only find annuals like Match or the Wisden Almanack, but now it can dominate a whole section. There are books on sporting philosophy, history, theory and of course the autobiography.

Sporting books have launched the literary careers of authors like Nick Hornby, whilstothers have sprawled massive charitable campaigns. Anyone who has read Lance Armstrong’s It’s not about the bike’ would find it hard not to commend the inexorable determination of the man and his route to success.

The genre's evolution over the past twenty years even saw a dedicated prize established. So why else would be people want to read their stories and prose? There is a stereotype to suggest that sportsmen and women aren’t intellectual and therefore, why would we want to read their musings? The drivel delivered during press conferences or post-match interviews would highlight such drollness. Some athletes have signed multi-book deals worth millions of pound, even though they are still in their early twenties! Yet people still buy them.

Perhaps it is the fact that sport is about real life, the highs and lows. The lives of actors is purely fictional and doesn’t have the human drama that we can associate in sporting events. Athletes are mortals. They can tell their stories about overcoming failures.How triumph and defeat become blurred.

Reading the autobiography of Andre Agassi, it is surreal to see the life of a high profile name in such perspective. The pressure from parents and school, the fear of losing and the inability to succeed. The honesty and realities is often lost on the spectator and we only learn of the inner most thoughts after such battles have been fought. Life could be compared to a tennis match or an athletics race. It is often only through these athletes, who have dedicated their lives to one dream or target, that their outlook can teach us what events mean and we can take from them. The best books tell us about life itself.

Tuesday, 17 August 2010

Andy Murray: Aulding it against him.

Andy Murray is Britain's best tennis player by a distance and one of our best prospects to win trophies in the future. The problem for Andy is that many English followers plain and simply don't like him. Despite him never overtly talking about Scotland, he is remembered for making a comment before the 2006 World Cup that he would be supporting "anyone other than England". It was a tongue-in-cheek remark, yet some newspapers labelled him anti-English. Others dislike his attitude and personality, something that also seems to be out of date. When the teenage Murray first played at Wimbledon, he was the opposite of Tim Henman, he appeared insolent and angry, compared to the measured and experienced Henman. Despite his improvement as a tennis player and maturity as a person, he is still pigeon-holed as a dour, awkward Scot; something he hasn't been now for 5 years.

Perhaps there is something else underlying the antipathy. Murray spent part of his childhood in a training camp in Barcelona and recently to train full time in Miami. From the a pithy teenager, he has become one of the fittest and strongest athletes on the tour. Murray doesn't conform to how we want our sportsmen and woman to be: he is reticent, he does not possess the traditional likeable character and nothing in his childhood endears us to his sporting spirit. Even the English have taken to his brother, Jamie, after his romantic coupling with Elena Jankovic (at Wimbledon of course).

If Murray wins a Grand Slam, an honour as elusive in British tennis it will be interesting to see whether he is finally accepted by the British public.

Thursday, 1 July 2010

Federer- The Great Man will rise again.

I am aware that Tennis can be seen as a young person's game; but to write off Federer's career after a lacklustre Wimbledon seems to be extremely premature. Just remember despite his age, this man has won more grand slams than any other man in the game. His elegance and accuracy has meant a high voltage game has never been necessary. Write him off at your peril...
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