Sunday 14 November 2010

Further calls for a shorter tour

Last week's article looked at whether Russian star Dementieva's shock retirement outlined a tendency for money-rich stars to get out of the sport for other pursuits more readily. Over the past few days interviews with top players have seen calls for a shorter tour due to the physical strains the current setup puts on players contributing to early retirements.
The professional tennis tour currently lasts through nearly eleven months of the year with a bevy of tournaments and challengers being hosted every week for players to choose from. During the Dementieva piece it was highlighted how the Top 10s on either side can afford to pick and choose their tournaments more carefully as they already have a host of ranking points backing them up.
For everyone else, however, it's a case of scrounge every point you can get. It's like an expensive, and slightly more entertaining, version of Hungry Hungry Hippos. It makes for a long and exciting tour for us fans but what about the pros involved week-in, week-out?
Over recent years a number of top pros have "fizzled out" due to injury or mental strain after a bright start. Jennifer Capriati faced all sorts of issues off-court while players like Marcos Baghdatis and David Nalbandian have never quite reached where they should have because of continual injuries.
As we speak, Nikolay Davydenko has had his 2010 ruined due to wrist injuries while we can only hope that Juan Martin Del Potro returns as exciting and vigorous as he was throughout 2009 next year.

Roger Federer calls for a shorter season on the ATP Tour
And further down the ladder, American Taylor Dent has finally given up the goose after doing so well to fight back from a debilitating backinjury. It is so sad to see such problems happen to genuinely worthy individuals. Of course they are always thankful for what they have experienced and accomplished. But there is no doubt that they will always feel they could, and probably should, have had more.
With Rafael Nadal's mentor Toni admitting that Rafa is going to have to play a reduced calendar from 2011 to prevent complete destruction of his knees, Roger Federer and Andy Murray have also been calling for a reduced tour to help the physical and mental conditions of people who, for all the fame, riches and glory, do spend roughly ten months of the year away from friends and family having to keep themselves in peak condition for fear of losing touch with the top.
"I think it's time we shifted back a bit and we get a proper off-season," said world No. 2 Federer. "Four weeks is just not enough. I think six is much better as you can take two weeks off… practise three, four weeks which is a lot for us in our world."
Federer also added that it may help the closing tournaments of the year who are often hit with withdrawals from top players who have either long-since secured their places at the WTA/ATP Finals, or want to end the year earlier to enable them to recuperate and prepare for their assault on the Australian Open.
The calls have previously been backed by Nadal and also world No. 3 Novak Djokovic, who both sit with Federer on the Players' Council.
Andy Murray also added that players such as Dent, Nalbandian and Lleyton Hewitt would be helped by a less demanding schedule being placed on their body.
"There's no time for you to take a break to get rid of an injury," the 23-year-old Scotsman told The Sun newspaper. "Instead players end up playing through it and that actually shortens careers.
"There should be fewer mandatory tournaments because you get punished so much for being injured and I don't really think that's fair. If after the US Open you had two or three months when you could actually take time off to recover, players would have longer careers."
It's not just the length of the tour which proves a gripe for some players either. Some despise the constant switch between surfaces and the changes in speed from one tournament to another prove a problem for consistency. Before this week, 64 ATP Tournaments had been played this calendar year. We've had 36 on hard courts, 22 on clay and six on grass.
"I like varying surfaces… indoor tennis should be fast," said Murray. "But it's annoying when it changes week to week. Last week [in Valencia] was one of the slowest courts we've had all year, and here it was lightning quick.
"It would be nice for the players to have a run of tournaments on the same surfaces. It's tough to play tennis week in, week out if you're always changing the surface. You're not going to play your best tennis after just two days."
The new, lightning-quick surface at Paris is proving a hit with the players who feel that many have been slowed down too much in recent years.
"It's a different type of tennis," said American No. 1 Andy Roddick. "I believe it's become so monotonous … it feels like there is a slow court available nine months of the year."
Federer backed up those sentiments: "It's nice that some tournaments have made the courts faster again. I'm not saying it should be the trend for all the tournaments, but indoors is supposed to be faster. We only have one indoor Masters 1000, so I think it should be the fastest one, which is the case.
"Shanghai was brutally slow; Toronto was very slow as well. The only other one that is a little bit fast is Cincinnati, then Miami and Indian Wells have been also slowed down drastically. It's good for the players, honestly, to experience a faster court again, and a bit of two-shot tennis is fun for a change to do. It's tricky, it's not easy—but it's fun."
Could the change in surfaces be contributing to the increase in injuries? Could the continuing change of pace be a problem? The Sports Medicine Information website lists common tennis injuries along with treatment and prevention techniques. Surely one of the biggest preventions of all would be to reduce the strain on tennis pros?
The ATP schedules for 2012 and 2013 will be finalised during a series of board meetings to take place during the ATP Finals in London in the next couple of weeks. It remains to be seen whether they will listen to their top pros or whether the dollar signs will continue to be too hard to resist.

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