[專欄]Shouldering The Load
Lingering injuries or limitations coming to light for
Sharapova
By Joel Drucker
Special to ESPN.com
Updated: October 3, 2007, 4:15 PM ET
Maria Sharapova's 2007 woes boil down to a simple question:
Has she merely been hindered by a yearlong right shoulder
injury or have her limitations been conclusively revealed?
At the four Grand Slams this year, it's been most unsettling
not so much to see Sharapova lose as much as be obliterated --
and do so in increasingly earlier rounds. In the Australian
Open final she went down to Serena Williams, 6-1, 6-2. At
Roland Garros, Ana Ivanovic pummeled her 6-2, 6-1 in the
semis. At Wimbledon, Venus Wiliams whipped the Russian 6-1,
6-3 in the fourth round. At least those were losses to elite
players. Then, launching her title defense at the U.S. Open,
Sharapova played exceptionally poor tennis, losing 6-4, 1-6,
6-2 in the third round to 32nd-ranked Agnieszka Radwanksa.
In one sense, it's easy to attribute Sharapova's lackluster
Slam results to the right shoulder injury that's severely
handicapped her serve. Once one of the best deliveries on
tour, Sharapova's serve is the catalyst for her entire
game. Power and placement put her immediately in control of
the vast majority of her service points -- a particularly
critical step for a player whose sporadic court coverage
skills make it vital for her to dictate play with
exceptional haste. Moreover, when Sharapova holds serve
briskly, she's mentally liberated when returning, swings
more freely and threatens her opponents.
But this year, backed on her heels by repeated returns,
Sharapova's been forced to scramble. Unequipped to mix up
paces and spins, scarcely nimble transitioning from defense
to offense, Sharapova in her Slam losses has looked
exceptionally unmasked.
"Right now she doesn't have the confidence," said Robert
Lansdorp, Sharapova's former coach. "I used to always know
that Maria would find a way to turn things around. It's
completely different now. That girl grew up with me. The
game I taught her isn't there."
Through her handlers, Sharapova declined to speak for this
article.
Hoping to heal her right shoulder, Sharapova pulled out of
this week's event in Stuttgart, Germany. Though on her Web
site she says she hopes to play more this year in the
lead-up to the season-ending championships, it wouldn't be
surprising to see Sharapova cease all competition and work
to get herself healthy for 2008.
"Give her a break for this year," said former WTA Tour pro
and Tennis Channel analyst Elise Burgin. "This is the first
time she's been confronted with significant injuries. She's
a smart competitor."
And yet, to witness Sharapova's father and coach, Yuri,
watch one of her matches, you'd hardly imagine a long-term
vision. Yuri Sharapov is a driven man who treats the ups
and downs of each of his daughter's matches as if they were
life and death struggles.
But given the long journey this man took from Chernoybl and
Siberia to help his daughter (and family), his bunkerlike
focus makes a certain kind of sense. After all, it has been
only six years since the girl launched her pro career an adult.
So the schism between Sharapova's long-term ambitions and
Yuri's short-term ferocity can create painful tensions.
Certainly it hasn't helped in the coaching department,
where Yuri's anger was the trigger point for Lansdorp's
exit following her loss in the semis of the 2005 U.S. Open.
Yet the prominent coach, who had worked with Sharapova from
ages 11 to 18, said last week that, "Yuri calls me all the
time. I told him to shorten her service motion. I know I
can straighten her out in a month -- her head, her serve,
her mentality. But now I'd go first, 'Hey listen lady, send
me a check.' But I like Maria. I like Yuri, too."
But of late it wasn't Lansdorp who got the call. Instead it
was the first notable tennis coach Yuri met when he came to
America, Nick Bollettieri. It was at Bollettieri's where
the pint-sized Maria lived as a 10-year-old, building her
game through endless hours of ball smacking. Reached last
week at his academy in Bradenton, Fla., Bollettieri noted
that Sharapova was working out on the grounds with Yuri's
co-coach, former Lansdorp student Michael Joyce.
Though Bollettieri has no official role in the Sharapova
camp, he also knows there's no need for him to be hands-on
in the manner of Lansdorp.
"I'm not the coach, no way," Bollettieri said. "But let me
tell you this: Over the course of an athlete's life,
particularly those that reach a high level of success,
perhaps there'll be a slide. But you're going to see Maria
coming back with a thunder."
As Sharapova said last month following her U.S. Open loss,
"I have a whole future ahead of me. I'm not going to throw
myself a pity party here. … You never know when God's
going to bring down those gifts. So I'm waiting for those
Christmas gifts."
Perhaps one might be a bit less drama from Yuri. His
daughter has put in the time to be great. As the world
knows, her grunt is grand. Now if he could only let her
breathe a little bit more too.
Joel Drucker is based in Oakland, Calif., and writes about
tennis for Tennis Magazine and The Tennis Channel.
http://sports.espn.go.com/sports/tennis/news/story?id=3046996
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※ 編輯: jcshie 來自: 202.130.147.136 (10/04 12:22)
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