Gilles Simon generated quite a flutter with his seemingly
outrageous comments on women’s tennis. The reaction to that statement was weighed towards
opposition and rejection of what Simon had to say and propose. Serena Williams went
onto win her 5th Wimbledon which has resulted in Victoria Azarenka
sitting at the pedestal on WTA rankings. In the last 5 years the numero uno
ranking has fluctuated 17 times between 9 players. Out of the 21 slams during
that period we have witnessed 12 different champions! During th last 5 years
there have been 3 occasions when the player on the pedestal didn’t have a slam
to her name. Serena Williams has won the most slams during this period with 6
titles, but managed to stay at the top of the table for only 66 weeks during the
last 5 years. She has been off the number one ranking for about a year and a
half now.
These are too erratic stats for a sport! Either they suggest
extensive close competition or too much fluctuation; those following women’s
tennis would vehemently pick the latter option. Simon’s thoughts appear sexist
and outrageous for the way they were articulated, but what we can draw from it
is the concern of quality tennis from the women’s circuit. If anybody is
suggesting lack of effort from the women players or less work more pays kind of
thing, then that demands opposition as was the case with Simon’s statement.
Women’s tennis was, is and will remain a popular event, for
the obvious reasons. Sharapova, Ana Ivanovic et al. will always generate decent
on & off-field following but recent history in the women’s circuit suggests
that there is absence of words like dominance, monopoly and authority. Barring
Kim Clijsters with US Open 2010 and Australian Open 2011, nobody has managed to
win back-to-back grand slams for the last 8 years! Sometimes it is good to have
different champions over a period of time, but for that to happen you want to
have the champion beaten in close semi-finals or finals. Women’s tennis has
failed to provide such action for some while now; defending champions are
ousted early, one slam champion suffers pre-quarterfinal exits on a different
surface.
There could be reasons for such results, there could be
nuances to the above stats but it would take some real digging to back thoughts
of quality of women’s tennis dropping down. Parallel to men’s competition a
contest between Federer, Nadal or Djokovic undoubtedly provides action to its
billing. Women’s tennis lacks such match-ups or battles; you almost get a sense
it is a discipline where anybody with two weeks of good form can win a Grand
Slam!
Any and every sport needs its popular poster faces to propel
the sport to prosper, grow and inspire generations; women’s tennis has them
aplenty. To back such role models you need constant competition of the highest
quality, otherwise the sport is exhausted with its global following,
restricting the set of followers to individual players. Women’s tennis is
entering an interesting phase with lots of players in the fray, variety in the
kind of tennis and champions of different nationals. Hopefully for the next few
seasons we get to discuss women’s tennis on-field stories as much as their
off-field ones!
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