Sports India

2/28/2005

Dubai Open: Sania to face Kuznetsova

Played under: — Indian Players

Sania Mirza will face US Open champion and fourth seeded Svetlana Kuznetsova of Russia in the second round of the Dubai Open today.

Eighteen-year-old Sania upset Croatia’s Jelena Kostanic, who is ranked 61 places above her, in the first round on Monday.

Sania, playing on a wild card, came back from a set down to win 6-7, 6-4, 6-1, a great result considering she’s coming off an ankle injury.

Tough challenge

“It was definitely a very tough match and at this level every match you play is going to be tough. I am just happy I came through,” Sania said.

“I just wanted to go there and give my 200 percent which I did. Even if I had lost I would have been satisfied,” she added.

However, Indian fans based in Dubai are extremely keen to see Sania get through the second round.

“The amount of Indian faces I saw here was amazing. With everyone cheering for me on every point it was really inspiring. I think they really pushed me,” Sania said.

The crowd may have to do their very best, as will Sania, if she is to beat Svetlana Kuznetsova in the 2nd round.

Martinez, Mirza Advance in Dubai

Played under: — Indian Players

Former Wimbledon champion Conchita Martinez and rising Indian star Sania Mirza the oldest and youngest players in the field advanced Monday to the second round of the Dubai Women’s Open.

Martinez, 32, defeated Shinobu Asagoe of Japan 6-3, 6-4. The 18-year-old Mirza beat Jelena Kostanic of Croatia 6-7 (2), 6-4, 6-1 and will next face U.S. Open champion Svetlana Kuznetsova.

“She is a great player, but everyone is beatable,” Mirza said.

Also, Jelena Jankovic of Serbia-Montenegro defeated Paola Suarez of Argentina 6-3, 6-1.

Martinez, who ended a five-year title drought in January by winning in Pattaya City, Thailand, raced ahead 5-1 in the first set and broke Asagoe in the fifth game of the second.

Mirza, who this month became the first Indian woman to win a WTA Tour title, squandered a 4-1 lead in the first set and Kostanic went on to win the tiebreaker. Mirza then regrouped behind a strong forehand.

The ATP’s Dubai Open ended Sunday with top-ranked Roger Federer defeating Ivan Ljubicic.

Sania Mirza advances to second round

Played under: — Indian Players

Former Wimbledon champion Conchita Martinez and rising Indian star Sania Mirza earned first-round wins in the Dubai Women�s Open on Monday.

Martinez, the oldest woman in the draw at 32, defeated Shinobu Asagoe of Japan 6-3, 6-4, while Mirza, the youngest at 18, beat Jelena Kostanic of Croatia 6-7 (2), 6-4, 6-1.

Also, Jelena Jankovic of Serbia and Montenegro breezed past Paola Suarez of Argentina 6-3, 6-1.

Martinez, who ended a five-year title drought by winning in Pattaya City in January, raced to 5-1 in the first set, and broke Asagoe in the fifth game of the second for the match.

Mirza, the first Indian woman to win a WTA Tour title this month on home ground at Hyderabad, let slip a 4-1 lead in the first set against Kostanic, who prevailed 7-2 in a tiebreaker.

Mirza, however, regrouped and used her forehand to telling effect to set up a second-round match against U.S. Open champion Svetlana Kuznetsova.

�She is a great player,� said Mirza. �But everyone is beatable and I am looking forward to a great match.�

Earlier, the Dubai tournament made history by becoming the first outside the U.S. Open and Australian Open to offer equal prize money for men and women.

The Dubai Women�s Open, which previously paid US$585,000 in total prize money, will pay out US$1 million this week, matching the ATP�s Dubai Open, which ended on Sunday with Swiss world No. 1 Roger Federer defeating Ivan Ljubicic of Croatia.

Who is Sania Mirza?

Played under: — Indian Players

Who is Sania Mirza? If you put that question to Indians living abroad, you’ll get a frown because they’ll think you should know all about her. Ask an Indian in India, and after the eyes stop rolling, you’ll be handed just about any newspaper or magazine that’s handy. And there she is, peeking out of every publication and every TV screen as writers and anchors gush “This Lass Has Got Class” or “She’s the Belle of the Ball.” It’s called “Sania Mania,” and advertising agencies are working overtime to cash in on it.

Well, to the answer then. Sania Mirza is an 18-year-old Muslim girl from Hyderabad, India, who has caught the attention of the world of tennis since Feb. 12 when she became the first Indian to win a Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) title — and the $140,000 prize that went with it. She was given a wild card for the Hyderabad Open event, which she won by beating ninth seed Alyona Bondarenko of the Ukraine. That victory came after her amazing exploits in the Australian Open last month where she became the first Indian to reach the third round of a Grand Slam event. Sania lost to Serena Williams. By her superb display she jumped from a 400 ranking last year into the Top 100 this year. She is on No. 99 in the latest world rankings.

Those are cold statistics and are for the record books. That still doesn’t tell us what sort of person she is and what her background is. “She is a deeply religious girl who prays five times a day and tries hard not to play during the holy month of Ramadan. She reads the Quran every day,” her father and coach, Imran Mirza, told in a telephone interview from Hyderabad this week. “She doesn’t want to miss out on college, so she recently enrolled herself for a bachelor’s degree in mass communications, having completed her higher secondary course (Plus 2) last year. She went to Nasr School, an English-medium school which is a typical Muslim one.”

So she wants to be a journalist? “Having answered hundreds of questions from hundreds of journalists after winning the hearts and minds of a multitude of Indians, she probably knows the right questions to ask,” said the doting father.

Sania had already learned the nuances of journalism when someone asked her what’s it like for a Muslim girl to wear short skirts and slug it out on court. She quickly replied: “I don’t wear miniskirts on the streets.”

Imran Mirza himself was a sports journalist once. He ran his own sports magazine called “Sportscall”. “It folded a long time back,” he said, “but my heart was once into journalism.” The father thinks that the whole family has contributed in a big way to Sania’s rise to sports stardom. “My younger daughter Anam, who is 11, probably missed a lot of time with us because we were busy with Sania so much.”

Here in Saudi Arabia, old-timers recall one of Sania’s great-uncles coming for Haj many times. “He was my Phuppa Al-Haj Mirza Shakoor Beg,” confirmed Imran. “He performed Haj 31 times and died at the age of 96.” Sania’s grandfather was an avid sportsman.

“My father, Muhammad Zafar Mirza, played university-level cricket. He also played club cricket for Middlesex in England. But his first love was hockey. Then he went into academics,” said Imran. Sania’s mother also is a sports lover. “She never played organized sports though, but she played badminton a lot,” said Imran.

How did Sania get into tennis? “It was natural for her to pick up some kind of sport. Cricket was not an option for women, and we discouraged her from getting into swimming so tennis became the best option,” said Imran.

“We knew she had talent when she picked up the racket for the first time at the age of six. We knew then that she was destined for big things, but we didn’t know she’d reach the Top 100 ranking at 18. Now she wants to be in the Top 50 by the end of 2006 and the Top 25 by 2007.”

Imran says finding corporate sponsors initially was tough. “GVK Industries did a lot to promote her. Now we are deluged with offers from sponsors.”

Anirban Das, senior vice president of Globosport, which handles Sania’s commercial work, told Outlook news magazine that he spent the last few months “persuading people, trying to convince them there was something special about this girl.”

Now they have seen the light, and he is flooded with offers since Sania’s appeal extends beyond the demographic of tennis-watchers in that she is an icon for all young people — particularly women. As she was walking back after losing to World No. 7 Serena Williams in that celebrated Australian Open encounter at Melbourne’s Vodafone Arena, Brad Gilbert, coach of the likes of Andre Agassi and Andy Roddick, told her: “You have a bright future. I would like to see you in the Top 50 in the next 12 months.”

That’s what she’s working on now. Sania Mirza possesses a simple, wholesome charm that comes from sheer earnestness. There is a down-to-earth quality to her which goes beyond the transitory appeal of models. And, unlike actresses, Sania is real.

Sania’s rise to the top also has given a shot in the arm to the morale of the country’s Muslim minority. In his much-acclaimed article, Praful Bidwai hit the nail on the head when he said: “Sania has come to embody a number of aspects of modernity, freedom and rationality — the very opposite of the stereotypes that Indian Muslims are straitjacketed into. Many conservatives, especially Bharatiya Janata Party sympathizers, believe Indian Muslims are irredeemably backward, illiterate, overly religious, bigoted… In their view, Muslims are somewhat inferior, under-socialized human beings who deserve pity or sympathy, not equal treatment or respect. The Hindu nationalist, as well as the middle class pseudo-liberal, is deeply uncomfortable with the modern, liberal, educated, well-informed Indian Muslim who has an open mind and cosmopolitan outlook. The discomfort is all the greater if the person is a woman. Sania Mirza represents all of those modern attributes. And yet, she has become an irresistible, irrepressible icon by dint of her talent and her transparent charm. This is a major transformation of the Indian Muslim stereotype.”

So who is Sania Mirza? If you’re one of the Top 100 in the world of tennis, the answer might be “Trouble.”

2/27/2005

Indian sensation Sania meets Kostanic in opening round

Played under: — Indian Players

Six of the Top 10, 12 of the Top 20, the World No.1 and between them, the winners of 17 Grand Slams. The fifth edition of the $585,000 Dubai Tennis Championships Women’s Open has managed an array of stars that is hard to find anywhere in the world outside of the four Grand Slams.

Topping the list of the glitterati are World No. 1 Lindsay Davenport, who is making her first appearance in the tournament, and superstar sisters Serena, the Australian Open champion, and Venus Williams. And you could add to the list Australian Open quarter-finalist Alicia Molik, who is one of the fastest rising stars on the tour.

Adding to the glitter of the Middle East’s showpiece tennis event will be Russians Anastasia Myskina, the French Open champion, and Svetlana Kuznetsova, the US Open champion. India’s latest sporting sensation, Sania Mirza, too will be adding to the turnstiles. And so will Tunisian Selima Sfar, the only Pan-Arab in the fray who is returning for the fifth time.

But those hoping to feast their eyes on top seed Davenport, second seed Serena, third Myskina and fourth seed Kuznetsova, however, will have to wait till the second round as the top four have earned a first-round bye in the 28-player event, which will be looking for a new champion as two-time winner Justine Henin-Hardenne is not here to defend her title because of injury.

The other two winners of the tournament, Martina Hingis (2001) and Amelie Mauresmo (2002) are not in the fray.

The hard-hitting Venus, who has played in Dubai twice previously, including last year when she was knocked out in the quarterfinals, is seeded fifth and will open her campaign against Silvia Farina Elia of the Italy, the World No.22.

Venus is in the same half of the draw as her sister Serena, and the two are drawn to meet in the semifinals.

Aussie star Molik, who has slipped into the top 10 following her performance on home soil at the Australian Open, is seeded sixth and opens her campaign against the lanky Daniela Hantuchova of Slovakia.

Molik, who has competed in the Dubai Women’s Open three times before, will be looking forward to a possible rematch with Lindsay Davenport, who beat her in the quarter finals of the Australian Grand Slam. But before that she might have to go past the Williams sisters — Serena in quarter-final and Venus in the semis. And the kind of form she is in, it wouldn’t be beyond her.

Another standout at the Australian Open was veteran French star Nathalie Dechy, who has also climbed the rankings following her semifinal appearance in Melbourne. Dechy also fell to Davenport’s sword in the semifinal. And she will have a chance to avenge that loss in the quarter-finals. Sania — one of the three wild cards along with veteran Conchita Martinez of Spain and Tunisia’s Sfar, will open her campaign against World No.36 Jelena Kostanic of Croatia. And if she wins that, she runs into US Open champion Kuznetsova in the second round.

But the Indian remains positive.

“Let’s hope I can play well here,” she said. “It’s a big tournament for me and a big opportunity after Australia. Let’s just hope I can give my best and see what comes,” added the Hyderabadi.

And she got encouragement from Tournament Director Salah Tahlak as well.

“We have been getting a lot of calls from all over the world for Sania,” said Tahlak. “So Sania, you have to do well in this tournament because you have a lot of support here in Dubai.”

Selima Sfar, the only too is confident, relishing the pressures of being the only Arab women’s player on the circuit.

“It is a bit of a pressure for sure,” said the Tunisian, about being the lone torch-bearer for Arab women’s tennis. “But I guess it is a huge motivation too.

“It is my fifth time here and I have always played well here,” she said, thanking the organizer for giving her “this opportunity and this privilege to play here”.
“I am a little bit nervous because I want to do well here, especially in this tournament as an Arab player,” said Sfar, who runs into Molik if she wins her first round against Elena Likhovtseva of Russia. “So I will try to play my best tennis and who knows, I might create a few surprises because I am really motivated.” Sfar will need all the motivation and encouragement she can.

Paes set to take on the Chinese

Played under: — Indian Players

Indian Davis Cup captain Leander Paes says the two-month lay-off from injury will not hamper his performance against China in the Asia-Oceania zone Group 1 first round tie, to be held in Delhi from March 4 to 6.

Paes, who played his first match this week since injuring his ankle in a Sydney event prior to the Australian Open, said he felt a bit rusty but is confident of getting into the groove quickly.

“I was a bit rusty. But tennis is not going to take long. I just need to pace myself into the tie (Davis Cup),” said Paes, who lost in the first round doubles of the Dubai Open.

The 31-year-old, who flew in on Friday, had his first hit on grass courts, his favourite surface, in months with Vishal Uppal and Vivek Shokeen at the NSCI Courts on Saturday morning.

“I had a good session. I am playing after a long time on grass but surely it does not take a long time to get back on grass,” he added.

The Indian captain said selection of the second singles player would be a tough job given the good form of Harsh Mankad, who won the Satellite circuit in Britain this week.

“Harsh is the player in form and Prakash [Amritraj] is a good serve and volley player. So it [selection] will be a difficult job for me.

“But we have a whole week ahead and we can judge who has acclimatised to the conditions well and how everyone is playing.

“Harsh’s past performances in Davis Cup make you think that you should look at a younger player. But he is now a player in form and is coming in with a winner’s mindset. It makes my job more difficult,” Paes said.

Paes, who has shouldered the Indian challenge in the Davis Cup for 15 years now, said he would now like the youngsters to stand up and take up the responsibility.

On the strategy against China, he said India could beat any country in Asia if they concentrate on playing their natural game and hence he is focussed on that.

India has a 2-0 head-to-head record against China. The last time they played on grass at Kolkata in 1999, the hosts emerged runaway 5-0 winners in the Group 1 relegation play-off.

The multiple Grand Slam winner was all praise for Sania Mirza and said her achievements are great for Indian tennis.

But the 18-year-old from Hyderabad would now have her work cut out as she would have to live up to the expectations every time she steps on the court, he added.

Team coach Nandan Bal expressed satisfaction over the first training session.

On the arrival programme of other players, he said almost all of them would be in Delhi on Saturday and though they are unaware of the travel plans of Mankad, they are hopeful that the player would also join the team’s practice session on Sunday.

Meanwhile, the Chinese team will arrive in Delhi on Sunday.

2/26/2005

In desert venue, Sania wants to take one step at a time

Played under: — Indian Players

India’s tennis sensation Sania Mirza has set a modest goal of reaching the second round in the $585,000 WTA Tour event in Dubai starting on Monday.

Sania, who would be playing her first tournament at the Tier 2 level as a wild-card entry, said with the world’s top 30 players competing, winning the first round would be a significant achievement.

“I really do not have big goals for this tournament. I’m not even expecting anything. Getting past the first round would be the immediate worry as there are a lot of top players from the tour here this time,” said the 18-year-old who arrived in Dubai on Friday.

The first Indian woman to win a WTA title said that entering the top 50 in women’s tennis remained her prime goal for this year.

“I know it’s a tough goal, but this is something I have to achieve by the end of this season,” Sania said after a practice session with former Indian Davis Cup player Zeeshan Ali.

She said there would be added pressure on her but that would be from the court than off it.

“The pressure has always been there. I have never played a match without having the pressure to do well,” she said.

“But now, it’s much more since I am playing at a much higher level,” she added.

Sania admits to having a crush on Akshay Kumar

Played under: — Indian Players

For parents and toddlers from Srinivaspuri jhuggi, who had gathered at the local MCD dispensary, the attractive lady on the dais administering polio drops and signing autographs could be from the “filmi duniya".

Shivani, with her six-month-old son perched on her shoulder, said, “Kitni sunder hai. Koi film star hogi. Aur dekho kitni pyar se bachchon ko dawa de rahin hain.”

However, when this was conveyed to tennis sensation Sania Mirza, looking a bit overdressed for a warm afternoon in a magenta and black embroidered salwar kameez and bangles, she laughed.

“I am not surprised. Villagers relate success to films. So long as it all goes to a charitable cause, I do not mind. I am helping Rotary International in its polio eradication drive,” she said, murmuring sweet nothings to a child in the queue.

Razaq, a Sania fan in the crowd, seemed starstruck when the sportstar accidentally brushed against him.

“I love her game. And one day I’ll play like her.”

However, the little boy’s aunt seemed more impressed that Sania, being a Muslim girl, has made a name in the “bahri duniya".

Deepak Kapur, chairman, Indian National PolioPlus Committee of Rotary International, said, “Sania’s iconic status will help us in the final push against polio. Her star power and the fact that she is a Muslim should generate trust among people. Muslim children are the most affected by polio.”

Sania, sounding mature for her 18 years, said she understands the advantage of her religious belief. “I hope that when I reach out to Muslim mothers, they will trust me and come forward to immunise their children.”

But why the young Sania? “We want to generate trust among minority families that polio drops are safe for their children. And she fits the bill,” said Kapur.

Realising her capacity to inspire people, Sania said, “If I can help even one child from contracting polio, I’ll be satisfied.”

And is being a star tennis champ a hard life?

“Definitely", admitted Sania. “You make a lot of sacrifices and have to travel a lot. It is very hectic. But if I wouldn’t have made the sacrifices, the media wouldn’t have been interviewing me today. I wouldn’t be talking to these kids either,” came the smart reply.

Scribbling endless autographs in school notebooks and patiently smiling for the cameras, Sania seemed harassed at times but kept her calm.

“I think the media attention is just a bonus in my life. I have a small circle of friends and often go out with them for coffee and shopping, just like any other teenager.”

Kapur could not help but sing her praise.

“We do not have mega funds and thus do not have a contract with Sania. It’s her large heartedness that she is working with us. In July, when she will have some time, we’ll ask her to tour polio-affected villages in western UP.”

And does celebrity endorsements help the eradication drive?

“It does. Amitabh Bachchan’s television advertisement helped us to a large extent in UP. And I hope Sania too will make a huge impact, specially on Muslim women in the region,” said Kapur.

“Last year saw the smallest number of polio cases. Hence, this year we have a one-time opportunity to weed out the virus from our world. Our aim is to reach that goal by the yearend. And thanks to Sania and our other star campaigners, I am sure we will be able to do so,” he added.

Amid all the serious “bytes", the teenager Sania peeped through at times.

“I have had a crush on Akshay Kumar since I was a child.” But hurriedly added, “though I’ll never say yes to a film with him or any other actor.”

She also vehemently ruled out a crush on any tennis star but accepted her soft spot for Brad Pitt.

Sania, who loves to dress in red and black and prefers track pants and T-shirt, has captured the hearts of many like Razaq with her junior Wimbledon title and her on-court fight against the mighty Serena Williams. As Kapur said, “We hope she wins the Wimbledon and brings glory to the country and our cause.”

2/25/2005

Dubai Open: Sania sets modest target

Played under: — Indian Players

She might have conquered a billion Indian hearts winning her maiden WTA title in Hyderabad, but Sania Mirza has her head firmly on the shoulder.

As she gears up to compete in her first Tier 2 event on the WTA Tour in Dubai next week, Sania has set a modest target for herself: to win the first round of the $5,85,000 event.

“My aim is to win the first round. I am not looking much beyond at the moment,” said the 18-year old.

“It is a very big tournament for me. The top 30 players will be competing in the event, including number one Lindsay Davenport, Venus Williams and others.

“So it is going to be tough for me, and my aim will be to win the first round,” said the 98th ranked Sania, who entered the main draw with a wild card.

High profile event

The Hyderabad girl became the first Indian to win a WTA title early this month in her hometown, which came soon after she reached the third round of the Australian Open grand slam.

Whereas the Hyderabad Open was a Tier 4 event with $1,40,000 in prize money, the Dubai event is much more high profile with the cut off applied at 35.

The women’s event follows the ATP Tour men’s event with equal prize money.

Sania said neither the weight of expectations nor the ankle injury that she had endured during her winning run in Hyderabad had hampered her preparations.

The left ankle that she injured two weeks before the Australian Open in mid-January still bothers her, although the right one that she twisted during play in Hyderabad has completely heeled

Aparna Popat appointed brand ambassador for Indian handicrafts

Played under: — Indian Players

India’s top woman badminton player Aparna Popat has been appointed the global brand ambassador for Indian handicrafts. Popat recently won the national title for the eighth time in a row. She is the third Indian sportsperson to be signed on for the promotion after ace golfer Jeev Milkha Singh and hockey ace Gagan Ajit Singh.

India Sports