Archive for the ‘Somdev Dev Varman’ Category

Tennis: Somdev training with Roddick

December 5, 2008

India’s Davis Cupper Somdev Devvarman is capping an eventful year with a 10-day training stint with American world number eight Andy Roddick

Somdev, who became India’s number one men’s singles player recently, is training in Austin, Texas, with the 2003 US Open winner under renowned coach Larry Stefanki.

Somdev achieved his career best ranking of 201 last month and is currently placed 205 in the ATP ranking list.

“I am very excited at the opportunity to train with Andy under the watchful eye of Larry Stefanki. It will be a great learning curve for me and it is a great way to prepare for the 2009 season,” Somdev said.

Stefanki has coached greats like John McEnroe , Marcelo Rios, Yevgeni Kafelnikov and Fernando Gonzalez.

Tennis: Somdev, Prakash handed Chennai Open wildcards

November 26, 2008

Somdev and Prakash Amritraj were handed down wild cards into the main draw of the Chennai Open to be held in January 2009. Somdev is ranked 200 and Prakash is ranked at 2004. Another entry will be Lukas Dlouhy who will be making his maiden appearance at the Chennai Open. If you havnt forgotten, Dlouhy is the doubles partner for Leander Paes.

Tennis: Somdev-Izak in main draw of Champaign Challenger

November 13, 2008

Somdev Devvarman and his South African partner Izak Van Der Merwe qualified for the doubles in the ATP Challenger series tournament in Champaign, USA.

The second-seeded pair of Somdev and Izak outplayed the top seed Indian pair of Ashutosh Singh and Harsh Mankad, winning 6-3, 6-2 in the final round of the qualifying competition.

It was sweet revenge for Somdev and his partner as they had lost to the same Indian pair in last week’s Challenger at Nashville at the same stage.

Somdev and Izak will play their first match against Indo-American pair of Prakash Amritraj and Amer Delic.

In the singles event, Prakash will open his campaign against Izak, Somdev’s doubles partner, who entered the main draw as a qualifier.

Tennis: Somdev loses US Challenger final

November 10, 2008

Somdev Devvarman’s giant-killing run ended with a straight-set loss to fourth seeded American Robert Kendrick in the final of the ATP Challenger Series’ hard-court tournament in Nashville, US.

The Indian Davis Cupper, who had beaten the second and third seeds in the run-up to the final, lost 3-6, 5-7.

There was further disappointment for India when Ashutosh Singh and Harsh Mankad lost 4-6, 5-7 to the Australian-American pair of Carslen Ball and Travis Rettenmaier in the doubles final.

Column: Infusion of quality players needed

October 23, 2008

In a column Naresh Kumar writes that the need of the hour is the Infusion of quality players without the messy politicking that goes on in the associations as well as well as between players and associations. The most memorable one has been the tiff between Mahesh Bhupati and AITA over Mission 2018 by Apollo Tyres. The groupism that is developing in the Indian Tennis Team and the revolt against Paes has only added to the woes of the system.

Pasted below is the complete article. The link to the article

Indian tennis is in a turmoil. The Davis Cup team is in revolt. The rebels — reportedly led by Mahesh Bhupathi/Prakash Amritraj — are trying to sign up Somdev Dev Varman to retain their stranglehold on the Davis Cup team. The All Indian Tennis Association (AITA) is also at loggerheads with Bhupathi over his flamboyant Apollo Tyres Mission 2018 programme, a Rs 100 crore project promising a Grand Slam Champion in ten years!

Furthermore, the AITA has banned private promoters from conducting WTA and ATP tournaments. Happily, the controversy about the selection of coaches for training the team for the Commonwealth Games seems to have died down with the appointment of Jaidip Mukerjea as the chief coach. Quite a plateful.

The turbulence started during the Indo-Japan Davis Cup tie in Delhi in March. In an appalling move, the team wrote to the AITA refusing to play under the captaincy of Leander Paes and listing his failings. The ominous letter was also signed by Karan Rastogi, a Davis Cup prospect not on the team.

Not only was it an effort to oust Paes, but the inclusion of Rastogi made it apparent that it was an effort to ‘hijack’ the team.

With the powerful Bhupathi-Amritraj combine and the forthcoming important pre-World Group tie against Romania, the AITA had little option but to back down. A non-playing captain, S. P. Misra was appointed and Paes ‘voluntarily’ stepped down from the captaincy.

The matter is put away in the cupboard and may be raised again when the next Davis Cup tie in the Asia Oceania Group I comes up in April ’09.

Somdev’s performance in tournaments has now made him a key member of our future Davis Cup tennis. He needs a sponsor badly and understandably he will have to follow his sponsor’s directions. If the AITA can help him and receive his support, the revolt could well peter out and the AITA would be back in the saddle. If not, the ‘rebels’ will retain control of the Davis Cup team.

For some years now WTA and ATP tournaments have been organised by tennis loving promoters and sponsors, at times working with state associations.

The tournaments, held at a total cost of more than Rs 100 crores with almost all the prize money being taken away by foreign players, have done little for Indian tennis. The sole exception was when Sania Mirza won the tournament in Hyderabad. One does not need a consultant to tell you that the absence of a meaningful Indian presence in the events cannot be compensated by glitzy promotional gimmicks with prancing models and Bollywood stars.

Sponsors are not in love with the game. They want adequate return on their money. It is reported that the cancellation of the Bangalore ATP tournament was triggered by the absence of sponsors. The promoters wriggled out of their commitment, citing security apprehensions after the bomb blasts. The excuse outraged AITA, who apprehending loss of face on the international scene, fired a broadside by banning private bodies from conducting WTA or ATP events.

Though the promoters grudgingly pay royalty to the AITA for holding the tournaments, they will strongly contest the AITA’s jurisdiction over them. The dispute will surely escalate and could end up in the covernment’s lap.

Yet another source of irritation for the AITA is the Rs. 100 crore sponsorship Bhupathi has received for the Apollo Tyres Mission 2018 programme. The aim is to produce an Indian Grand Slam winner by 2018. The racy title conjures up images of Tom Cruise emerging successful in ‘Mission Impossible’. The AITA has taken strong exception to the advertisements and newspaper reports on the grounds that it conveys the false impression that the AITA is not doing anything for Indian tennis.

Bhupathi, in a press statement stated, “We have never had a structure to produce players in the country. All eight players who made it to the top 100 in singles or doubles over the last 30 years have made it privately. We have created this structure and are confident it will work. The mission is to produce results.”

Player versus association skirmishes are a global phenomenon and India is no exception. The confrontation between the AITA and the others is moving towards an all out Twenty20 cricket slog.

Indian tennis badly needs an infusion of good quality players without which promotional hype is futile and global recognition a dream.