I am playing my best tennis, I have matured now: Bopanna
Team Udayavani, Jun 9, 2017, 10:22 AM IST
New Delhi: Rohan Bopanna says he is playing the “best tennis” of his career after he achieved a personal goal of winning a Grand Slam title.
The Indian asserted that he has matured as a player who knows how to negotiate pressure situations.
“There is a huge difference what I used to be as a player. I have played close played close matches over the years. I was not so nervous today as compared to 2010 (US Open final). Over the years it has helped me to adapt (quickly) to surfaces. Last two years I have been enjoying a lot playing on clay,” Bopanna said.
“I have started to control the points better. I am playing my best tennis. I have matured over the years. I know how to handle those situations better. I have lost close matches, the Wimbledon semis, played the Masters series consistently. There were no nerves and that was a big difference,” he said.
Bopanna won his first ever Major title with Gabriela Dabrowski, who became the first Canadian woman to win a Grand Slam trophy.
The last time the Coorgy came to close to a Major title was in 2010 when he played the US Open final but had lost to Bryan brothers with Aisam-ul-haq Qureshi.
Bopanna and his partner today saved two match points in the Match tie-breaker.
It took Bopanna 14 years to realise his dream of winning a Grand Slam trophy after turning a Pro and he said it will take some time to realise what he has done.
“I had fantastic past two weeks. It’s still sinking in.
Maybe when I will be in flight tomorrow, it will sink in.”
Asked if this win erases all regrets over getting close to Grand Slam title twice but not winning and also not winning an Olympic medal in Rio, where he and Sania Mirza were a set away from the bronze.
“There was never ever any regret. Past is past, it can’t be changed. The only way to look is look forward and present,” he said.
Bopanna said he made adjustments to his game and altered his style to get success on clay, the most demanding surface of all.
“I have been working hard, doing the right things. On clay, I changed the way I play. I was serving and staying back and not just doing serve and volley. Practising with Pablo Cuevas also helped me get better,” the 37-year-old said.
Recalling the crunch moments of the match when they were down by two match points, he said, “I kept telling my partner that we have to keep it in play and she came up with unbelievable return off Robert.
“It’s a big bog moment for us, more than special. It was a personal goal for me to win a Grand Slam. It’s proud moment more than relief.
Udayavani is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest news.
Top News
Related Articles More
Rohit gets hit in nets, practice pitches on slower side
Mandhana, Renuka blow away West Indies in first ODI
Rohit Sharma should change his tactics, be more attacking batting at No. 6: Ravi Shastri
Joe Root returns to England’s ODI squad for India tour, Champions Trophy; Ahmed in T20Is
India beat Bangladesh by 41 runs to bag Women’s U19 T20 Asia Cup
MUST WATCH
Latest Additions
Kannada Sahitya Sammelana: Food distribution creates stir
Rohit gets hit in nets, practice pitches on slower side
India & Kuwait elevate ties to strategic level; ink defence pact after PM Modi meets top Kuwaiti leaders
In Kuwait, PM Modi meets yoga practitioner, other influencers from Gulf country
Notorious gangster wanted in UAPA case arrested at Nepal border
Thanks for visiting Udayavani
You seem to have an Ad Blocker on.
To continue reading, please turn it off or whitelist Udayavani.