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Britain's 14-year-old junior champion looks fine prospect, but long road ahead



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Published Date: 07 July 2008
WINNING Junior Wimbledon may come in retrospect to seem the easiest stage of her tennis career for Laura Robson. The significance of the British girl's achievement in clinching the title on Saturday by beating Noppawan Lertcheewakan of Thailand 6-3, 3-6, 6-1 should not be underestimated, but nor should the difficulty of turning youthful promise into senior success.
At 14, Robson has been hailed with almost indecent haste as the new standard-bearer of British tennis. She did indeed play magnificently over the past week to defeat girls up to three years older and far more experienced, and the title she won on No
1 Court can never be taken away from her.

Yet the transition from her current status to the professional circuit is by no means a smooth one. For every Briton who has gone from winning big as a junior to thriving on the main tour, there is another who has failed to make the jump. Andy Murray, the US Open Boys' Champion in 2004, is the outstanding example of someone who has succeeded; others such as David Sherwood did not make a prolonged stay in the pro ranks.

Robson is remarkably mature off the court as well as on. It takes nerve for a girl of that age to invite Marat Safin to the champions' ball, and she will need that maturity to cope with the vastly increased pressure she will now be under. To date she has been treated as a delightful surprise, but now her ability is known she will start to feel the burden of expectation.

There may also be the danger that the Melbourne-born teenager has been hothoused and will wilt. She is taught at home rather than attending school in order to accommodate her training schedule, and, while so far she seems pretty grounded, in the longer term that may not be the best way to provide her with a rounded understanding of life. On the other hand, the pro tour can be a curious and claustrophobic place, so it could be her present way of life becomes a good preparation for it.

Certainly, for the moment at least Robson seems not easily fazed by difficult situations. After taking command of her match against Lertcheewakan, for instance, she let the No 3 seed back into contention, and as the deciding set started the momentum was with the Thai.

Then, quite simply, Robson gave herself a brief talking to. She knew she would need to change her approach if she was to win, and she did it, simple as that.

"I think I lost the second set because I started getting annoyed with myself," she explained. "So I sat down after the second set and I thought, well, if I want to win this then I've got to change my attitude."

Few senior players can so readily shake off a negative mood and adopt an optimistic outlook, but Robson appears able to do so as easily as changing a TV channel. If it persists, that attribute will be as valuable as any of her playing strengths, although it should be said that against more imposing opposition it will be a far tougher trick to pull off.

Despite her place of birth, Robson sees herself as British, and as a white middle-class girl who lives close to Wimbledon has been adopted by the tennis establishment with alacrity. If she is to make the most of her enviable talent, however, she cannot allow herself to be contaminated by the anxieties of that establishment.



The full article contains 606 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 06 July 2008 10:20 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Star o' Rabbie Burns,

New Cumnock, CUMNOCK 07/07/2008 09:23:21
There, in Stuart Bathgate's final paragraph is an example of all that's wrong with British tennis.

"As a white middle-class girl, who lives close to Wimbledon has been adopted by the tennis establishment with alacrity".

Well said SB for your next sentence about contamination.

She's been all over the Daily Mail for the last few days, she's built up to be wonderful. I now await the "dirt", her Mum will (it will be hinted) be "pushy", they will find some inuendo about the family - it's the way the London papers work.

Once all the hype started I just knew: middle-class, south London girl.

I already feel sorry for her and her family, what they will have to endure in the years ahead, but, good luck to her; as one of them rather than a surly Scot, she'll need it.
2

AJ Fife,

07/07/2008 09:42:28
A great performance by the young Australian. I'm sure her Australian parents will be very proud, as will the public of the city of her birth, which is Melbourne!
3

the earthtracer,

Angus 07/07/2008 21:53:29
"She is taught at home rather than attending school in order to accommodate her training schedule, and, while so far she seems pretty grounded, in the longer term that may not be the best way to provide her with a rounded understanding of life."

Just what does the second part of this sentence mean? Is the reporter just slagging off home education? If so, one might legitimately ask why? The tennis world is hardly mainstream anyway - and all the home educated people (adults and children) that I know, happen to be very well rounded and have a better understanding of life than those poor children that are confined in schools, where they are taught to become obedient little clones of the system.
4

MelissaLW,

West Sussex 07/07/2008 22:05:59
Congratulations on a wonderful achievement to Laura, I wish her well for the future. As for the reporter of this article, I wish him a better all round understanding of homeschooling! Most homeschoolers are far more grounded, well rounded and more confident members of society with a good understanding of life because they live life everyday. Homeschool children mix with people of all ages and backgrounds not just a selected number of peers in a classroom everyday. The majority of homeschoolers see far more of everyday life than a child locked up in a classroom. What a blinkered and inaccurate view of life Stuart Bathgate has!
5

Nigel's brother,

Surrey 08/07/2008 18:36:23
Sorry to see those Scotch chappies took a beating at Wimbers.
But good to see the bonnie wee ENGLISH lass was a winner.
Come on the tennis!

 

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