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Post Info TOPIC: Sportastic Grade 1 ITF Austria


Tennis legend

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Sportastic Grade 1 ITF Austria


Firt G1 title for them. clap.gifclap.gifworship.gif

They're just 15 or so places off a direct entry into next year's AO.

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Junior player

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Way to go boys!!!
Their finest win so far,that was a very tough match on paper.The british bulldog spirit is alive and well!

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Intermediate Club Player

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I think they will make AO DA anyway due to drop out & the fact not every one high enough to play chooses to make the journey. We will see, it is a goal as they plan to play all the slams next year via DA!! This is the best part of tennis, the players faces after a great win or winning a title......totally priceless!!smile

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Nah, last year people who were ranked around 125 in December just got in. Willis and Pauffley will need to get some points to first get there and then hold on to it.



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Goldenslam wrote:

 

Sheddie wrote:

go Tubba and Pauffley !!

This info is fantastic goldenslam, really great to read....looks like a reallly tight one, hopefully they can come through. Who are they playing ? Opponents they're expected to beat or seeds ?


Sheddie - thanks for the comments regarding updates but I have a request, please can you not call Willis Tubba, I know you would'nt do it to offend him but he reads this site & names like this upset him & piss him off & rightly so, he has worked hard on his fitness recently & is continuing doing so & names like that are not really great for the confidence. On top of that his mum reads this site too & you wouldn't wanna mess with her!!! Cheers smilesmile




-- Edited by Goldenslam at 10:25, 2007-07-20

 



Hi Goldenslam, I apologise for calling Willis Tubba, was out of order from me.  Good to hear that he's putting in the fitness work and from recent results its paying dividends which is great !

It's great to know that Willis and his mum read the site, didn't know that !  I know Evo and Ricey read it, think Cox might do/have done so too....do you know if any of the other juniors do ?

Btw, I'm looking to update the profiles page on britishtennis.net, wondered if you might be able to give me some info for that on Willis and Pauffley ?   Eg...where they're based, best junior achievements so far. I can also put sponsor info if u want  

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This article was found by a friend who posted it for me to read. I'm sure she won't mind me sharing it with you all.smile.gif

From Russia with love for the work ethic

Owen Slot, Chief Sports Reporter
On the subject of hunger and desire in tennis, it may seem something of an oxymoron to mention Anna Kournikova, but the following is a tale told yesterday by Victor Roubanov, her coach at the Spartak club in Moscow.

To join the elite at Spartak, you had to go for trials and roughly one child in 200 would make it. The point about Kournikova, aged 6˝, is that when her turn came, Roubanov asked her what she could do and she immediately pumped 50 press-ups on her knuckles. That helped to win her a place and thereafter Roubanov recalls the girl badgering other kids to play with her through their lunch breaks. Sometimes, he said, she would play for eight hours without stopping.

And yes, we tend to think that of all the Russian girls, she was the soft one. All of this is significant now because the word is that British kids are soft, too, and because Roubanov is over here and trying to find one that is not.

The news is that he believes he has cracked it. At the LTAs invitation, he went to work at Bisham Abbey in 1989 with his wife, Olga Morozova, the 1974 Wimbledon singles finalist and former Soviet national coach. After a number of years, though, he asked if he could run his own programme in his own way, exactly the way he saw it working in Moscow.
So his story is one of Russian ways applied to the United Kingdom. His first products are at Wimbledon in the boys singles, two 17-year-olds, Neil Pauffley and Marcus Willis, both of whom, he says, will make the world top 50. They themselves tell you their sights are set somewhat higher, adding that their unusual grooming gives them an edge over their British peers.

There are other British hopefuls, Willis said, who arent prepared to try everything to win. He and Pauffley, who have been waiting since Friday to open their Wimbledon campaigns, talk about how others will find excuses. If all this is beginning to sound familiar, Roubanov reinforces the idea that Russians are simply bred to want it more, but believes these intangibles are not beyond our own children.

Russian parents are tougher, he said. They push children. Everyone wants to see their child here in Wimbledon. If British parents see their childrens tennis dip, they say, OK, well concentrate on school instead. They are not ambitious.

There is a reason. Life is more comfortable here; British children have more opportunities. In Russia, with such a big gap between the rich and the poor, many have one opportunity: to play tennis. Sport is an opportunity to earn money. Parents here do not pay for tennis. Russian parents will sell their houses, cars, everything for their childrens tennis.

Through the Spartak club, Roubanov has watched the progress not only of Kournikova but also of Marat Safin, Mikhail Youzhny, Elena Dementieva and Anastasia Myskina, and he has a Safin tale to demonstrate what Russians do and Britons dont.

He once watched a young Safin, who was told to play cross-court to hit a cone ten times. After half an hour, Roubanov said, he was still out there trying to hit it. It was: Come on, do it, do it. But if that was here? The maximum would be ten minutes. You cant do it? OK, lets do something else. Roubanov is honest, saying: You cant change the mentality here.

What he believes you can do is this: first, he does not believe in scanning the country for talent, it has to be local; and he will not consider a drive-in time of more than 30 minutes. The reason is that he demands of his six, seven and eight-year-olds three two-hour sessions a week. This is very unusual for British parents, he said, because they are used to two and they also have horse riding, swimming, piano, ballet dancing.

The parents, he says, are introduced to a culture that is unfailingly professional. They are given certain windows in which they are allowed to holiday. I never cancel, Roubanov said. I only cancel if I die. There is high discipline. If children come and see everyone working, then they work, too. Not playing, but working. This all tells the children this is something serious.

Bottom line: does this make Pauffley and Willis as hungry as the Russians? I think they are more safe than the Russians. But they have to feel that I want it badly.

He tells them to model themselves on Nikolay Davydenko because what he lacks in talent he makes up for in work ethic. Willis and Pauffley seem to like the sound of that.


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Intermediate Club Player

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Thats an interesting stat Arka! We were checking the rankings after the dubs final & the boys are 61 & 62 respectively in the 1990 age group, there is a huge 1989 drop out this year, far more than usual. I would advise that the boys dont just stop & wait for the drop out, they should keep pushing for points & get as high as possible before the end of the year, in fact I would even drop down a grade or 2  to pick up some wins or even titles, we will see......

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Sheddie, thanks for the post- V much appreciated!! I think quite a few of the players read this site, juniors & seniors. Its a fun site to pass the time during rain delays or when you are waiting for matches Willis & Pauffley told me about this site. I will ask the boys to forward some details on to you to update the site. Once again thanks & thanks from Willis too.

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administrator

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Quality stuff that so many of the players read the site ! The inside info on the matches is really good cause it allows us to cover the juniors in our homepage articles ! Big congrats to both guys on winning the title, not often you see Brits winning G1s on clay ! Fantastic achievement against some of the best juniors in the world. Hopefully it will lead to a few doubles wcs for the autumn challengers

There's always a massive drop-out at the end of each year so if Willis and Pauffley are around 120 they'll get into the AO easy...I was amazed to see how few of the top juniors actually play it, must be the weakest of the slams.

Have they got much to defend in next few months ?

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Whats the next tourney for Willis and Pauffley ? Seems to be mainly G4s and G5s this week, are they stepping down a few levels or taking a week off ?

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Intermediate Club Player

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The boys are taking a week off & may play a couple of days at County week?? Pauffley has the Euro summer cup coming up for GB next week, Willis will be going to Belgium next for a G2 & G3, I think he should be looking to take a singles title out there other than that it will be US Open (hopefully), then some G2 & G1 events in the states & Asia, ending the year at the Orange Bowl & the few events that follow, mixing in some futures & challengers aswell. Aussie open is a big goal & with the drop out the boys are ranked 61 & 62 in 1990 age group.

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There is no G2 in Belgium in the near future. confused.gif And the G3 there ends the day before the G1 in Canada starts.


Willis and Pauffley need to start playing out of Europe now. I really hope that they'll travel to Asia as you say. There are some big tournaments out there on hard courts.

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Intermediate Club Player

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My bad!! it s a G3 in Belgium & then a G2 & G3 in Serbia, although alot depends on whether they can take the chance of getting in to G1 Canada, USO & the G1 after? We will see.....hmm

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Tennis legend

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I don't think that Angus, Willis, Pauffley or James will be going to the US as they have entered the G3 on clay in Belgium that's played the week before the G1 in Canada.


http://www.heiveldtennis.be/download/2007-08-03_12-03_Accept%20list%20BOYS%20July31%20ranking%2030Jul2007.pdf


Although there will be withdrawals, that field is extremely strong for a Grade 3.

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Intermediate Club Player

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You are right, all the boys have given up the ghost on that one & none will be travelling to the states.

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