Mirza
joins star-studded cast at Dubai Tennis Championships
Sania Mirza returns to Dubai
By A Correspondent
24 January 2006
DUBAI — Indian tennis sensation
Sania Mirza will return to the Dubai Tennis Championships, organisers
Dubai Duty Free announced yesterday.
Given a wild card for the 2005 Dubai Women’s Open, Mirza returns
to Dubai next month as a true superstar of the game and a genuine
contender to take the title.
She not only attracted sell out crowds
in Dubai last year, the teenager backed up the expectations by claiming
a stunning first round victory over the reigning US Open champion,
Svetlana Kuznetsova.
That was just another step to becoming
an icon for countless millions of sports-loving Indians, and Sania’s
success in Dubai as well as winning her first Sony Ericsson WTA
Tour title in her home city of Hyderabad led to her meeting presidents
and prime ministers, appearing on the cover of Time magazine and
being featured on CNN’s Talk Asia.
“We are absolutely delighted to
be welcoming Sania back to Dubai and I’m sure there are many
people who will be looking forward to watching this young star in
action again,” said Colm McLoughlin, managing director of
event owners and organisers Dubai Duty Free.
“The atmosphere in the Dubai Tennis
Stadium when Sania was playing last year was unforgettable and she
will no doubt draw on that support once again to help her against
some of the top players in the world.”
Mirza is sure to cause another frenzy
when she returns to compete in the Dubai Tennis Championships 2006.
Taking place at the Dubai Tennis Centre from February 20, the $1,000,000
event also features the greatest line-up of stars in the history
of the tournament. Mirza will compete against defending champion
and world number one Lindsay Davenport, 2004 Wimbledon champion
Maria Sharapova, two-time former champion Justine Henin-Hardenne,
Serena and Venus Williams and 2004 US Open winner Svetlana Kuznetsova.
Mirza’s talent attracted the interest
of Australian legend Tony Roche, who now coaches Roger Federer.
In fact, Sania spent time at the Roche residence in December, preparing
for the Australian Open in the company of Federer himself. “It
was like two hours for me, two hours with Roger, then I was back
after two hours. He was actually giving personal attention to both
of us,” said Mirza. “We worked on my serve, changed
my action a little bit, worked a lot on my volleys, getting some
variation in my game.”
Sania has managed to take all the adulation
she has received in her stride, although it has sometimes been difficult
with constant demands on her time.
“It gets hard sometimes,”
she admits, “You know, I'm there, I'm playing tennis. That's
what I'm here for. That's what I want to do the best I can for however
long I can. I think you need to just go out there and play your
game.
“Expectations are not in my control.
That's something I have to live with.
“It's amazing, though, the amount
of people that are so proud of you when you go back home, the amount
of people that come up to you and say, ‘I'm proud to be Indian,
you're doing a great job for India.’ It's just amazing that
you can bring so many smiles to so many faces.”
Sania will certainly be bringing smiles
to her thousands of fans in Dubai when she competes next month against
many of the best players in the world.
The Dubai Tennis Championships is owned
and organised by Dubai Duty Free and takes place under the patronage
of His Highness Shaikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President
and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai.
The Dubai Tennis Championships has won
a total of 12 ATP/WTA awards. These include the Tournament of the
Year award from the WTA in 2001 following the inaugural Dubai Duty
Free Women's Open, and the equivalent award from the ATP in 1998,
2003 and 2004 for the Dubai Duty Free Men's Open.
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