An innocent bystander in the adjoining ‘School Road’ outside the S.D.A.T. Stadium in Nungambakkam will have little hope of realising an event of significance is being held nearby. The lane, shaded by trees, is quiet, devoid of the usual buzz of traffic and activity ubiquitous in the arterial roads of the city. In front of 50 people, Somdev Devvarman, once India’s No. 1 and ranked 62, took his position in Court 1 to face Britain’s James Ward.
But as the tightly-contested match warmed up to progress towards an
exciting finish, people started filing in. Alongside former tennis
stalwart Anand Amritraj and Indian player Sanam Singh, they cheered
Devvarman to victory. There weren’t coarse or plebeian jeers, but
genuine encouragement of a niche crowd, and this, it seemed, was the
lifeline of the tournament.
For the event to create a louder buzz, two things are hoped for:
participation of the best international players in the world, for people
to catch stars in action, and a local player turning out to challenge
the best here. Somdev did that in 2009, stunning two stars in Carlos
Moya and Ivo Karlovic en route to finishing runner-up. But that turned
out to be an anomaly, something Indian tennis fans keep hoping would
change.
Important landmark
But the Chennai Open is serious business. The razzmatazz of off-season
tennis tournaments in the International Premier Tennis League (IPTL) and
the Champions Tennis League (CTL) are captured by the arrival of top
players in the world. But this one is an ATP 250 event, a limited but
important landmark in the ATP calendar. Players participate to gain ATP
points and warm up for the Australian Open. In football terms, it is
like a league fixture as against playing a friendly. Therein lays its
value.
So when nine players in the top 50 in world rankings play in Chennai, it
is more than an extravaganza. And if an Indian faces one of them (that
can happen only in the second round), the experience for the local fans
and the player will be worthy to savour as it will be rare.
From gingerly taking baby steps, the tournament has run a mile to be in
its 21st year in India. Due to the niche nature of the event,
sponsorship has been difficult to come by, as has been confessed by the
organisers. But if the tournament were to be culled – as the contract
for it to run was till 2016 and a renewal of it is uncertain – it will
be a loss of these rare moments.
Sunday, the second day of the qualifiers, also threw up exciting moments
in the topsy-turvy match featuring Somdev, and got him into the main
draw. He was sluggish in the first set, as Ward kept serving big and
hitting powerful groundstrokes to undo him. After the set was lost
tamely, Somdev failed to convert a crucial break point by Ward in the
first game of the second set, and was himself broken in his service game
to go 3-1 down.
Powering his way
His revival was characterised by a more attacking, active game, and an
endeavour to come closer to the net. When the match looked like a lost
cause, he played powerful strokes from the baseline and conjured errors
out of Ward to break him and level the set 3-3. The tempo of his strokes
rose, and diagonal shots to the lines were attempted. Moreover, drop
shots were retrieved well, the best of them arriving in the seventh game
of the second set, and Ward’s services were returned competently. Ward
was broken in the 11th game for Somdev to take a 6-5 lead; it was
followed by a service hold to tie the match 1-1.
Somdev ran through the third set in what he terms as the ‘momentum’
gained from the second, to win 2-6 7-5 6-4. He will play Andrey Rublev
of Russia in the first round.
“I knew that he was playing really well. I needed to up my level a
little bit. Make it a little tougher for him, try to get that first set
out of my mind as fast as possible. It took halfway through the second
set for that to happen. So, it was one of those matches where you had to
claw your way back, fight hard. I’m happy I got one of those matches
under my belt,” he said after the match.
“I needed to hold on to my serve, and I needed to find a way to break
him. Early in the second set, he played a horrible game, and gave me a
break point, (but) I didn’t break. I felt at that point that I had an
opening. Once I broke in the second, I started serving a lot better. Got
to 5-5, played a good game to break and served up the set really well.
In the third, I rolled with the momentum of the second.”
Crowd approves
The crowd had also sensed this momentum shift. The hoot wasn’t deafening
so as to trickle outside the venue, but was audible enough to signify
its intent. In the coming days, there will be a lot more action to
generate a buzz that, like today, is likely to be limited, but never
absent. For the city, as Somdev has put it, ‘it is a great blessing’.
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