Sania upbeat on new partner
Sania Mirza will pair up with China’s Jie Zheng for the US Open and the Indian ace is hoping that they will able to prepare well for the last Grand Slam of the season despite not having the luxury of time.
Sania played with American Lizel Huber at Wimbledon where she made a third round exit.
“I am gonna try with Jie Zheng. We will take time to get used to each other and we have four weeks before the US Open,” Sania said on the sidelines of the IBL auction in the capital on Monday.
Sania said the game of the Chinese, with whom she had fought many interesting singles battle in the past, compliments hers. “Backhand is her strength, she plays close to the net. The back of the court is my strength. She has won Wimbledon and the Australian Open. She made a couple of semi-finals in singles. She knows what it takes at the highest level.
“We had some great singles battles in the past. I lost my Asian Games singles medal in three sets to her in Doha, so hopefully we will hope to win some together,” Sania said.
Asked about her partnership with American Bethanie Mattek-Sands, with whom she won her last WTA doubles title (14th), Sania rued that the pairing could not continue.
“Me and Bethanie were playing so well for the last year but unfortunately her body is very fragile and it is tough for her to play both singles and doubles so right now she has decided to stay away from doubles as she has lost a lot due to injuries and she doesn’t want to go out again,” she said.
Sania said giving up singles was not easy but she had to listen to her body. “I miss singles terribly but it is a choice I had to make because I don’t feel I am good enough anymore. I don’t want to be 100 odd in the world and still play for the heck of it. My body is fragile and after three surgeries in five years, it is tough and you have to make some hard decisions and it was very difficult for me.”
Asked why India could not see the rise in women’s singles players, Sania said, “I have been asked this question for the last 10 years and every time I draw a blank. There are many reasons. A lot has to do with physical ability, we don’t train well. We do things at the age of 15 which we need to do at 8. Look at the way, how the Chinese have come up from nowhere.”
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