JUST DON’T CALL HER KOURNIKOVA
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Melanie Neff
For all you ladies out there, July might be a good month to plan for
your summer vacation, or else just plan to lock up your men for the
month, because Maria Sharapova is coming to town.
The hottest thing to come to Newport Beach since, well, OK, she’s
no hotter than 90% of the high school girls walking around town, but
Teen People magazine selected her as one of “20 teens that will
change the world,” and the hoopla has begun.
The 16-year-old Russian tennis phenom, who will make her debut
with the Newport Beach Breakers on the World Team Tennis tour July 8
at Palisades Tennis Club, is touted as the next Anna Kournikova, but
that is based strictly on looks, and that is where the comparisons
end.
“There really is nothing to say,” Sharapova said during a
conference call Tuesday. “I want to be myself. I don’t want to be the
next Kournikova, I want to be the next Sharapova.”
And the young Siberian is making sure nobody confuses her with her
fellow Russian beauty.
Unlike Kournikova, Sharapova can actually win tournaments. She was
named the United States Tennis Association Pro Circuit Player of the
Week on Tuesday, after winning her second USTA title of her brief
career last week at the Cloisters Cup in Sea Island, Ga.
Sharapova, with her 6-foot, long-legged frame and flowing blond
hair, had a chance to dim Kournikova’s spotlight in the Cloisters
tournament where the two were scheduled to meet in the semifinals,
but No. 2-seed Kournikova defaulted at the last minute because of a
thigh injury.
“I was really ready for the match,” Sharapova said. “When I heard
that [she defaulted], it was good for me because I had a really tough
match before that. But I was ready to play her.”
Sharapova, the No. 3 seed, took the free ride into the finals and
recorded a 6-4, 6-3 victory over seventh-seeded Christina Wheeler of
Australia. Sharapova advanced to the semifinals, rallying to defeat
Kristina Brandi of Tampa, Fla., 2-6, 7-5, 6-2.
Kournikova’s only wins came seven years ago when she won two
International Tennis Federation tournaments in 1996.
Sharapova’s marketing machine, IMG, has her going full gear. She
has appeared in Rolling Stone, Vanity Fair and Sports Illustrated,
ESPN: The Magazine, as well as on the covers of Smash Tennis,
ADDvantage and several other tennis magazines. She was also featured
on HBO “Real Sports” with Bryant Gumbal. Sport Magazine nominated her
as one of 21 athletes to watch in the 21st century and she was
awarded the first annual “Rising Star Award” given to promising young
players who have shown tremendous talent at a young age.
Modeling photos and Web sites are popping up all over the
Internet. Fans have started www.mariaworld.com, and although she has
nowhere near the number of sites Kournikova has, just wait, they are
coming.
More importantly, so is her game. Sharapova can play, and yes, she
just happens to look good doing it.
She moved from Russia to the Bradenton, Fla., to be trained at the
Bollettieri Sports Academy when she was 7. She is coached by Robert
Lansdorp, the former coach of Lindsay Davenport and Pete Sampras. She
is expected to one day be a top-10 player. She is ranked 162nd in the
world by the USTA, but when rankings are released next week she is
expected to climb to 140. She is the youngest player ranked in the
top 300. Kournikova is currently 70th.
Sharapova, who turned 16 on April 19, began her pro career on her
14th birthday and has appeared in four USTA circuit finals. She won
her first title last year at the $25,000 Peachtree City, Ga. event.
Along with her two USTA titles, she was a junior finalist at the 2002
Australian Open and Wimbledon. She has also won four titles on the
ITF circuit.
She won her first professional match in 2002 at the $25,000 event
in Columbus, Ohio, where she defeated Teryn Ashley, 7-6, 1-6, 7-5.
She made her WTA debut at 14 at Indian Wells. She knocked out Brie
Rippner in the first round before losing, 6-0, 6-2 to Monica Seles.
Sharapova’s next tournament will be trying to qualify for the French
Open, which begins May 24.
Sharapova said the last year hasn’t been easy for her, as her body
continues to grow. And after having a recent X-ray for an ankle
sprain, she found out she is likely to reach beyond 6-0. While it is
a benefit for tennis players to be tall, Sharapova said it has taken
adjustment.
“On the other side, it’s very difficult,” she said. “I didn’t feel
anything until I went out and played matches. There was a streak at
the beginning of the year where I didn’t play well because of it.”
She seems to be adjusting this year, and is looking forward to her
second season in the WTT. She played with the Delaware Smash last
year and said she greatly benefited from the experience.
“It improved my game unbelievably,” Sharapova said. “It was a
great experience for me. I look forward to the same thing this year
and getting as much out of the experience as I can get out of it.”
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