Friday 28 June 2013

Wimbledon 2013: The state of grassroots & elite tennis in Britain

I was listening to a radio phone in the other day and tennis coaches from the UK were phoning in complaining they cannot produce players as they do not get the support they need and have not got the facilities available in other countries.It was pointed out that as 95% of the time we have rain in the UK ,so indoor facilities are a must have. I was then informed about the BBCs article below on their website and I thought it made really interesting reading...

With the grass-court season upon us and Wimbledon less than a week away, British tennis is about to experience its annual moment in the spotlight. 


But this year carries added importance because the Lawn Tennis Association is effectively on trial, charged with failing to grow participation and threatened by the loss of £10.3m in funding. The governing body has until December to prove itself worthy of receiving that public money. If not, Sport England will pump it into the game through alternative means.

So while the nation craves success from the likes of Andy Murray and Laura Robson, the LTA is working frantically to improve the state of tennis at grassroots level.
Sport England director Phil Smith is of the opinion that elite success and grassroots participation are not mutually exclusive. "We think they can be both achieved at the same time," he said. "British Cycling has managed to do both and that tells me it's possible. I want the LTA to have a big summer, winning as much as they possibly can with British players. I want the knock-on effect of that to be more people on tennis courts."


Easier said than done, but many would argue this should be expected of an organisation with a £60m turnover, a £40m National Tennis Centre and an outgoing chief executive earning £640,000.
LTA statistics indicate that there are 4,118 places to play tennis in England, Scotland and Wales, including 97 performance centres,  21,186 courts (1,645 of which are indoor) and 3,904 registered or licensed coaches.
Tennis Ulster lists a further 40 clubs, 320 courts (10 indoor) and 80 coaches in Northern Ireland.
According to Tennis for free,  which campaigns for better access to tennis facilities, there are 2,594 free public courts and 16 free park coaching programmes in the United Kingdom.

For a nation of its size, the level of infrastructure appears reasonable, but Britain still has fewer players in the ATP and WTA rankings - 66 men and 27 women - than any other leading tennis country.



The success stories - Andy Murray's US Open win, the rise of Laura Robson and Heather Watson, Jonny Marray's Wimbledon doubles title and various junior triumphs - are offset by the fact that just one man and four women are inside the world's top 200.
At the French Open, Murray's absence exposed the lack of strength in depth in men's singles as no British man contested the main draw for the first time since 1994. In the women's event, Britain's three entries won one just set between them.
"We need to start again, no matter how long it takes," said John Lloyd, a former British number one and Australian Open finalist who has also coached Britain's Davis Cup team.
"Spending money on players at the top has not worked. The important thing is to create a base from the bottom up."

Tennis Europe's 2012-13 report shows that, despite similar populations, France has three times more clubs than Britain, 11,000 more courts, five times the number of indoor courts and 7,000 more coaches.
France can also lay claim to 132 ATP and 58 WTA ranked players, with 19 men and 11 women in the top 200, although its wait for a male Grand Slam singles champion now stands at 30 years.
Spain has 1,500 fewer clubs than Britain and a quarter of the courts, but 16,500 more coaches. It also has 92 ATP and 32 WTA players - 19 men and eight women in the top 200 - plus plenty of Grand Slam winners.
"France has some of the best coaches in the world, a club system that is the envy of nearly all of their international rivals and good courts in almost every town across the nation," Pat Cash, Australia's 1987 Wimbledon champion, wrote in the Sunday Times.
"The Spanish players are tough because they are brought up the hard way and thrust into solid competition against senior male players at a very early age. It's a case of sink or swim and those who are good enough keep afloat and flourish."

The LTA points to a promising future after Britain won the Junior Davis Cup for the first time in 2011. There have been other notable performances from British youngsters, too, with Kyle Edmund winning the boys' doubles at this year's French Open.
The LTA also highlights its vast Talent ID programme and claims that 58,000 juniors compete in six or more matches a year, with 17,000 playing 20 or more.
Elena Baltacha, one of Britain's leading female tennis players for the last decade, said more needs to be done. "Kids have to compete more regularly," said Baltacha, who runs the Ebat academy  in Ipswich.
"The more we get competing, the higher the quality is going to be. Then a filter begins to emerge and the strongest will survive."
Cash argues that junior competition - an area in which Britain traditionally has a reasonable record - is not necessarily the key.
"In the boys' singles at Roland Garros this year, there were 12 French entrants, four Australians and three players each from Britain and the United States," he wrote. "How many Spaniards? Just one.
"Spanish kids don't bother with the juniors and are brought up on the ultra-competitive network of Spanish clay court tournaments."
It was this environment that led London-based Cash to send his son to the Sanchez-Casal Academy in Barcelona, where Murray spent two years developing his career after leaving Scotland in 2002.
"Every day they empty crates, hitting hundreds of tennis balls, honing the groundstrokes and technique. At weekends, they play in extremely demanding contests," Cash explained. "The kids learn resilience, stop using lame excuses and lose their softness."
Speaking on the condition of anonymity, one British player told BBC Sport: "A lot of the British players I see are flaky, they're weak.
"A lot of the young British players get funding without doing an awful lot or, if they don't, their parents help out.

 
"They work hard, but maybe the commitment is not 100%. They do the gym and tennis sessions, but they don't push it past the point of no return. They go to discomfort but they don't go to pain.
"A lot of players I see from other nations - the Spaniards, the Serbs - are much tougher mentally. They're very hardy people."
Baltacha agreed that coaches should "be harder with the players", a philosophy she feels has helped grow the number of players at her academy grow from 10 in 2010 to around 150 today.
She is adamant more British players will rise to the top if the volume of people taking part in tennis is greater.
That sentiment is now being embraced by the LTA, whose 2006 vision of "winning" has shifted to "more people playing tennis more often".
A detailed plan has been drawn up to address Sport England's concerns, focusing on three areas to drive participation:
  • Community - play for free or pay and play in parks, indoor tennis centres, leisure centres and community centres
  • Clubs - play via membership at public and commercial venues
  • Education - play in schools, colleges and universities
In response, the LTA believes more than 110,000 children already play Mini Tennis  at 1,500 venues across the country.
"It's really important we have an attractive offer at the entry point so we can bring kids into our sport in a fun and engaging way," said Oliver Scadgell, the LTA's head of competitions and programmes.
"The more kids we get in, the more likely they are to progress through and maybe become the next Andy Murrays or Laura Robsons."
There are countless other initiatives being used by the LTA to get people of all ages, abilities and backgrounds involved, with a significant emphasis on changing perceptions of tennis.

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