Tennis
'Time for cultural shift': Rohan Bopanna calls for robust local circuit
Rohan Bopanna, who retired from international tennis at the Paris Olympics, suggested several measures to overhaul Indian tennis.
Ace Indian tennis player Rohan Bopanna called for a complete overhaul of the Indian tennis' system in a social media post on Sunday.
"It is about time. Time for a cultural shift," Bopanna wrote on X, formerly Twitter.
Suggesting what changes Indian tennis requires at the moment, the 44-year-old, who bid farewell to Davis Cup in 2023 and international tennis after a first-round exit from the Paris Olympics in 2024, said India needed a 'Stronger Domestic Circuit', 'Improved Grassroot Infrastructure', 'Focus On Youth Development', 'Player - Coach - Synergy' and 'More International Exposure'.
While responding to a query about the expenses of starting a domestic league, Bopanna said, "For a domestic circuit with larger prize pools, better infrastructure, approx the cost could be Rs 10 crore to Rs 20 crore per year. High end estimate."
India need a robust local circuit: Bopanna
Bopanna, the winner of the Australian Open Grand Slam, also emphasised that India needed a well-structured domestic circuit to help players earn ranking points and much-needed confidence to compete at the international level.
The doubles specialist also suggested a measure to help players bring down the cost of international travelling.
"Travelling internationally is extremely expensive. A robust local circuit reduces costs and allows more players to compete regularly," said Bopanna.
"A well-structured domestic circuit can serve as a stepping stone to international tournaments, allowing players to build ranking points and confidence," he added.
Boppanna's remark came after India fell behind 0-2 against Sweden in the Davis Cup World Cup 1 tie in Stockholm Saturday.
As India trail, N Sriram Balaji, who lost to Sweden's top-ranked player Elias Ymer 4-6, 2-6 in the opening rubber, underlined India's poor balance in the squad. "If you ask me doubles is my first priority now. So through the player I am playing only doubles; I do not play singles much. So I am not really comfortable right now," Balaji said to media persons after Saturday's matches.
With Sumit Nagal, the country's highest-ranked men's singles, pulling out and Mukund Sasikumar being banned by AITA, India's chances in the Davis Cup tie against Sweden hang in a thread.