Victoria Azarenka let it be known that mind tennis was a very important part of her tennis game. But yesterday, mind tennis #1 Azarenka pulled out of the Fed Cup with injury. Her withdrawal from the Fed Cup singles matches has made the contest easier for the United States team.
Ben Rothenberg of the NYTimes.com says Azarenka pull out of the singles competition because of a lower-back injury.
Mind Tennis #1 Azarenka Pulls Out of the Fed Cup With Injury
Azarenka, who blitzed Maria Sharapova, 6-3, 6-0, to win her first Grand Slam championship, has not lost a match in 2012, compiling a 12-0 record en route to titles in Sydney and Melbourne.
The sudden withdrawal of Azarenka, 22, took some excitement out of the tie. She had played the best tennis of her career in Australia while letting her personality loose. After routine wins against unseeded opponents, she celebrated with her tongue out, wagging her finger toward her box with a swagger that was decidedly more Dikembe Mutumbo than Rod Laver.
“The attitude, I was just trying to be there, be present, you know, in every moment, and try to give my best,” Azarenka said during an interview before the tie against the United States. “I’m really believing I can go all the way through, but I always take it step by step. I never jump ahead.”
Azarenka has displayed a level of braggadocio that women’s tennis has not seen perhaps since the early days of Martina Hingis in the 1990s, when she was dissecting opponents with vicious spins and a delighted grin. Azarenka’s confidence does not manifest itself in midmatch smiles, but rather in fist-pumps and struts.
She often walks around the court between points with the same sort of bounce she has when she walks on for warm-ups — when she has music blaring in her ears and a hood over her head as if she were entering a boxing ring.
“I think it’s very personal,” Azarenka said of her attitude on court. “You really have to find the way for yourself, how to take the step for winning. It’s, I think, a long way to really find that momentum that makes you in the moment when you need to be pumped up, and the moment when you need to come down. So I think it’s important to learn your body, to learn your body language, and everything.
“For the young players, I would say you really have to pay attention to how you feel. You don’t have to reject or not accept what you’re feeling—you just have to try to learn how to deal with it.”
In the article, Ben goes on to say that, according to Sam Sumyk, Azarenka’s coach, her on-court attitude has been something they have concentrated on. That however doesn’t help when mind tennis #1 Azarenka pulls out of the Fed Cup with injury.
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in the final on Saturday, she would also become the new world number one.