logo
Tennis-Bublik says Vegas trip helped him compete with the robots

Tennis-Bublik says Vegas trip helped him compete with the robots

The Star2 days ago

Tennis - French Open - Roland Garros, Paris, France - May 29, 2025 Kazakhstan's Alexander Bublik reacts during his second round match against Australia's Alex de Minaur REUTERS/Lisi Niesner
PARIS (Reuters) -Kazakhstan's trickster Alexander Bublik always brings a novel approach to his matches and off court too he defies convention, describing how a three-day trip to Las Vegas to let off steam helped turn around his year.
The 27-year-old reached the fourth round of a Grand Slam for only the second time in his career on Saturday as he beat Portugal's Henrique Rocha 7-5 6-1 6-2, setting up a clash with Briton's fifth seed Jack Draper.
Bublik reached a high of 17 in the rankings last year but dropped to 82 in March after a first-round exit at Indian Wells left him questioning whether he had what it took to compete with what he calls the tennis 'robots'.
The answer? A trip to The Strip.
"To be honest, my fall was not linked with lack of attitude and lack of practising. It was the exact opposite. I just burned out because I was waiting for the results to come," he told reporters.
"I was like, if I practise more, if I hit better forehands, it will come. It didn't, and then I got to the point, like, Okay, why am I sacrificing so much? For what?
"My coach suggests a trip to Vegas in between Indian Wells and Phoenix. He's like, 'man, if you play like this, we're going to be out of tennis, out of the conversation by Wimbledon."
Asked if the trip to the notorious Nevada playground was a training trip to Vegas or a Vegas trip to Vegas, Bublik said: "No, Vegas, Vegas, like a hangover thing Vegas, yeah.
"It was a good three days. I arrived three hours before the match in Phoenix. I had just let it all out. I said, I'm useless now, I can't win a match, so let it be, let's see how it goes."
What happened was that Bublik reached the final in the second-tier Challenger event and something clicked.
During the claycourt season he made the fourth round in Madrid and won a Challenger in Turin.
Bublik, who describes himself as a normal guy, said he has accepted that he cannot compete with the world's very best on their terms, so has to bring something different to the table, be it underarm serves, through-the-leg returns or mind-boggling drop shots -- all played with a smile on his face.
"I'm not a fighting person. In order for me to win against the best of the best, and I prove that I'm capable of doing that, I have to find ways to outplay them because they will outwork me, outrun me," he said.
"I also find the ways to win matches, to find a way how can I beat those guys with what I have, and I have a lot, in terms of an arsenal of shots, shot selections.
"Sometimes I have to go for crazy shots, but this is the only option I have. Otherwise, what happened with me when I was 17 is that I tried to play (their game)."
In an age of sports science, endless gym work and nutrition plans, Bublik bucks the trend and do not expect him to enter a war of attrition with Draper.
"Jack for me is insane. I saw him first day here. I'm like, are you getting ready for UFC?" Bublik said. "Last year the guy is 40 in the world, this year he is top four, that's a crazy achievement. How can I beat him? I don't know. I will just go there, enjoy the time, show what I'm capable of showing."
(Reporting by Martyn HermanEditing by Toby Davis)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Shelton confident he is closing gap to top players despite Alcaraz defeat
Shelton confident he is closing gap to top players despite Alcaraz defeat

New Straits Times

timean hour ago

  • New Straits Times

Shelton confident he is closing gap to top players despite Alcaraz defeat

PARIS: World number 13 Ben Shelton is confident he is cutting the distance dividing him to top players despite his loss to defending French Open champion Carlos Alcaraz in the fourth round on Sunday. Shelton, 22, pushed the world number two to four sets and though the Spaniard proved to be too good on the day, there were still plenty of positive takeaways. "For me, this is the closest that I've felt in a match against him, and the most pressure that I thought that I've applied, the most comfortable that I felt in the baseline exchanges, the best I've hit my open-stance backhand when he's put pressure there," he told a press conference. Shelton has now lost all three matches against Alcaraz but Sunday's was the first where he took a set. "In that way, it also being a clay court is kind of ironic, arguably his better surface, and arguably my least-experienced surface." Shelton had never before made it into the fourth round and he was one of eight Americans - five women and three men - to reach that stage in Paris, breaking a 40-year-old record. "There are a lot of positives to take from that because I feel like my game is improving a lot," he said. Shelton also lost to world number one Jannik Sinner at the Australian Open semi-final in January but that gap to the top has been closing, he said. He trails the Italian 5-1 in their head-to-head. "I don't want to be disrespectful and just be 'I'm right there' but I feel like I am close to starting to win some matches like that, give guys a run for their money more often, and have these deeper runs more consistently." "Not two bad guys to lose to. Those two matches I've lost at Slams this year, I consider myself a really good Grand Slam match player.

Swiatek thankful for confidence-boosting win over Rybakina at French Open
Swiatek thankful for confidence-boosting win over Rybakina at French Open

New Straits Times

timean hour ago

  • New Straits Times

Swiatek thankful for confidence-boosting win over Rybakina at French Open

PARIS: Defending champion Iga Swiatek is gunning for a fifth French Open title and fourth in succession but the Pole said Sunday's comeback win over Elena Rybakina was a much-needed reminder of her claycourt prowess in a lacklustre season. The fifth seed looked in deep trouble, trailing by a set and two games on Court Philippe-Chatrier, but completed a 1-6 6-3 7-5 win and later admitted that playing the big-hitting Kazakh was like facing men's world number one Jannik Sinner at times. The 24-year-old, who failed to win a title on clay in the build-up to Roland Garros after enduring some difficult moments following a short doping ban last season, celebrated the win in an effervescent manner unusual for her. "It means a lot. I needed this kind of win to feel these feelings that I'm able to win under pressure, and even if it's not going the right way, still turn the match around to win," Swiatek told reporters. "It's a great confirmation for me. Obviously it's great to also have full control over the match but against great players, it's not always going to be possible. I'm happy that I fought, and I also problem-solved on court." Victory extended Swiatek's superb winning streak at Roland Garros to 25 matches but also marked her first against Rybakina on clay and improved her head-to-head record to 5-4. "I wasn't expecting to have an easy score against Elena," Swiatek said, before pointing to past losses to Rybakina. "That wasn't something that I even considered today. No matter what the score is, I'm going to just try to play the best tennis possible any minute." - Reuters

No more outside courts for me, only centre court from now on, says Sabalenka
No more outside courts for me, only centre court from now on, says Sabalenka

New Straits Times

timean hour ago

  • New Straits Times

No more outside courts for me, only centre court from now on, says Sabalenka

PARIS: World number one Aryna Sabalenka is done playing on the outside courts in Paris and wants only the centre court from now on as she chases her first French Open crown. The top seed has played two of her four matches so far on the Suzanne Lenglen court – the second court with a capacity of 10,000 – including Sunday's straight sets win over American Amanda Anisimova. The Belarusian three-time Grand Slam champion, however, now wants her quarter-final against China's seventh-seed and Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen to be scheduled on the Philippe Chatrier court, which fits 5,000 more fans than the Lenglen. "If you ask me what I prefer, I prefer to play on Philippe Chatrier," Sabalenka told a press conference. "Why the decision was to put me on that court for the second time, I don't know. Hopefully from now I'm going to be playing only on Philippe Chatrier. I think I should be, right?" she said. Sabalenka said while playing on the smaller court gave fans without tickets to the showcase court the opportunity to watch her play, the Philippe Chatrier had a different aura and a bigger audience. "When you play on the biggest courts, they show those matches on the TV, so more people are watching and you can show yourself to more people," Sabalenka said. "Also, the court is so beautiful, and it's much bigger. The moment you step on the Chatrier, you feel like, okay, this is a big stage, and this is where I'm meant to be." "This is where I want to compete, and I want to fight, and I want to bring my best tennis. So I think it's all about the energy of the stadium." - Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store