Back to Tennis
Breaking 🎾 Tennis 3 min read

Former Grand Slam finalist says Swedish tennis youngsters are afraid to compete

SV

Svend Bertil Frandsen

Published 1 month ago

Former Grand Slam finalist Magnus Norman says that Swedish youngsters need to compete more if Sweden are to develop young talents with a potential of making a name for themselves on the WTA and ATP Tours.

[p]There was a time when Sweden dominated the world of tennis with players like [a href="https://www.flashscore.ca/player/wilander-mats/KQlqiWhO/"]Mats Wilander[/a], [a href="https://www.flashscore.ca/player/borg-bjorn/EcVHJwIF/"]Bjorn Borg[/a], [a href="https://www.flashscore.ca/player/edberg-stefan/OGjCfEga/"]Stefan Edberg[/a], and others. Today, [a href="https://www.flashscore.ca/player/ymer-elias/GhVfMwlD/"]Elias Ymer[/a] is by far the best-ranked of all Swedish men's players in 175th place.[/p][p]On the women's side, [a href="https://www.flashscore.ca/player/rinaldo-persson-kajsa/IBGyxZ49/"]Kajsa Rinaldo Persson[/a] is the best Swede in 253rd place.[/p][p]The question is whether Sweden has the capacity to recreate the glory years when they had a great number of male players in the Top 20 rankings?[/p][p]Ex-star [a href="https://www.flashscore.ca/player/norman-magnus/tMYhArqM/"]Magnus Norman[/a], now long-time coach and founder of the tennis academy Good to Great, has a clear opinion on how to nurture tomorrow's new tennis stars.[/p][p][b]"Competition can sometimes appear as a dirty word[/b]," Norman wrote in his newsletter earlier this year about how he experiences Swedish sports culture today. [/p][p]And Norman has a clear message. [b]"Children and young people must compete more. Play a lot of matches and compete for points to understand the game."[/b][/p][p][b]"We have had good juniors, but we have not done a good enough job in the transition phase between juniors and seniors",[/b] he says to Expressen.se. "When I'm out and about, I talk to many international coaches and, generally speaking, many people there learn to compete quite early."[/p][p]Norman who reached the final of the French Open in year 2000, points out at the same time that it's not just about learning to win. Equally important, if not more important, is the art of learning to deal with defeat.[/p][p][b]"If you lose, there is often a new tournament around the corner. So you don't have to be too broken or depressed. You have to learn to be able to take something with you from the losses. [/b]What can I do better next time? What did I do well? And then you go home and work on it. Hopefully, it will be better in the next game."[/p]

Related stories

⚽ Football New

Three things to look out for in Champions League qualifying ahead of new season

David Parkes
⚽ Football New

Resilient Switzerland captain Xhaka born to lead on World Cup stage

AFP
⚽ Football New

EXCLUSIVE: Pavel Pardo on Mexico's World Cup run, Gilberto Mora and his Bundesliga title

Daniel Sobis
⚽ Football New

World Cup Team of the Round of 32: Messi and Mbappe deliver once again

Aaron Murphy
⚽ Football New

The remarkable run England will need to end if they want to beat Mexico at the Azteca

Sergio Alvarez / BeSoccer
⚽ Football New

World Cup highlights: Morocco show clinical edge while France see off Paraguay

David Parkes