Sport

Canada hope for Bouchard win

Canada hope for Bouchard win

August 23, 2014 | 10:02 PM
Eugenie Bouchard of Canada

Reuters/TorontoCanada has long been a global ice hockey super power, toasted a Formula One driver’s champion and at different times has laid claim to the world’s fastest man. The Maple Leaf has been waved by a Masters champion and produced most valuable players in the National Basketball Association, National Hockey League and Major League Baseball. But one sporting peak no Canadian has yet to reach is the top of the tennis mountain as a grand slam winner. Faced with some Everest sized hype, Canadian Eugenie Bouchard has set up base camp within sight of that lofty goal and head into the US Open next week prepared to make a final push for the summit. By reaching the Wimbledon final Bouchard has already climbed higher than any Canadian before her after semi-final appearances at the French and Australian Opens - losing to eventual champions on both occasions - had already marked her as a rising star. WTA chief Stacey Allaster and world number one Serena Williams are among those who have not only hailed Bouchard as a future grand slam champion but the next face of women’s tennis. “I think Genie is a great player,” said Williams. “I think she for sure is the future face of tennis. “She’s already proven being one of the faces of tennis now. Why wait for the future?” As any athlete who has been to the top will tell you it is the final push to the summit where the real challenge lies. When you are within sight of the peak, reaching it is as much a matter of will as skill. On the cusp of fulfilling her promise, Bouchard stumbled, falling 6-3 6-0 by Petra Kvitova in the Wimbledon final. The young Canadian has been on the slide ever since, devastated after an opening match loss to American qualifier Shelby Rogers at her heavily promoted home tournament in Montreal. That was followed by second round exit in Cincinnati. While clearly rattled by the lack of form, Bouchard has been able to gather herself and display surprising maturity in dealing with the sudden wave of adversity, taking it all in as part of a steep learning curve. “I feel like I can rise to the occasion well and raise my level where it counts,” said Bouchard. “I feel like I play well in kind of high pressure situations and can really play my best tennis when it counts. “So maybe that’s why I play better at the slams. “There’s ups and downs in tennis and in life. “I can realise that and it won’t always be amazing.” In what has been a quirky pattern, Bouchard lost her opening match in Sydney, her only Australian Open tune-up, but then advanced to the semi-finals of the season’s first grand slam. In the buildup to the French Open she failed to win a match in Madrid and Rome but won a title in Nuernberg and reached the semi-finals in Paris. An opening match loss in Hertogenbosch, her only grass court event ahead of Wimbledon, was followed by a march into the final at the All-England Club. “She has the champion gifts,” said Allaster. “She has this mental capacity that I see in her the likes of Serena and Venus and Maria (Sharapova).

August 23, 2014 | 10:02 PM