Paes agrees to Olympic participation
Veteran Leander Paes has
finally agreed to take part in the London Olympics, ending days of
suspense over his participation after he threatened to pull out due to a
selection row that engulfed Indian tennis ahead of the mega-event.
After
days of maintaining a stoic silence on his Olympic participation, Paes
confirmed his participation at the post-match press conference of the
ongoing Wimbledon Championships in London, a statement which is likely to put a lid on the selection controversy.
"I
am looking forward to representing my country with the teams that the
All India Tennis Association have selected," Paes said after winning his
first-round men's doubles match with regular Czech partner Radek
Stepanek.
"I am here to play sport and not politics," he asserted.
The 39-year-old had
threatened to withdraw from the Olympics despite being India's number
one doubles player after being paired with a lower-ranked Vishnu Vardhan
for the big event against his wishes.
Paes'
partners of choice -- Mahesh Bhupathi and Rohan Bopanna -- refused to
combine with him and insisted on being sent as a team themselves.
The
All India Tennis Association ultimately bowed to their insistence in a
compromise formula of sending two teams, leaving Paes furious.
Paes was given the mixed doubles slot with Sania Mirza, breaking her Grand Slam winning combination with Bhupathi.
In
an extraordinary attack shortly after getting her Olympic wildcard,
Sania hit out at AITA, Paes as well as Bhupathi, claiming that she was
used as a "bait" to pacify the disgruntled veteran.
Paes, however, chose to stay mum on Sania's outburst.
"Unfortunately,
I see the games being played within games, and as much as that is very
disheartening, I am looking forward to playing my sixth Olympics for my
country as I have played for 22 years for the people and the flag.
"Every
Olympics has some nonsense coming in with it. I know how much hard work
goes into what I do. (Either) people choose to respect it, which I'm
very lucky that India does, (or) people choose to disrespect. That's their problem, not mine," Paes added.
The
world number seven doubles player said he had no complaints about being
paired with Vardhan, who is ranked 206 in the ATP list.
The seven-time Grand Slam winner in men's doubles is a singles bronze medal winner from the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta.
Paes, set to make a
record sixth Olympic appearance, said he would look to help Vardhan,
who would be making his Games debut in London.
"I
don't even know if he has grass-court shoes. So it's a bit of a tough
one. But he's a really good kid, I'm happy to play with him.
"Whatever the
obstacles are, which I see are going to be many -- he's never been to
Wimbledon before -- whatever I can do as an experienced professional
athlete to help my partners out, I do," he said.
The
controversy broke out when AITA initially paired Paes and Bhupathi as
the only men's doubles entry for the Olympics. Bhupathi refused to play
with Paes, citing his commitment to Bopanna.
When approached by AITA, Bopanna also rejected the idea, leaving Paes cornered.
It
was then that AITA came out with a compromise formula which was
lambasted by Sania who said it reeked of male chauvinism and was
humiliating to Indian womanhood.
Despite
Paes' confirmation, Bhupathi might still trigger a controversy as he
has expressed his desire to partner Sania in mixed doubles given their
recent success -- most significant being the French Open title just a
few weeks back.
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