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The tennisworld had better get used to the breadth
of Amelie Mauresmo' s shoulders.
They've been with her for a long time and, after
the Australian Open, it looks as if they will
be around at the summit of the women's game for
quite a while yet. And herup-front, out in the
open lesbianism, too.
That two-for-one yarn proved manna for the Australian
media. They were not sure what was the best angle,
Amelie's bulk or her homosexuality. Certainly
not the tennis, despite her getting to the women's
final at 19 and unseeded.
The Mauresmo shoulders had to be broad during
those tumultuous days in Melbourne and she will
need all her new-found strength of physique and
spirit in the coming season.
Virtually every French publication and radio
and TV company has sought aone-on-one with Amelie
in advance of her next tournament, an indoor event
in Paris at the end of this month. Mauresmo is
already inside the top 20 and according to Martina
Hingis, her conqueror in the Australian final,
a certainty for the top 10. It was Hingis who
said Amelie was "half a man" because of her relationship
with Sylvie Bourdon, the 31-year-olddaughter of
a bar owner in St Tropez. She brushes that comment
aside as "stupid", and of the other memorably
disparaging remark made in Melbourne said this:
"I was a bit surprised Lindsay Davenport compared
me to a man because she is bigger and heavier
than me and hits the ball harder.
At the time I was shocked but after receiving
her note of apology I decided to treat it as history.
"I have always been built like that, a big frame
and muscles, and when I was a kid it used to upset
me." She took immediately to the tank top which
her clothing sponsor, Nike, introduced last year
but insists "wearing it is not my way of showing
off mymuscles and attempting to intimidate people,
it is because I'm more comfortable that way" .
Her new coach, Christophe Fournerie, ridicules
the shoulder furore. "It is never shoulders which
make tennis players great, but the head and the
legs. Amelie would play just as well if she had
narrow shoulders."
Mauresmo has been with Fournerie, who runs a tennis
school in the Atlantic coast resort of Dinard,
for only two months. Their daily training routine
is a punishing one of six or seven hours, divided
between physical training, on-court work and what
Fournerie calls " musculation" involving the pumping
of weights and leg-building exercises. "It is
dynamic work and powerful," said the coach, "designed
to help her develop an aggressive attitude." He
is delighted with his pupil's commitment. "Her
dedication is total, she has completely surprised
me. Everything that Amelie needs to do to get
there, she does. One day, after six hours' work
on the beach, it was necessary to drag her off
to make herstop. I have never seen anyone putting
such intensity into their work.
"We have a sound working relationship and we
laugh a lot because it is necessary to enjoy life,
too. There's no need to be miserable while doing
all this work. And when you're in love, as Amelie
is, you have wings." Despite the fact that, under
the nurturing of the French Tennis Federation,
she became world junior champion in 1996, Mauresmo
is adamant that her decision to break away was
a crucial one.
"When I was feeding at the breast of the Federation
I felt myself a bit of a prisoner. It was like
being in the army. Tennis, tennis, tennis all
day and all evening. In bed by nine o'clock and
nothing else. By the age of 17 I was deeply pissed
off with all that because that's the age when
you want to go out abit. But I had to remind myself
not to lose sight of my priorities. "There were
happy memories, of course, like winning the junior
titles at Wimbledon and Roland Garros, but it
was not easy to leave home at 11 to live in the
world of tennis. I felt like chucking it all in
when I was 12 and again at 14. Perhaps if Ihadn't
gone through these times I might never have got
this far but I think there are other ways of doing
it.
Less rigid structures would permit young ones
to blossom. "Now I have found a new structure
to my life, new trainer, new methods, an apartment
of my own. I have the sensation of having opened
out and the improvement in my game is the direct
result of all that."
Another result of all that is an acrimonious
split with her parents, Francis and Francoise.
"The relationship is absolutely finished," said
Guy Barbier, a leading French tennis journalist.
"They don't want to speak to anybody about their
daughter."
Mauresmo met Sylvie Bourdon three months ago
and according to Sylvie (who is coyly referred
to by the French sports daily L'Equipe as Amelie'
s "petite amie") it was un coup de foudre, a bolt
of lightning. Amelie decided to make the relationship
publicin Australia "out of respect for Sylvie
and, because my new liberation was being reflected
in my play, it seemed logical that I should do
so".
"Amelie's announcement was a shock at first to
people in France," said Barbier, "but now she
has a good image." Her numerous sponsors have
decided the same and last week banded together
to indicate as much, so the signs are very positive
for the girlwho hails from the Compiegne area,
the home of France's greatest-ever women tennis
player, Suzanne Lenglen.
And how does Amelie Mauresmo see herself two
years from now? "High in the rankings and happy."
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