INSIDE:

NEWS/STORIES/ARTICLES
Book Reviews
Columns/Opinion/Cartoon
Films
International
National

NW/Local
Recipes
Special A.C.E. Stories

Sports
Online Paper (PDF)

CLASSIFIED SECTION
Bids & Public Notices

NW Job Market

NW RESOURCE GUIDE

Consulates
Organizations
Scholarships
Special Sections

Asian Reporter Info

About Us

Advertising Info.

Contact Us
Subscription Info. & Back Issues


FOLLOW US
Facebook

Twitter

 

 

ASIA LINKS
Currency Exchange

Time Zones
More Asian Links
 


Copyright © 1990 - 2020
AR Home

 


Where EAST meets the Northwest


HALL OF FAMER. Two-time Grand Slam champion Li Na serves the ball during a tennis clinic she led at the Sutton East Tennis Club on July 18, 2019 in New York. Li Na was inducted into the Tennis Hall of Fame last month. (AP Photo/Kevin Hagen)

From The Asian Reporter, V29, #15 (August 5, 2019), page 10.

Li Na’s tennis journey to stretch from China to Hall of Fame

By Brian Mahoney

AP Sports Writer

NEW YORK — Li Na remembers first watching a tennis match on TV, drawn to the unforgettable style of one of the players.

Andre Agassi had long hair, an earring, and wore denim shorts, and made an instant fan in China.

"Andre Agassi is my role model," Li said.

Li went on to become one herself.

The first player from Asia to win a Grand Slam singles title, she was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame, celebrated not only for her skills on the court but for her contribution to the growth of the sport in her country.

"She’s like an icon in China. She’s a huge superstar," said Mike Silverman, the director of sport for New York’s City Parks Foundation.

Li conducted a clinic with children from the organization and her influence was obvious. Many of the young players were Asian, including one teenage boy Silverman thinks is good enough to get a college scholarship. They were probably too young to remember much of her career — she retired in 2014 because of knee problems — but her impact didn’t end when her playing days did.

"There’s no question that Li Na, when she was playing and even now, tennis in China has never been the same since she won the French Open," Silverman said. "It changed everything."

That was in 2011, when more than 116 million people in China watched the final. Li added a second major title in 2014 at the Australian Open after twice losing in its final, rose to No. 2 in the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) rankings, and earned more than 500 singles wins.

"At least I always try my best in tennis on the court," Li said. "If you try everything I think one day for sure there will be payback."

The mother of two children was a little nervous about the induction ceremony last month in Newport, Rhode Island, as she tried to put together her thoughts in English. But perhaps she took a lesson from something else she admired about Agassi.

"He never cared about what other people say, he just did his own," said Li, who was joined in this year’s class by fellow two-time Grand Slam singles champions Mary Pierce of France and Yevgeny Kafelnikov of Russia.

Li said she can see the growth of tennis in China, where the WTA Finals will be played in Shenzhen and which got another event on the tour’s calendar this year when the former Connecticut Open was moved to Zhengzhou.

"It’s not only good for the athletes, it’s also good for the fans to have less travelling," Li said. "They can see a high-level tournament in China."

Fans can see plenty of them, as there are nine women’s tournaments in China after the U.S. Open. The country may not have a long tennis history, but Li thinks it will continue to get bigger.

"For me, I think China tennis is still young," she said. "They can have a lot of time to grow up."

Read the current issue of The Asian Reporter in its entirety!
Go to <www.asianreporter.com/completepaper.htm>!