Sania Mirza: National Sports Governance Act key for Indian tennis change
Sania Mirza: National Sports Governance Act key for tennis change

Sania Mirza on Thursday said the provision under the National Sports Governance Act, which allows eminent athletes to become part of administration, could be the key to bring about much needed change in Indian tennis.

Sania Mirza on Athletes in Administration

"It's great to be very honest. Athletes understand the pain, the commitments and the sacrifices that other athletes make, and when you have provisions for having certain athletes in those power positions, or in positions that help make certain decisions for the betterment of the sport, it's a good thing," Sania said during an online interaction.

"I think we can all agree that, especially with tennis, change is required for more than one reason."

Wide Pickt banner — collaborative shopping lists app for Telegram, phone mockup with grocery list

Need for a National Training Centre

Sania believed change would be a "gradual process" but an active national centre like the National Cricket Academy was the need of the hour.

"I do feel that systems will change. And by systems, I mean the coaching systems around," the former world No. 1 and two-time Grand Slam winner in women's doubles said.

"I think it's important to have a national training centre, for example. We did have a national training centre, (but) did we have the quality that we needed? I don't know. Where do girls or guys go and train when they have time off, what happens to them when they are injured? Do we have a physio team in place, do we have a medical team in place?"

Void in Women's Tennis

Sania acknowledged the "void" in women's tennis in India, but also sounded confident about the future.

"I think there are emerging players. I just don't think that they have made that jump .. to playing the Grand Slams," she said.

Stay updated with the latest sports news and coverage.

Pickt after-article banner — collaborative shopping lists app with family illustration