"Lotta pressure on a young girl."
These were the sage and gravelly words of Nick Bollettieri, who was sitting next to me in Wimbledon's brand new Court 2 this afternoon. He should know about the pressures on young girls, and how they handle them. He's seen a lot of both at his academy over the last 30 years.
But his protégés are rarely as young as Britain's Laura Robson when they walk onto a Wimbledon show court. Just 15, the 2008 Wimbledon junior champion and latest subject of press obsession in her home country was given the honor of playing the inaugural match on the All England Club's newest arena. On this gray, dry, mild opening day, every seat was filled, including the section reserved for the country's tennis elite: Sue Barker, John Barrett, and Virginia Wade were watching from first ball to last.
Fortunately for Robson, she had drawn a player who was assured of being just as nervous: Daniela Hantuchova. "This is a tough match-up for Dani," said Bollettieri, who has worked with Hantuchova. "She has to play a younger girl with nothing to lose, who has a big serve and forehand. Not easy." In other words, there was a lot of pressure on both young girls out there.
Did Robson live up to the expectations? Did she raise them? Lower them? While she lost in three after being up a set and a break, I was impressed. So was the British journalist to my right, apparently. After Robson pulled off one of her specialty shots, a swinging forehand volley from mid-court, he mumbled in surprised wonder, "Blimey. She can play, can't she?" Pause. "Is she really British?"
"No, she's Australian," came the chuckling answer from the reporter next to him. Robson was indeed born in Australia, to an oil exec father and basketball-player mother. The family moved to England when she was 6 and she became a citizen last year. If that doesn't make her officially British, no one here is going out of their way to bring it up.
Wherever Robson comes from, Bollettieri is right about her serve being a reason to like her future. She's a lefty, but she doesn't own the customary nasty hook into the backhand side; instead, she hits it flat and heavy to both corners. It's a more natural and athletic stroke than most other women's serves today; there are no hitches or screwey extraneous movements. Like the best servers, Robson just tosses the ball up, leans forward, and hits it—it's amazing how easy it looks and how hard it is to do. Her first-serve velocity hovered around 105 mph.
Unfortunately, the serve was also Robson's biggest enemy today. She double-faulted consistently, especially during the biggest moments, including match point. That said, it didn't look like her mechanics broke down, a la Dementieva; she just overhit, mostly because of nerves—her one errant toss came, not coincidentally, when she went up a break in the second set—but also partly because she hasn't had time to develop a second serve of iron-clad reliability. At this point, it remains virtually identical to her first one.
Not surprisingly, Bollettieri was also right about Robson's weaknesses: her movement and her big-loop backhand. The two are not unrelated, according to Nick. "Her backswing is too high," he leaned over and graveled, "so when she's rushed her contact point can be late, and that's trouble." Hantuchova had success taking Robson's time away by going right at her forehand. The Brit, who is already 5-foot-8, didn't catch up to that shot all afternoon. "Let me tell you," Bollettieri intoned with a tap of his hand on my knee, "movement is going to be the key with Laura. She's got to get in the best shape of her life and make herself as fast as possible."
"She's a great girl," Nick leaned back and said just before walking away. "Great girl, very nice. Maybe too nice."
Like a guy at the end of a first date, a young player does not want to hear the phrase "too nice." Robson is indeed charming, as she proved in her jam-packed presser today. Poised, proper, smart, snarky, she parried questions from every corner of the room—about her recent exams, about Federer vs. Murray (she's picking Federer, but hopes "Andy proves me wrong"), about her coach ("he's nothing special" she said with a dry smile), about the fact that she blew a set and a break lead ("thanks for rubbing it in"), about whether she has time to socialize ("what do you want me to say, I've got no friends?"), about whether Henman Hill should be renamed Robson Ridge ("it's not really a ridge, is it?")—with the kind of self-possessed wit that Americans believe is the birthright of all Britons. I walked out trying to imagine myself in that situation when I was 15. All I could do was shudder.
I hope for tennis' sake that Robson isn’t too nice, that she doesn't have too much personality, too much variety in her brain. Not that she's pretending to be an intellectual—she's too smart for that. When Robson was asked what she does in her downtime, she said, "Uhm, I watch Gossip Girl. But no, season two is finished. I'm so depressed." I hear you, Laura.
At the tail end of her presser, she was asked to comment on the grunting phenomenon that passes for the most intriguing topic in women's tennis right now. "It's such an unattractive sound, isn't it," said Robson, who plays in silence.