Sania, Leander, Sumit: India’s three musketeers deliver at Wimbledon
Leander Paes, Sania Mirza and Sumit Nagal brought a lot of cheer to the country’s tennis fans as India took home three titles at Wimbledon this year.
A vintage Leander Paes clinched his 16th Grand Slam trophy, winning the mixed doubles of the Wimbledon Championship with the legendary Martina Hingis through a dominating victory over Alexander Peya and Timea Babos in London on Sunday.
The seventh seed Indo-Swiss pair drubbed the fifth seed Austrian-Hungarian team 6-1 6-1 in the lop-sided summit clash which was over in just 40 minutes. It was Paes’ eighth mixed doubles title and the second with Hingis.
“Coming out and playing like that on one of the most prestigious courts that we’ve grown up with and winning a title like that, again for the second time in a Grand Slam without losing a set, that is really special,” Paes said after the Wimbledon crown.
Indian junior tennis player Sumit Nagal and Vietnam’s Nam Hoang Ly beat Reilly Opelka of the US and Akira Santillan of Japan 7-6(4), 6-4 to win the Wimbledon boys doubles title on Sunday.
The 17-year-old Nagal and Ly, seeded eighth, defeated the American-Japanese fourth seeds in an hour and three minutes on No 1 Court of The All England Club.
The New Delhi-born, right-handed player had also entered the boys’ singles competition. However, he was ousted from the category in only the opener when he lost to Argentinean Juan Pablo Ficovich in three sets.
The official Twitter account of the Rashtrapati Bhavan congratulated the winners. “Congratulations @Leander, Sumit Nagal on winning mixed and boys doubles titles in #Wimbledon2015, proud moment for India,” it posted.
A day ago, India’s tennis queen Sania Mirza created history by becoming the first woman player from the country to win a women’s doubles Grand Slam trophy as she clinched the Wimbledon title with Swiss partner Martina Hingis in London.
Hingis, 34, and 28-year-old Mirza came from a set down and 2-5 behind in the final set to beat Russian duo Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina 5-7, 7-6 (7/4), 7-5. It was the top seeds’ first Grand Slam title as a team having only decided to play together in March this year.
“Every kid that picks up a tennis racquet this is about winning Wimbledon or playing at Wimbledon one day.
“I hope it inspires a lot of girls and makes them believe they can be Grand Slam champions too,” Mirza said.
With three Indians rising to the occasion, Indian tennis fans and the fraternity had a lot to rejoice about.
This was India’s most significant triumph at the All England Lawn Tennis Club since Vijay Amritraj’s two quarter final appearances in 1973, when he lost to eventual champion Jan Kodes, and in 1981 when he was beaten by his rival Jimmy Connors in a five-set thriller.
The former world no 16 made such an impact on the game that he is fondly remembered as part of the “ABC” of tennis, standing alongside legends Bjorn Borg and Jimmy Connors.