Quick visit to mum puts Li Na right

Updated: 2013-06-20 07:25

By Reuters in Eastbourne, England (China Daily)

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 Quick visit to mum puts Li Na right

China's Li Na serves to France's Alize Cornet in her singles match on the fourth day of the AEGON International in Eastbourne, England, on Tuesday. Glyn Kirk / Agence France-Presse

World No 6 looks to shrug off past struggles at Wimbledon

Who can a woman turn to when everything falls apart? Her mother, of course - even if, in Li Na's case, it necessitated a 12-hour flight from Paris to China after her early exit from the French Open.

Wimbledon might not be her most successful tournament but Li says she is feeling "totally relaxed" ahead of next week's grasscourt grand slam, thanks to the visit home.

"I had one week off, I was feeling in need of having time to myself to relax. I couldn't stress all the time, so I went back to China to see my mum and to see friends," the world No 6 said.

"I really inside myself was feeling I had to go back," added Li, who would not normally return to Wuhan until after Wimbledon. "I really wanted to go back to see my mum.

"When I unlocked the door my mum was like: 'What are you doing here?' So I said: 'Mum, I just wanted to see you, say hi, have dinner, blah blah..."

Li left Paris berating herself for losing in the second round to American Bethanie Mattek-Sands at a tournament where she became Asia's first grand-slam champion in 2011.

The defeat included a seven-game losing streak, and Li departed Roland Garros vowing to "talk to myself and my team to see what happened".

So what did happen? The 31-year-old shrugged as she stood in Eastbourne's sunshine.

Quick visit to mum puts Li Na right

"I was giving her the chance to play well," she said, clearly having moved on from the Paris heartbreak.

Lying in bed until 10:30 in the morning, enjoying home cooking and spending time with friends in coffee shops allowed her to recharge, and Li was all smiles in Eastbourne, where she is seeded second.

Tennis was not even a subject of discussion with her mother, she said. "She doesn't like to watch my matches because she says it makes her nervous. I think she watches but she will never tell me.

"She was pretty happy (to see me), it doesn't matter to her if I am doing well or doing badly."

Twice an Australian Open finalist, Li has never done better than the quarterfinals at Wimbledon, in 2006 and 2010, and lost in the second round last year.

"Grass is a good challenge," she said. "And when the tournament starts, everyone is the same. I will really try as much as I can."

"Big Sister Na", as she is known at home, has long cut a lonely figure in Chinese tennis, with only Peng Shuai, ranked 24th, and Zheng Jie, 47th, also in the world's top 110 women players.

Things might, however, soon change, she said.

"I see a lot of very good junior players (at home)," she said. "But they still have lower rankings, they can't play higher level tournaments. You still have to give them time to let them grow up.

"I always believe that in future there will be great players from China."

(China Daily 06/20/2013 page23)

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