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Australia's
Great Anti-Hero
I have never been one for severe
heat and tend to seek refuge in an air conditioned bar with
a queue of ice cold beverages and the comfort of knowing
that I am welcome to stay as long as need be.
It is rare that I throw myself at the mercy of a pounding
sun that knows little in the ways of providence and humility.
There are exceptions to every rule however, no matter how
personal or flexible, and the prospect of a day at the tennis
seemed as good a reason as any to get a little uncomfortable.
It is, of course, that time of year and though I am not well
versed in the ways of tennis, I am decent enough to appreciate
the game and an event of the magnitude of the Australian
Open.
I was also interested in seeing the next great defeat of
an Australian anti-hero.
Despite the constant flow of
bikini clad girls wandering through the sweltering heat
at the bar and in the outer,
I managed to force myself into the squeeze of Rod Laver Arena
to engage in a prolonged bout of relatively silent sitting,
watching what would hopefully be the farewell of one of Australia’s
most disliked athletes, Lleyton Hewitt.
Despite being Australia’s most successful tennis player
since the glory days of the seventies, at an age where most
players of his stature have reached levels of iconic reverence,
on his home country’s biggest stage, Hewitt was hardly
afforded a genuine cheer. There was, of course, plenty of
noise. Most of that came from The Fanatics, a group of hell-boring
drones whose monotonous ranting, comfortable middle-class
nature and manufactured patriotism is as embarrassing as
it is irritating, provided most of it. The more discerning
sports fans, who tend to dislike Hewitt as both a player
and a person, preferred to just enjoy the match, applauding
the tennis and the fight and the contest. The vast majority
appreciated Hewitt’s fight as much as they enjoyed
Gonzalez’s forehand but the genuine emotion that fills
a stadium when an authentic and beloved champion is competing
was nowhere to be seen. In essence, it was a strange coolness,
a detachment bought about by a decade of Hewitt behaviour
and revelation. Had Pat Rafter been adorning centre court
on Tuesday, the genuine affection the Australian public has
for their heroes would have permeated every crevice of the
arena. Even players like Pat Cash, the Woodies and Wally
Masur would have received more genuine affection from the
crowd and the Australian tennis watching public as a whole
despite their obvious talent deficiencies compared to Hewitt.
The comparison between Rafter
and Hewitt is an interesting one. Rafter, by nearly any
measure, never had the physical
tools or the tennis ability of Hewitt. While both won two
Grand Slam titles, Hewitt has a Wimbledon title to his name
while Rafter only has two U.S Opens, the least regarded of
the majors in Australia. Both players reached the ranking
of number one in the world yet Rafter’s reign lasted
only one week while Hewitt held the mantle for eighty weeks
including a streak of seventy-five straight weeks between
November 2001 and April 2003. Rafter has eleven career titles.
Hewitt has twenty-six. Rafter’s career record is 358-191.
Hewitt’s record is 488-163.
Yet Rafter is a beloved figure in tennis and Australian
sport, an Australian of the Year winner and a Hall of Fame
inductee. Hewitt, by comparison, is loathed by his contemporaries
and generally treated with disdain by the tennis going public,
even in Australia.
Hewitt’s most astonishing
achievement is, perhaps, not his Wimbledon victory or his
ascent to the number one
player in the world but his capacity to turn off a sporting
public in his homeland who should naturally be drawn a player
like Hewitt.
He is successful and we all love a winner. He is a scrapper
and Australia has always had a soft spot for the tenacious
bulldog who never says die. He is a tennis star and tennis
players have always held a special place in the story of
Australian sport. He was a young prodigy who actually lived
up to his potential and Australians have always been particularly
supportive of young athletes who go on to achieve greatness.
Hewitt should be revered, an
archetypical Australian sporting legend, yet through his
propensity to take the low road,
his constant whining, his disagreeable personality, his clichéd
and irritating on-court demeanour and his whore-like mentality
towards publicity, he sits along side the likes of Anthony
Mundine as accomplished Australian athletes who are genuinely
disliked both at home and abroad.
Early in the decade Hewitt
was rated the least admired Australian athlete by Sport
magazine. In 2006 he was listed as the tenth
most hated athlete in professional sports by GQ, a list that
includes the likes of Terrell Owens and Phil Mickelson, where
the piece noted that “he isn’t even popular in
his native Australia”.
To achieve such a universal dislike and lack of admiration
is really an incredible achievement.
It is not particularly surprising, however, when you consider
Hewitt the man.
On the court, Hewitt acts like
a spoilt only-child who chucks a tantrum whenever he doesn’t get his Caramello Koala.
His histrionics reek of a sore loser who cannot accept personal
responsibility for defeat. He has called umpires “spastics” and
accused linesmen of foot faulting him because he was a white
man playing against a black man. His behaviour at the 2001
U.S Open against James Blake where he linked a black linesman’s
foot fault calls to the blackness of his opponent was one
of the all-time shameful incidents on a tennis court.
Hewitt also disregards nearly
all of the unwritten rules of the tennis court with his
insufferable dramatics and his
public celebration of an opponent’s error. In 2005
this angered Argentinean player Juan Ignacio Chela to the
extent that Chela delivered a body serve before spitting
in Hewitt’s direction. It is a mark of how unpopular
Hewitt is that public sympathy tended to rest with Chela
with one paper noting that “many regretted [the spit]
didn’t find its target”.
His persistent invoking of
Rocky with his loud self-motivation screams and his use
of “Eye of the Tiger” as
a pre-match song only further served to distance him from
any self-respecting sports fan. Hewitt was and is a sad parody
of the from-the-boondocks-athlete-who-overcame-adversity-to-reach-the-top
and a transparent one at that. The sporting public tend not
to buy such a story when a player has had the privileged
upbringing and run Hewitt has.
Off the court Hewitt’s behaviour
and words have been similarly as irksome, sulky and disagreeable.
Hewitt rarely
has anything positive to say about the game or his opponents.
Grace is neither a word that he understands nor a
quality that he exhibits. He has attacked the Australian
public for having the nerve to cheer a fellow Australian
opponent. He has gone after the organisers of the Australian
Open over the Melbourne Park surface with complete disregard
for the tournament or the damage his attacks have. He became
entangled in a court battle with former friend Andrew McLeod
all in the name of money. He similarly courts the cheap press
of the women’s dirt rags in a transparent attempt to
boost his profile and his bank balance.
I went to Melbourne Park with
the optimistic hope that this would be Hewitt’s last Australian Open but I was wrong.
He said he won’t retire, living in the delusion that
he can return to the top ten and win a future Australian
Open. It is not really surprising that he will play on. He
will have little else after tennis. There will be no media
career when he is done. There is little call for poorly spoken,
one-dimensional, uninspiring analysts. Well, if you discount
the Channel Nine cricket commentary team. Few would buy into
any attempts at philanthropy. He doesn’t strike me
as a person with a wide array of interests or talents. Tennis
is the end of the line for Lleyton Hewitt.
When he is finally forced to
give the game away, he will not sit in the pantheon of
Australia’s great sportsmen
or even on the list of Australia’s finest tennis players.
There will be no post-retirement renaissance either. Hewitt’s
achievements will be respected but it will be left at that.
There will be no reverence, no divine aura that will surround
Hewitt in retirement. He will fade into the background and
most of us feel so little attachment to him that the only
sign that he is gone will be that our irritation and embarrassment
levels when watching big time tennis will be significantly
further south than they once were.
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