FEATURE-From piano to racket,
Hantuchova handles pressure
Thu Sep 14, 2006 3:31 AM BST
By Barry Wood
DENPASAR, Indonesia, Sept 14 (Reuters) - Spending her formative years as a
classical pianist became the ideal preparation for handling the pressurised
world of the women's tennis tour, said Slovakia's Daniela Hantuchova.
The world number 19, seeded fifth for the Bali International this week, spent
her early days at the keyboard and her deft fingerwork before large audiences
proved a formidable learning curve ahead of her experiences on the tennis court.
"I did some pretty big concerts, and I can tell you I've never, ever been so
nervous in my life," Hantuchova told Reuters.
"When I was about 13, 14, a couple of hundred at least would be watching, maybe
a thousand. It was scary stuff, but it prepared me well for the tennis circuit
so it was good," said Hantuchova, who reached the heights of world number five
in January 2003.
"I really enjoyed playing. It was very difficult time-wise because I had my
school in the morning, tennis practise, then piano, then tennis again and then
study in the evening. So I was finishing my day at 11, 11.30.
"Every day was like that from eight o'clock in the morning, and I loved it
because there wasn't any one second I had some free time."
A winner in Indian Wells in 2002, Hantuchova also overlooked a promising
academic career in order to pursue her first love.
"It was a really tough one because after finishing high school I thought for
sure I was going to continue, and I had some really good offers and studying
always felt to me like it was part of my life," she said.
"Especially for my parents it had been very important too, because with tennis
you never know so you always have to have another option if something happens to
you.
"So it was kind of a tough one, but I knew if I wanted to do this properly there
wouldn't be enough time for me to do both." And at what did she excel in her
studies?
"Mathematics and physics. The high school I went to is the best in Slovakia and
it mainly goes in that direction, computers. My father and brother went to the
same school. My parents and my brother and my grandmother are the brainy ones. I
don't feel I've done anything compared to them."
Father Igor is a computer scientist while her mother Marianna is a toxicologist.
Older brother Igor is an architect.
But the 23-year-old has a slightly less academic pursuit in mind once her tennis
career is at an end.
"I am very interested in fashion," she admits. "
"I like anything that's glamorous, with a lot of class. Usually I prefer things
that are different to things that people are used to seeing.
"I just love that part of my life and it's something that I definitely want to
get involved with more after I finish with my tennis."
Visit the Daniela Hantuchova
page here