Neil Harman, Tennis Correspondent, Indian Wells, California
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David Felgate, the former LTA performance director and coach to Tim Henman, set out at 5.30am each day last week for the 200-mile round trip from here to Orange County to supervise the blossoming career of the young British prospect, Naomi Cavaday. The reward for his highway slog came with the 17-year-old’s victory in an ITF tournament and the prospect of a combination that could become a permanent fixture on the tennis landscape.
The paradox of the partnership would not be lost on those charged with charting the direction of British tennis, for one of the first moves that Roger Draper made when he became the LTA’s chief executive a year ago was to dispense with Felgate’s services to make way for a worldwide sweep of appointments that has still to be completed.
Felgate bit his tongue and hooked up with another former charge, Xavier Malisse, the 2002 Wimbledon semi-finalist from Belgium, ranked No 31 in the world, before a call from the Kentish teenager in October raised the prospect of a fresh challenge. “I had split with my former coach, James Trotman, after the US Open [in September] and played a few events back home on my own, but I was losing direction and focus,” Cavaday said. “The LTA were going through so many changes and they told me I’d have to wait until April when they had settled down and moved to Roehampton, but I felt I needed someone straight away or I’d go backwards.”
Hence a call to Felgate, on the premise of asking for advice as to whom she might work with. When he had looked at her prospective schedules, how they might knit together with Malisse’s demands and factored in Cavaday’s potential, Felgate wondered if he might take on the job.
Such a move has plenty of interesting implications. Cavaday is the British No 8; she has impressed Nick Bollettieri, the famed American coach, after two stints training at his Florida academy; Brad Gilbert, Andy Murray’s coach, believes that she is Britain’s best prospect; and the LTA is working on how best to structure financial support. It is going to have to swallow its pride and come to terms with dealing with someone who, 12 months ago, it had deemed surplus to requirements.
“David’s been a real help,” Cavaday said. “I was dashing about thinking ‘points, point, points’ and he has slowed me down, saying that I need to develop as a player, gain wider experience and the points will come along as a consequence. I’m in no rush. There are years before I reach my peak. I was too intense and now I smile a lot on court.”
After her success in Orange County — Cavaday is No 359 in the Sony Ericsson WTA Tour world rankings — she plays another hard-court tournament in Redding, California, before flying to Miami for the Luxilon Cup junior championship, teaming up with Felgate. “I’ve always been impressed with her ball-striking,” he said. “But the progress she’s made in the past few weeks is really encouraging.”
Felgate will sit down with Malisse this week to discuss where their partnership is heading because, as he said: “There will come a time soon when someone has to be the priority and somebody not.”
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It's easy to knock the LTA for failing to identify the potential stars at junior level. It's often the case that the juniors who win at 12,13,14 & 15 yrs don't go on to similar success at senior levels. But they deserve to be criticised for their inability to nurture the talented juniors that they do recognise. The best British players in recent years have all succeded despite the LTA rather than because of it. Henman and Andy Murray are obvious examples but what about Jamie Murray - a world junior champion? The LTA's effors to propel him into the pro ranks were woeful but at least it caused Murray Jnr to go elsewhere to learn his trade and spared him from their attentions.
Tennis Gob, Sevenoaks, UK