| THE
NATION Published
on June 24, 2004
But Thai’s star shines a little brighter. When Danai Udomchoke
arrives home on Saturday morning he will no longer be known
as the tennis player who lives in the shadow of Paradorn Srichaphan
and Tamarine Tanasugarn.
Despite
his second round loss to big-serving Croat Mario Ancic on
Wednesday night, the unheralded Danai captured the hearts
of the fans and huge attention from the media after he pipped
Stefan Koubeck of Austria in round one.
For
more than two hours, he fought off a right leg injury to display
impressive tennis to take a set from the 10th-seeded Ancic
before losing in 7-6 (6-8) 3-6 6-3 6-3.
Danai,
ranked just 161 in the world, became only the second Thai
man in history after Paradorn to qualify for the main draw
at All England in the open era. And when he progressed to
the second round while Paradorn did not, the world realised
a new tennis prodigy from Thailand had arrived on the scene.
At
the moment, the 24-year-old Danai is overshadowing his more
illustrious countryman and has been on the front pages of
many newspapers. He said was prepared for a media onslaught,
similar to what Paradorn experienced during his peak in 2002.
“I
think I just have to be ready for that. I think I will have
some rest to heal my leg for awhile, so there should not be
any problem,’’ Danai told The Nation yesterday.
But
no matter how big the reception waiting for him at home, Danai
said he would maintain his ordinary and simple lifestyle even
though more people will recognise him on the street.
“I
will still be the same person. But I guess I might get more
attention from people wherever I go,’’ said Danai
whose confidence is sky high after matching it with Ancic,
a semi-finalist at Wimbledon last year.
“Now
I feel that I can play everybody. I might try to skip the
challenge level and play more ATP events now,’’ said
Danai who yesterday had his right leg scanned.
It
was this injury that took the edge off his game against Ancic,
who claimed a title on grass in the Netherlands less than
a week ago. The Thai had set point against the Croat at 6-5
in the tie-break but lost after a double fault.
“If
I feel sorry [in any way], it would be for giving him that
first set. I could have shaken his confidence should I have
taken that set,’’ the Thai said.
“I
played very well even though my leg hurts. I could have played
even better if I’d had no injury.” Danai sustained
the injury during his match with Koubeck on Monday.
Danai
applied superb returns and passing shots to break Ancic’s
service game and win the 35-minute second set 6-3. But his
injury was aggravated in the third set and before long he
was trailing the towering Croat 0-5.
Danai
called for a trainer and won three straight games before surrendering
the set 3-6. The Thai was down an early break in the final
set and had a chance to break back at 3-4. Ancic never made
things easy for Danai, firing explosive serves and charging
the net to dominate the rest of the match.
Danai
will cancel his tour of Spain in order to rest at home. His
next tournament will be the Davis Cup tie against Japan in
Osaka next month.
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