The only time India won a medal
in tennis at the Olympic Games was when Leander Paes beat Fernando
Meligini of Brazil for a bronze at the 1996 Atlanta Games.
Since
then Leander, his world class doubles partner Mahesh Bhupathi and
India's only Grand-Slam title winning woman player Sania Mirza have all
been trying for another tennis medal but without luck. The closest they
came to was when Paes-Bhupathi pair lost the bronze by a whisker to
Croatia's Mario Ancic and Ivan Ljubicic at the Athens Games in 2004.
However,
the London Games are being touted as the place where they can end the
medal drought, though the draw forecasts a difficult time for the
Indians.
Bhupathi and Rohan Bopanna and Leander Paes and Vishnu
Vardhan have been handed tough first round matches. The Indians will
have to play out of their skins for a podium finish.
Bhupathi-Bopanna,
who have been seeded seventh, will face Belarus's Max Mirnyi and
Alexander Bury in the first Saturday tie while the unseeded Paes-Vardhan
will take on the Dutch pair Robin Haase and Jean-Julien Rojer in the
32-team draw.
If they clear the first hurdle, Bhupathi-Bopanna
will play either Britain's Colin Fleming and Ross Hutchins or Frenchmen
Julien Benneteau and Richard Gasquet, and if the Indian pair is lucky to
get to the next round, quarter-finals, the likely opponents will be
Serbia's No.3 seeds Nenad Zimonjic and Janko Tipsarevic.
Bhupathi
and Bopanna have been seeded one rung ahead of Serbian pair of World
No. 2 singles player Novak Djokovic and Victor Troicki.
The going
is likely to be tougher for Paes and Vardhan, who should run into
second seeded French pairing of Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and Michael Llodra in
the second round, if they clear the first hurlde. Though, having Paes
as a partner is a big advantage, the inexperience of Vardhan should also
be taken into account.
Both Bhupathi and Paes have won majors on
the grass of Wimbledon where the tournament is played. Leander has won
four titles at the All England Club, one in the men's doubles (with
Bhupathi in 1999) and three in the mixed doubles, while Bhupathi has won
three, including two mixed titles. This is the first time the
tournament is being played on grass since tennis was reintroduced in the
Olympics at Seoul in 1988.
In the mixed doubles, which has been
reintroduced here for the first time since 1924, the pair of Paes and
Sania Mirza are being touted as a real medal prospects as they have only
two rounds to clear to reach a medal round. The draws and seeding will
be announced on July 31. The two have won an Asian Games gold (Doha
2006) and a bronze (Busan 2002).
Wild card Somdev Devvarman,
India's sole singles representative at the Olympics, has a tough task
ahead of him as he will meet Finland's Jarko Nieminen in the men's
singles. Somdev, who is returning to big-time tennis after a shoulder
injury kept him off court for nearly a year, has an opportunity to test
his fitness.
The women's doubles combination of Sania Mirza and
Rushmi Chakravarthi begin their challenge against Su-Wei Hsieh and
Chia-Jung Chuang of Chinese Taipei and they have little hope of looking
ahead.




