Cynthia Lum/WireImage.comMichael
Llodra is ready to get down to business.FROM THE ABN AMRO WTT IN
ROTTERDAM – There was
a time when Rotterdam champion Michael Llodra was thinking more about
what kind of practical joke he was going to pull next than he was focusing
on which tactics he’d use in his upcoming match. “I give
my best sometimes,” the Frenchman said about his attitude. “Like
one match here, one match there, but not every time. And that’s
the difference when you want to be in the Top 20, or something like that,
or you want to be like 80, 90.”
But when his coach Olivier
Marcor came up to him one day in August last year and said it was time
for Llodra to start thinking about what he wanted to get out of the
rest of his career, he became a different man. “My coach said, ‘Now you are 27, and you
have two chances. One: You can be Top 100 at the end of the year. You
play good, you win some money, you win some doubles, and that’s
all. Or you have the second chance and you fight more on the court, you
try to do your best everyday and we see what’s happening.”
Llodra went for the second
choice, and his new season couldn’t have started in a better way. Before 2008, Llodra had
captured only one singles title in his career, at '04 ‘s-Hertogenbosch.
By posting a 6-7(3), 6-3, 7-6(4) win over Robin Soderling in the Rotterdam
final on Sunday, he already claimed his second crown of the year after
winning in Adelaide in January. Llodra moved up 21 positions in the rankings
to his new career high of No. 37.
“Every time I go on the court I do my best and
it’s working,” he said. “When you start the match and
you know you’re going to fight until the end, you feel much better
in your body, and I know during the match I can have an opportunity to
win. Sometimes you can change a match. It’s only mentally. I think
last year, I couldn’t win this match.”
Soderling was in control
of the encounter after winning the first set, but he failed to convert
one of two break points in Llodra’s
opening service game of the second set. Slowly but surely, the momentum
shifted. Llodra said he saw it coming. “It was predictable before
the match. He can be very nervous, that’s why he’s not in
the Top 10. He has such a big serve and very good strokes so I think
he can be much better than his ranking at the moment.”
In the Ahoy-stadium, all
the past champions of the event are listed on the boardings surrounding
centre court. Llodra said he was honoured to join those big names such
as Jimmy Connors, Björn
Borg and Roger Federer on the walls, claiming that winning this tournament
was the best achievement of his career.
“When you came here and you see all the superstar
like [Goran] Ivanisevic, [Richard] Krajicek, I thought, ‘Whoah,
it would be nice if I can put my name there’, but it was a dream.
When you see the draw it’s amazing. Finally I won five matches
in a row. Nobody knows me, they say, ‘Llodra, what is it’?
I hope I’m going to play more like this week and maybe I can become
a superstar like all the players [on the boardings].”
FEELING HOME AT THE NET He’ll never reach superstar status, though Llodra
might be remembered as one of the last natural serve-and-volleyers in
the game. His style is still effective and great to watch, and it makes
you wonder if there really isn’t a future for serve and volley. “I
don’t know if there’s a future but that’s the way I
play and I’m going to stay like this,” Llodra said. “If
I have to play from the baseline I’m not as confident as if I play
serve and volley.”
“If I have to choose,
I prefer to play like 20 years ago. When I was young it was my dream
to play serve and volley. But the conditions now, the balls are not
so fast and also the court.
Now they build new courts,
to see play more from the baseline.”
“Now nobody wants to make serve and volley.
Even Tim Henman, the last two years that he played, he tried to mix it
up. Little bit serve and volley and come to the net from the baseline.
It’s tough to do it but it’s the only way I can win the match.”
Llodra gets his confidence
around the net from his success in doubles. He’s won three Grand Slam titles: The Australian
Open in 2003 and 2004 with Fabrice Santoro, and '07 Wimbledon with his
close friend Arnaud Clement. He now believes that he can also win matches
on his own, by using his lefty serve to an advantage in setting up easy
volleys at the net. “My career in doubles was amazing. I was confident
in doubles, but not in singles. But it’s the same, when you’re
serving doubles, singles, it’s exactly the same. You just have
to believe it.”
If Llodra plays as well
as he’s done so far
this year, his ambition of reaching the Top 20 is not out of reach, though
he really needs to stay committed and play his best to get there. He
mixes up his lefty serve well, though he doesn’t hit 130-plus-mph
bombs. His one-handed backhand is at times a joy to watch, but it’s
not consistent enough in long rallies. Consistency is also a problem
on his forehand wing, which explains why Llodra loves to play at the
net, where he’s undoubtedly one of the best in the game. He’ll
likely crack the Top 30 at some point this year, maybe after the clay-court
season.
LLODRA: THE TRUE JOKER Despite easing up a little on the joking off court,
Llodra still likes to have fun in his own way. After winning the title
in Adelaide, he jumped into a river and dragged his coach with him.
One of his better known
pranks involved an incident with Ivan Ljubicic some years ago. During
a tournament, Llodra hid naked in the Croat’s dressing room closet and jumped out when Ljubicic
entered the room. “I love to make some jokes,” Llodra said. “I
promise you, if you spend one day with me you’re going to see that
I’m a good joker.” He and Novak Djokovic should hang out
someday.