HomeSportsExclusive | Mahesh Bhupathi: 'When there's no system in your country, it's very hard to produce champions'

Exclusive | Mahesh Bhupathi: 'When there's no system in your country, it's very hard to produce champions'

Mahesh Bhupathi, in an exclusive interaction with Moneycontrol earlier this week, reflected his thoughts on the country's discouraging tennis ecosystem.

August 17, 2025 / 21:57 IST
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Mahesh Bhupathi, former India doubles tennis ace (AFP/File Photo)
Mahesh Bhupathi, former India doubles tennis ace (AFP/File Photo)

The year 2024 witnessed turmoil in the Indian tennis ecosystem, marked by disputes between the federation and some high-profile Indian players. Such was the mess that Mahesh Bhupathi, former India doubles tennis ace, jumped in to expose the gaps within the All India Tennis Association (AITA), which appeared to be headed South. In an explosive social media post, which you can still find on the tennis icon's profile, Bhupathi called out Anil Dhupar, then AITA Secretary General, for "butchering Indian tennis players."

Eight months into 2025, a lot has changed as Dhupar has been removed as the Secretary General by AITA's executive committee. The senior sports administrator, in response, has challenged his ouster at the Delhi High Court. In more development, Sumit Nagal, India’s top-ranked singles tennis player, and Yuki Bhambri, who were at the heart of the controversy due to their withdrawals from the Davis Cup, have returned to the Indian squad.

Bhupathi, in an exclusive interaction with Moneycontrol earlier this week, reflected his thoughts on the country's discouraging tennis ecosystem. The 12-time Grand Slam doubles winner acknowledged that the current scenario may not appear appealing, but refused to blame the players for it. He instead made a hard-hitting point.

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"There are gaps that are exactly why we don't see the results that we all as tennis fans want to see. Until those gaps are filled, which are not the players' fault, I don't think we'll see too many miracles. In the meantime, players who are out on tour, I know they're trying their best, and we can't demotivate anyone by telling them they are not good enough. But when there's no system in your country, it's very hard to produce champions in any sport; that's the bottom line," said Bhupathi.