Kim Clijsters’ first full season back on the tennis tour is presenting new challenges: figuring out a balanced schedule, needing more rest than she used to, traveling with her two-year-old daughter, Jada.
“Days are totally different now. In the past ... everything is kind of based around you,” Clijsters said.
“When I come home from practice, I have to make sure that I’m home before lunch or that I can pick up food from the supermarket and start cooking lunch,” the Belgian said.
“It’s constant until Jada goes to sleep. And then, kind of, clean up the house, and then you have an hour where you can sit back and relax a bit. It takes a lot of energy,” she said.
Clijsters was away from tennis from May 2007 until last August, getting married and giving birth to Jada in the interim.
When she got back on tour, the Belgian immediately displayed the same big groundstrokes and perpetual-motion court coverage that helped her win the 2005 US Open and briefly reach No. 1 in the rankings.
She came into last year’s US Open without a ranking and left as a two-time major champion and member of the top 20, having beaten both Williams sisters en route to the title.
Serena Williams called it “one of the greatest comebacks ever.”
Even Clijsters was taken aback at how well things went.
“After having my daughter, and everything, and being back in tennis, the results have come a lot faster than I think myself and my whole team kind of expected,” Clijsters said. “But I trained really hard to try and get back into shape. The confidence and my level and everything just grew gradually.”
She is ranked No. 17 this week, heading into the hard-court event in Indian Wells, California.
It will be her first official tournament since a 6-0, 6-1 loss to Nadia Petrova in the third round of the Australian Open. Once one of the busiest players on tour, playing week-in, week-out, no matter the city or the surface, Clijsters is now picking and choosing events carefully.
“I’ve definitely cut back a lot,” Clijsters said. “I’m a little bit older. Toward the end of my first career, I had a lot of injuries that I think could have been avoided if I took enough time to rest.”
With all of the globe-trotting — “Once in a while, there’s some surprises with the hotel you stay at,” she said — and the “draining” parenting, Clijsters finds herself telling her coach or fitness trainer to give her a break once in a while.
“At the end of the day, you just feel a little bit more tired than when you just focus on tennis by itself,” she said. “But my team knows that. They know I want to be a mother, and that’s my first priority in life.
“Luckily, I’m not the type of person who needs six to seven hours of practice every day to feel good on the court,” Clijsters said. “If I can have a good hour-and-a-half, two hours of good shots, then that’s something that certainly is enough.”
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