Misc Tennis

Coach Todd Clark sees a bright path ahead for Tavish Pahwa

Storm Sanders was Australia’s hero after she won the first singles rubber before returning for the deciding doubles match alongside 38-year-old Samantha Stosur.

Tavish Pahwa
| Photo Credit: Kamesh Srinivasan

Tavish Pahwa is one of the bright emerging tennis talents in the country. Right from the time he won his singles and doubles matches in helping India beat Pakistan in the South Asian under-12 final in Nepal, Tavish has been in focus for his unflinching attitude on court.

After the recent titles in two of the big Asian under-14 events, Tavish is the best ranked Indian boy in Asia, behind two Koreans. He had shown his talent on the global stage last year when he reached the Orange Bowl semifinals and the quarterfinals of Eddie Herr in the USA.

The best of talent may not bloom and realise potential without the right guidance. The 13-year-old Tavish has come under the tutelage of coach Todd Clark at Accelerate Tennis in Gurugram.

“Tavish demonstrates great athletic qualities. He uses his fitness as a weapon as he has the cardio base to play long, physically demanding rallies. Equally, he has the explosiveness to play short high intensity points,” said Clark.

The Aussie coach, who has been working in India since 2008, Todd intends to introduce a tournament fitness plan to ensure that Tavish maintains his fitness while travelling and further enhances it. Physical loads will be carefully monitored and adequate time marked for rest and recovery.

“He is tactically smart. Tavish has an ability to analyse his opponents’ strengths and weaknesses as well as most coaches. He is becoming more aware of his strengths and is developing some strong patterns of play. We are seeing his win percentage on big points improving simply as a result of his ability to do what he is good at. He is comfortable at the baseline or transitioning to the net. We are working on his net game, which will be essential for his future success,” the coach explained.

More than anything else, the coach admires Tavish’s love for the battle.

“He is a confident young man who thrives on stepping up when faced with a stronger, higher ranked opponent. He plays attacking tennis in close situations which shows his level of self-belief. He will be one of the toughest competitors in the Indian junior circuit. He will also learn to appreciate that competition is unpredictable and will not always go your way. There is no losing, only learning”, said Clark.

As another coach, who has worked with the boy for quite some time, Ankit Patel pointed out, Tavish is very passionate about the game, and has been reading books on all the top players. He spends time…

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