The 23-year-old’s campaign at the All England Club ended in the third round last year and was followed by a very public and bitter row with Tennis Australia over what he said was their lack of backing for him.
Since then, there have been rows over his suitability to be part of Australia’s Olympic team, which he defused by withdrawing his name from consideration, and the now traditional woes of his claycourt season.
Federer returns to favourite stomping ground
After a second-round departure at the French Open that surprised few given his dislike of the Roland Garros surface, however, Tomic has rediscovered his form on grass at ‘s-Hertogenbosch and Queen’s Club.
“I’d say probably it’s the best it’s been leading into Wimbledon,” the 19th seed told Australia’s Fox Sports TV. “I managed to play two grasscourt tournaments, played really well, making the quarters in the Netherlands and the semis at Queen’s. I feel like I’m playing some of my best tennis on grass and now we’re here at the famous Wimbledon tournament and I’m ready to go.”
Tomic made his grand slam breakthrough when he reached the Wimbledon quarter-finals as a qualifier in 2011 and it remains his favourite of the sport’s four majors.
Wimbledon: Final showdown on cards for Djokovic, Murray
“On grass, I always seem to be intense and on my feet and I always seem to play really well,” he said.
Lapses of concentration and intensity have been a problem for Tomic throughout a career that promised so much when he won two junior grand slam titles.
Allegations of giving up, or tanking, have dogged him in recent years and reached fever pitch when he faced match point at the Madrid Open in May with his racket upside down.
He knows, however, that he will have to be on his toes for his first round match against tricky Spanish left-hander Fernando Verdasco, who he beat at Queen’s Club to take a 4-1 lead in their career head-to-head.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 26th, 2016.
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