21 September,2023 09:13 AM IST | New Delhi | PTI
India’s Sumit Nagal serves to Morocco’s Yassine Dlimi during their Davis Cup tie in Lucknow on Sunday. Pic/Getty Images
After arranging for a sustenance budget of Rs 1 crore that keeps him going on the ATP Tour, India's No. 1 tennis player Sumit Nagal is left with less than Rs 1 lakh in his bank account and a morose feeling of not leading a comfortable life. He has been training at the Nansel Tennis Academy in Germany for a few years but lack of funds meant that he could not train at his favourite place in the first three months of season 2023.
His friends Somdev Devvarman and Christopher Marquis helped him stay in shape in January and February before he finally managed to fund his stay in Germany. To stay and play on the extravagant ATP Tour, Nagal has invested all his prize money, his salary from IOCL and the support he gets from Maha Tennis Foundation. The expenditure is related to his stay at the training centre in Peine and his travel for tournaments along with either his coach or a physio.
"If I look at my bank balance, I have what I had at the beginning of the year. It is 900 euros [approx Rs 80,000]. I am currently getting help from Prashant Sutar through Maha Tennis Foundation and I also get a monthly [salary] from IOCL, but the funding needed to break into the Top 100 is around one crore," Nagal told PTI in an interview.
ALSO READ
Filmmaker Shyam Benegal cremated with full state honours
Telangana: NCB unearths illegal drugs lab, arrests pharma firm employee
Rafi a musical genius, his cultural influence transcends generations: PM Modi
Sudan's war is 'deepening and widening' famine crisis, hunger monitoring report says
"We need two spinners playing...": Rohit Sharma on Tanush Kotian's selection
Also read: Wrestling: Panghal shocks world champ Parrish, but loses in semis
Nagal's racquet, shoes and apparel needs are being taken care of by Yonex and Asics respectively. This year, in 24 tournaments played, Nagal has earned around R65 lakh with his biggest pay cheque coming from the US Open where he lost in the first round of the Qualifiers and still pocketed $22,000 (approx Rs 18 lakh).
"I'm investing whatever I'm making. The yearly cost, where I travel with one coach, is around Rs 80 lakh to Rs 1 crore and that's just with one coach [no physio]. Whatever I've made, I've invested. I'm lacking suport despite being India's No. 1 player for the past few years. I'm the only player to qualify for Grand Slams, only player to win a [tennis] match at the Olympics [Tokyo] and still the government has not added my name to the TOPS [Target Olympic Podium Scheme]," Nagal said.
This story has been sourced from a third party syndicated feed, agencies. Mid-day accepts no responsibility or liability for its dependability, trustworthiness, reliability and data of the text. Mid-day management/mid-day.com reserves the sole right to alter, delete or remove (without notice) the content in its absolute discretion for any reason whatsoever