India's doubles world number one has promised to take a measured approach to next year's Olympics, promising she won't kill herself if she fails to bring home a gold medal
Sania Mirza
Beijing: India's doubles world number one Sania Mirza has promised to take a measured approach to next year's Olympics, promising "I'm not going to kill myself!" if she fails to bring home a gold medal.
ADVERTISEMENT
Watch video: Sania Mirza returns home after claiming China Open doubles title
Sania Mirza
Excitement over the Rio de Janeiro Games is already ramping up with high speculation over who will team up with Sania as she seeks to win a rare Olympic gold for India.
Also Read: India's first lady of tennis Sania Mirza sizzles off court too
Sania and her new partner Martina Hingis have cut a swathe through the doubles circuit this year, winning Wimbledon and the US Open among eight titles altogether including the China Open on Saturday.
Amazing to win
The 28-year-old said it would be "amazing" to win Olympic gold, but also stressed that it wasn't the only target in a sport which has four Grand Slam tournaments every year. "It would be amazing. As players we do want that, but we also have four Slams a year," she told AFP in interview at the China Open in Beijing.
"So it's not like a lot of other sports where they get one opportunity every four years — we kind of get opportunities every four months.
"So it would be amazing, it would feel like probably I've won everything then if I win that Olympic medal. But if I don't, I'm not going to kill myself. I mean life
goes on."
India's Olympic successes have been few and far between, with only one non-team gold medal so far at any of the Summer Games — going to bespectacled shooter Abhinav Bindra at Beijing 2008.
Expectations at Rio
Victory in Rio would push India's Sania mania to fever pitch, but the player herself did her best to dampen growing expectations.
"People kind of expect that if you don't have that medal, you're depressed. It's not like that," she said. "The last time, I remember we played the Olympics and before people left the Olympic village we were already competing in another tournament. That's how a tennis player's life really is.
"It would be amazing to win a medal and I'll do whatever I can, but if it doesn't happen, it doesn't happen."