Premium
This is an archive article published on September 25, 2002

Tennis is off, Hewitt tries his luck on a different ball game

Lleyton Hewitt may be the number one tennis player in the world but when he was a boy he wanted to be an Australian Rules footballer.The Wim...

.

Lleyton Hewitt may be the number one tennis player in the world but when he was a boy he wanted to be an Australian Rules footballer.

The Wimbledon champion proudly wore his Adelaide Crows Football Club jumper during his on-court warm-up as Australia beat India 5-0 in their Davis Cup World Group relegation tie in Adelaide last week.

Unfortunately for Hewitt, the Collingwood Magpies defeated the Crows in their Australian Football League (AFL) preliminary final on Saturday.

Story continues below this ad

But the 21-year-old from Adelaide is still looking forward to attending Saturday’s grand final between the Magpies and Brisbane, a match that will be watched by a crowd of 90,000 at Melbourne Cricket Ground.

“Growing up, I played as much football as I could and now travelling around the world I am always trying to keep up with what’s happening in the AFL and the Adelaide Crows,” Hewitt wrote in the “AFL Record” official programme this week.

“I can’t wait to be at the grand final again. Last year was the first one I had been to and it was just fantastic.”

Hewitt said he started playing the 18-a-side game when he was six and had success at high school level.

Story continues below this ad

“Football was my number one sport until I was about 13 or 14 and then tennis took over,” he said.

“I was going away overseas with junior (tennis) teams.”

Hewitt’s father Glynn played for Melbourne AFL club Richmond in the 1970s.

The world number one was given permission to miss Sunday’s reverse singles against India, which were dead rubbers, by Davis Cup captain John Fitzgerald so that he could play in a Crows charity football match in Adelaide.

Hewitt kicked three goals in the match, celebrating with a typical double-fisted arm pump, and showed enough dash to avoid any possibility of a heavy tackle interrupting his tennis career. (Reuters)

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement