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Twenty-two-year
old Aisam ul-Haq Qureshi is Pakistan's hope in the tennis arena.
Talented and motivated, he was instrumental in taking Pakistan to
this September's Asia/Oceania Davis Cup Group II final against China.
Playing at Wimbledon without financial support from the Pakistan
Tennis Federation (yes, there is such a thing) or the Pakistan Sports
Board, Aisam is the second Pakistani to make it to the pre-quarter
final stage at Wimbledon and thus a hero to tennis hopefuls around
the country.
The young Lahori has
created quite a stir in Pakistan - and contrary to everyone's expectations,
it's not because of his good looks and athletic abilities! Partnered
with Israeli Amir Hadad, Qureshi stirred up controversy by laughing
off suggestions that his choice of partner is "not morally
correct" (as Sports Minister S.K. Tressler put it). As calls
for his suspension from the sport were being bandied about in official
sports circles, Qureshi stated he would play with whoever he needed
to in order to make it to the US Open. As a result of the uproar
at Wimbledon, however, he has changed his partner. Currently paired
with Karol Beck of Slovenia, he has reached the finals in doubles
and semi-finals in singles for the Manchester Trophy International
Men's Grasscourt Tournament.
Pakistan's best player for the past two years, he vows to "continue
to raise Pakistan's flag high wherever I play." Qureshi's fine
performances have shown that it is possible to reach international
acclaim despite having a politically charged sports bureaucracy
at home. Perhaps Pakistan can now change its reputation from a state
with good cricket to a state with good cricket AND tennis.
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