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SportTennis

How Li Na went from a badminton-playing kid in Wuhan to one of China's global icons

Double grand slam winner changed the face of tennis in the mainland

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An image of Li Na is seen on a promotional campaign for the upcoming Wuhan Open at the city's airport. Photo: AFP
Reuters

A typical “neighbourhood kid” toting a badminton racquet in the Yangtze river port of Wuhan, eight-year-old Li Na could have had little idea the path the Chinese state set for her might lead to tennis glory, riches and Asia’s first grand slam singles title.

Steered into a sports college to work on her badminton, Li was soon diverted into a tennis programme after coaches found her stroke-making too lusty for the genteel sport played on street-sides across the country.

Read the full text of Li Na's farewell letter

The fiery swing became her hallmark, the crunching shots laced from the baseline propelling her to two grand slam titles, all in defiance of a litany of injuries that threatened to bring a premature end to a trailblazing career.

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A student plays with a motion-controlled tennis game near a wax figure of Li Na on display at Madame Tussauds museum in Beijing. Photo: AP
A student plays with a motion-controlled tennis game near a wax figure of Li Na on display at Madame Tussauds museum in Beijing. Photo: AP

Li lost the battle with her body this year, persistent surgeries on her knees blamed principally for ending the career of Asia’s most decorated player on Friday.

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“When I started playing tennis, I was just a neighbourhood kid with an afterschool hobby, not realising what magical journey lay ahead of me,” she said in her farewell statement.

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