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STIRLING and Loughborough Universities were named today as the sites of two national academies that will form the centrepiece of the Lawn Tennis Association’s new high performance pathway.
The strategy, unveiled at the National Tennis Centre in Roehampton, is the latest LTA attempt at producing a system that will create British strength in depth at the top of the sport.
It has been a long time coming, with the high performance department in flux under the stewardship of former chief executive Michael Downey and the new pathway then delayed by Downey’s resignation and the appointment of Scott Lloyd as his successor.
Downey prioritised grassroots and decentralised high performance following the big-spending and much-criticised efforts of his predecessor Roger Draper to increase the number of top-100 players from Britain.
This strategy, the brainchild of performance director Simon Timson, who moved from the same position at UK Sport two years ago, very much goes back to a centralised approach, beginning with children aged seven.
It is envisaged that up to 3,000 children between seven and 10 will hone their skills at local player development centres and take part in county training before the best 250-300 move on to one of 11 regional player development centres.
There will then be a maximum of 32 residential places available at Stirling and Loughborough from September 2019 for those players aged 13-18, or potentially as young as 11, deemed to have potential to reach the top.
They will attend a local school alongside their tennis commitments and, addressing one of the key barriers to what is a notoriously expensive sport to pursue, the places will be funded to cap the cost to players or their families at £5,000 a year.
Applicants for the academies were not given a budget but asked to come up with a vision and say how much it would cost and Timson and Lloyd refused to reveal the amount of money the LTA has committed to each centre over five years, saying only that it is a significant proportion of the high-performance budget.
They are also steering clear of putting a figure on the number of top-100 players they hope to see in 10 years time, which became a millstone around Draper’s neck following the announcement of an earlier strategy.