
Martina Hingis was born in Kosice, Czechoslovakia (now
Slovakia), on 30th September, 1980.
She was born Martina Hingis due to her father, Karol
Hingis. At this time, her mother was joined in
matrimony, and thus named Hingis, but she has since
changed her name twice, to Zogg, and its present
incarnation, Molitor.
This is her maiden name. She changed her name to Zogg
when she married a Swiss computer salesman named Andreas
Zogg, but this relationship has subsequently dissolved,
rather acrimoniously. Melanie Molitor was a capable
tennis player herself. It is broadly accepted that it
was her who hatched the plan to make her daughter a
star, though there is some debate that Karol may have
had some influence in starting Martina off.
That is not the version that Melanie remembers, she
states that she placed a sawn-off wooden racquet in
little Martina's hand for the first time when she was
just two. Martina and mother played tennis together for
ten minutes a day at this time. Molitor had been ranked
as highly as ten in her native Czechoslovakia during her
youth.
It was clear she relished her life within the game, but
she simply didn't have the talent to reach the WTA Tour,
to make a considerable living out of the game. Molitor's
own tennis career had some major influences on Martina.
Her hero was Martina Navratilova, though Molitor was
clearly jealous of the freedom that tennis gave to her
hero. Navratilova prompted Molitor to name her daughter
Martina, and she vowed to give her daughter the
opportunity to go wherever she wanted, and to have
financial independence. Also, Molitor was primarily a
baseliner, and she was determined to make Martina an
all-court player, capable of playing any shot in the
game. It is clear that Molitor's family history had a
considerable influence on her determination for her
daughter to have a fruitful life. Molitor's personal
life was shaped profoundly by politics in
Czechoslovakia. Her father, and Martina's grandfather,
was a landscape architect, and an ardent anti-Communist.
He was sentenced to eight years of hard labor, working
at a uranium mine that essentially amounted to a
concentration camp. In essence, he was imprisoned,
purely for opposing the government politically.
The Communist party had intended to break him, in an
eternal attempt to crush Communist opposition. Molitor
cites her father as the most important person in her
life, the one who had the greatest influence on her. His
refusal to compromise, and determination to stand up for
what he believed in, has clearly had a huge influence on
Molitor's fiery temperament. And the freedom that he was
denied convinced her to give Martina every opportunity
to be as free as possible. Her father died in 1988, one
year before Communism died in Czechoslovakia. Molitor
says he was, apart from her, the only one who believed
in Martina. Tennis was still very much part of Molitor's
life when she met Karol Hingis, who has also been a
player and coach. They married and set up house in
Kosice, and had their only child, Martina, in 1980.
Unfortunately they divorced four years later, in rather
angry circumstances, the details of which remain firmly
private.
They will not communicate at all now. Molitor and Hingis
moved to Roznov, Czechoslovakia, with Martina's
grandfather seriously ill, a bitter divorce behind them,
little money and no occupation. It was now that
Martina's hitherto difficult life was to take a turn for
the better. She could already hit the ball back and
forth 300 times. In Roznov, Hingis begun to play tennis
prolifically. Martina says that the divorce was the
worst time of her life. And she has hardly seen her
father since it happened. Her father is now a
groundskeeper at the local tennis club where he lives,
earning approximately £8,500 per annum. His daughter is
a world famous, multi-Grand Slam winning tennis player,
who was paid £8,500 by Sergio Tacchini every two days.
For the record, Hingis still sees her father, making
time to visit him at least once a year.
There are rumors that Karol Hingis walked out on Martina
and Melanie, and that the break-up of the marriage was
not mutual, but these are unsubstantiated.
Typically, Martina does not resent her father, indeed
she says they have "a great relationship", and that "he
wants the best for [her]". It would appear that Hingis
and Hingis are rather more alike in character than
Hingis and Molitor, both of them are laid-back people.
Had Martina taken up residence with her father, she
probably would not have become the success she has.
I cannot imagine Martina working in a factory or an
office.
Perhaps she would have worked with horses in some
capacity. Such speculation is irrelevant, however,
because Martina did indeed go off with her mother, to
begin a new life in Roznov. "Since I was in her stomach
my mom was thinking I was going to be a great tennis
player".
Well, at Roznov, Martina's tennis practice began in
earnest. Martina begun to play at the local tennis club,
and what had been a turbulent life suddenly became a
happy one. "I just loved it.
I didn't want anything else in the world. We had a small
apartment, which I liked, and we were always on the
courts playing tennis. We had fun".
By five, Martina was playing tennis for up to five hours
a day, considerably longer than she plays now. She
entered her first tournament at four, and by the time
she was six, she could be beaten by no-one under the age
of nine. Most importantly for a young girl, she had
esteem and belonging. "I just had a great life out
there. There were always 40 kids on the grounds. It was
like a big family together, like one big community. I
just grew up on the courts. I would go to the courts
with my mom, and when she practiced, I was there. I
would play for four hours, then play a soccer game in
the evenings, and then go home and hit the ball on the
wall of our apartment. I was crazy!" Martina also
sparked her passion for horse riding when her mother
took her to ride a pony, aged just four. She loved it
instantly, and now lists horse riding as her main
passion in life. She was also able to go and see her
grandmother and father whenever she wanted to, and often
went over to the courts for lunch, as their house was
near the courts. But when she was seven, Martina was
again uprooted, as her mother married Andreas Zogg, and
moved to Switzerland. Her new residence has been her
home for years since, it was the beautiful town of
Trubbach. In some senses Martina had landed on her feet,
Trubbach is just the most gorgeous place you can
imagine, and an unassuming girl was well suited to life
in the tiny hamlet. Her laid-back attitude was also
reflected in the attitudes of her new compatriots. It
was obviously not an ideal thing for a seven year-old
girl to start all over again in a new country. But
Hingis was nothing if not resolute. She refused to be
held back a year, and was thrust straight into the
second grade. At first Martina could barely understand a
word that was being said. She would return from a day's
schooling to announce to her mother that she had no idea
what they had been doing. "I wasn't very happy to go to
school at first". But within three months, Martina was
fluent in Swiss-German, and she now appears as Swiss as
any girl, and is as eloquent in German as in Czech. When
asked in Melbourne in 1997, how Slovakia would react to
her Australian Open victory, she responded by saying
that she was Swiss, Switzerland was her country, and
that she was unrelated to Slovakia, now. "I was
determined to learn and make friends, which I did in
time". Hingis is, in my opinion, a fine linguist. She
speaks four languages, and I feel bound to say that her
English is excellent. She could not speak any English
until she was 12, yet it needs only a second for her to
describe her mother as undiplomatic. I really admire
anyone who can learn English; it is a language without
rule or reason.
Martina first defeated her mother when she was ten years
old, and throughout her younger years won a succession
of Swiss titles, until, when she was 11, she was the
under-18 champion of Switzerland.
Next year she won the adult Swiss championship.
It was clear that Martina was going to have a career in
tennis, and a sparkling future was predicted when she
became the youngest girl to win a junior Grand Slam, at
the French Open, when still only 12.
So, by the time she was 14, having left school, Martina
was ready for professional tennis. She entered her first
professional tournament on 3rd October, 1994, in Zurich,
a mere 50 miles from her home.
In her very first professional event she upset American
veteran Patty Fendick in straight sets, and caused a
young Mary Pierce considerable discomfort in the second
round. She reached two quarterfinals in her next two
events, and upset former top-ten player Helena Sukova.
By the end of 1994, Martina Hingis had broken into the
world's top 100.
A career had begun that was to bring achievement, glory,
fame, admiration and wealth. And freedom. And such has
been the nature of her life that a rather splendid young
lady had been forged, a charming, self-aware,
spontaneous girl, who realized just how lucky she was,
and was determined to enjoy and cherish what she had.
This girl had no bitterness toward her father, ultimate
respect and gratitude for her mother, and the desire and
passion to learn and experience and prosper.
And she was about to prosper profoundly in the sphere of
tennis.
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