Social Sciences, asked by ss3584951, 6 months ago

No pain no gain . How does this statement apply to Maria Sharapova?​

Answers

Answered by sunita1597
7

Answer:

When a groggy Maria Sharapova woke up after the effects of the anaesthetic wore off following shoulder surgery in August 2008, it was not long before the doubts started to race through her overworked mind.

Was the surgery successful?

Would she be able to serve at a competitive level again?

Would she ever be able to play top level tennis again?

Would she ever be pain-free again?

Explanation:

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Answered by julietlawrence729
8

Explanation:

A new champion is like a new person in our lives—it takes time to judge them for what they are and not keep wishing they would change. We may never forgive Sharapova her grunt, but today, while it still sounded pretty awful inside Centre Court, I didn't notice it much. I expected it from her. Like a friend's annoying habit, I'm starting to tune it out. It will help Sharapova if she's upstaged by a new and bolder generation of deci-belles. It will also help if she establishes an identity separate from her father.

All that's for the future. Today, during one point early in the third set, a ball by Dulko floated lazily toward the baseline. Sharapova couldn't tell whether it was going to be in or out. She struggled frantically to get her feet and body in a place where she could hit a shot at shoulder level. Just as she got there, the ball touched down an inch behind the line and was called out. Sharapova had started her swing from an awkward, tip-toe stance, but she ended up slapping through air as the ball went past. As she swung, she made a face that was equal parts relieved, intense, and humorously exasperated at her less-than-graceful stab at getting into position. I wondered: Could Maria Sharapova's blind competitiveness ever come to seem . . . cute

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