Marina Bassols: a dream fulfilled between invoices and threats
The Catalan tennis player lived a great experience at Roland Garros after struggling to stay on the professional circuit
BlanesWhen everything pointed to it being one of the worst years of her career, in just under a week the situation took a 180-degree turn. During the month of March, Marina Bassols (Blanes, 1999) publicly reported death threats after losing a match. This harassment was compounded by injuries, lack of competitive consistency, and a shortage of financial resources to cope with the professional circuit. But Roland Garros changed the face of the Catalan tennis player, who for the first time entered the main draw of a Grand Slam after overcoming the qualifying round and defeating Colombian tennis player Emiliana Arango in the first round. She did all this without dropping a single set before being defeated by the world number 8, Mirra Andreeva.
In Paris, Bassols has written the first major chapter of her love story with top-level tennis. The dream lasted only a week, but it was worth it. She doesn't mind having had to change accommodation five times in 10 days for the numbers to add up. There are no fixed incomes, but there are expenses: salaries, flights, hotels, meals..., all at the player's expense. "The circuit is very expensive, the expenses are incredible. Last year was tough, I didn't play as well and with injuries I played fewer tournaments, so you stop earning a certain amount of money that you were counting on and you organize your year. I had to talk to my team at the beginning of this year because I couldn't continue paying them as I had been up to that point," confesses the player from La Selva.
Within this financial distress, Marc Pallarès, her coach, proposed making a tweet on social media asking for help in finding sponsors. The post has accumulated nearly 50,000 views and the approval of several colleagues from the circuit, who have not hesitated to ask her if they can copy the idea. For those potential partners who wish to obtain her services, Bassols defines herself as "a hardworking person, with good values, grateful, fighter and resilient. In addition to being one of the best rackets on the state and world stage". After all, it is not a dystopia of the labor market, but the day-to-day reality of professionals below number 100 in the ATP and WTA rankings.
Condemned in victory and defeat
“Be clear that you are dead”, “I hope your plane crashes”; “I know where you live. How do you prefer to die?”, are some of the messages Bassols received at the beginning of the year when she lost a match in Colombia. She displayed them in a video on social media. “This is what most tennis players experience in our day to day. It is very serious. I speak from anger and sadness, but also from fear,” the tennis player pointed out in this same message.
It's hard to understand how internalized it is. “In the end, I receive insults every day, win or lose, even passing the Roland Garros preliminary round,” she adds in conversation with ARA. She is not the first tennis player on the circuit to receive threats, and unfortunately, she won't be the last. There are others who have received photographs of family members, of their homes, or of guns demanding a certain result before a match. There are others who have had to deal with stalkers who have pursued them through various tournaments and hotels where they were staying.
“That's why I made the video, to show the other side of tennis to young people who are starting their careers and might encounter this behavior, so they try to manage it in the best possible way and their development is not affected.” In an exercise of sincerity, she assures that she has truly been scared, suffering for her physical integrity. “In the end, I receive many messages and nothing ever happens, but… what if it does?” she wonders.
Happy amidst serenity
Those who know her describe her as a calm and simple person, who likes to spend quality time with friends to keep her mind occupied and disconnect. “Working with Marina is very easy, she makes things very easy. She is very tidy, arrives on time, places trust in her team, and always seeks the well-being of those around her,” explains Pallarès. After a week of fantasy in Paris, she is resting these days with her family in Blanes, her emotional base of operations. Her refuge. She has everything there: childhood, friends, and a lot of memories. She lives and trains in Barcelona, but takes advantage of the Costa Brava whenever she can.
She has a coaching title and does not hide her desire to continue involved in tennis in one way or another. “I really like teaching, seeing the enthusiasm of young children, although for now I am focusing on my career,” she concludes with a smile on her face, recalling her time at Roland Garros.