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Russian tennis ace Maria Sharapova backs 'super-coach' trend in modern game

Sixth seeded Pole Agnieszka Radwanska has taken on 18-times grand slam title winner Martina Navratilova, while up-and-coming American Madison Keys has former world number one and three-time major winner Lindsay Davenport as a mentor.

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Maria Sharapova is all game for the 'super-coach' trend in tennis
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Maria Sharapova has backed the 'super-coach' trend that will see two of her rivals tapping into the knowledge of grand slam champions at the Australian Open.

Sixth seeded Pole Agnieszka Radwanska has taken on 18-times grand slam title winner Martina Navratilova, while up-and-coming American Madison Keys has former world number one and three-time major winner Lindsay Davenport as a mentor. 

The appointments follow the development of a number of high-profile partnerships in the men's game, with Roger Federer, Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray all taking on multiple former grand slam winners. Sharapova has swapped a few coaches in recent years but has been working with Dutchman Sven Groeneveld since late 2013, a career coach who has mentored a number of top players but had no notable success as a player.

"Well, I think from experience-wise, there's no better person that can help you in certain situations as a coach, as a motivator, as someone that just has been there, done that," Sharapova told reporters at Melbourne Park on Saturday.

Also Read: Tennis ace Andy Muray unfazed by 'tough' Australian Open draw

"I think it's great to see. I think it's always nice when you've been through a career and you have the opportunity or you have the desire to share it with other players, to share your knowledge and experience," added Sharapova.

In contrast to last year's tournament, the re-energised Russian enters the year's first grand slam in peak condition and great form after winning the warmup Brisbane International with a hard-fought victory over former world number one Ana Ivanovic in the final. With a career grand slam of major titles and a sweet-making business, the 27-year-old was asked whether she might rather stay home and drink wine rather than grind hard on the tour.

"I'm starting from scratch. I'm hungry. I'm determined to do better," said 2008 champion Sharapova, who was dumped from the last 16 by eventual finalist Dominika Cibulkova last year after missing the back end of the previous season due to injury. "I lost in the fourth round here. That's not a result I want. I want to do much better. I'm here to try to win the title," added Sharapova.

"I don't know if I'd be drinking wine. Maybe a sangria actually. But when you're holding the trophy, God, you can have as many sangrias as you want and you're in it. So that sounds a lot better," signed off Sharapova.

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