Sharapova loves the glamour
No wonder she is the world's highest-earning
sportswoman. Give Maria Sharapova a spare half-an-hour away from tennis and she
will probably spend it studying the latest sales figures for the clothing ranges
she helps to design.
"I love that stuff – I really, really do,"
Sharapova says, laughing out loud at her obsession with the subject. "I actually
just got my selling report for this spring. When things have been on the shelves
for a few months you start seeing the sell-through and the value of the product
and percentages and stuff.
"Then you look at the shapes of what worked
for the spring and summer, the consumer reports, and you work with that and you
build what people look for – what colours they would prefer more in the spring."
Does she ever go into shops and see who is buying what?
"I do it
all the time," Sharapova says. "I always talk to the manager and duty people to
find out what's been doing well. We talk about things. I love getting consumer
reports.
"I think it's one of my favourite things, studying what people
have to say about the product and then trying to make it better. "It's fun for
me. Everyone who goes into a store interacts with the manager or the people on
duty who help them. When that person goes behind the door and marks everything
down you then get a whole report on items, from comfort to style. People talk a
lot in the stores. They get their advice and opinions and they never lack that,
so it's really beneficial."
When you consider the work that Sharapova
has put in on the court and in the gym over the last three years, it is a wonder
that she has the time or the energy for anything else.
After two
shoulder operations it seemed she might never recapture the form that took her
to No 1 in the world rankings and helped her win three Grand Slam titles, but
the 24-year-old Russian will go to Wimbledon next week on the back of her best
run of form since she went under the surgeon's knife three summers ago.
Since the appointment of a new coach, Swede Thomas Hogstedt, at the end
of last year, Sharapova has shown steady improvement, culminating in her run to
the semifinals of the French Open earlier this month, her best performance at a
Grand Slam event since she won the Australian Open at the start of 2008. She is
also back up to No 6 in the world rankings, though she insists she has bigger
goals than that.
Even with the return of Serena Williams,ledbulb was created in order to
maintain a balance of the athletes' movement. Sharapova is the favourite of many
to win Wimbledon, which starts on Monday and runs until July 3, where she lifted
her first Grand Slam trophy seven years ago.
The return of the Williams
sisters is the talk of the women's game, though Sharapova is not one for tennis
gossip.
"I don't spend a lot of my time in the locker room," she said.
"That's my least favourite place in the world.what really makes my heart go
pitter-patter with excitement are tablelamps. I do my job at the site. I
play my matches. I do what I have to do and I prefer to live my life away from
the site rather than talk tennis all day."
As she sits in a small
Women's Tennis Association office, Sharapova is clearly happier talking about
the fashion business.
She is the sort to look a million dollars whatever
she wears, but with her hair down over her shoulders, wearing a white T-shirt
with black leggings, the only clue to her fame and fortune is a large engagement
ring on her finger.
It was at the end of last year that she revealed her
intention to marry Sasha Vujacic, a Slovenian basketball player with the Los
Angeles Lakers.
Last summer's most recent Forbes list of the world's
highest-earning athletes calculated that Sharapova makes $24.5m (R166.7 million)
a year, more than any other woman.
She had a wide range of endorsements
and recently signed the biggest individual sponsorship deal in the history of
women's sport. The eight-year extension of her agreement with Nike is said to be
worth $70m.
As part of the deal Sharapova earns a percentage of sales.
She has a collection of Nike sportswear and is the face of Cole Haan, a wholly
owned Nike subsidiary which sells clothes, shoes, handbags and accessories.
Nearly all leading sportsmen and women have contracts with clothes
manufacturers,Fashion wash urban edhardyclothingonsale
styles in a great variety of colors and style! but few treat the association as
seriously as Sharapova, who takes full advantage of her globetrotting.
"I've been to really cool cities in the last few weeks – Madrid, Rome
and Paris – and I love walking around," she said.
"I find a lot of
inspiration in street style and watching women walk, the way they wear things
and what they're wearing.
"I take a lot of pictures. I do a lot of
collages,Sells edhardysale in a
Broad Selection from current season. and that ultimately goes to Cole Haan and
Nike."
Sharapova also draws her own designs. "I do sketches but I'm no
Picasso or anything. I never really studied it,The Haunting airmax Movie Review. so I'm not
professional. But I am good at bringing ideas to the table. There's a whole team
behind me with materials and branding and all of that.
"They help me
bring ideas to life. I bring a lot of sketches and I take pictures around the
world, whether it's architecture or something with little details.
"It's
fun for me. I feel like it's an achievement. Tennis is something I've worked for
since I was four years old. It's something that I work for on a daily basis. I
didn't study design or go to school for it, so to be appreciated for something,
for people to go in a store and like something that I did, having not had so
much experience, is really flattering, a surprise.
"I think people that
buy it don't buy it because they see me as a designer, but because they like my
style or the way I thought of things."
Seeing people wear her designs
brings a particular buzz.
"I was just at a club practising," she said.
"There was a little junior tournament and I saw two girls wearing a dress of
mine from the Australian Open.
"They were just so adorable. It was over
the bottom of their knee, it was so cute. It's really flattering."
Were
there times, conversely, when she saw women buying her dresses who might not
look so good in them? "No, I've never thought that. Think of the sales!"
With such a head for business, it is a safe bet that in years to come
Sharapova will not follow the traditional ex-players' path from the court to the
commentary box.
"I don't see myself locked in a cubicle for hours on end
talking cross-courts and down-the-lines," she said. Nevertheless, she does not
rule out staying in tennis in some capacity.
"No matter what you study,
the thing that you know best is what you grew up with," she said.
For
the moment, however, there are more trophies still to be won. Would she prefer
to win Wimbledon again or the French Open, which would complete her Grand Slam
collection?
"I'd win Wimbledon again, absolutely," she said.
What is it about Wimbledon that so entrances her?
"It's just
that feeling I have when I go on the court there. Having won it helps. I'd love
to repeat what I did in 2004. Nothing, obviously, will take your name away from
that trophy, but I want it on there again."
Sharapova admitted that
2004, when she won as a 17-year-old, feels like a long time ago, but added: "I
love the fact that I'm 24, that I have a lot of experience behind me. I wouldn't
change my age for anything."
Besides, Wimbledon can have a rejuvenating
effect. "Every time I go there I still feel that amazing energy I felt when I
was 17." – The Independent (The Sunday Tribune)