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Blind tennis world number one sheds light on hidden barriers faced by sport

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Blind tennis world number one sheds light on hidden barriers faced by sport

London-based Naqi Rizvi has risen to the top of the world rankings for blind tennis after only discovering the sport for the first time in 2015 and has called for greater support

Naqi Rizvi at the Young Champs launch in London(Young Champs)

The sight of a Londoner at the top of a sport’s world rankings ought to be a cause for celebration, but Naqi Rizvi’s rise through the blind tennis ranks has gone unnoticed by many.

Rizvi, who represents Pakistan but has been based in the UK for close to a decade, became “absolutely hooked” upon being introduced to tennis as an adult in 2016. He was born visually impaired, losing all sight aged seven, but quickly picked up a knack for the game.




Blind or visually impaired tennis is played on a smaller court with a ball which makes noise. Equipment doesn’t come cheap, with players forced to pay their own way, making for an environment which can leave some feeling as though they don’t have a way in.

Everyone has to start somewhere, though, and wheelchair tennis began with obstacles of its own before reaching the point where it is included on the Wimbledon programme. Speaking to Mirror Sport at an event held by tennis charity Young Champs, he lays bare just how challenging things have been – as long as the support received by British men’s number one Jack Draper along the way.

“I think blind tennis still is a less understood sport in some ways,” Rizvi says. “Not many people know about it, so unless there’s organisations that actively promote it… it’s not televised, it’s not really talked about in the media, people generally don’t know about it.

“Wheelchair tennis, for example, started in 1976 if I remember right, and I think it was only about 20 years later that people really started to recognise this is a sport. I’m hoping with blind tennis, because we already have a precedent so it won’t take us long, but sadly we still don’t have much media presence.

“Even for the world games and world championships I played in last year, there was pretty much no media there, so I’m glad we have some here who can shed a bit more light.”

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