Deafness no problem for rising star Lee
Updated: 2013-01-21 16:46
(Agencies)
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Fourteen-year-old tennis player Lee Duck-hee of South Korea poses for a photo after an interview at the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne, Jan 21, 2013. [Photo/Agencies] |
But the 14-year-old who has been deaf from birth refuses to make a big deal of his disability.
Lip-reading, then speaking through an interpreter, Lee told reporters at the Australian Open that, in fact, he would rather not even mention his deafness to opponents or officials.
"The one thing that's difficult is the communication with the umpires, both chair umpires and linesmen," he said. "I don't hear the calls, especially the out calls, so sometimes ... just continue. That's kind of difficult but it's nothing special."
It happened a number of times during Lee's second-round clash with Chile's Christian Garin in the junior event on Monday, a match Lee eventually lost 6-3 6-3.
"I do worry about that because today it happened a lot of times," said Lee, who gets round his deafness in doubles by lip-reading his partner.
"The chair umpire already called 'wait' but I couldn't hear that, so there were a lot of lets. I wanted to see big (gestures) from the umpire during the match."
According to the Australian Open, officials received no specific direction before the match to let them know Lee is deaf but on a number of occasions, umpire Thomas Sweeney used his hands to communicate.
For most players, hearing the sound their opponent's racket makes when they strike the ball is crucial to judging how hard it will be and how to react to the spin.
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