Boris Becker, who was released from prison in the UK last December after he served eight months of a 30-month sentence for hiding financial assets and loans, will coach Holger Rune; Head to the Sky Sports website and app, for live scores, reports, analysis and features
Thursday 19 October 2023 14:28, UK
Boris Becker has announced he is returning to the tennis circuit as coach of world No 6 Holger Rune.
The pair had a training week together in Monte Carlo and Becker, who coached Novak Djokovic for three years from 2013 to 2016, has now officially joined Rune's team until the end of the season.
It marks a first high-profile role for Becker following his release from prison in the UK last December having served eight months of a 30-month sentence for hiding financial assets and loans.
"I can confirm that I am Holger Rune's coach," Becker told Eurosport Germany's podcast.
"It makes me a little proud that he asked me. The contact has existed for a long time. Now it was a very good fit.
"My calendar allows it and I have always been interested in Holger because he is on the tennis court with so much commitment and temperament."
Rune, who previously worked with Serena Williams' former coach Patrick Mouratoglou, is one of the hottest young talents in tennis but the 20-year-old Dane has struggled since reaching the Wimbledon quarter-finals, winning only one of his last nine matches.
Becker will join Rune for next week's tournament in Basel, with their major goal ensuring he qualifies for the ATP Finals in Turin next month.
"Holger is a rough diamond that needs polishing," said Becker. "I like his emotional outbursts. I have coached a player before, Novak Djokovic, who was sometimes not quite himself on the court, but that is allowed."
As to whether their partnership continues into next season, Becker - who is currently barred from entering the UK - said: "There's no point in signing a two-year contract now when you've only been cooperating for a week.
"If you are successful, you usually stay together, no matter what the contract says. If not, everyone goes their own way again."