Sania Was Not In Favour Of Compromise
It was tennis star Sania Mirza who didn't want a compromise. “If Shoaib crumbles under pressure, I will be his second wife,” Sania is said to have told her parents, reports The Telegraph, Kolkata. Family
PTI
April 08, 2010 13:19 IST
It was tennis star Sania Mirza who didn't want a compromise. “If Shoaib crumbles under pressure, I will be his second wife,” Sania is said to have told her parents, reports The Telegraph, Kolkata.
Family friends said there was a heated argument at the dinner table on Tuesday night at the Mirza home, with Sania and Shoaib arguing for hours and the elders insisting on a compromise, the report said
Sources close to Sania's family said community elders were upset with her comments about Ayesha. “Ask anyone about them, they will tell you the truth,” Sania had said in front of the entire media with Shoaib standing uncomfortably near her.
A prominent Sunni leader in Hyderabad and a former judge said Sania had no right to insult other Muslim women. “We all know who is in the wrong and who is right”, said the luminary, according to Telegraph.
On Monday night, some Muslim leaders had called on Sania's father and advised that he shouldn't go ahead with the scheduled April 15 wedding in such a vicious atmosphere.
Buckling under community pressure, Sania's father later told Shoaib to put an end to the controversy. “Let us not give room for any more public outcry as the wedding is hardly a week away,” Imran Mirza is said to have told Shoaib.
Meanwhile, in the media world, Sania Mirza seems to be losing her brand value just ahead of her marriage with Cadbury Bournvita deciding not to renew its contract with the country's top female tennis player.
“Our contract with Sania Mirza was signed for a period of one year that expired last month and we do not intend to renew the contract,” a Cadbury India spokesman said. He, however, refused to cite any particular reason for the decision.
The wedding between the two national sports players has been in the news for all the wrong reasons.
First, some right wing parties asked Sania to reconsider her decision. Later, yesha Siddiqui from Hyderabad, claimed that she is already married to the Pakistani cricketer. Add this to her inconsistent form in recent times, brand Sania — the country's best-known sportswoman ahead of badminton star Saina Nehwal — has taken a hit, reports Economic Times.
“Unfortunately, Sania has not been able to play consistently for the last 16 months which has resulted in a drop in rankings,” said Andreas Gellner, MD Adidas India, which signed a multiple-year endorsement contract with the tennis player in 2008.
“However, we are confident she will be back to her best and will represent India at the London Olympics in 2012,” added Gellner.
TVS Scooty, the only other brand Sania is endorsing, could not be contacted for this story.
“The negative press surrounding her marriage has definitely depleted her brand value and image with the advertisers currently,” said Manish Porwal, managing director of marketing solutions firm Alchemist.
The only Indian tennis star and sportswoman to command Rs 1-2 crore per endorsement was already struggling with her brand image when her wedding was announced, with the number of brands she representing falling along her tennis ranking.
In 2005-06 when Sania was at the peak of her career with a world ranking of 77, she had bagged big endorsers with the likes of Tata Indicom, Hyundai Getz, Lotto Sport Italia, Sprite, GVK Industries , Sahara India, Atlas Cycles and Tata Tea.
That year, Sania's valuation has come next only to Sachin Tendulkar, Saurav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid and she was commanding anywhere between Rs 2 crore and Rs 4 crore.
By 2007, brands like Hyundai, Tata Indicom, Sahara India and Lotto Sport Italia were off her endorsement list.
But she did well on the court and reached a career high ranking of 27 two years ago. Result? In 2008, Adidas signed a multiple year contract with her as their brand ambassador.
And in 2009, she signed deals with TVS Scooty and Cadbury Bournvita.
But now the chips are down again. “Inconsistent performance has kept her at bay from the endorsers,” said Harish Bijoor, brand consultant and CEO of Harish Bijoor Consults Inc.
He, however, added that her brand value will increase if she does well on the court and the marriage will not hamper it. “She has to get back only with her tennis to be in the endorsements circuit again,” he said.
More:
Sania Should Not Be Allowed To Play For India, Says Raj Thckeray
Family friends said there was a heated argument at the dinner table on Tuesday night at the Mirza home, with Sania and Shoaib arguing for hours and the elders insisting on a compromise, the report said
Sources close to Sania's family said community elders were upset with her comments about Ayesha. “Ask anyone about them, they will tell you the truth,” Sania had said in front of the entire media with Shoaib standing uncomfortably near her.
A prominent Sunni leader in Hyderabad and a former judge said Sania had no right to insult other Muslim women. “We all know who is in the wrong and who is right”, said the luminary, according to Telegraph.
On Monday night, some Muslim leaders had called on Sania's father and advised that he shouldn't go ahead with the scheduled April 15 wedding in such a vicious atmosphere.
Buckling under community pressure, Sania's father later told Shoaib to put an end to the controversy. “Let us not give room for any more public outcry as the wedding is hardly a week away,” Imran Mirza is said to have told Shoaib.
Meanwhile, in the media world, Sania Mirza seems to be losing her brand value just ahead of her marriage with Cadbury Bournvita deciding not to renew its contract with the country's top female tennis player.
“Our contract with Sania Mirza was signed for a period of one year that expired last month and we do not intend to renew the contract,” a Cadbury India spokesman said. He, however, refused to cite any particular reason for the decision.
The wedding between the two national sports players has been in the news for all the wrong reasons.
First, some right wing parties asked Sania to reconsider her decision. Later, yesha Siddiqui from Hyderabad, claimed that she is already married to the Pakistani cricketer. Add this to her inconsistent form in recent times, brand Sania — the country's best-known sportswoman ahead of badminton star Saina Nehwal — has taken a hit, reports Economic Times.
“Unfortunately, Sania has not been able to play consistently for the last 16 months which has resulted in a drop in rankings,” said Andreas Gellner, MD Adidas India, which signed a multiple-year endorsement contract with the tennis player in 2008.
“However, we are confident she will be back to her best and will represent India at the London Olympics in 2012,” added Gellner.
TVS Scooty, the only other brand Sania is endorsing, could not be contacted for this story.
“The negative press surrounding her marriage has definitely depleted her brand value and image with the advertisers currently,” said Manish Porwal, managing director of marketing solutions firm Alchemist.
The only Indian tennis star and sportswoman to command Rs 1-2 crore per endorsement was already struggling with her brand image when her wedding was announced, with the number of brands she representing falling along her tennis ranking.
In 2005-06 when Sania was at the peak of her career with a world ranking of 77, she had bagged big endorsers with the likes of Tata Indicom, Hyundai Getz, Lotto Sport Italia, Sprite, GVK Industries , Sahara India, Atlas Cycles and Tata Tea.
That year, Sania's valuation has come next only to Sachin Tendulkar, Saurav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid and she was commanding anywhere between Rs 2 crore and Rs 4 crore.
By 2007, brands like Hyundai, Tata Indicom, Sahara India and Lotto Sport Italia were off her endorsement list.
But she did well on the court and reached a career high ranking of 27 two years ago. Result? In 2008, Adidas signed a multiple year contract with her as their brand ambassador.
And in 2009, she signed deals with TVS Scooty and Cadbury Bournvita.
But now the chips are down again. “Inconsistent performance has kept her at bay from the endorsers,” said Harish Bijoor, brand consultant and CEO of Harish Bijoor Consults Inc.
He, however, added that her brand value will increase if she does well on the court and the marriage will not hamper it. “She has to get back only with her tennis to be in the endorsements circuit again,” he said.
More:
Sania Should Not Be Allowed To Play For India, Says Raj Thckeray