Davenport eager to return to Olympics arena

The excitement is beginning to build for former world number one Lindsay Davenport as next month's Beijing Games inch closer. The 32-year-old American made the Olympics her top priority when she returned to the WTA Tour last September after an 11-month...

The excitement is beginning to build for former world number one Lindsay Davenport as next month's Beijing Games inch closer.

The 32-year-old American made the Olympics her top priority when she returned to the WTA Tour last September after an 11-month absence to have a baby.

Davenport had to withdraw from the second round of Wimbledon last month after struggling with a knee injury in her opening match, but she is confident she will be fit for Beijing and her third appearance in global sport's showpiece.

"I'm really excited about Beijing," Davenport said during a World Team Tennis conference call this week. "It was my huge goal coming back from having my baby.

"I really wanted to be in Beijing and be a part of my country and the athletes and the success hopefully that the country will share.

"I'm proud to represent tennis and be an American and hopefully try and bring some medals back."

Davenport, who won the singles title at the Atlanta Games in 1996, will represent the United States in Beijing along with Serena and Venus Williams and doubles specialist Liezel Huber.

Davenport said her knee was getting better and that she had been following her doctor's orders to limit her activity.

"I've got a big summer ahead so I've got to be careful with it. I want it to heal 100 per cent before delving back in full time," she added.

"I'm doing my rehab and trying to get it better. So far it's responded well but I haven't tested it too much yet."

Davenport, a former Wimbledon, US Open and Australian Open champion, conceded the injury was the legacy of a professional career that began 15 years ago.

"The diagnosis is just an old knee that's played too many tennis hours," she said. "That's just it. Nothing looks crazy on any of the scans."

Davenport, who gave birth to son Jagger last June before mounting a WTA Tour comeback, would dearly love to make a triumphant return to the Olympics in Beijing.

She competed at the Sydney Games in 2000 but opted to miss out on Athens four years later to focus on the US Open.

"It was a conscious decision then to put all my eggs into one basket and go for the US Open," Davenport recalled. "For tennis players in general, we are really lucky in our sport we have so many huge opportunities.

"I've always regretted skipping 2004, not because of my tennis but just being an Olympian again," she added. "The difference is you're part of something so much bigger.

"Being Olympic champion is kind of bigger than tennis and at that point (in 1996) I hadn't been a grand slam champion yet. My dad was an Olympian, my family were there in Atlanta and it was a huge moment for me."

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