Brisbane, Australia (AP) – Formula 1 did it, the same goes for professional golf course, the National Hockey League and the elite tennis tour. It is now time for Ball Boys and Ball Girls to take Center short in a reality style documentary.
Tennis Australia this week said that “Ballkids”, a 65 -minute film, is expected to “raise the lid on the unknown heroes of the Australian Open”. He was filmed during the Grand Chelem opening tournaments of the season in 2023 and 2024 in Melbourne Park and will be presented on May 3 at the Gold Coast Film Festival in Queensland State.
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Although he will not have the high level episode style format of F1 “Criver to survive,” which will start his seventh season this week, “Complete swing” in golf or “Face to face: inside the NHL, “What is now in production for its second season,” ballkid “manufacturers say that it will tell the often cut selection process and the rigorous training program.
Indeed.
The documentary indicates that out of more than 3,000 applications, only 420 are chosen as Australian children opened during a given year. And it is for the right to cope with the stress of performance, sometimes, in front of 14,000 to 15,000 people in the main Arena of Rod Laver, with millions of people watching on television or streaming around the world.
Tennis had already “break point”, which took place for two seasons on Netflix and presented players from the ATP and WTA tours. But “Ballkids” should show the “little -known hero who only share the field with the best players in the world”.
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Friendships are established at the start of the qualification process, but children know that they clashed against each other for these coveted places of the team.
“Nothing has fully prepared you for pressure,” said an official of the Australian Open in the documentary. “The first AO experience of a recruit is like a really friendly slap!”
This is particularly true towards the end of the tournament when the so-called winners of “Top Gun” are announced. It is the children of the ball who put themselves at work of the championship finals in simple male and female, double and double mixed. At this point, perhaps some friendships have established themselves and some have lost.
“Ballkids” was produced by Run Wild Productions in association with Mischief Media and is told by the Australian actor-actor Celia Pacquola.
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“We have always known that Ball children are an integral part of the proper functioning of the tournament, but” Ballkids “shows how much efforts, skills and determination are needed to reach the summit,” said Scott Baskett, director and producer of Run Wild Productions. “This documentary does not only concern tennis, it is resilience, teamwork and continuation of perfection – values that transcend sport.”
A trailer of “ballkids”, which will be available to look on the Australian Open YouTube channel and perhaps for a limited outing in cinemas or streaming later in the year, can be found here.
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AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis