Sania came close to a historic Olympic medal in company of Rohan Bopanna, the eternal under-achiever of Indian tennis, but the Indian combination snatched defeat from a winning position in the mixed doubles semifinals in Rio.
They were in complete control of the match against Americans Venus Williams and Rajeev Ram before some inexplicable errors turned around the script.
Sania always wanted to play with Bopanna in Rio but they never combined on the Tour and thus lacked enough practice together for the big stage.
Playing a few IPTL matches for the Indian Aces was the only preparation for Sania and Bopanna. They had been there for years slugging it out on the Tour but perhaps not handling tough situations in big matches as a team proved to be their bane.
More From This Section
The challenge of Paes and Bopanna in Rio also fell flat in the first round itself against the Polish pair of Martin Matkowski and Lukasz Kubot. Bopanna never wanted to team up with Paes and had conveyed to AITA that he wanted to play with Saketh Myneni but the Federation could not leave out a legend like Paes, who was gunning for a historic seventh appearance in the Olympics.
In the end, two players who did not see eye to eye, were tasked with the job of winning an Olympic medal that has been achieved only once in India's entire Olympic Tennis history.
And the result was there to be seen, an expected first round defeat. Paes and Bopanna too did not practice together except for a Davis Cup tie against a weak Korean team. Paes was busy playing World Team Tennis and landed in Rio just a day before the competition began.
If AITA had control over the players and a proper planning in place, coupled with players' intense desire to win a medal for themselves and the country, the story could have been different today.
Bopanna is immensely talented but that has never transformed into big success. He always had to live under the shadows of Paes and Mahesh Bhupathi and it was his golden chance to grab a slice of history for himself.
AITA's lack of control over the players can be attributed to the negligible role it has played in helping their careers, which the players made almost entirely on their own.
(REOPEND DEL 8)
In the end, the medal drought continues for India until a player arrives at the stage who is not spoilt by politics and ego and also has the gift of the game to challenge the best in the world.
Sania ended the year as world number one in women's doubles and won eight titles, including a Grand Slam, even as her successful partnership with Swiss great Martina Hingis ended surprisingly in August.
They won a couple of WTA titles before winning the Australian Open too but once their 41-match winning streak was broken in Qatar, things took a different, rather dramatic turn.
A few more defeats and by August the partnership, that took the tennis world by storm in 2015, was over. Sania had immediate success with new teammate Barbora Strycova, winning two titles (Cincinnati and Tokyo), and kept a tight hold over the world number one rank.
When his younger colleagues are struggling to stay fit, Paes still is the fittest Indian player. Such are his training methods that he has never suffered a major injury in his career. This is something the younger lot needs to learn from the legend.
It was a forgettable year for Yuki Bhambri since he began as a top-100 player but a tennis elbow injury kept him out of action for six months, taking away the chance to build on the brilliant 2015.
Myneni has come up nicely and had success at the US Open where he made the main draw through the qualifiers but fitness is one area where he too needs to work hard, or perhaps, differently.
Sumit Nagal showed a lot of promise and can be India's next big thing if he continues to work hard and smart. It's time that Ramkumar Ramanathan takes a step forward and accelerate his transformation.
Bopanna could not win a single title this year but ended runner-up at two -- Madrid Open and Apia International -- with Florin Mergea.
It was a bitter year-end for Anand Amritraj, who has been handed a farewell Davis Cup tie.
The AITA, which installed Mahesh Bhupathi in his place, says it wants to give a chance to new people but the truth is that Amritraj paid the price for voicing his opinion that did not match with the Federation's.