Early mentors cheer Tiafoe's 'unbelievable' U.S. Open run
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[September 10, 2022] By
Amy Tennery and Julio-Cesar Chavez
NEW YORK/COLLEGE PARK, Maryland (Reuters) - American Frances
Tiafoe's dream run at the U.S. Open this week came as little
surprise to his early coaches and mentors, who told Reuters his raw
talent was obvious from his first days picking up a racquet.
Tiafoe executed the biggest upset of the tournament when he downed
22-times Grand Slam winner Rafa Nadal in the fourth round, raising
hopes that he could help end a major title drought for the American
men.
Spanish teenage sensation Carlos Alcaraz stopped him in the
semi-final Friday, but his performance still sent cheers of joy
through his former academy in College Park, Maryland, where a crowd
of roughly 50 gathered to watch him compete.
"Very proud of him, very proud of him. He’s unbelievable," Tiafoe's
childhood coach at the Junior Tennis Champions Center (JTCC), Komi
Oliver Akli, told Reuters.
"Hopefully he takes positives away and comes back and works harder."
Tiafoe's parents fled civil war in Sierra Leone in 1990s and
eventually settled in Maryland, where his father worked as an
on-site caretaker at the JTCC. Frances and his twin brother
regularly stayed the night, getting to hit balls on the courts.
"He always had a racquet in his hands. He was always hitting on the
wall or he was always watching training," said Martin Blackman, the
general manager for USTA player development, who was a coach at the
JTCC from 2004 to 2008 when Tiafoe was there.
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Frances Tiafoe of the U.S. after losing his semi final match against
Spain's Carlos Alcaraz REUTERS/Mike Segar
"Coaches would walk by and give him some tips, you
know, but he absolutely loved it."
Tiafoe was offered a full scholarship to the 10-and-under programme
when he was eight. Blackman said his extraordinary run some 14 years
later in New York came as little surprise.
"It's a great breakthrough for him," he said. "He's put a lot of
work in."
The training centre counts among its former pupils twice Grand Slam
finalist Vera Zvonareva and Alison Riske-Amritraj, who reached the
fourth round at Flushing Meadows this year.
At the JTCC on Friday, children hoping to follow in Tiafoe's
footsteps stayed up past their bedtimes, cheering their throats raw
whenever he scored a point.
"The whole nation is so proud of him, so let’s see what happens next
year," said Akli.
(Reporting by Amy Tennery in New York and Julio-Cesar Chavez in
College Park, Maryland; Editing by William Mallard)
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