National Post

One who’s been there has advice for Shapovalov

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Mike Belkin has been the next great tennis player. He has also seen the next, and the next great tennis player. And he has advice for the current, next great tennis player, 18-year-old Denis Shapovalov, who headlines Canada’s Davis Cup team entering its tie with India in Edmonton.

“This kid, he can really play, but now the pressure is going to be on him, you understand?” Belkin said Thursday from his home in Key Biscayne, Fla. “He looks like the real deal, this guy. If he stays with it and keeps his nose clean, he’s going to be some tennis player, this kid.

“What I’m afraid of is he might get caught up in all this ‘ oh, you’re a great tennis player’ stuff. He’s just going to have to be a tennis player, you understand? If he stays straight and is just a tennis player, he could be No. 1.”

More than 50 years ago, glowing praise was heaped upon a young Mike Belkin, the transplant­ed Montrealer who took up the game at age 11 and quickly became the hottest thing on clay.

While living in Miami, he won the U.S. boys and junior championsh­ips and the prestigiou­s Orange Bowl championsh­ip. As a wispy high schooler — he was 5- foot-11 and just 150 pounds — Belkin also took the Florida men’s title. By 1963, he’d won so often — 26 sanctioned tournament­s in a row — that Sports Illustrate­d dispatched Frank Deford, a writer of considerab­le repute, to check out the wunderkind.

The piece, titled ‘ A big word for a small boy,’ hit the streets March 18, 1963, when Belkin was 17.

“Around national j unior singles champion Mike Belkin, the word ‘ greatest’ is used with much the same careless abandon and the same lack of point that it is around comedian Jackie Gleason,” Deford wrote.

Belkin was in the midst of augmenting his baseline game with a serve and volley component. He was entertaini­ng multiple college offers and was chock full of the confidence that came with beating everyone.

“The way I’m going with my serve and volley now, I think I should be on top by the time I’m 20,” he told Deford. “Yeah, on top. That’s right, the greatest player in the world.”

He didn’t get there. While in his late- 20s, right knee surgery derailed what had been a modest pro career. But he had been runner- up to Arthur Ashe in the 1965 NCAA tournament, and was perennial Canadian champ in the late 1960s and early ’ 70s. He coached for a couple of decades too.

“I made a nice living. I love the game and it’s been good to me. It kept me straight. It’s just a wonderful sport,” the 72-year-old Belkin said.

Some of his fondest recol- lections are attached to the Davis Cup. His sterling singles record of 14-7 gives him one of the best winning percentage­s in Canadian history, and that’s a point of pride. Perhaps owing to his joyful experience­s with baseball and hockey, he loved being part of a Davis Cup team in a pressurepa­cked environmen­t like the one facing Shapovalov and his mates today.

“It’s the same old story, when you represent your country in something, there is a lot of pressure no matter what level. It’s amazing, the pressure in Davis Cup. All these guys getting ready to play in Edmonton, it’s all about the pressure, you understand? You want to win. It’s very difficult. And I feel the team at home has got a lot more pressure.

Belkin still tries to teach the local kids a thing or two.

“No one listens. I try to tell them I got to the centre court at Wimbledon, I won the U. S. junior championsh­ip, I won the Orange Bowl junior championsh­ip, I was about seventh-ranked (as an amateur), I beat six Wimbledon champions.

“And no kids listen. They say that’s old- fashioned, the way you play.

“I said it’s the same game today as it was 60 years ago.”

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 ?? JASON FRANSON / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Canada’s Brayden Schnur reaches to return a serve to India’s Ramkumar Ramanathan in Davis Cup singles tennis on Friday.
JASON FRANSON / THE CANADIAN PRESS Canada’s Brayden Schnur reaches to return a serve to India’s Ramkumar Ramanathan in Davis Cup singles tennis on Friday.
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