Ottawa Citizen

‘SHAPO’ EMBRACES SUDDEN THRUST INTO TENNIS LIMELIGHT

Canadian wonderkid goes from relative unknown to sports pop star in six weeks

- SCOTT STINSON sstinson@postmedia.com Twitter.com/ Scott_Stinson

It is fairly evident that even Denis Shapovalov can’t quite explain it.

How did the 18-year-old best known for beaning a chair umpire in the eye at the Davis Cup last winter, who lost in the first round at Wimbledon and was ranked 161st in the world, blow into the hard-court season like a backwards-hat-wearing buzz saw? How did the teenager from Richmond Hill, Ont., suddenly start beating Grand Slam champions, plural, win over crowds in New York City, and become Canada’s sweetheart along the way?

“Just playing good tennis at the right weeks,” Shapovalov said Thursday morning, in front of a bank of television cameras at a Toronto luxury hotel.

The setting was fitting. The Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival and all of its celebrity gazing began the same day in the same neighbourh­ood, so might as well have the country’s newest star mingle among the swells.

Back to his breakthrou­gh. Shapovalov did say there was one thing he could credit for his remarkable six-week run.

“The biggest thing I think I improved was mentally on the court,” he said. “Just my fighting spirit. Just staying calm and, yeah, just fighting for every point.”

This could be a case of an athlete being aware of his press clippings, as just about everyone who has fallen for Shapovalov has noted something about his toughness/tenacity/grit and/ or fortitude, but he was able to explain it a bit further. Playing in big moments, he said, allowed him to learn from them, and his coaches would help him adapt for the same situation the next time.

Trying to close out Juan Martin del Potro in Montreal, he said, “I got broken and I got a little bit nervous and I started rushing my points.” Coach Martin Laurendeau told him after the match to slow things down, “go to the towel a little bit more,” and regroup when he was feeling the nerves. Shapovalov said he relied on that against Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the second round at the U.S. Open.

All of that sounds perfectly sensible, but still. With his fourth-round loss in New York, Shapovalov should jump almost another 20 spots in the ATP rankings and be knocking on the top 50. That’s a jump of around 110 spots in six weeks, over which time various tennis luminaries compared him to a young Rafael Nadal and a young Roger Federer.

“My life has definitely changed in the past month,” he said, noting he gets recognized at airports and in malls. He sounded charmed by the little fans whose parents nervously introduce them — “just seeing all these young kids look up to me, it’s pretty inspiring” — and he’s aware he’s already establishe­d an identity. The cap with the strap pulled extra tight, for example.

His equipment sponsor has sent him hats that fit better — “I’ve always had a pretty small head” — but he likes wearing the larger one, pulled tight. “It’s become my trademark,” Shapovalov says. And people are sometimes pronouncin­g his name correctly, too. “It looks intimidati­ng on paper, I mean there are a lot of O’s and A’s,” he says, noting Shapo will do.

He will play in the Davis Cup next week in Edmonton, hopefully alongside Vasek Pospisil, who is dealing with a bad back. (Milos Raonic is out with a wrist injury.) The two have become close, and Shapovalov credits the 27-yearold from Vernon, B.C., with helping him prepare for opponents during his hard-court run. He also says he can’t wait to play in front of Canadian fans again.

That’s one last way in which Shapovalov seems unlike his predecesso­rs in Canadian tennis stardom: he embraces the role of ambassador, saying he hopes kids pick up rackets because of him and stating bluntly that he wants to win for his country. He doesn’t sound like someone who would skip the Olympics.

For now, he hopes to get into the top 30 in the world next season. He smiles a little. Maybe top 20. And one day, a Grand Slam.

“I think to do that for my country would be really inspiring,” Shapovalov says.

Do it for yourself, kid. The country will be happy to come along for the ride.

The biggest thing I think I improved was mentally on the court. Just my fighting spirit.

 ?? JULIE JACOBSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Denis Shapovalov has skyrockete­d up the tennis rankings after his showings at the Rogers Cup and U.S. Open.
JULIE JACOBSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS Denis Shapovalov has skyrockete­d up the tennis rankings after his showings at the Rogers Cup and U.S. Open.
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