Times Colonist

Young Canadian in illustriou­s company

Auger-Aliassime quickly climbing world tennis ladder

- LORI EWING

Canada’s Felix Auger-Aliassime launched himself into illustriou­s company when he won the Open de Sopra Steria in Lyon, France, on Sunday.

At 16 years and 10 months, the Montrealer became the seventhyou­ngest tennis player in history to win an ATP Challenger title, sandwiched between Rafael Nadal at No. 6 and Novak Djokovic at eighth.

The star-studded company had the well-spoken teen feeling “quite proud” on Monday. But better yet, the momentous accomplish­ment shows he’s clearly on the proper path.

“I really see it as motivation, and a sign that I’m doing the right things,” Auger-Aliassime said on a conference call. “And after all it’s just staying me, I want to be a unique player, I want to be as good as I can be, I want to be the best version of me, so that’s what it’s all about.

“But obviously it’s really encouragin­g.”

Auger-Aliassime defeated world No. 171 Mathias Bourge of France 6-4, 6-1 in the final to become the youngest Challenger winner in eight years, and send his world ranking skyrocketi­ng up 105 places to No. 231. He’s the youngest player to crack the Top 250 since Juan Martin del Potro in 2005.

“Every tournament I play, I always believe in my chances,” Auger-Aliassime said. “I didn’t feel like my level was far from these guys, and I think I proved it matche after match. It was a tough start of the tournament, winning my first three matches in three sets, [but] what I think what I did great in this tournament I fought well mentally, I stayed positive on every moment of every match, and at the end ofthe week it paid off because I played my best tennis.”

Last September, the hard-hitting and athletic Auger-Aliassime captured the U.S. Open boys title, dispatchin­g Serbia’s Miomir Kecmanovic in a mere 57 minutes. That victory was a turning point as the six-foot-three player and his coach, Guillaume Marx, decided to step on the accelerato­r, making the move from boys to men, and committing to the ATP Challenger Tour.

“We decided to give myself a chance to play more and more pro events. . . and this year I keep on confirming I’m at the right place, I’m able to play at a high level with the guys in Futures [the third rung of the men’s profession­al tennis ladder], and now I’m at the Challenger level, I think playing more and more tournament­s of this level got me used to it,” Auger-Aliassime said.

“There was an adaptation to do, it took a little bit of time, but probably shorter than I thought.”

Auger-Aliassime was the third Canadian to win a Challenger Tour title this season. Denis Shapovalov — who teamed up with AugerAlias­sime to win the boys doubles title at the 2015 U.S. Open, the first Canadian junior Grand Slam double title in 25 years — won the Drummondvi­lle National Bank Challenger in March. Vasek Pospisil captured the Busan Challenger last month.

Auger-Aliassime said it was a tough adjusting to high-level competitio­n in the main draws of Challenger­s week in and week out, but he’s adapting nicely.

“I got more used to the level of these guys. And now I think this week it really paid off,” he said.

“It was really tough mentally, it was tough physically also, I was pushing myself to the limits almost every match. But at the end of the week I found the little edge to get over these guys.”

 ??  ?? Felix Auger-Aliassime launched himself on to the world stage when he won the Open de Sopra Steria in Lyon, France on Sunday.
Felix Auger-Aliassime launched himself on to the world stage when he won the Open de Sopra Steria in Lyon, France on Sunday.

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