The Jerusalem Post

The true tennis love story of Canadian-Israeli Sharon Fichman

- •By HOWARD BLAS

Afew curious fans watched the female tennis player with the Canada T-shirt warming up an hour prior to her doubles match on Court 9 at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center. She seems confident and clear in what she needs from Fritz, her strong male hitting partner. Another guy with a white sleeveless shirt, shorts and colorful shoes is holding a tennis racket and retrieving balls. Though no one knows who she is, the player is no stranger to the US Open.

Canadian-Israeli Sharon Fichman, 28, played in Flushing Meadows as a junior in 2006, where she reached the doubles finals with partner Anastasia Pavlyuchen­kova. Fichman was ranked No. 5 on the junior circuit that year. She played in the US Open qualifying tournament each year from 2009-2012, and she lost in the first round of the main draw in both 2013 and 2014. In 2014, she reached career-high rankings in singles (No. 77) and doubles (No. 48).

Following a long period of absence from the tennis tour, Fichman was back in New York this year to compete in the US Open doubles tournament. She and fellow Canadian Bianca Andreescu (the eventual singles champion) lost in the first round.

Fichman’s break from tennis and her dramatic return is a complex, moving love story.

Fichman spoke with The Jerusalem Post last week and explained that in March 2014 “there were a lot of things happening in my life… there was a big change in my coaching dynamic.”

Fichman described moving to Vancouver from Toronto to be with her coach, who relocated there for profession­al and personal reasons. The relationsh­ip was unhealthy and unraveling.

“In hindsight, I should have changed the situation at the time, but unfortunat­ely I didn’t.”

Fichman experience­d multiple injuries and surgeries to her Achilles, ankle and knee.

“Looking back, I shouldn’t have been competing. It got to the point that I didn’t enjoy it anymore. I was in pain, mentally and physically. I needed a break. I fell out of love [with tennis].”

Fichman decided to take a break from tennis in May 2016. But ultimately she “fell back in love with tennis” and started taking coaching education courses, serving as a high-performanc­e coach and doing tennis commentary on TV.

Fichman also fell in love with a person – Dylan Moscovitch, the accomplish­ed 35-year-old retired pairs skater.

Moscovitch, who like Fichman is Jewish, was the 2013 Four Continents silver medalist, 2014 Olympic team event silver medalist, and 2011 Canadian national champion. He also was a 2017 Four Continents bronze medalist, twotime bronze medalist on the Grand Prix series, and three-time Canadian national medalist (silver in 2015 and 2017, bronze in 2016).

Fichman’s relationsh­ip with Moscovitch started slowly.

“We met when I was 12, through his tennis-playing brother,’ she recounted. “We weren’t in each other’s lives… we sort of knew about each other and each other’s careers – we were both Jewish Canadian athletes.”

Fichman was born in Toronto to Jewish parents who moved from Romania to Israel before settling in Canada. She competed in the 17th Maccabiah Games in Israel at age 14 and won the gold medal in women’s singles. Moscovitch also had visited Israel on a Birthright program.

“We had each other on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. Eventually he reached out, and asked me out a couple of times. Eventually I said yes.”

They started dating in August 2017 and “hit the ground sprinting.”

Moscovitch’s life would soon be unexpected­ly turned upside-down

In December 2017, he called Fichman just before she boarded a plane for a three-hour flight to Toronto. He was relaxing on a stretching mat after a gym workout.

“While we were on the phone together, a 200-pound mirrored door next to him unhinged and fell on him. He was knocked unconsciou­s and suffered multiple facial laceration­s, a cracked bone in his hand, multiple stitches in his right hand and was concussed for two months. What was horrible, is that I heard everything on the other end of the phone, not knowing whether or not he was dead or alive throughout the flight.”

As a result of his injuries, Moscovitch retired from skating and was unable to participat­e in the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Winter Olympics.

That missed opportunit­y is intimately connected to Fichman’s return to tennis.

“Dylan’s injury inspired me to come back because I wanted him to fulfill that dream. When I heard someone mention the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, it inspired me to come back for Dylan.”

Fichman now hopes to compete for Canada at the 2020 Olympics in Japan.

“I had a bad break-up with tennis,” she noted. “I didn’t finish the sport in a way that left me feeling like I had a lot of love for it. This has given me an opportunit­y to play again and play on my terms and learn to love it.”

Fichman returned to tennis in doubles at the 2018 ITF event in Indian Harbour Beach and reached the quarterfin­als with partner Jamie Loeb.

At this year’s US Open, when her practice session draws to a close, she sits in her chair next to the guy who had been assisting on court – Dylan Moscovitch.

Fichman opens up her tennis bag and takes out a hard case. She retrieves a shining diamond ring which she slips on to her finger. Fichman and Moscovitch got engaged in November 2018, and are planning their wedding in February 2021.

While the US Open may have ended early for Fichman, she and Moscovitch have Tokyo and married life to look forward to and their future is bright as the sun.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? SHARON FICHMAN
(Reuters) SHARON FICHMAN

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