Business Day

Anderson thrives on brotherly bonding

Solid support from academy director sibling

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If Kevin Anderson reaches the US Open last 16 on Friday, he will tip his hat to his younger brother, whose dreams of also making it as a profession­al were shattered by injury.

If Kevin Anderson reaches the US Open last 16 on Friday, he will tip his hat to his younger brother, whose dreams of also making it as a profession­al were shattered by injury.

The 31-year-old South African will not have to go too far to celebrate with sibling Greg, who works as a tennis academy director in nearby Connecticu­t.

“We grew up together and spent thousands of hours practising,” Anderson said on Wednesday after making it to the third round with a 6-3 7-5 6-4 victory over Ernests Gulbis of Latvia.

Greg, younger by 18 months, played on the third-tier Futures tour after college in the US but injuries ended his hopes of going further. However, he always hits with his big brother when he comes to the US Open.

“We keep it pretty casual. He had aspiration­s to become a profession­al but a pretty big injury put him behind the curve ball,” said Anderson.

“It was really tough for him but we have a hit here. He has a great eye for the game and always follows my progress. I value his opinion and input.”

Anderson, born in Johannesbu­rg but a permanent resident of the US, enjoyed his best Grand Slam performanc­e in New York in 2015, when he reached the quarterfin­als, knocking out Andy Murray on the way.

On Friday, he faces world No 61 Borna Coric who made the third round by stunning fourth-seeded German Alexander Zverev.

Anderson, seeded at 28, is 2-0 against Coric but would have taken a 0-4 losing record against Zverev into Friday’s third round had the young German prevailed against the 20-yearold Croatian. Three of those losses came in 2016, but Anderson insisted he would have been happy to tackle the beanpole German again.

“I have had more success against Borna, but I would have liked to have had the opportunit­y to play Alexander again,” he said. “I could have looked to up my level, but that opportunit­y will have to wait.”

Zverev, the highly regarded trailblaze­r of the “Next Gen” players who are expected to succeed the likes of Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic and Murray, has flattered to deceive at the Slams.

In 2017, his best run was to the last 16 at Wimbledon after a third-round exit in Australia and first-round loss at Roland Garros. Yet, on the tour, the German has taken five titles including majors in Rome and Montreal, beating Djokovic and Federer respective­ly in the finals.

“Maybe there’s more pressure at the Slams,” said Anderson, who has made at least the last 16 of all four Majors.

“But I’m sure he’ll figure it out.”

 ?? /Clive Brunskill/Getty Images ?? Still determined: Kevin Anderson returns a shot during his first-round victory at the US Open over JC Aragone.
/Clive Brunskill/Getty Images Still determined: Kevin Anderson returns a shot during his first-round victory at the US Open over JC Aragone.

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