The Citizen (Gauteng)

Shapovalov’s actions helped him in long run

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Neew York – Denis Shapovalov became the youngest man in 10 years to reach the US Open third round on Wednesday and credited his breakthrou­gh to being defaulted from a Davis Cup tie for firing a ball into an umpire’s eye.

The 18-year-old Canadian qualifier stunned French eighth seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 6-4, 6-4, 7-6 (7/3), a victory which followed a win over Rafael Nadal in Montreal earlier in August.

He goes on to face Britain’s Kyle Edmund today for a place in the last-16.

However, it will be a matchup which brings back painful memories of the pair’s meeting in the Davis Cup in February when Shapovalov was defaulted for hitting a ball at umpire Arnaud Gabas.

The Canadian youngster was fined $7 000 for the incident even though it was deemed to be unintentio­nal.

Despite the official escaping serious injury, Shapovalov was disqualifi­ed and Britain won the tie.

But he believes the controvers­y has helped fire him into the tennis headlines for the right reasons.

“I’ve been working extremely hard on it. It’s definitely helped me mature,” said the world No 69.

“I continue to apologise for my actions. It’s something I have to live with. But it’s in the past and I’m a different person and a different player now. So it’s a completely new match.” –

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