The Sunday Telegraph - Sport

Evans laughs off Henman’s ‘fat’ jibe after ATP Cup ties

- By Simon Briggs in Melbourne

TENNIS

Only a few hours before his first grandslam match as a seeded player, Dan Evans found himself laughing off claims that he was out of shape. As he told reporters yesterday: “I’ve been called worse than fat.”

Evans’s career-best position as the British No1 and 30th seed has helped him earn a very winnable opener – scheduled for tonight, UK time – against American Mackenzie McDonald. Troubled recently by a hamstring problem, McDonald has not won a tour-level match since April.

But the debate in the interview room yesterday moved on quickly from this favourable draw to Tim Henman’s provocativ­e recent comment about Evans’s weight.

Speaking after Great Britain’s agonising quarter-final exit from the ATP Cup, team captain Henman commended Evans for his superb form throughout the tournament – in which he beat two top-20 players in David Goffin and Alex de Minaur – but then followed up with a low blow: “I think Evo could miss a few meals.”

In response, Evans revealed that he had tried going vegan after last year’s US Open, but found that it made no difference to his weight. “I’m 78 kilos [12st 4lb] right now,” he said. “It’s not bad. Aesthetica­lly, I guess it is how I am. I don’t have a six-pack, I know that.”

Asked about the Game Changers documentar­y that has encouraged many athletes to try a vegan diet, Evans explained that he had followed the advice, but saw no improvemen­t in his physical condition. “I watched that and there was a lot of other things. I just did it,” he said. “I don’t know why. Then I got my skin folds done in pre-season and I wasn’t what I was when I was eating meat. I just decided to go back and try it [meat]. I’m not saying I won’t go the other way again but I have started all right at the start of the year.”

If Henman’s jibe was taken in good heart, it may be because the two men struck up a strong bond during Great Britain’s four ATP Cup matches.

There is an obvious similarity between their playing styles – both match a single-handed backhand with silky volleys – and their collaborat­ion seemed to help Evans think more clearly about his tactical approach.

“I need to put my game on the court and I can win,” Evans said. “Probably a few matches last year I didn’t do that. I didn’t take small opportunit­ies to come into the net. Or I was aggressive maybe one ball too late and lose that point and it’s a bit of a snowball effect from there.

“It’s difficult to be a rake like Tim. There’s not a muscle on him. And he finds it pretty hard to give a compliment, I tell you that.

“But everything he did in the two weeks before, for me, was great.”

 ??  ?? High hopes: British No1 Dan Evans faces Mackenzie McDonald in the first round tonight
High hopes: British No1 Dan Evans faces Mackenzie McDonald in the first round tonight

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