The Guardian (USA)

‘I’m the last one standing’: Norrie happy to carry British hopes at Wimbledon

- Tumaini Carayol at Wimbledon

Cameron Norrie says he will gladly take all of the pressure and expectatio­ns that come with being the British No 1 as he continues his breakthrou­gh grand slam run at Wimbledon.

Norrie, the ninth seed, reached a grand slam quarter-final for the first time in his career at Wimbledon by defeating the 30th seed Tommy Paul 6-4, 7-5, 6-4 on a packed No 1 Court.

“I’ll take it,” he said. “At the beginning of the tournament, you guys were asking me: ‘You’re British No 1, you got a lot of pressure, a lot of expectatio­ns on your shoulders.’ For me to play the way that I did in all my matches so far means a lot. Unfortunat­ely, I’m the last one standing. But I think it’s even more reason for everyone to get behind me.”

After a breakout 18 months in his career, rising from 74th at the beginning of 2021 to a career-high ranking of 10th in April, Norrie had been searching for his first run to the second week of a grand slam. This new achievemen­t is a significan­t moment in his career. Norrie, 26, says he wants to use his platform to help young British players beneath him.

“If I can help any of the younger guys, there’s a big group of guys coming through with a lot of talent, a lot of chances to make it inside the top hundred. If I can be that guy to lead them on and to show they can do it ... I went to college, I can show them a good path, if you can stay profession­al and make good decisions. Managed to make the quarters of a slam doing that. I was really pleased with myself.”

Having won at Indian Wells last October, the biggest event on the tour outside the grand slam tournament­s, major success at the biggest events was naturally his next goal. Norrie said he will continue to focus only on one match at a time, although an enormous opportunit­y awaits as he next faces David Goffin, the world No 58. Goffin, a former top-10 player who is rounding into form again, defeated Frances Tiafoe in a dramatic five-set match.

“I’m taking it one match at a time,” Norrie said. “It’s great to be through to the quarters. But no reason to be satisfied. I want to keep pushing. Yeah, I’m looking forward to the next match. Another challenge. Very experience­d player. Yeah, I’m looking forward to the next challenge. Still a long way to go, but pretty nice to get over and tick the box making the quarters.”

 ?? ?? Cameron Norrie celebrates victory against Tommy Paul on a packed No 1 Court. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian
Cameron Norrie celebrates victory against Tommy Paul on a packed No 1 Court. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

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