SPORT / TENNIS
Odds-defying Frances Tiafoe raises home hope ahead of quarterfinal
Published: Sep 07, 2022 08:30 PM
Frances Tiafoe (right) and Rafael Nadal shake hands at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York, the US on September 5, 2022. Photo: AFP

Frances Tiafoe (right) and Rafael Nadal shake hands at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York, the US on September 5, 2022. Photo: AFP

Flushing Meadows has found a new darling in Frances Tiafoe, who set up a potential US Open outcome that seemed impossible only days ago - an American man hoisting the trophy.

Not since Andy Roddick in 2003 has the US seen one of their own clinch the title, with the golden years of Pete Sampras and Andre Agassi long gone.

But no sooner had Serena Williams taken her leave than Tiafoe emerged to give US fans some hope, executing the biggest upset of the tournament so far with victory over second seed Rafa Nadal to stand two wins from the final.  

"Slams, crazy things can happen. Especially here in New York," said the 24-year-old from Hyattsville, Maryland, whose humble beginnings are already the stuff of legend in tennis.

His parents moved to the US fleeing the civil war in Sierra Leone in the 1990s and his father worked as an on-site caretaker at the Junior Tennis Champions Center in College Park while his mother, a nurse, worked two jobs.

"Us being around tennis was kind of - gets us getting out of our neighborhood," said Tiafoe.

His father hoped tennis could help provide university scholarship money - unaware that one day his son would captivate the crowd in the stadium named for one of the sport's great pioneers, Arthur Ashe. 

"It wasn't anything supposed to be like this," Tiafoe, whose last Grand Slam quarter-final came in 2019 at the Australian Open, said in a statement.

Tiafoe, who is friends with 40-year-old Williams and grew up watching the American great and her sister Venus, wore a hoodie on Monday that listed each of her 23 Grand Slam titles.

Now, win or lose, he carries on her legacy of inspiring the next generation of black athletes in tennis.  

"When I was younger, the reason I said to my dad that I think I could be a professional tennis player is seeing her and Venus battle each other," he told ESPN.

"I said damn, that's two people who look like me and I can go and do that. That's unbelievable."

His next hurdle to the Grand Slam final is ninth seed Andrey Rublev, who he faces on Wednesday in the last eight. 

The Russian player beat him earlier in 2022 at Indian Wells.

Rublev told reporters he was all too aware of the American's appeal to the Flushing Meadows crowds after Tiafoe harnessed the fans to help him win their third-round meeting a year ago.

"[He is] a tough player," said Rublev. 

"He will try to use the energy, the crowd to be more pumped, to play better tennis ... with him I need to wait for my moment and use it."

Reuters