Teo Davidov is the youngest ranked player on the ATP Tour.
The 15-year-old American is somewhat of a tennis âunicornâ, hitting left and right-handed forehands.
Looking to become the first successful ambidextrous player, Davidov has received plenty of attention.
During the latest episode of his podcast, former world number one Andy Roddick reacted to footage of Davidov and suggested whether he could succeed at the top level.
Andy Roddick hopes he is wrong about Teo Davidov as he has questions for the youngster
âIncredibly cool, congrats, obviously getting ATP points at that age is not something that I was ever close to,â he said during the Served with Andy Roddick podcast.
Roddick was asked if he thinks Davidovâs tennis is sustainable.
âNot when itâs fast,â said Roddick.
âSo, Iâve seen people do this before.
âThe part that really intrigues me is the serving.
âLuke Jensen could do it, try it, but then he would default to the right when he needed to.
âIf someone can fluently serve with both directions, it changes a lot.â
Luke Jensen was one of the worldâs first ambidextrous players, impressing at the junior level.
Ranked number one in the world in juniors for singles and doubles, expectations were high for the American.
Unfortunately, Jensen was unable to live up to expectations and never broke into the worldâs top 150 in singles.
Roddick explained why itâs so difficult to be an ambidextrous player on the ATP Tour.
âNow, the grip, when the ball is coming fast, imagine Jannik Sinner hitting at you, and you have to switch! When youâre hitting forehands and backhands, your bottom hand is the same, so to hit two forehands, you not only have to shift the racket, but you have to slide it down, quickly,â he said.
âI question, and I hope Iâm wrong, for this kidâs sake, I question whether or not you can do that when the speed ramps up.â
The 43-year-old is âcurious to seeâ what happens with Davidov, but has his reservations.
âThe serving thing is really interesting, itâs like having a baseball player who could pitch equally well left-handed and right-handed, thatâs potentially game-changing to me,â said Roddick.
âThis is cool, Iâm curious to see how it works.
âI donât know if thereâs a contingency plan, of like, maybe we hit some normal backhands once in a while, just in case.
âThe serve is great, if you can serve that way, thatâs something weâve never seen before.
âIt looked clean on both sides; itâs something to watch for.â
Roddick is keeping an eye on Davidov, but whatâs next for the 15-year-old?
Teo Davidov sets sights on top 1000
Davidov reached the quarterfinals of the ITF M15 event in Naples, Florida, recently, earning himself his first two ATP points.
For context, world number 1,000, William Rejchtman Vinciguerra, has 17 ATP points to his name.
If Davidov can start picking up ATP points on a regular basis, making deep runs at ITF tournaments, itâs not unrealistic to suggest he could be ranked inside the top 1,000 by the end of the year.
O que achou dessa notĂcia? Deixe um comentĂĄrio abaixo e/ou compartilhe em suas redes sociais. Assim conseguiremos informar mais pessoas sobre o que acontece no mundo do tĂȘnis!
Esta notĂcia foi originalmente publicada em:
Fonte original
