Welcome to the Function Tennis Podcast Broke brought to you by ASICS Tennis.
Speaker AAnd I'm your host, Fabio Motley.
Speaker AAnd I bring you insights and lessons from players, coaches, parents and experts who are ingrained in the world of high level tennis.
Speaker AToday I'm joined by Charlie Cooper, a rising 17 year old American wheelchair tennis talent born with spina bifida.
Speaker ACharlie's story is one of resilience, passion and purpose.
Speaker AHe'll take us from discovering tennis in his youth to navigating life with a disability to becoming a US and Australian championship Junior Open champion.
Speaker AWe dig into how he builds confidence, handles setbacks, and what it's like competing and inspiring on a global stage.
Speaker AThis episode is full of grit and inspiration for players, coaches, parents and anyone who believes in the power of sport.
Speaker AHere's Charlie.
Speaker ACharlie, welcome to the Functional Tennis Podcast.
Speaker AHow are you?
Speaker BGood.
Speaker BThanks for having me.
Speaker BIt's awesome.
Speaker AI love your enthusiasm.
Speaker AI saw some videos and yeah, where do you get this enthusiasm and energy from?
Speaker AIt's amazing.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BGrowing up, you know, my dad always told me, you know, you'll be happy around others and, you know, always feel like, you know, you're just like everyone else having a disability.
Speaker BSo for me, you know, I tried to leave that disability out of it, having spina bifida, which I was born with.
Speaker BAnd for me, you know, happiness was my way of life, you know, figuring out through hard times and surgeries, you know, finding ways to be happy.
Speaker BAnd once I found tennis, you know, that, that helped my joy overall and, you know, I think that's helped me with my confidence today.
Speaker AWere you not as happy before tennis?
Speaker BThere was a tough time around nine years old when I was in surgeries and I was pretty, I was home by myself a lot, you know, playing video games.
Speaker BBack then I was before tennis.
Speaker BSo there's some quiet times for sure, but I was always enthusiastic, you know, playing worship music growing up and playing other sports like T ball as I walk with leg braces when I was young.
Speaker AAnd maybe for our listeners who don't know what spina bifida is, maybe can you explain to them what it is?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSpina bifida is a birth defect in the spine and yeah, in the back.
Speaker BAnd a lot of kids are born with it and it affects, you know, certain areas on the body.
Speaker BFor me, I lost feeling under, under my knee level and I also can't move really anything under there.
Speaker BAnd so that made me wear leg braces.
Speaker BAnd when I was born, the doctors told me I wouldn't Be able to walk.
Speaker BSo a lot of kids hear that around the world.
Speaker BAnd I'm blessed to be able to walk with leg braces as I did pretty much my whole life.
Speaker BI went to private school walking around just like anyone else doing physical education classes.
Speaker BSo I was a pretty active kid.
Speaker BAnd as part of it comes in all forms, some people are not able to walk and they're in wheelchairs immediately.
Speaker BSo it's definitely a really common disability in the United States, for sure.
Speaker BAnd yeah, that it was, it was.
Speaker AFrom birth for me on a day to day basis.
Speaker ASo do you walk around?
Speaker BYeah, I'd say no.
Speaker BIf I go to like a restaurant or something, you know, I'll walk.
Speaker BBut if it's, if it's long distances or, you know, going to Disneyland, you know, I'm definitely going to use a chair or even around tournaments, you'll see me in a wheelchair for sure.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AWhen did tennis, when did the love of tennis start for you?
Speaker AWhen did you first set your eye on a tennis court and play?
Speaker BYeah, so I was not born into a tennis family, me and my dad, he played high school tennis growing up, but he wasn't that good.
Speaker BAnd my mom never played before.
Speaker BSo I lived three minutes from the tennis garden in New Wall Tennis Garden growing up, which is a crazy coincidence.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BAnd I used to go there when I was younger and you know, I remember watching Roger Federer before I even played tennis and he was huge for me.
Speaker BSo I, I started the sport randomly.
Speaker BI was at a guitar shop at 9 years old.
Speaker BLike I said, I played worship music growing up.
Speaker BAnd I met a kid with spina bifida as well.
Speaker BAnd he told me about a clinic going on that Friday.
Speaker BMe and my mom were there and she told me I should try it out.
Speaker BAnd I thought it was crazy because, like, I'd never been in a wheelchair before that maybe in the hospital.
Speaker BAnd I always thought that walking was, you know, the one thing that I wanted since the doctors told me I wouldn't be able to.
Speaker BSo doing that was the miracle and I wanted to stay with it.
Speaker BBut then I thought wheelchair attendance was going back in the wrong direction.
Speaker BAnd I tried it out and I felt so, so fast.
Speaker BAnd I went to a tournament for the first time and everyone was disabled.
Speaker BAnd it was insane because I think the Valley, there's not too many people with disabilities out here in Palm Springs.
Speaker BSo it was a huge eye opener.
Speaker BBut that community of people being disabled and being able to play competitive sport because that's what I wanted to Do.
Speaker BI wanted to be an NBA player, NFL, but I couldn't with this disability.
Speaker BSo it really changed.
Speaker BAnd now I'm playing at the US Open, playing at the show and open next to all these stars and champions, and I'm just like them.
Speaker BAnd it's.
Speaker BIt's amazing.
Speaker AWait, you're winning the US Open?
Speaker AYou're winning the Australia?
Speaker AIt's a bit different.
Speaker AIt's a bit different.
Speaker ABut how did you push through?
Speaker ASo how did you get through?
Speaker ASo how old were you then?
Speaker ANine, ten?
Speaker BYeah, I was around nine years old.
Speaker AAnd now you're 17?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ASo over those years, how have you progressed?
Speaker AHow have you got better?
Speaker AWhere have you trained and when was there a day you realized, I'm actually quite good at this, I can be professional?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo in the beginning, I started with a coach named Dwayne Begay.
Speaker BHe's a big coach out here in the desert, and I've been with him for the whole eight years, which is crazy.
Speaker BHe's been huge for me, and I'm on that path.
Speaker BI've been going to the USA national campus in Orlando or coaches named Jason Hartnett, and we also been working with the best player of all time named Shingo Kenneda, who's.
Speaker BHe's won 25 single slams, which is crazy.
Speaker BAnd he's, you know, almost like my assistant coach out there.
Speaker BSo I've been going back and forth between the desert and Orlando, and being around people like Ben Shelton, too, is amazing because you have that whole environment, and there are some tough moments along the path, for sure.
Speaker BAnd I think for me, I've just started, you know, really digging in.
Speaker BLast year, I was going to school in high school in person, and playing Junior Masters, the La Petitas, which we also partake in.
Speaker BI played last year.
Speaker BIt was my last one.
Speaker BAnd I remember I was talking to my mom, and I lost a few tough matches to the juniors.
Speaker BThat was in January.
Speaker BAnd she was like, you know, if you really want to take all the weight, you got to go online.
Speaker BYou got to dedicate more to it, you know, and that was my dream.
Speaker BYou know, I'm not, I, I, I knew that.
Speaker BYou know, I feel like God gave me this disability for a reason.
Speaker BSo I wanted to go all in with it.
Speaker BYou know, why not?
Speaker BAnd my parents fully supported me.
Speaker BThey're amazing.
Speaker BAnd so I, I took it seriously then, and I think that whole year.
Speaker BI won my first men's tournament in July of last year, and that was, that was a huge set for me as I'VE been playing juniors most of the time and the work started to pay off.
Speaker BAnd then once I won that US Open for the first time, being the same juniors I lost to in January, it was, it was, I think that was the eye opener where it's, you know, I really see how the work, what the work can do and, you know, and the dreams I want to do in the future and that's playing the men's Grand Slams and I want to win it.
Speaker BSo that, that was the eye opener for me.
Speaker BAnd it really shows, you know, how much time you got to dedicate for sure.
Speaker BAnd that was something I did.
Speaker BI didn't think I had to do before.
Speaker BYou know, we had to talk to my mom.
Speaker ASo you're full time now?
Speaker ANo, school.
Speaker BSorry.
Speaker BOnline.
Speaker BOnline.
Speaker AOnline school.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd so what's your typical training day like now?
Speaker AHow many hours you're on court?
Speaker BYeah, so now I'm going to be in Orlando full time.
Speaker BSo it's pretty crazy days there.
Speaker BWe do two hours in the morning and then an hour workout and then another two hour.
Speaker BSo it's almost around six hours a day.
Speaker BIt's like a, you know, we go to like a 9 to 5.
Speaker BSo it's crazy.
Speaker BAnd we go every day.
Speaker BWe go half day on Saturday and then no nothing on Sunday.
Speaker BSo it's, it's pretty stacked schedule and it's something I wasn't doing before, for sure.
Speaker BYou know, and having all these things for us and at the campus, like the best coaches and Shingo and I get to train a lot of other we tennis players too, which, which is awesome.
Speaker BAnd so getting, getting that constant play is huge, especially in the wheelchair sport.
Speaker BIt's, you know, it's becoming so competitive now where you have to do that if you want to be the best.
Speaker BSo yeah, that's like my schedule is.
Speaker AYour training split in between, like, I don't know, technique and sort of basket work and then match play.
Speaker ADo you do that throughout the day?
Speaker BYeah, I'd say the mornings are usually more technical and with a lot of baskets and.
Speaker BAnd then the afternoon we go match play pretty much all the time.
Speaker AWhat's fitness look like for you guys?
Speaker BYeah, so we're definitely not always in the gym every day, so most of it's upper body, as you know.
Speaker BBut at the campus we like to work with our legs too.
Speaker BAnd I'm blessed to be more like I have a lot of ability in my legs.
Speaker BSo once we get that, you know, I use my legs to push down on the foot plate.
Speaker BSo when I serve, I'm pushing the energy almost into the ground.
Speaker BJust like, you know, you're standing up.
Speaker BSo we do, we do squats.
Speaker BI know that sounds crazy.
Speaker AYeah, it does.
Speaker BWe almost hit leg days a lot, but.
Speaker BAnd then we'll also go on the, onto the track outside and do pushing drills because mobility is the biggest part of the game of wheelchair tennis.
Speaker BAnd then we'll go inside and do spider, spider drills around cones and different things like that.
Speaker BAnd so we mix it up a lot.
Speaker BBut yeah, mostly it's in the gym or outside.
Speaker AAnd you see, you said you, Ben Shelton to be around there.
Speaker AWhat have you learned Anything, Anything sparring from Ben?
Speaker BYeah, the biggest thing I've learned, I've watched a few practices just how intense he is.
Speaker BYou know, he's, he's always grunting in practice, you know, maybe louder than the match.
Speaker BAnd he's, he's just so intense.
Speaker BSo then once he gets on that match, it's, it's just the same thing.
Speaker BAnd I think that's huge for people practicing because sometimes, you know, we relax too much and especially when you're on the clay, you got to be grinding and it really shows because, you know, what you're doing out there in the Florida heat is it makes it easy for the match.
Speaker BSo that's the biggest thing I learned from him.
Speaker AAnd you, sorry, you say now you're in Orlando, by the way, you're from Indian Wales area, the desert over there.
Speaker ASo are you relocating full time to Orlando by yourself or is your family moving also?
Speaker BYeah, so we just bought a house, so my whole family's going as well.
Speaker BMy sister's, she's 13 now, so she'll go to school there.
Speaker BSo it's a big life, whole life move west to east coast.
Speaker BIt's crazy, but I love it there.
Speaker BMy parents do too, so it's gonna be fun.
Speaker ADid your sister play tennis now?
Speaker BShe tried to at the tennis garden, but it's not a thing.
Speaker BI think she's more of a volleyball player.
Speaker BAnd you know, like I said, my parents didn't really play either, so it's nothing really.
Speaker BWas running the family.
Speaker BBut maybe I'll be the start.
Speaker AMaybe.
Speaker AYeah, bro, you're on.
Speaker AYou're on the way.
Speaker AAnd growing up, who was your tennis star growing up?
Speaker BI'd definitely say Roger Federer for sure.
Speaker BI just, I just love the way he competed and I feel like just, just the word, the words, like the aura, the aura around him, you know, as I wasn't really playing tennis.
Speaker BBut I, I knew who he was and I saw him win.
Speaker BEverybody loved him, so.
Speaker BAnd I, I had the, you know, the honor to meet him at the US Open this last year, which was huge.
Speaker BAnd it felt like my world stopped.
Speaker BYou know, I, I looked up to him so much, and to hear him, you know, before my final, he said, good luck, champ.
Speaker BAnd that was like the biggest thing for me.
Speaker BMaybe that helped me win too, but that was a, you know, full circle moment as growing up.
Speaker BAs a kid, I never played tennis, but I looked up to him.
Speaker BAnd then, you know, making ends meet and seeing him as a player is.
Speaker BIs different.
Speaker BSo it was awesome.
Speaker AAnd plus, you got the one hander too.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker ANo, that's amazing.
Speaker ASo they just take it forward to winning.
Speaker ASo you won the US Open last year.
Speaker AYou won Australia this year, French.
Speaker ADid you get to the final?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ADid you win the dubs in French?
Speaker AAnd then did you.
Speaker AI'm not sure if actually you played Wimbledon or not.
Speaker ADid you play Wimbledon?
Speaker BNo.
Speaker BSo they don't have juniors there yet.
Speaker BThey're just starting to add all the Grand Slams for juniors, which is a huge step.
Speaker BIt started back in 2022.
Speaker BThe US Open was the first, so they're starting to add that now.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BBut you know, I'm making that transition, as I said, to the men's.
Speaker BAnd this is my last year of juniors, but right now I'm currently looking hopefully to get a wild card into the US Open, which would be first program slam.
Speaker BAnd so I'm, I'm looking forward to that, and if not, I'll play juniors again.
Speaker BBut it's pretty exciting things ahead.
Speaker ACan you play both?
Speaker BI. I don't know.
Speaker BIt.
Speaker BIt hasn't come up yet.
Speaker BYou know, I don't think that situation's happened yet, but.
Speaker AAnd I don't know, what was it like winning the US Open last year?
Speaker ALike, were you going into the tournament, did you think I could win this?
Speaker AOr was it, you know, you start believing it throughout the tournament, throughout the event, and then what changed?
Speaker AOr did anything change afterwards?
Speaker BLooking back at it?
Speaker BYeah, I had, I had a little winning streak going in singles, and it was, like I said, the men's tournaments was helping my confidence extremely.
Speaker BAnd so once I got into the US Open, I mean, what I was thinking about is all the work I was putting in.
Speaker BI think that helped my confidence.
Speaker BAs before, I would show up and, you know, maybe hope to win or hope to be close.
Speaker BYou know, I wasn't trusting what I was doing because I wasn't spending as much time on the court as I am now.
Speaker BSo I had.
Speaker BI had a lot of coaches around me, supporting staff.
Speaker BYou know, my coach from my.
Speaker BFrom here, Dwayne Begay, came and he supported me.
Speaker BI had my urologist show up from when I was a child, and that was.
Speaker BThat was pretty crazy.
Speaker BAnd he got to watch me play.
Speaker BSo I feel like all the support around me, you really, really helped me, you know, want to win and want to win for them and everyone that's ever supported me.
Speaker BSo this year felt different, for sure.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BOr this last year.
Speaker BAnd, yeah, I went in there the first round.
Speaker BFirst round was three sets.
Speaker BIt was pretty close, and I was super nervous because I had the feeling, you know, I don't want to lose first round.
Speaker BYou know, I've been working this whole year for this, you know, and I also work with a mental.
Speaker BA mental strength specialist.
Speaker BYou know, he.
Speaker BHe helps me so much, and with those.
Speaker BWith those things that go on my head like that, you know, everyone has them.
Speaker BSo he was huge, too, and he got to watch me play.
Speaker BSo, like I said, you know, all the work going in and, you know, believing.
Speaker BBelieving that I could win and believing that God had this plan for me, you know, win or lose, you know, there's still a plan.
Speaker BAnd I think, you know, so many people came out for that final, and I think so many younger kids with disabilities, and I think it was all part of the plan, you know, having a US Player there and playing in the final, and I think I inspired a lot of people, and that's my biggest thing.
Speaker BI want to do more than the winning.
Speaker BYou know, it's having those younger players come up.
Speaker BAnd, you know, I want to be like you.
Speaker BAnd so that.
Speaker BThat's the biggest thing for me, and that's what inspired me to win the US Open, I think.
Speaker BAnd, you know, getting that trophy, that winning feeling was.
Speaker BWas everything.
Speaker BEverything that year, you know, paid off.
Speaker BAnd, you know, there's so much ahead, but that's probably the biggest moment in my life so far.
Speaker ASo that is.
Speaker AThat is deep root in you is a goal.
Speaker AYour job is to inspire more wheelchair players.
Speaker BFor sure.
Speaker AThat's.
Speaker AIt's a big undertaking, but, you know, you're starting young, so I'm gonna wish you all the best in that.
Speaker AThat's gonna be fun chat.
Speaker AObviously, you've started well, and you're ranked about 65 in the world now.
Speaker BYeah, so I just won a tournament this four days ago in Vancouver.
Speaker BIt was Like a pro tournament.
Speaker BAnd yeah, so I think I'm back up to like 50 now, on the rise.
Speaker BSo I keep trying to get up there.
Speaker BBut yeah, there's a lot of good, a lot of top players that come out here to the US and for us, you know, we have to travel to Europe more because, you know, you don't get like two tournaments in the same place out here in the US like you can on maybe challengers or so.
Speaker BSo there's a lot of traveling that has to be done in the sport.
Speaker AIs the level like that?
Speaker AIs it like a Futures challenger and, and like a Master's level, then a Slam?
Speaker AIt's similar to the ADP and WTA Tour.
Speaker BYeah, I say it's pretty similar if you put it in this perspective.
Speaker BAnd the news is a few days ago they just confirmed that they're changing the tour next year and they're making a premier tour.
Speaker BSo we're going to have events at Miami, Indian Wells for a top group and then we're going to be having more of a challenger group to try to get in.
Speaker BAnd so I think I'll be taking part of that middle section trying to get in there.
Speaker BSo it's huge.
Speaker BAnd like you said, I think it's going to make it more easy to understand now they're starting to name the tournaments the same, maybe having the name of the points like in a thousand instead of.
Speaker BWe call it Super Series right now.
Speaker BSo making it, making it more understandable for the average tennis follower.
Speaker AAnd how many people in it?
Speaker ALet's say, let's say it's on a Miami.
Speaker AHow many people in a draw in a top tier event?
Speaker BYeah, so it's probably going to start at like 16, which is, you know, I know that this, it sounds pretty small, but again, there's not millions of wheelchair players out there right now.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BYeah, and I, I think it's, it's, it's not hard to jump up in literature, tennis.
Speaker BYou know, anything could happen.
Speaker BYou know, you have players like his name, Taquito Oda, the world number one, who's, I think he's 20 now or 19 and he was world number one at 17.
Speaker BSo it's really, you know, if you get good at the movement and you have a lot of ability, you could, you could really jump up there pretty quick.
Speaker BAnd obviously you got to be a really good tennis player and got to put the work in.
Speaker BBut you know, I, I think starting to see big jumps now and I hope, you know, to be the next.
Speaker AYeah, you gotta Aim big.
Speaker AAim big.
Speaker BYeah, that's right.
Speaker AAnd you know, for me, I'd say I go to the.
Speaker AI go to a few tournaments.
Speaker AI find traveling, you know, first term it's okay.
Speaker AAnd then travel.
Speaker ATravel becomes quite tough, traveling.
Speaker ABut for you it's even harder.
Speaker AHow.
Speaker AHow do you deal with that?
Speaker AAre UK traveling or do you find it hard?
Speaker BYeah, it's definitely harder.
Speaker BYou're traveling with two wheelchairs because, you know, I have my everyday chair and then a sports wheelchair and you know, sometimes they get lost and that's like the worst.
Speaker BThe worst thing that could happen.
Speaker AHas that happened?
Speaker BIt's so bad.
Speaker BI've had it happen.
Speaker BBut I'm busting up.
Speaker BNot.
Speaker BNot before.
Speaker BNot like when I ride to a tournament.
Speaker BSo I've been.
Speaker BI've been lucky there.
Speaker BBut when I get home, I've had a loss for like three days and it doesn't show up.
Speaker BAnd so it's.
Speaker BIt's crazy.
Speaker BAnd I definitely got better for sure.
Speaker BBut you'll see a lot of the players around, around the world in Lucha Tennis, they have big boxes, like hard, hard shell boxes for the chair because they also get broken on the plane as expect.
Speaker BAnd so it's definitely hard traveling with two wheelchairs.
Speaker BBut, you know, I like.
Speaker BRegardless of that, you know, I love flying.
Speaker BI think.
Speaker BI think it's like one of my favorite things.
Speaker BI like it more than car driving.
Speaker BThe cars just make me sick.
Speaker BBut when I'm on the plane, I just listen to music.
Speaker BI fall asleep really easily.
Speaker BSo I love that part of it.
Speaker BBut you know, definitely going from one place to another is hard, you know, and sometimes I miss being home, being with my.
Speaker BBeing with my mom and my sister.
Speaker BMy dad travels me a lot, you know, around the world.
Speaker BSo it's.
Speaker BThat part's tough.
Speaker BBut, you know, the flying and stuff, you know, I could do that all day.
Speaker AAnd does then.
Speaker ADoes anybody ever have two wheelchairs?
Speaker AJust in case that was to happen?
Speaker AImagine you're traveling to Wimbledon or to New York.
Speaker AAnd does anybody actually travel like that?
Speaker BI. I haven't seen that yet.
Speaker BI think that's.
Speaker BThat would be kind of extreme.
Speaker BBut I could.
Speaker BI.
Speaker BMaybe in the future I could see something like that happening.
Speaker BBut a lot person bring another pair of wheels.
Speaker BSo a whole.
Speaker BA whole wheel.
Speaker BWhich.
Speaker BSo, yeah, not just the tire, but so like something goes wrong, they just take it out of the bag and plop it right on.
Speaker BSo I. I don't.
Speaker BI don't do that.
Speaker BI.
Speaker BOnly a few players, maybe one or Two right now.
Speaker BAnd it just, you know, you're just adding more to the travel.
Speaker BSo it's rough, but yeah.
Speaker AAnd on, during a match, can anything, I know, you know, you can break a string, break a racket, your shoes probably don't break.
Speaker ABut for you, from a technical perspective with your wheelchair, can anything actually break that you can't fix or do you actually have a tool bag with you?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo most tournaments that they all have a mechanic.
Speaker BSo if something breaks, if a tire pops, you got like a 20 minute period.
Speaker BIt's almost like a medical timeout, but they add it for this.
Speaker BSo yeah, you get 20 minutes.
Speaker BBut I've had it in doubles where my partners, one of his tire pops and it takes I think 15 minutes to get that changed.
Speaker BAnd we get back on the court, the other tire pops.
Speaker BAnd so they try to do as fast as they can.
Speaker BIt takes like six minutes and we get like a point penalty because we go over the time.
Speaker BAnd so that, that was probably the craziest thing I've seen so far.
Speaker BBut yeah, we have, we have mechanics and everything and people that are pretty quick and get on the court, change the tire really quick.
Speaker BSo yeah, you know, we don't usually have to do it ourselves.
Speaker BThat, that would be rough.
Speaker AYeah, that would be rough.
Speaker AAnd tell me, does playing at the higher level, so let's say you're top 20 in the world, does it pay the bills?
Speaker AIs, is there a cut off where it actually pays the bills?
Speaker AAnd we all know tennis expensive, we all know like DPWA level.
Speaker AUnless you're top 100, you know, you're barely breaking even.
Speaker AIs there a break even point for you guys?
Speaker BI say around the top 16 level for sure because that's the Grand Slam cut off.
Speaker BAnd you know, once you get in the Grand Slams, then you're making prize money and it's going up now for sure.
Speaker BAnd it's amazing to see how their prize money is increasing.
Speaker BAnd obviously it's not like, you know, stand up tennis, but you know, I think most of it's more like endorsements and that kind of things.
Speaker BObviously, I think that that helps more and you know, having, you know, likable characters and having good stories is what's important.
Speaker BSo yeah, I think that combination's, you know, the key to, you know, making a living on the tour.
Speaker BAnd I know tennis, you know, in general is hard to make money on tour, so there's definitely got to be more, more in this sport than just the tennis.
Speaker BYou know, you gotta, you gotta Be doing other things for sure, and having to, you know, being marketable.
Speaker BAnd so I think, you know, that's what I'm trying to, you know, make sure I do well in the future.
Speaker BAnd, you know, if you want to play the sport, you gotta find ways, you know, to, to market yourself.
Speaker BSo I think that's, that, that's the biggest thing.
Speaker BBut prize money's going up a ton.
Speaker BYou know, U.S. open is, you know, putting a lot of money into it, which is amazing.
Speaker ASo, Yeah, I just saw it there.
Speaker AWimbledon was about 70,000 sterling, just under for the winner, which is not really a lot for a professional athlete winning a Grand Slam.
Speaker ASo I think they have a bit of work to do there.
Speaker ABy the time you pay your taxes, that's half of that.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker AYeah, you're right.
Speaker ABut it's good to see it's increasing and that, that's good.
Speaker AThat's good to know.
Speaker ASo you just got to play more tournaments, get out there and win more.
Speaker BThat's right.
Speaker ABecause I'm sure even from a cost perspective for you, flying to tournaments where you've all these bigger bags, you know, you've.
Speaker AWait.
Speaker AI'm not sure if they charge for the wheelchairs or not, but it's.
Speaker AIt gets pretty expensive.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BYeah, it gets really expensive.
Speaker BAnd, you know, I'm blessed.
Speaker BYou know, my parents have, you know, been, you know, fund me and, and I still, I. Yeah, still.
Speaker BI'm still 17, live with them.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BYeah, and the USA helps us, too.
Speaker BThey'll give us, give us grants to be able to do this.
Speaker BThese things too.
Speaker BSo that, that's huge.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BBut yeah, I know a lot of players around the world, you know, maybe can't afford is.
Speaker BIs for tennis.
Speaker BYou know, it's really hard tennis by itself.
Speaker BBut now you have the wheelchair, like you said, and that's.
Speaker BSome of those are like $15,000.
Speaker BYou know, they're almost like buying a motorcycle.
Speaker BSo it's, it's crazy.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BBut yeah, I'd say, I say it's getting better and with this premier tour, like I said, and, you know, having Miami, any wells, that just means more prize money for, for players.
Speaker BAnd that means you'll see some of us coming up, you know, maybe players that didn't think they would be able to make money now are, you know, you know, coming out and we're hungry, you know, players that, you know, need it.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd are you, are you Nike sponsored?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BNo, not, not officially, but, you know, just.
Speaker BI just wear the clothes and, and everything and I'll use Yonex so they, they support me too.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AWhat Yonex do you use?
Speaker APeople always ask and have players on.
Speaker AI never ask them what racket they use and we get listeners saying what racket do you use?
Speaker AWhat racket to use?
Speaker AWhich Yonex?
Speaker BI use the EZO98 and what string.
Speaker AAnd actually tension do you have?
Speaker BSo I use the Polytour spin in the mains and then Polytor Pro and the crosses.
Speaker BIt's like the Casparid style and.
Speaker BYeah, and I actually use an ezone from was it 2020.
Speaker BSo I don't use the newest one and Yeah, I don't know if I'm allowed to say that but.
Speaker BYes, but I've been using that racket for a long time.
Speaker AYeah, but what tension?
Speaker ASame, same as the ordinary tennis is the what tension you string at?
Speaker BYeah, 48 pounds.
Speaker BJust both.
Speaker BI, I tried switching it up, going 3 lower in the crosses and no, I just stick with 48.
Speaker AAnd is the ball you use the exact same ball as a normal ball?
Speaker BYeah, the exact same balls actually string rackets, you know, everything and.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BI think though you will see on the top, you know some players are using really light rackets like Takeda oda is using 100L, which is something you wouldn't see too much and stand up and I think that helps, you know getting, getting a little more, a little more whip or getting off the wheel faster because you know we have to push with the racket in the hand and then taking it up and swinging.
Speaker BSo if you have a really heavy racket, you know your forearms are going to be cooked.
Speaker BYou know, you're not going to be able to move that long.
Speaker BSo I, I'm good with mine at 305 right now and I, I don't know what it is with the string but it's, it's not that heavy.
Speaker BAnd but like you said, you'll see people with 285 grand rackets and it's kind of crazy but I think that's, that's kind of where the sport is.
Speaker AYeah, there's a reason for it.
Speaker AWhat's your, what's your hero shot?
Speaker AWhat's your, what are you known for?
Speaker BMe?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo my, my hero shot is the back end down the line.
Speaker BYou know in winter tennis we all have one handed back ends.
Speaker BYou know, we're like Roger Federers everyone.
Speaker BAnd I learned that mainly from Shingo Kenneda.
Speaker BLike I said, one of the best players of all time and that's his Favorite shot, too.
Speaker BSo he's really coached me on how to hit it the best.
Speaker BAnd I feel like in the sport now, Lucha tennis, it's pretty much the first to find the line.
Speaker BIt's hard.
Speaker BWe can't sidestep, and we can't get to the other side that fast.
Speaker BAnd especially, I feel like the returner always has the advantage in this sport unless you have an amazing serve.
Speaker BBut yeah, it's just so hard to serve and get to the other side of the court right away, because sometimes your chair, you know, it stops after the serve.
Speaker BAnd so for me, you know, like, going down the line right, right on the return, or being the, maybe the second shot in the rally just to, you know, switch it up and have the move across.
Speaker BSo that, that's my favorite shot.
Speaker BAnd I, I.
Speaker BPeople call me Mini Shingo for it, so it's cool.
Speaker AIt's like, it's like, it's.
Speaker AIt's your wrong foot and shot, really, isn't it?
Speaker AI know a different name, but, yeah, that's, that's, that's interesting.
Speaker ASo in your young career, what do you feel has been your biggest challenge so far to get where you are today?
Speaker BI think the biggest challenge for me yet to get where I was was, yeah, definitely.
Speaker BI've said before tennis was the surgeries, and that is kind of developed to how I am today.
Speaker BAnd I think around, let's see, I was probably around 8 years old or 7 to 8, and I was just missing the transition into first grade, which is huge.
Speaker BAnd I feel like, you know, my social skills weren't as good.
Speaker BYou know, I. I didn't really have friends then.
Speaker BAnd yeah, like I said, I was kind of lonely at home.
Speaker BAnd I feel like I, I still had faith in faith in God, and that's huge for me.
Speaker BAnd that with having that faith helped me get back into it and having believed that everything would be okay, you know, and everything would.
Speaker BThere would be a plan for me.
Speaker BAnd from that belief at a young age, it helped me getting back into school, making friends right away.
Speaker BAnd I think that's part of me being really friendly and having a gift from God.
Speaker BNot letting the surgeries affect me, because sometimes you might have mental trauma from those.
Speaker BAnd to be honest, all that's walked out.
Speaker BI really can't tell you.
Speaker BI don't remember anything from it, which is crazy.
Speaker BI just remember the taste of the medicines, so it's crazy.
Speaker BI feel like that's developed how I am today.
Speaker BYou know, having that belief in God is is crazy, because now I could lose a tennis match and be.
Speaker BAnd be like.
Speaker BLike I said, Roland Garros, I lost the final.
Speaker BAnd I was.
Speaker BI was really sad because that was my last time to do it in juniors, and I wanted to go 3 for 3, like, with all the Grand Slams, and so y' all sitting on the sideline, and I could have been like, you know, why?
Speaker BLike, why, why.
Speaker BWhy did this happen to me?
Speaker BYou know, but instead I was more, you know, thank you, God, for allowing me to play.
Speaker BAnd I said it in the out, you know, on court, you know, microphone, trophy ceremony, you know, taking God first, that's huge for me.
Speaker BAnd so if God could get me through the surgeries and make me a tennis player, you know, how God could take a loss and make something great out of it.
Speaker BAnd I feel like that's something that's helped me massively, and it's held my belief, and I hope I'll always stay with that the rest of my life.
Speaker ASo the good skill you have, that's good attitude and a good skill because it's a mental skill.
Speaker ASo it will make you go far.
Speaker AAnd are you surgery wise, barn.
Speaker AGod forbid, any injuries.
Speaker ABut are you actually finished all your surgeries, or will there be more surgeries at some stage?
Speaker BYeah, right now, I'm pretty much finished, you know, unless something happens.
Speaker BBut I'm.
Speaker BI'm.
Speaker BYeah, I don't have anything going on.
Speaker BYou know, I'm blessed that life is good, you know, how do you have a disability?
Speaker BAnd I. I'm.
Speaker BI love.
Speaker BYou know, obviously there's some challenges, but, yeah, yeah, I've learned to, you know, To.
Speaker BTo realize it's for a reason.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd, you know, we have disability for a reason.
Speaker BAnd so.
Speaker BSo, yeah, I.
Speaker BThat, yeah, there's nothing really coming up.
Speaker BSo, yeah, I'm.
Speaker AFinally.
Speaker AMy last question is, what advice do you have for other people in wheelchairs who want to pursue a career in tennis?
Speaker BYeah, I'd say the advice for them is, you know, you have to give it a go.
Speaker BYou know, it might seem.
Speaker BIt might seem crazy at first we went to tennis, but, you know, once you watch the top players and see them competing, you know, it really opens up crazy doors.
Speaker BAnd you get to be next to Novak Djokovic, you know, in a gym, warning up for an Australian Open final, like I once did, and it's.
Speaker BIt's amazing.
Speaker BAnd, you know, if you don't give it a shot, you know, you never know where you could be.
Speaker BAnd like I said, I wanted to Be an NBA player and NFL player, but, you know, I couldn't.
Speaker BSo finding this was that door for me.
Speaker BAnd now I want to make sure that I'm giving back to everyone and hope everybody has a fair chance to find the sport.
Speaker BThis is amazing.
Speaker BAnd, you know, tennis is hard, for sure, but, like, you know, I never played growing up, but I, you know, I found it and, you know, I loved it.
Speaker BI love competing.
Speaker BI love the let's Gos, and that was a big for me.
Speaker BSo, yeah, just, you know, go out and try it.
Speaker BThat's my, that's my advice.
Speaker AThat's amazing.
Speaker AI totally forgot, actually, that, you know, if you're getting to finals, you're there when Jockovich is there.
Speaker AAlcross is there the best players around.
Speaker AI know there's less people there.
Speaker AThere's not that many people around anymore, so you probably better chance of bumping into them.
Speaker ADo you ever speak to any of them?
Speaker BYeah, I, I, yes, I spoke to Yannick Sinner in the, he was playing Ben Shelton that day.
Speaker BSo I, I, I said good luck to both of them.
Speaker BBut I, yeah, I was just like, good luck, man.
Speaker BHe's like, thanks, bro.
Speaker BSo I, I, we don't have, like, conversations like that, but, yeah, probably, yeah, with Roger Federer, you know, we talked about, you know, the, you know, he's asked me if I was playing and all that, and I say I was in the final.
Speaker BSo, yeah, you really get to talk to all these guys, and you're right at the very end of the tournament, all the best guys are there and no one else is.
Speaker BSo it's, it's awesome.
Speaker BAnd, and I think a lot of them, you know, look up to us, too, and how much work we have to put in.
Speaker BAnd Djokovic is a good ambassador for that.
Speaker BYou know, he does a lot of exhibitions for Luther Tennis, and he talks about a lot, so he's awesome, too.
Speaker BAnd, yeah, so I think it will keep growing like that and, you know, the more juniors we get in the sport, you know, the more future the game will have and, you know, with this new tour is awesome and, you know, I hope to be, you know, inspiring for them and, you know, the next face of us tennis, and that'll be, that'll be huge.
Speaker ACharlie, thank you very much for jumping on.
Speaker ABest luck next month in New York.
Speaker AI'm excited to see how you get on and hopefully get that wild card into the main draw.
Speaker ASo let's go.
Speaker BThanks.
Speaker AI appreciate it, Sam.