The thought of getting a message from Queen Elizabeth II for becoming tennisā most improbable Grand Slam champion likely couldnāt have been further from Emma Raducanuās mind at the start of the year.
Indeed, at that time, she was preoccupied with whether sheād be able to finish her high-school degree during the pandemic.
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āSo are A Levels happening?ā read one of the first tweets of 2021 from a math and economics student from Bromley ā an area of southeast London ā who just happened to also be a really, really good tennis player, even if few in Britain had heard of her.
Despite her obvious ability on the court, Raducanuās parents were insistent on their daughter finishing her education so she had something to fall back on in case a tennis career didnāt take off.
Seems crazy now, right?
The 18-year-old Raducanu was being hailed Sunday as the new queen of British sport ā and perhaps the architect of one of the most unlikely sporting achievements of all time ā by winning the U.S. Open as a qualifier.
Her 6-4, 6-3 victory over Leylah Fernandez, broadcast on free-to-air TV in Britain, was in a primetime slot on Saturday evening, allowing the nation to savor a superstar in the making.
Among them, apparently, was the British Prime Minister.
āWhat a sensational match! Huge congratulations to Emma Raducanu,ā read a tweet from Boris Johnsonās official account. āYou showed extraordinary skill, poise and guts and we are all hugely proud of you.ā
The queen also sent her congratulations.
āIt is a remarkable achievement at such a young age,ā the monarch said, āand is testament to your hard work and dedication.ā
Gary Lineker, the former England soccer captain, was hosting a popular soccer highlights show ā āMatch of the Dayā ā on the BBC as Raducanu was completing a victory in Arthur Ashe Stadium that would earn her $2.5 million and change her life forever. Seems he didnāt have his mind on the job.
āFirst time in my life Iāve ever tweeted whilst on air,ā Lineker said, ābut my goodness what a performance, what a triumph, what an amazing young woman.ā
They were sentiments echoed across the country as Britain got to grips with the success of a teenager ā born in Toronto but who moved to England with her family at age 2 ā who pulled at the heartstrings of her nation with a July run to the fourth round of Wimbledon that ended when she withdrew from a match on medical advice, saying the āwhole experience caught up with me.ā
If her matches at Wimbledon were overshadowed by the England soccer teamās run to the European Championship final over the same period, she had the countryās attention all to herself on Saturday.
āIncredible ā we are all so proud of you,ā wrote the Duchess of Cambridge on her Twitter account about Raducanuās āhistoric Grand Slam victory.ā
Raducanuās amazing success ā until three months ago, sheād never played in a professional tour-level event ā had some comparing it to Leicester winning the Premier League in 2016, at preseason odds of 5,000-1, and marketing experts predicting vast career earnings potential.
Because, considering the way she played in New York, Raducanu is here to stay.
āShe will win more of these (Grand Slams), she is that good,ā said former British No. 1 tennis player Tim Henman, who has been a mentor to Raducanu.
āThis is not some flash in the pan or fairy tale. She is playing top-five tennis. Her world will be turned upside down but she has good people around her and it will be a hell of a ride if she can stay injury-free.ā
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More AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
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Steve Douglas is at https://twitter.com/sdouglas80