When the United States gained the mixed-team United Cup crown it was apparent early on that Frances Tiafoe was the court docket jester and the glue that held them collectively, and the camaraderie between the gamers has spilt over into the Australian Open.
Tiafoe noticed off Chinese teenager Shang Juncheng with a 6-4 6-4 6-1 victory to advance to the third spherical whereas his United Cup workforce mates Jessica Pegula and Madison Keys additionally moved to the third spherical within the girls’s draw.
The American gamers have been speaking about being “locked in” this week in Melbourne and have even drawn photos of locks on a tv broadcast digital camera utilizing a marker pen following their wins.
When requested concerning the mantra, Tiafoe advised reporters: “It’s the whole thing with the United Cup guys, just staying locked in. I made a joke about it with the guys (at) the United Cup asking them before the match, ‘Are you locked?’
“The locked thing, honestly, I’ve been kind of living by that for a little bit. I think you’ve seen the shift in myself in being just locked in everything you’re doing, staying super present, staying in the moment, staying locked in.
“It’s funny coming from me because everyone knows how I go about my business. I’m very open and just joking around. When I’m saying it, it just sounds funny. So then it became a thing where if Frances can lock, everyone has got to lock.”
Taylor Fritz’s try to attract a lock following his first-round victory went horribly improper and Tiafoe didn’t shrink back from mocking his compatriot having performed pranks on him on the United Cup.
“Fritz, dumb a** drew a pen*s the other day trying to draw a lock sign. That’s Fritz being Fritz,” Tiafoe stated.
Fritz clarified on Twitter that he was attempting to attract the lock emoji, saying: “I just forgot the very important fact that I suck at drawing.”