MELBOURNEâA lot of cool things happened to 15-year-old Taylor Townsend on her trip to Australia this month. She got a few kangaroo souvenirs for her family, and a couple of koala bear trophies. She watched Roger and Rafa go at itââI was in shock,â Townsend said of their rallies. She played inside Rod Laver Arena, made a Hawk-Eye challenge, and, for good measure, completed a rare sweep of the girlsâ singles and doubles events. But all of that may have paled in comparison with her biggest find at Melbourne Park: four official Australian Open towels, sitting in the sun, unattended.
You must realize that these arenât any old towels. The pros take them by the thousands each year. Rafael Nadal said today that he has 10 of them himself. So you can understand Townsendâs excitement when she stumbled upon them. âI was surprised I saw four towels,â she said, flashing her braces in a wide grin. âLike two towels on one seat, two towels on the other. I was like, âWhoa, Iâm gonna snag these.
âThatâs exactly what I did.â
Itâs been a banner Aussie Open for Townsend in many ways. Seeded 14th and competing in just her second junior Grand Slam, she became the youngest winner of an junior singles title here since her friend Donald Young did it at the same age six years ago. The two prodigies share more than just that piece of trivia. Both are left-handed, both are African-American, both hail from Chicago, and both have trained with Youngâs parents, Donald, Sr., and Alona, in Atlanta. Thatâs where Townsend says she learned the attacking game and accomplished net play that may set her apart from her peers in the future. âEver since I was young,â the apparently not-that-young-anymore Townsend says, âwhen I started playing tennis, we always did volleys. Mr. Young and Ms. Young, they always taught me just to move forward.â
Townsend says with a matter of fact smile that she has âpretty good hands.â Those hands were in evidence in her three set win over Yulia Putintseva of Russia in today's girlsâ final, a histrionical affair that ended with the loser smashing her racquet over and over and the winner falling to a scorched rubberized court before overflowing with that she called âtears of joy.â Townsend, who switched last year to the Prince EXO3 and began using the company's Beast brand of spin-producing polyester strings, won the match with powerful forehands and two-handed backhands, some well-timed, precociously savvy net play, and a heavy, cutting lefty serve. Its motion, perhaps not surprisingly, bears more than a passing resemblance to Youngâs.
âShe has a great feel for the game,â says USTA director of player development Patrick McEnroe. Townsend left Atlanta last year to train at the USTAâs center in Boca Raton, Fla. âShe has that easy power you love to see, and more variety than most of the girls. I think itâs a game that should translate well at the pro level.â
McEnroe also likes the fact that sheâs working with what he calls a âtight-knit group of girls at Boca.â That group includes 17-year-old Grace Min, last yearâs U.S. Open junior champion, and 16-year-old Madison Keys. âI think itâs when you get those groups together that you see success at the higher level.â For U.S. tennis fans waiting for their next womenâs champion, these are signs for cautious optimism.
âWe practice together,â Townsend says of her days at Boca with Keys and Min. âWe push each other.â
Whatâs next for Townsend? She seems ready for more, right away. A reporter asked her today if she was ready to âslow yourself down and not push success too fast?â
The outgoing Townsend didnât hesitate with her answer. âNo,â she said, âI mean, Iâm just gonna keep doing what weâve been doing. Iâm playing a pro tournament in about a week. Itâs a great opportunity, Itâs a 100,000 [dollar tournament, in Midland, Texas], so Iâm just gonna go there and do my thing.â
The fun stuff, the koalas and the kangaroos, is over fast, and the pro grind beckons. âYou want a balance,â McEnroe says of how Townsend should proceed from here. âA mix of competitionâplay the big junior events and ease into womenâs events, try to get into the Top 100 this year. The big thing is that she keeps playing her game."
Townsend is currently ranked No. 426, so thereâs work to be done in 2012. But after this Aussie Open, when sheâs back sweating with her friends on the hot courts in Boca, sheâll know what sheâs playing for and what a big title feels like. And sheâll have a few nice towels to keep herself dry.