MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — To get an idea of just how new the whole international
pro tennis thing is to Ben Shelton, the 20-year-old NCAA champion from the University of Florida about to make his
Australian Open debut, consider this: He says he is using a passport for the first time.
There's more that is unfamiliar to him. The Gainesville-Atlanta-Los Angeles-Sydney-Adelaide itinerary of airplane rides late last month that brought Shelton on his initial trip outside of the United States as he played tuneup events before the first Grand Slam tournament of 2023. Going through customs. Trying different food. Riding in cars on the left side of the road.
And that's to say nothing of the on-court learning curve, which Shelton will continue to navigate when he plays his first-round match at Melbourne Park on Tuesday against Zhang Zhizhen, a 26-year-old from China also never previously in the main draw there.
"It's a completely different ballgame," Shelton said in an interview with The Associated Press. "These are all a lot of experiences that I haven't had yet. But I'm glad to be out here."
It's been said over and over and over again: No American man has won a Grand Slam singles title since Andy Roddick at the 2003 U.S. Open. Shelton is part of a group of players hoping to end that drought at some point, and while it still might take some time, breakthrough performances in 2022 by
Taylor Fritz and Brandon Nakashima helped show countrymen what could be possible.