“At the end of the day I'm around my family, and my family's there,” Sock said earlier this month when visiting New York. “…When I'm not playing tournaments, I'm able to go home and be with family, be in my own bed and my own house. It's simple living. You've got everything you need within 15-20 minutes. Not much traffic. It's nice.”
It makes sense that a player who’s got such a strong hold on family would also embrace team tennis wholeheartedly.
Sock actually went to a normal high school and played high school tennis all four years (finishing his career undefeated). The closest he came to losing a match was against his older brother, Eric, who he nearly followed to the University of Nebraska.
“I was planning on going for my whole life, even through my senior year of high school,” Sock said. “I was planning on probably going to Nebraska and playing on the team with my brother. I probably would have wanted to go for four years and complete it … It was better for me, at the time, to go pro.”
Earlier this month, Sock was part of the winning U.S. team that took out Switzerland in the first round of Davis Cup. He also played the Hopman Cup with CoCo Vandeweghe to start the season, finishing second.