NEW YORK—It was only a matter of time before the new Court 6 at Flushing Meadows was christened with an old-fashioned U.S. Open mob scene. But few, if any, expected that it would happen when it did on Tuesday. By the late afternoon, you could hear the tell-tale Open roar from halfway across the grounds, and people began to gather in the blinding low sun to see what was the ruckus was all about. People bent down in stairwells, stood three-deep on the cement outside the court, climbed up on on the seats in the back rows of the next court over, and watched from bleachers a hundred feet away.
And why not? History, it turned out, was in the making. CiCi Bellis, a skinny 15-year-old girl under a blue visor, was trying to become the youngest player to win a match at the U.S. Open since Anna Kournikova did it at the same age in 1996. Bellis was also trying to pull off one of the all-time upsets: Her opponent, Dominika Cibulkova, is ranked No. 13; Bellis is, as of this moment, No. 1208.
Every so often in tennis, youth conquers all. Bellis played in a trance that reminded me of Monica Seles and Rafael Nadal when they were teenagers. She took almost no time between points. On changeovers, she stood up well before the chair umpire called time and waited impatiently at the baseline for the next game to start. And as she closed in on her 6-1, 4-6, 6-4 win, Bellis kept belting the ball with blank-eyed fearlessness. It was like watching the tennis version of levitation.
Afterward, Bellis, who earned a wild card into the Open by winning the U.S. girls’ national championship, was asked if she was nervous at any point in front of the crowd.
“No,” she said between her trademark hyper-giggles. “It gave me more energy. I love it when people watch me. It gives me more energy and makes me play better. I had like four friends who started some chants. I was like, ‘Oh my God.’ I loved it.”