FREETOWN, Sierra Leone (AP) — Last year, Sam Jalloh zig-zagged across West Africa coaching tennis to kids, taking with him rackets, balls and a cellphone loaded with photos and videos of a pro player in action to inspire the youngsters.
The player? Frances Tiafoe.
That move to encourage young Africans by showing them images of Tiafoe, an American with Sierra Leone roots, has paid off. Jalloh's phone has pinged and pinged this week with text messages from many of the kids, delighted by the 24-year-old Tiafoe's
incredible run to the semifinals at the U.S. Open, where he
beat Rafael Nadal along the way."They're saying, ‘coach, have you seen Frances? This is really good.' When these things happen . . . you can see that it motivates children," Jalloh said. "They are very, very excited and it's not just kids from Sierra Leone. I've got kids from Gambia, kids from Ghana, kids from Nigeria. This will bring a lot more inspiration for them."
Tiafoe was born in the United States to parents who emigrated from Sierra Leone — also Jalloh's home country — and while Tiafoe
offers new hope for the future of American tennis, the African link made him an ideal role model for Jalloh to use, even before this breakthrough U.S. Open where he advanced to Friday's semifinals before losing in five sets to Carlos Alcaraz.