Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Lefty Levine helps Federer stay sharp

South Florida Sun-Sentinel The Spokesman-Review

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. – This had to be one of Jesse Levine’s Boca Raton, Fla., or Gator buddies, bored with a particularly hot Florida summer, trying to pull a caper no one with any sense would believe.

The phone message: The world’s No. 1 tennis player, Roger Federer, wants you to come to Dubai and practice with him for 10 days.

“Yeah, I thought it was a prank at first, but it was for real,” said Levine, a college freshman unknown to many tennis fans.

In a half-hour, instant-messaging exchange from Dubai, where he is indeed working with Federer and living the high life in a five-star hotel on the beach, Levine is well over his initial shock. However, he’s still star-struck enough to describe the experience as awesome, incredible and, predictably, subject to a little nervousness.

“Right now, I’m just living the dream,” said Levine, 19. “When I get back to Gainesville, it’s going to feel weird, and then I’ll look back on it and probably be like, ‘Wow, I just played with the best tennis player in the world for 10 days.’ Not too many people can say that.”

With the U.S. Open Series under way and ATP players moving from Los Angeles to Indianapolis this week, and then to four other North American cities on the way to the U.S. Open, there aren’t many players available for Federer, who enjoys spending time and practicing in Dubai, where the oppressive heat toughens his training regimen.

So he called his management group, IMG, and an agent phoned Levine. Why Levine? He was 21-0 in his freshman season at the University of Florida and known a little to IMG, which owns the Bollettieri Academy in Bradenton, where Levine has been training for several years.

One other thing: He’s left-handed, as is Jonathan Eysseric, the French junior with whom Federer worked in the days before the French Open. It wasn’t lost on Levine that Federer is trying everything he can to get an edge over his No. 1 nemesis, lefty Rafael Nadal.

He arrived in Dubai late on the evening of July 19 after 14 hours of riding coach from Atlanta.