No, it’s not the introduction to a complicated joke, but a real life scenario that linked two of the finalists at the US Open.
Canadian Bianca Andreescu stunned the tennis world by beating 23-time grand slam champion Serena Williams to clinch her maiden major title. A day later, the lanky Daniil Medvedev made Rafael Nadal work hard for his 19th grand slam title.
Connecting the two was 22-year-old financier Michael Genender, who served as a hitting partner for both Andreescu and Medvedev during the tournament.
“I will remember it forever,” Genender told CNN’s Patrick Snell.

‘Showed fight’
He also replicated Nadal (as best he could) by standing far behind the base line on serve as Medvedev worked on his strategy to counter the Spanish great in his first grand slam final.
“Daniil is a great guy, really down to earth,” said Genender, who also hit with Naomi Oska’s conqueror Belinda Bencic. “He was very relaxed and knew the magnitude of what was coming.”
Medvedev, 10 years Nadal’s junior at 23, showed real grit, coming back from two sets down to square the match at 2-2 before losing in five sets. Not that Genender is taking any credit for himself.
“I tried to emulate what Rafa might use,” Genender added. “We saw the way [Medvedev] took the two-handed back hand and took it across court. He was more effective with that play. He showed fight.
“He showed how prepared he was for the battle. We only hit for 25 minutes. Most of his warm up was physical, making sure his body was in the right state to go with Nadal for five hours.”

‘Fan for life’
Despite the intensity of their workout, Geneder managed to steal a brief moment for himself.
“Rafa was about to walk on the court, he was about to warm up after us,” Geneder said.
“I caught him out of the corner of my eye and he’s watching me serve. In that moment it hit me how real this experience was. I will be a fan for life of the game, of Daniil personally and tennis as a whole.”