Wimbledon 2013: Steve Darcis enjoying time in the limelight following shock win over Rafael Nadal
Ranked 135 in the world, he stunned the two-time former champion
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Your support makes all the difference.Steve Darcis probably thought he would be taking a flight back to Belgium this morning but instead the world No. 135 was basking in the Wimbledon spotlight after his stunning defeat of Rafa Nadal the previous evening.
Precious little was known about the 29-year-old from Liege until he turned tennis logic on its head by defeating the twice former champion in the first round in straight sets.
While journalists scrambled around for more information on the man nicknamed "Shark", the fall-out from Nadal's only defeat in the first round of the 35 grand slams he has contested was still reverberating around the All England Club grounds.
With Nadal was heading back to Mallorca to pick over the bones of his humbling loss, however, Darcis was holding court on a media balcony as television cameras swarmed around him.
Despite a win over Czech Tomas Berdych at last year's Olympics it is safe to say he could have walked through the grounds unnoticed 24 hours earlier.
Life has taken an unexpected turn for the recent father though after his 7-6(4) 7-6(8) 6-4 defeat of Nadal.
"It's amazing and I'm now starting to realise how big a win it was," Darcis, whose ranking peaked at 44 in 2008, told the BBC as spectators walking below stopped to point at the man who knocked out Rafa.
"I had many texts and messages after the win, which was really nice. And my Twitter followers jumped from 2,000 to 5,000."
There was to be no partying though as it was straight back down to business for the son of a tennis coach who sports a shark tattoo on his arm and supports Belgian soccer team Anderlecht.
With Pole Lukasz Kubot awaiting in the second round, Darcis hopes to avoid the fate of Lukas Rosol who also stunned Nadal last year but lost his next match in feeble fashion.
"My next match is tomorrow (Wednesday) so I have to focus already," he said.
Impressive as his victory was, Nadal looked a pale imitation of the man who claimed an eighth French Open title earlier this month and, while making no excuses afterwards, he looked hampered in his movement against Darcis.
Former Wimbledon great Boris Becker, who commentated on the match for the BBC, noted Nadal's reluctance to put pressure on his suspect left knee while hitting backhands.
The German great even suggested Nadal should have perhaps missed the tournament, especially as he had pulled out of the Halle warm-up event the week before and arrived in London with little preparation on the slickest of surfaces.
"Nadal has come back from injury so strongly this year but he was playing mainly on clay," Becker said.
"I almost thought that he should contemplate not playing (Wimbledon) this year."
Reuters
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