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Aug 21st, 2020, 4:50 pm
When Macron, Merkel met and greeted each other with 'Namaste'

Ditching handshake, French President Emmanuel Macron welcomed German Chancellor Angela Merkel with a Namaste at his Mediterranean holiday retreat on Thursday. Both leaders switched to the Indian style of greeting in the time of the coronavirus pandemic.

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They were meeting at Macron's summer residence to discuss a range of issues including the COVID-19 pandemic, Belarus unrest and growing tensions with Turkey.

The two leaders have now joined the list of world leaders including US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who have adopted the traditional style of greeting in an effort to stop the spread of the coronavirus.

In March also, the French President had opted for namaste while greeting Spainish king and queen. In the same month, a video of Prince Charles, 71, greeting people with a namaste in London had gone viral on social media.

https://www.asiavillenews.com/article/w ... emic-55970
Aug 21st, 2020, 4:50 pm

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Aug 21st, 2020, 5:16 pm
Kids get a haircut and a reading lesson at this St. Pete barbershop

At Central Station Barbershop & Grooming, Antonio Brown mentors and reads with kids every Wednesday from 4 to 6 p.m. as they get their hair cut.

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Clumps of hair pile on the floor as R.J. Franklin reads The Same Stuff as Stars from the barber’s chair. He sounds out words, slowly making his way though Katherine Paterson’s young adult novel. Cassiopeia. Briefcase. Anxious.

“Do you know what that word means?” barber Antonio Brown asks. “Anxious.”

“When you’re angry?” the 10-year-old asks.

“It’s when you’re kind of nervous and eager,” Brown explains. “So if your dad says, ‘Hey we’re going to Orlando, you better be good’ it makes you anxious, right?”

Brown, master barber and owner of Central Station Barbershop & Grooming on Central Avenue in St. Petersburg, teaches kids ages 4 to 12 how to read from 4 to 6 p.m. every Wednesday as they get their hair cut. And if they read the book to him, they get to keep the book and get a free haircut.

Brown, 39, came up with the idea five years ago when he first opened the shop. He wanted to do something different in the barbershop — something that would help kids.

“I was always passionate about reading, so now I’m carrying it on,” Brown said. “I don’t take for granted knowing how to read. Being able to teach to those younger than me is something I’m dedicated to doing.”

The books are donated from people across the city, Brown said. The most recent donor dropped off two big reusable Publix bags full of spoils for young readers. Why Mosquitoes Buzz in People’s Ears. Brown Girl Dreaming. One Crazy Summer.

Brown doesn’t see many young clients, maybe 20 kids a month, but he hopes the program will bring in more customers. He tried to start the program two years ago, but stopped it for a while. When he launched it again this month, a handful of kids came out.

Some parents can’t come on Wednesday, so Brown gives out the books whenever they drop in for a haircut. In the next few months, Brown said, he would like to start a scholarship program for kids of all ages. Ideally, he would hold an essay contest and six kids would win $500 to attend educational camps, buy school supplies and take any other opportunity that furthers their education.

“I’m trying to help mentor the boys, the kids,” he said. “Being able to reach the kids from behind the chair, I’ve noticed is something that can be very effective.”

Brown tries to be a good example; to be another positive voice that is not their mom or dad.

“It’s something our young boys don’t see a lot of,” he added. “They don’t see a lot of Black educators. A lot of Black men talking about reading.”

Brown remembers his assistant principal at Bay Point Middle School, Mr. Bonner. Bonner told him stories about his late grandfather, who was the head of the recreation centers in the city.

“He died before I was born,” Brown said. “So we had conversations about where I came from.”

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Brown doesn’t always stick to reading. When his cousin, 13-year-old Cromartie Evans, comes in for a haircut, they discuss football at length.

The eighth grader at Azalea Middle School plays cornerback and wide receiver. Brown played football at Boca Ciega High School in the late ’90s.

“You know I was one of the little guys when I first started, but I had the most heart,” Brown said. He offered to help Cromartie and reminded him to keep up with his pushups.

“You’re going to do good. You’ve just got to make sure you’re doing better than the rest of them out there.”

Once the shop talk concluded, Cromartie began to read Orbiting Jupiter, a young adult novel by Gary D. Schmidt.

Cromartie’s feet tapped the pedestal as he parsed through the first chapter. Brown silently shaped the boy’s hairline, but reminded him, “When you come across a word you don’t know, I would like for you to write it down and look it up in the dictionary later.”

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R.J. was one of Brown’s first customers in the program. Now, he’s in the fourth grade at Bay Vista Fundamental School, but he’s still loyal to Brown.

“He won’t go anywhere else,” said his dad, Watt Franklin. “He goes ‘I want to see Antonio.‘”

Though R.J. loves to play Fortnite on his Xbox, he likes to read, too. The program is a “dope” opportunity, Franklin said.

Franklin knows the importance of reading. R.J.‘s mother reads with him most nights before bed.

“It can do a lot for you,” Franklin said. “I’ve been trying to get him to read with enthusiasm so he understands emotions and the meaning of the words.”

“That’s good,” Brown added. “Give him 20 minutes a day with a book, that’s good.”

But R.J. kept reading, focused on his goal: the next chapter.

“You’re reading pretty good, R.J.,” praised his dad as he taped his son with his smartphone.
Aug 21st, 2020, 5:16 pm
Aug 21st, 2020, 5:24 pm
Graduate Invents Plastic Alternative

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A 23-year-old British design graduate has invented a biodegradable material made from fish waste that could one day replace plastic in packaging.

Lucy Hughes (above) used fish offcuts to develop a strong, flexible and translucent material called MarinaTex, which looks and feels like plastic but can be disposed of as compostable food waste.

In the UK alone, around 490,000 tonnes of fish waste is produced by the fish processing industry every year. It is of low commercial value and ends up in landfill or incineration. However, through her research, Hughes found that she could create a substitute for plastic by using red algae to bind proteins from fish skins and scales into translucent sheets.

A single Atlantic cod could generate the organic waste needed for 1,400 bags of MarinaTex, she says. “It makes no sense to me that we’re using plastic, an incredibly durable material, for products that may have a life cycle of less than a day.”

Hughes won the 2019 international James Dyson award for design engineers. Dyson, an inventor and entrepreneur, says: “MarinaTex solves two problems: the ubiquity of single-use plastic and fish waste. I hope it becomes part of a global answer to the abundance of single-use plastic waste.” [Source: Dezeen/The Guardian]
Aug 21st, 2020, 5:24 pm

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Aug 21st, 2020, 5:56 pm
Chinese man's big belly saves him from falling down well

Luckily, he’s got guts!

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Rescuers arriving as the shirtless man patiently waited with his arms crossed.

An overweight Chinese man found his big belly to be a lifesaver — after it got wedged in a well and stopped him falling down, according to officials.

The 28-year-old only identified as Liu got trapped in his family’s well after breaking through wood that had been used to cover it in his hometown of Fuliudian Village in Henan Province.

He remained that way as gobsmacked locals watched a team of at least five firefighters tie a strong rope around his waist to finally heave him out to safety — totally unharmed, the Luoyang fire service reported.
Aug 21st, 2020, 5:56 pm
Aug 21st, 2020, 6:29 pm
Bear wanders into grocery store, grabs bag of Tostitos, dines by trash can

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KINGS BEACH, Calif. (KUTV) — A bear wandered inside of a grocery store Tuesday night, nonchalantly grabs a bag of Tostitos chips with his mouth and heads back outside – and it's all caught on camera. Adina Baidoo shot the video Tuesday night at the Safeway grocery store in Kings Beach, on the northern shore of Lake Tahoe, near the Nevada border.

Around 9:30 p.m., Baidoo was walking out of the store with her cart. She says:
“Someone made a high pitched sound that startled me so I looked up, and it is a good thing because I almost walked into the bear."
That's when she took the first video, showing the bear eating garbage next to a trash can.
Baidoo then took her cart to her van and came back to shoot the other two videos, and during that time the bear had wandered inside the store.
He wasn't in there for long, however, as the final video shows the bear grabbing the bag of chips and wandering away.
No injuries were reported, but Baidoo says while it was "scary s***", it is "the coolest story I get to tell for always!"

https://kutv.com/news/offbeat/video-bea ... NIlseIk95Y
Aug 21st, 2020, 6:29 pm
Aug 21st, 2020, 6:48 pm
2020's Reign of Terror Continues With the Introduction of the Cargo Shorts Hat

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Ask fashion critics what’s the one summer item they’d love to see banned forever and more often than not they’ll tell you that cargo shorts need to disappear. But don’t fret, if you’re a middle aged dad worried about both pocket space and fashion faux pas, New Era has teamed up with the TOMBOGO label to create an alternative to cargo shorts: the Cargo Cap.

In case you’ve lost track of time, which is understandable given a month’s worth of news happens every single day in 2020, we’re only about 60% of the way through the year at this point and if you thought the soul-crushing narrative was nearing its completion, TOMBOGO is here to remind us all that it will continue to get worse.

The label’s Cargo Caps are exactly as branded: standard New Era caps with an adjustable strap on the back that have been upgraded with snap on pockets that can be used to carry cash, a folding flip phone, your keys, or anything else you want awkwardly throwing off the weight balance of your head.

The pockets can be removed when not needed, but that defeats the purpose of the design and the entire reason you dropped $120 on reimagined cargo shorts you can wear on your head, right? What other possible reason could there be to spend so much money on a strapback hat? Even if you’re the type of person who’s capable of saying the term “hypebeast” out loud without giggling or immediately feeling the need to apologize for validating the term’s existence, the Cargo Cap is a hard sell.
Aug 21st, 2020, 6:48 pm

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Aug 21st, 2020, 9:56 pm
90-year-old grandfather comes out as gay, searches for long-lost love

Kenneth Felts is proud to be gay, even though it took him a lifetime to be able to say that.

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It’s never too late to start living your truth. Kenneth Felts is a testament to that.

At the age of 90, he’s finally opening up about an essential part of his life that he’s long kept hidden: Felts is gay.

“I had been keeping this secret most of my life, and I had planned to take it to the grave,” he explained in an interview on the 3rd Hour of TODAY Friday.

But the Colorado resident recently had a change of heart. During the past few months in quarantine, he decided to start writing a memoir, one that couldn’t be complete without revealing his sexual orientation.

So that’s just what he did.

“In 1942 when I was 12, I realized I was gay,” the nonagenarian recalled.

As a child growing up in a strictly religious household in Kansas, he felt unable to express that to anyone else or pursue any such relationship — at least until he left home.

Eventually, he intimate encounters with other men, but he never spoke of them, because in the 1950s and ‘60s, it seemed impossible for him to do so.

“If you came out, it really would cost you — your family, your job, all of your relationships,” Felts explained. “You would immediately be called a pervert.”

And so the secret part of his life remained a secret, even after he joined Navy and met a man named Phillip, whom he fell in love with and devoted two years of his life to. They “were just happy with each other,” Felts said, looking back on their relationship now. “It was a void in my life that had suddenly been filled by another person who, apparently, had some of the same needs," he said. "And we just melted into each other.”

What tore them apart was Felts himself, who, following church services one Sunday, realized he couldn’t reconcile his love with his faith.

In the intervening years, he went on to marry a woman, father a daughter and later divorce. Although he remained in the closet, it was his daughter who came out to him as a lesbian in 1995.

It took him another 25 years to come out to her.

“One day I was talking to Rebecca and I just happened to mention, I wish I had never left Philip,” Felts said.

Once his daughter knew the truth, he decided to tell more people — as in everyone, via a candid Facebook post.

His announcement was met with warmth, acceptance and a desire to see a reunion. Even complete strangers offered to find Phillip for him after learning of his story, but what they discovered was that Phillip had died.

“That was a real blow to me,” Felts said through tears. “I’m sorry I didn’t have the chance to say goodbye.”

But he has had the chance to inspire other generations within the LGBTQ+ community to start living their own truths sooner than he did.

“A lot of them telling me that they've got more courage now to come out,” he said with a smile, also adding, "I'm out, I'm gay and I'm free."
Aug 21st, 2020, 9:56 pm

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Aug 22nd, 2020, 3:19 am
Woman Pulled Over For Speeding Receives Act Of Kindness From Police Officer

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A woman in Maine took to Facebook to praise a police officer's act of kindness after he pulled her over for speeding.
Briana Corriveau said she was on a break from work when she was pulled over for speeding. While pulling over, she ran over the curb and popped her tire.
After realizing what happened, Officer Aaron Paradis immediately ripped up the ticket, called a tow truck and drove her back to work.
When Corriveau returned to pick up her vehicle, she found out Officer Paradis had paid for the tire and repairs.
Corriveau took to Facebook to share Officer Paradis' act of kindness:
"He calls me a tow truck, rips up my ticket and drives me in his cruiser to VIP to meet my car. When we walk in he tells the guy at the counter that I need a new tire and so on. I went to the bathroom then came back out. He brought me back to work. I sat in the cruiser thanking him a million times and telling him sorry for speeding and causing this BS...
When I went back to VIP the guy at the counter told me I was all set. I was baffled because he told me that the officer had given him his name and number and told VIP to call him when my car was finished. He paid not only for the tire I popped but my drivers side also!
This officer has no clue what he had done for me that day. I am so thankful for him and his act of kindness. I wish wonderful things to come your way. You restored my faith in man kind during these hard times."
Aug 22nd, 2020, 3:19 am
Aug 22nd, 2020, 1:44 pm
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IN OTHER NEWS
SATURDAY AUGUST 22


A new "news cycle" has begun.
Time for our Ace Reporters to file another story :D

As a reminder...
How do you play?
Just post a story that you have come across that made you smile, laugh, feel good...
BUT NOTHING DEPRESSING :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

Rules:
Each Edition of IN OTHER NEWS will be open for 7 days...
You may post One Story in any 24 hour period
So in other words, you can enter only once a day
Stories may be accompanied with images - but No big images, please! 800x800 pixels wide maximum
Videos are allowed, but please keep them to under a minute, and post a short summary for those that don't like to click on videos
No Duplicate stories - Where a post has been edited resulting in duplicates, then the last one in time gets disallowed.
And please limit this to reasonably family friendly stories :lol: :lol: :lol:

Reward:
Each news story posted that I feel is acceptable (must be a real story, too few words or simply a headline are not considered acceptable) will earn you 50 WRZ$
If you post multiple stories on any given day, you will only earn 50 WRZ$ for the first story of the Day
Special Bonus - Each week I will award "The Pulitzer Prize" for the best story of the week
The weekly winner of the "The Pulitzer Prize" will receive a 100 WRZ$ bonus
It's just my personal opinion, so my judgement is final

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Aug 22nd, 2020, 1:44 pm

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Aug 22nd, 2020, 1:49 pm
Giant Panda Cub Born at Smithsonian’s National Zoo

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Mei Xiang, a 22-year-old giant panda at the Smithsonian Zoo in Washington, D.C., is the oldest panda to give birth in the United States, officials said.

After days of speculation and anticipation, a giant panda at the Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington gave birth to a cub on Friday evening, the zoo announced. Mother and cub were doing well.

The panda, Mei Xiang, gave birth around 6:35 p.m. and was “nursing her cub and cuddling it close,” the zoo said in a tweet. After more than three hours of labor, Mei Xiang, who was lying on her side, honked a few times as she gave birth, rose and picked up her cub, said Brandie Smith, deputy director of the zoo. Soon after, the cub began squeaking.

The cub was a “tiny little pink bald thing,” she said, adding that a panda cub’s size is often compared to a stick of butter. For the first week of the cub’s life, Mei Xiang will stay in her den without eating or drinking while she cares for her newborn, Ms. Smith said. When the zookeepers see her leave her den for the first time, they will enter to do a quick exam on the cub.

“We know from her history that she’s a good mom, and she’s going to take care of that cub,” she added. Zookeepers will monitor the pandas over video. About half of all giant panda births are twins, so staff members are on “twin watch.” If another cub is born, it would happen within 24 hours of the first birth.

This is Mei Xiang’s fourth cub, said Pamela Baker-Masson, the zoo’s associate director of communications and exhibits. Her three others live in China.

The latest arrival, which some deemed a miracle because of Mei Xiang’s age, was viewed as a cause for celebration by many as the nation struggles amid the coronavirus pandemic at a time of political divisiveness. At 22 years old, Mei Xiang had a 1 percent chance of a successful birth. She is the oldest panda in the U.S. to give birth.
Aug 22nd, 2020, 1:49 pm

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Aug 22nd, 2020, 2:03 pm
Tiny elephant shrew species, missing for 50 years, rediscovered

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A mouse-sized elephant shrew that had been lost to science for 50 years has been discovered alive and well in the Horn of Africa.

The Somali sengi mates for life, can race around at 30km/h and sucks up ants with its trunk-like nose. But it had not been documented by researchers since 1968.
In 2019 scientists set out to search for the animal following tips from the region, but not in Somalia, from where the only past reports had come, but in neighbouring Djibouti. Locals were able to identify the creature from old photographs with Houssein Rayaleh, of Association Djibouti Nature, saying he had seen the animal before.

The team tapped into local knowledge, and the fact that the sengis need shelter from birds of prey, to set traps in likely locations, baiting them with a concoction of peanut butter, oatmeal and yeast. They caught a Somali sengi in the very first trap set in the dry, rocky, landscape, identifying it by the tuft of fur on its tail that distinguishes it from other sengi species.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment ... discovered
Aug 22nd, 2020, 2:03 pm

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Aug 22nd, 2020, 3:31 pm
This Guy Built A Squirrel Bar In His Backyard

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A woodworker built a bar in his backyard that offers a variety of different nuts to the local wild squirrels.
Duke Harmon built the bar from scratch and it has been a big hit on social media.

Each "tap" offers a different variety of nut, which he gave beverage names like "Peanut Pilsner" and "Almond Ale".

But Harmon says the "bathroom sign" is his favorite part.

Watch the video below!
https://youtu.be/408r747Bvvs
Aug 22nd, 2020, 3:31 pm
Aug 22nd, 2020, 3:37 pm
Uncle Makes Nephew’s ‘Lockdown’ Dream Come True, Building A Rollercoaster In The Backyard

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One very fun uncle made his young nephew’s dream come true by building a rollercoaster in the backyard that was based on the 11-year-old’s design.

Leigh Downing used the sketches made by his nephew Calden Ashley to bring to life a 230-foot-long ‘Big Dipper’.

Leigh, alongside his 20-year-old son Charlie, used plastic pipes for the rails. They then put together old bits of scrap metal and wood to make the frame of the coaster.

The inventive duo even used an old wooden cutting board as the seat of the ride which circles Leigh’s green space in Llandyrnog, Wales.

They built it as a surprise for little Calden who was fed-up after being unable to see his friends during summer vacation with its bummer lockdown restrictions.

Former engineer Leigh said, “Calden has been rollercoaster mad for as long as I can remember.

“Even before he was tall enough to ride, he was designing them on a computer. It all started a couple of years ago when I had an operation and was off work for a couple of months. I gave Calden a wooden marble rollercoaster kit I had when I was a child. He was so thrilled with it.

“My son Charlie built him a small wooden rollercoaster that he could ride.

“He was absolutely ecstatic with the end result, but a couple of years on had got a little bored with it. We hatched this latest idea during lockdown… We did it all in eight days.”

Charlie, who passed his maths GCSE when he was 11-years-old and skipped his A Levels to go straight to university to study maths and science, is a hobby mechanic.

Leigh, who has a background in engineering, added: “We said to Calden, you do the design. He designed it from start to finish including every twist, turn and bunny hop.

Leigh said the build has brought Charlie, Calden, and himself together. He added: “I feel we did something absolutely amazing.”

“Our next plan is a full steel rollercoaster with a corkscrew and a loop which, of course, will rely on Charlie’s maths degree coupled with Calden’s rollercoaster designs.”
Aug 22nd, 2020, 3:37 pm

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Aug 22nd, 2020, 4:10 pm
Sweet relief: honey ‘more effective’ than over-the-counter medicines for colds and coughs

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Honey could offer more effective treatment for some respiratory infections than prescription medicines, according to a study

The pharmaceutical industry has developed a host of treatments for sore throats, blocked noses and coughs, but a study suggests snuffling patients could get more relief from honey than antibiotics and over-the-counter medicines.

Physicians from Oxford University’s Medical School and Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences analysed existing data to evaluate the effectiveness of honey in treating illnesses that affect the nose, sinuses, pharynx or larynx.

Such maladies are referred to as upper respiratory tract infections (URTIs), and include laryngitis and tonsillitis, as well as common colds.

The analysis included studies that compared the efficacy of honey with that of over-the-counter medicines and antibiotics.

“We found that honey likely improves URTI symptoms, with the strongest evidence in the context of cough frequency and cough severity,” they wrote in the journal BMJ Evidence-Based Medicine. “When clinicians wish to prescribe for URTI, we would recommend honey as an alternative to antibiotics.”

The study was motivated by concern that the over prescription of antibiotics is exacerbating antimicrobial resistance, which the World Health Organization said could threaten the effective prevention and treatment of an ever-increasing range of infections.

“Upper respiratory tract infections are the most frequent reason for antibiotic prescription. Since the majority of URTIs are viral, antibiotic prescription is both ineffective and inappropriate,” wrote the authors. “Antibiotic over prescription for upper respiratory tract infections exacerbates antimicrobial resistance. There is a need for effective alternatives to antibiotic prescribing.”

They added: “Honey is more effective and less harmful than usual care alternatives and avoids causing harm through antimicrobial resistance.”
Aug 22nd, 2020, 4:10 pm

Twitter: Fatima99@fatima99_mobi
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Aug 22nd, 2020, 5:28 pm
Shapovalov prepared for return to tennis court in lead-up tournament to U.S. Open

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Canadian Denis Shapovalov returns the ball to German Alexander Zverev during the
3rd round match of the Paris Masters tennis tournament in Paris, France. Oct. 31, 2019.


TORONTO -- Denis Shapovalov is used to firing up the fans, and feeding off their energy in return.

The Canadian tennis star, who plays with a high-risk, high-reward style, can bring up the atmosphere in a match with a jumping two-handed-backhand winner or a cheeky between-the-legs rally extender, putting emphasis on his more audacious shots with a shout and an emphatic fist pump.

Shapovalov, however, will have to create his own spark when he returns to action at the Western & Southern Open. The tournament, normally held annually in Cincinnati, will take place at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York this year in the week leading into the U.S. Open at Arthur Ashe Stadium. Main draw action begins Saturday.

Players and staff will be isolated from the general public over the two tournaments at Flushing Meadows--Corona Park in Queens, and fans will not be allowed in the stands due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

"It's going to be interesting, especially in New York," Shapovalov said from Queens in an interview Wednesday. "I feel like I have so much love and support in the city and the past years I've been able to gather some really big crowds.

"So it's going to be interesting playing over here without the fans, but I'll definitely feel their support through the screens, through the internet, still know they're there with me while I'm on court."

Shapovalov said playing in a quiet stadium is nothing new, as tennis players often compete in tournaments with little fan atmosphere in the levels under the top-flight ATP and WTA Tours.

"We'll see how it goes, it's going to be the same situation for everybody," he said. "We've all been through it before, I went through Futures, Challengers when there's barely any people watching. So it's going to be kind of back to that, but I think everyone's still motivated to play regardless of whether there's fans or not. Everyone just wants to get on the court and compete."

Regardless of the fan situation, Shapovalov said he is itching to get back on the court for competitive matches. The world No. 16 from Richmond Hill, Ont., hasn't played on the ATP Tour since Feb. 21, when he lost to Alexander Bublik in the quarterfinals of the Open 13 Provence tournament in Marseille, France.

Not all his colleagues, however, have been as keen to return to action, especially for tournaments in the United States where the pandemic is widespread. At least six of the top eight women in the WTA rankings won't play in New York, including defending champion Bianca Andreescu of Mississauga, Ont., and No. 1 Ash Barty.

Rafael Nadal, the men's defending champion, has also withdrawn from the tournament, while Roger Federer is out for the rest of the season after two operations on his right knee.

Shapovalov said the situation with the pandemic may yet affect his plans this year, especially with tennis deciding to travel between continents instead of restricting competition to one region. Formula One, for example, is holding all of its races in Europe.

"It's definitely been on my mind a lot," he said. "I still don't know going forward which tournaments I'm going to play, which tournaments I'm not. Even with the U.S. Open I didn't know how it was going to work with all the players staying at the same hotel and volunteers and everything, but so far it seems to be panning out really well.

"They're doing a good job of really making sure everything's clean and testing us as soon as we get into the hotel, and everything's been pretty good so far."

Shapovalov entered the 2020 season coming off an impressive close to 2019 that included his first ATP Tour tournament title, first appearance in a Masters final and a finals appearance for Canada at the Davis Cup. But he struggled to find form early this season, losing five of six matches before the ATP and WTA Tours suspended play due to COVID-19.

A player who has often found success in streaks, the pandemic denied Shapovalov a chance to go on a run to counter his slow start. The tournaments cancelled in the wake of COVID-19 include the storied Wimbledon Grand Slam event and Shapovalov's hometown tournament, the men's Rogers Cup in Toronto.

"It's unfortunate, every tournament that was being cancelled, it was tough to see them going down," Shapovalov said. "The same with Wimbledon, the same with all the other tournaments, just one after another, seemed like we're going down. And it was tough, and we didn't know when the Tour was going to come back. So it's nice to be back now."
Aug 22nd, 2020, 5:28 pm