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Former Ukrainian tennis player Sergiy Stakhovsky in Independence Square in kyiv on March 15, 2022. (©AFP/Sergei SUPINSKY)
In 2013, he beat to everyone’s surprise the great Roger Federer at Wimbledon. Today, the former tennis player Sergiy Stakhovsky patrol with fatigues and Kalashnikov in kyiv, which he will protect “to the end” against the Russian armada.
His slender silhouette has not changed for almost nine years and this summer evening when the world discovered him, 116th player in the world lying on the London lawn, fists clenched and eyes amazed.
He had just created one of the greatest sensations in the history of the tournament, leaving defending champion and arch-favorite Federer.
But the outfit has nothing to do with it: on Maidan Square, in the center of kyiv at war, Sergiy Stakhovsky, 36, walks these days his 1.93 meters, his childish face, his gentle gaze and his light blue eyes in beige camo fatigues, weighted with a Kalashnikov and a gun in his belt.
“I’m not very comfortable with a gun, and I don’t know how I would react if I had to kill someone,” he says in perfect English.
I wish I never had to worry about that stuff.
“I knew I had to go”
It has been a little over two weeks since he returned to Ukraine and enlisted in the territorial bridagesthese volunteers responsible for helping the army counter the Russian invasion launched on February 24.
And the Ukrainians “hold on”, he assures, while the Russian fire approaches the center of kyiv, each day a little more tense.
But he does not regret anything: “I knew I had to go”.
The day before the invasion, Sergyi Stakhovsky, a young retiree who had hung up his rackets in January at the Australian Open, was on vacation in Dubai with his wife and their three children aged 4, 6 and 8.
The next morning, seeing his country plunged into war on television, he is overwhelmed by a mixture of “despair”, “uncertainty and “helplessness”. Much of his family is in Ukraine, and “we had no idea how many bombs the Russians were dropping”.
He spends the next three days gathering information to get people to safety, in a trance. “Full of adrenaline”, he sleeps “three or four hours” in total, and eats “nothing more”.