Back in 1987, 11 years before new Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin was born, her parents left Moscow for New York City, eager to escape the Soviet Union and live in the United States because, as her father Alex, put it: "You want to see the world. You want a better future for your kids."
Alex took English classes and attended computer school during the day; he drove for a car service at night, straining to understand the dispatcher's radioed instructions.
"It was very tough," he says now, "but it's amazing the things you do when you need to survive."
Just before Sofia was born, the family briefly returned to Russia so Grandma and other relatives could help with the baby. A few months later, the Kenins went back to New York. Eventually, they settled in Pembroke Pines, Florida, and it was in the driveway of their home there that Sofia, at age three-and-a-half, found her calling.
"I wasn't into any other toys. I always liked to play with balls and with a racket. So my dad said, 'Let's go try it and play.' I had great hand-eye coordination. I saw I was really different than other players," she said, a Champagne flute an arm's length away as she spoke with reporters after Saturday had turned to Sunday at Melbourne Park. "And people said, 'You know she's really special. Something about her.' ... And look where I am."