The No. 20 seed shook off the frustration of having blown a 5-3 lead to restore order in a tiebreaker against Marozsan who, as Mensik made sure to mention, had beaten Joao Fonseca and Andrey Rublev earlier in the week.
“Today, I worked on my mental side a lot, so I’m glad that even when there were a couple of fans that were doing unfair play, I stayed focused,” he said. “I had the opportunity to tell them something, to call them out, and that can sometimes help me to find my best game.”
The 6’4” Mensik was sitting forward in his seat but was almost making himself smaller, arms in his lap and looking down as he gave thoughtful but dense answers to ostensibly straightforward questions. His smile returned once the interview was over and it was then that I wondered if, like on the court, he was still finding himself off it.
“I know that it’s the biggest achievement of my career,” he said of his Miami win, “but I’m trying to improve every tournament, every week, every match.”
Much as Mensik insists things are still the same, he will likely look back on these months as the most formative of his career. And with each rep, he looks more and more ready for the even bigger changes to come.