Diego Schwartzman and the outsized power of Jewish representation in sports
Iwas never the best tennis player. Nor was I particularly good at soccer, basketball or any other sport my parents signed me up for. Still, I stuck with tennis through my junior year of high school, when I was unceremoniously cut from the varsity team. I had been captain of the JV the year before – a position that was awarded based on your peers, not your skills.
Since being cut, I have rarely picked up a racquet, until one day last summer when my dad finally goaded me into hitting a few balls with him. As I got on the court, I remembered why I stuck with tennis so long: It makes me feel happy.
Even though my active participation in the sport has dwindled to practically nothing as I got older, I remain an avid viewer of professional tennis. I cheer on Serena Williams on her path to 24 Grand Slams; I love watching young Coco Gauff and Naomi Osaka; I am obsessed with how much Nick Kyrgios wishes he were a basketball player, but instead he was blessed at tennis.
But there’s one player that makes me genuinely emotional to watch: 27-year-old Diego Schwartzman.
I hadn’t really heard of Schwartzman until I started working at Alma. He’s a Jewish tennis player from Argentina, and in 2019 he made it into the top 20 (he is currently ranked 14th in the world).
Schwartzman looks like every boy I went to high school with. He wears his hat backwards. He might as well have been one of the boys we would crush on at summer camp during the four times a summer we got to see boys. (I attended an all-girls camp.) He even wears summer camp bracelets when he plays. In other words, I feel like I know him, even though I definitely do not.
He feels so familiar.
There aren’t that many super successful Jewish athletes. There’s Aly Raisman, an Olympic gymnast, who performed a floor routine to “Hava Nagila.” There’s Julian Edelman, who in 2019 became the first Jewish Super Bowl MVP. There’s Sue Bird, one of the greatest US basketball players. (She also has Israeli citizenship.) There’s Omri Casspi, the first Israeli to play in the NBA. There’s Jason Brown, an Olympic ice skater; Josh Rosen, a quarterback for the Miami Dolphins; and baseball players Alex Bregman and Joc Pederson.
But Raisman, Bird, Edelman, Bregman – all these stars feel superhuman.
They are or have been at the pinnacle of their sports, MVPs, All-Stars, gold-medal winners.
Schwartzman, well, isn’t. He is still a superhuman tennis player (he is very, very fast, and returns practically everything). But Diego Schwartzman, I realized this weekend, is exactly the representation I crave. He has yet to win a Grand Slam, and may never win one. But he is trying his goddamn best, and he’s making it pretty far into tournaments. He’s losing to the best men’s players of all time (Nadal, Djokovic, Federer), and they are close matches. He’s a top 20 player, which is insane. He’s a better athlete than anyone I know or will ever know.
Yet even though he’s this world-class athlete, he seems so relatable.
Every anecdote I have read about Schwartzman is downright delightful.
Like this, from the French Open in 2018: “Yet though he may be small of stature, everybody on the men’s tour has always known Schwartzman has the biggest heart.” Or this Australian Open tweet: “He may be small in stature but he has a giant heart and work ethic.”
Or the fact that he won the US Open Sportsmanship Award in 2019, along with Naomi Osaka, for being a “true role model” and inspiration.
In an interview he gave recently, he said: “I am a very calm person in terms of religion and I try to respect everyone. I am always understanding. Everyone likes one thing or another, but the first thing has to be respect.”
When Schwartzman was 13 years old, a doctor told him he would never be taller than 5-foot-7 (1.7 meters). He came home and told his parents he was going to quit tennis. His mom convinced him otherwise. His friends and family called him “El Peque” – Shorty – and the nickname has stuck.
That never-quit attitude has remained with Schwartzman throughout his career.
Schwartzman is unique on the men’s tennis tour because of his height. His official bio says he is 5-7, even though many tennis reporters and fans have said he is much likely shorter.
Schwartzman is the highest-ranked player to stand 5-7 or shorter since Harold Solomon, also Jewish, was No. 10 in 1981.
When Schwartzman beat the 6-8 Kevin Anderson at the French Open in 2018, he told his interviewer with a smile, “Did you read David and Goliath?”
Schwartzman is proof that short people, Jewish or otherwise, can be world-class athletes. When so much of sports can be dependent on how you were born (like Michael Phelps’ wingspan, which is three inches more than his height), Schwartzman’s continued success proves that sports can also just be how much you want it.
Representation in sports is not something I ever really thought about. I kinda just accepted that the athletes I watched would never really look like me, and that’s OK. Mia Hamm was my idol growing up, and it didn’t matter that she wasn’t Jewish. Being Jewish or not doesn’t change who I root for.
But there’s something different about Diego Schwartzman. Although I am not short, nor am I an athlete, watching this Jewish player do his thing – specifically beat guys who are over a foot taller than him – is a true joy. (JTA from Alma)