Tomas Martin Etcheverry doesn’t need your labels.
Don’t call Argentina’s No. 3-ranked player a clay-courter: As much as he enjoys the dirt, the 25-year-old has been thriving on hard courts too as he embraces the travel grind that has worn down many South American players before him.
“I think I’ve always been quite different from other players,” Etcheverry tells Tennis.com in Spanish. “I've always enjoyed being on the road.”
Bursting onto the scene last year, Etcheverry is a part of the latest wave of Argentine players taking aim at the top of the rankings. Thanks in part to a series of Challenger events launched by “el Pulga” (“the Flea”) Horacio de la Peña, promising Argentines have more opportunities than ever to make that climb—and the country now seems to have become an incubator for young tennis talent.
There are six Argentine players in the ATP’s Top 100, with eight more inside the Top 200 also poised to strike. Etcheverry currently sits behind countrymen Sebastian Baez and Francisco Cerundolo at No. 37, a few spots from the career-high No. 27 he achieved this year.
They’re following in the footsteps of La Legión, the collective label for greats Guillermo Coria, David Nalbandian, Gaston Gaudio, Juan Ignacio Chela, Juan Martin del Potro and more who made waves in the early 2000s.
But this new Legión of players is trying to do things differently. According to Etcheverry, this “very nice group of guys” is more likely to share practice courts and PlayStations than the screaming rows that marred the previous ‘golden’ generation from Argentina.