In the regimented world of professional tennis, count Benjamin Hassan as an—affable—outlier.
“I’m a spontaneous guy,” Hassan told TENNIS.com ahead of his Olympic tennis debut with Lebanon. “I don’t plan stuff. I still play tennis because I want to have fun. The moment I don’t enjoy it anymore, I’ll stop.”
Emphasizing as much, his former coach, Dominik Meffert, recounted a recent conversation he had with the fast rising Flavio Cobolli that revolved around Hassan.
This month, Cobolli and Hassan played for the German Tennis Channel Bundesliga team Meffert captains, Kurhaus Aachen. When they were foes three years ago in Turkiye, Hassan beat the now world No. 48.
“We were talking about Benji,” Meffert told TENNIS.com. “Flavio said, ‘I played him a few years ago in a Futures in Antalya and he beat me. Now, I’m 48th and he’s 140th. We both made good progress, but he’s better than me, actually, as a tennis player when I look at the forehand, backhand.”