Whether it’s sports, tennis—anything in life—I think autistic people are very good at getting in routines and sticking with them. Jenson Brooksby
Jenson Brooksby knew tennis was for him at a very young age. He started playing around 4, toting a racquet around the house, wearing headbands and wristbands like his favorite players and pelting a garage door with Nerf balls. He was swinging plenty, but he wasn’t saying much—Jenson didn’t speak his first words until around the same age. It was an early sign of autism.
“Speech therapy was a full-time job for a while,” Brooksby told Tennis Channel in an exclusive interview. “It was harder to make friends.”