Catching Up
Rhyne Williams Matures with the Vols and Hits Pro Circuit
by Marcia Frost, 25 September 2012
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As a junior tennis player, the two things Rhyne Williams was most known for was his superior talent and his wild temper. He earned his share of violations and lost additional support he could have gotten from fans and the USTA, but Williams has learned to push his talent past his temper - and he has come out where he wanted to be all along.
Rhyne Williams at the 2012 US Open
© Marcia Frost
The tennis ability of Rhyne Williams is certainly not a surprise to anyone. His mother, Michelle DePalmer Williams, was a professional player. His uncle, Michael DePalmer, Jr., was a two-time All-American for the
Tennessee Volunteers, where grandfather Mike DePalmer, Sr., coached. The elder DePalmer also helped with the founding of the
Nick Bollettieri Tennis Academy, where Michelle DePalmer grew up. The family ties continue all the way to his first name, as "Rhyne" was his grandmother's maiden name.
Even though, Rhyne Williams' father, Bob, played college tennis at Duke, he grew up in Knoxville, and it was the Tennessee Volunteers that would be deeper in his bloodlines. That's where he would end up playing for two years, but the situation at the time was not the way it was planned.
"I guess the main reason I went to school was to mature," explained the now 21 year old. "It gave me a chance to get away from the pressure. I won a pro tournament when I was very young (16) and there was a ton of pressure for me to turn pro. I was thinking about it and I started to kind of hating tennis for a while, and I wanted to get away from the pro tennis deal. So I went to school, matured, and started enjoying tennis again."
Williams credits the college atmosphere with the change in him.
"It was incredible playing on a team - playing for something more than yourself. It relaxed me, and I flew under the radar. I ended up realizing I still love tennis. I'm glad that it's back, the enjoyment of it."
Despite the change, he realizes that he still needs to keep his attitude in check.
"Well, it's a day by day thing. When I'm enjoying it and having fun, that's when I play my best and when my attitude is the best and it's under control."