Zoey Di Giacomo May 2026

She elaborated: “When you panic, you go deaf. You can’t hear the rhythm of the game—the footsteps, the breathing, the shifting of weight. I just… let the noise drop out. Then I knew where everyone would be.” Off the field, Di Giacomo is surprisingly soft-spoken, almost bookish. She’s currently studying kinesiology and cognitive science at [University Name], writing a thesis on “decision fatigue in high-speed environments.” Her apartment, she admits, is filled with half-read neuroscience papers, chess puzzles, and a well-worn copy of The Inner Game of Tennis .

That philosophy is stamped all over her game. zoey di giacomo

“I want young players—especially the ones who aren’t the loudest, the strongest, or the fastest—to see me and think: ‘Oh. I don’t have to be a highlight reel. I can be a thinker. I can be calm. And I can still win.’” She elaborated: “When you panic, you go deaf

“I grew up watching my mom deconstruct a Chopin nocturne note by note,” Zoey told me over a video call, her training gear still on, hair pulled back in a tight, functional ponytail. “She’d spend three hours on four bars. My dad would spend a week solving one angle in a robotic arm. I realized early on that excellence isn’t flashy. It’s repetitive. It’s boring. And then one day, it’s magic.” Then I knew where everyone would be

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