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Darren Walton, a sports journalist for the Australian Associated Press, played golf with Reid mere days prior to his death.

“He picked me up at 5:30 a.m., half an hour early because he couldn’t sleep. Or hadn’t slept, to be specific. Not because he’d been out on a bender or anything — those days were in the past,” Walton started his AAP piece, whichThe Sunday Morning Heraldran.

Reid’s restlessness was for a positive reason. “The former Wimbledon junior champion was full of hope, excited about getting his life back together after a troubled few years and a touch-and-go battle with pancreatitis,” Walton continued.

“‘I’m pleased with that,’ he said after grinding out an eight-over-par front nine at the not-so-royal Northbridge club in Sydney and smashing down an egg-and-bacon roll at the halfway house,” Walton said.

Walton detailed the “life-changing setback” that derailed Reid’s career: a battle with glandular fever. “I was their golden boy then,” Walton quoted Reid as saying about the prime of his career. “Now they won’t even give me tickets [to the Australian Open].”

“I never got over what happened to me when I was 19,” Reid had reportedly said, reflecting on the illness.

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“Todd Reid was still young,” Walton concluded. “Tragically, his time ran out.”

“Utterly devastated. Played golf with him last week and he was in great spirits, full of hope. An unbelievably humble talent from a beautiful family. Really feeling for his Mum. RIP brother. You were much loved,” Walton tweeted on Friday.

Reid was the Wimbledon junior singles champion in 2002 and was once Australia’s No. 3 tennis player, theAssociated Pressreported. He ranked as high as 105th in the world and made the third round of the Australian Open in 2004 before losing toRoger Federer, according toESPN.

In aNovember 1997 profile of ReidinThe New York Times, Dr. James Loehrworried that the pressures that Reid was facingwere unhealthy for a teenager.

“This has all the earmarks of becoming a catastrophe. It’s way too early to decide if a 13-year-old boy is a phenom or a superstar, and from the outside, it sounds like the parents are leaving their son to the wolves,” Dr. Loehr said.

“At this age, the primary concern should be making sure he’s mentally, physically and emotionally healthy,” the sports psychologist continued. “He shouldn’t be a source of income.”

Reid’s cause of death is not known and there were no suspicious circumstances,The Sydney Morning Heraldreported.

source: people.com