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Queen's 2016: Andy Murray beats Nicolas Mahut in first round

  • Posted: Jun 14, 2016

Andy Murray gave coach Ivan Lendl the perfect welcome back with a fine win over France’s Nicolas Mahut at Queen’s Club in London.

The Briton, 29, saved set points in both sets as he won 7-6 (10-8) 7-6 (7-1) to reach round two of the Aegon Championships.

Lendl was courtside for the first time since 2014, having agreed last week to resume their working relationship.

Murray will face fellow Briton Aljaz Bedene after his win over Benoit Paire.

Slovenian-born Bedene made up 35 ranking places to beat the French world number 23 Paire 7-6 (8-6) 6-7 (7-9) 6-4 in two and a half hours.

Asked about Lendl, Murray told BBC Sport: “He doesn’t really give many signs during the match. He’s got quite a straight face.

“I started working with Jamie Delgado a few months ago and that’s worked extremely well, and obviously I had some of my best years with Ivan a few years ago.

“I think it’s a very strong team and I’m hoping they can help me win more major events.”

Swiss second seed Stan Wawrinka earlier lost 6-2 7-6 (7-3) to Spain’s Fernando Verdasco.

Murray finds his feet

Lendl had resumed his coaching role on Tuesday morning, directing the drills as Murray went through their first practice together for over two years.

The session was cut to just an hour because of the rain which has blighted the first two days at Queen’s Club, leaving Murray a little short of time on the grass.

Mahut, ranked 51st, won a title on the surface 24 hours earlier in the Netherlands and looked the more sure-footed when the pair finally got on court just after 17:00 BST.

The Frenchman broke serve first but could not convert the next game from 40-0, and Murray came through a tense tie-break on his third set point.

Mahut had an opportunity at 8-7, failing to make a return of serve, but he moved 4-1 up in the second set and a furious Murray went close to smashing his racquet.

The Scot complained to the umpire about the conditions underfoot, and Mahut would later slip over, but Murray fought back to 5-5 and saved three more set points before dominating the second tie-break.

“It was tough,” said Murray, a four-time winner at Queen’s.

“Nico’s a very accomplished grass-court player and because of the weather the last few days, we haven’t been able to get on the grass too much to hit.

“It was a tricky first round and I’m glad I managed to get through.”

Verdasco too sharp for Wawrinka

Wawrinka, 31, never looked comfortable on a greasy surface and struggled to cover the powerful forehand of his opponent.

Verdasco wrapped up the match – which was interrupted by rain – as Wawrinka’s serve faltered during a tie-break.

“For sure conditions are difficult for everybody since a few days with the rain,” said world number five Wawrinka.

“That’s the same for everybody, but it was a tough match.

“Grass is always a challenging surface for my game. I need quite a lot of practice to play my best game.”

Third seed Milos Raonic and Australian Nick Kyrgios will resume their match at one set all after darkness forced them from the court.

Verdasco will play Bernard Tomic next after the Australian extended his winning run over South African Kevin Anderson to five matches with a 6-3 6-4 victory.

British number five James Ward lost to Luxembourg’s Gilles Muller 6-4 6-4. Compatriots Kyle Edmund and Daniel Evans’ matches – against France’s Gilles Simon and Paul-Henri Mathieu respectively – have been delayed until Wednesday.

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Aegon Classic: Angelique Kerber & Petra Kvitova through in Birmingham

  • Posted: Jun 14, 2016

Australian Open champion Angelique Kerber and two-time Wimbledon winner Petra Kvitova advanced in straight sets at the Aegon Classic in Birmingham.

German second seed Kerber saw off Shuai Peng 7-6 (7-3) 6-3, while Kvitova beat fellow Czech Lucie Safarova 6-3 6-2.

Britain’s Tara Moore was one set all against Tamira Paszek, with compatriot Naomi Broady leading Daria Gavrilova 6-4 2-4, when rain intervened.

In Mallorca, French Open winner Garbine Muguruza lost in the first round.

The Spaniard was the top seed at the event which is making its debut on the calendar this year, but lost 6-3 6-4 to Belgium’s Kirsten Flipkens in her first match since beating Serena Williams in the Roland Garros final on 4 June.

The weather in Birmingham prevented British number one Johanna Konta playing her first-round meeting with Japan’s Misaki Doi. Their match is third on court in Wednesday’s order of play.

British number three Broady will play Kerber in the second round if she overcomes Australian Gavrilova.

Moore, who reached the final of the Nottingham event last week, would face American seventh seed Madison Keys next.

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NextGen Zverev Moves On In Halle

  • Posted: Jun 14, 2016

NextGen Zverev Moves On In Halle

German looking for deep run in his home country

NextGen player Alexander Zverev moved into the second round of the Gerry Weber Open on Tuesday with a 6-4, 6-4 win over seventh seed Viktor Troicki of Serbia.

The 19-year-old German erased five of six break points and was three-for-three in breaking Troicki. “Viktor is a very good grass-court player,” Zverev said. “So I feel pretty good. I’m playing well. I didn’t do a lot of mistakes and served quite well, as well as returned quite well which is probably the most important on grass.”

Zverev, No. 38 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, will face countryman Benjamin Becker in the second round in Halle. Zverev won their prior FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting last year on clay in Munich.

American Taylor Fritz, another NextGen player, fell on Tuesday 6-7(4), 6-2, 6-3 to Japanese qualifier Yuichi Sugita. Their match resumed in the first-set tie-break on Tuesday after rain halted play on Monday.

In a rematch of the 2007 Halle final, fourth seed Tomas Berdych faces Marcos Baghdatis in the first round. Berdych leads their FedEx ATP Head2Head rivalry 4-2, including the win in Halle in 2007.

German wild card Dustin Brown faces Albert Ramos-Vinolas, who’s fresh off a career-best quarter-finals appearance at Roland Garros.

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Maria Sharapova files appeal to Court of Arbitration for Sport over two-year ban

  • Posted: Jun 14, 2016

Maria Sharapova has appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (Cas) after being banned from tennis for two years for using a prohibited drug.

Sharapova, who tested positive for meldonium at January’s Australian Open, was last week suspended by the International Tennis Federation (ITF).

The 29-year-old, a five-time Grand Slam winner, said in her appeal her ban should be “eliminated” or reduced.

Cas said it would rule on the Russian’s case by 18 July.

A statement from Sharapova’s lawyer said the ITF’s tribunal reflected the player “did not intend to violate the rules”.

It added she was given an “unfairly harsh suspension because she is such a famous athlete and they wanted to make an example out of her”.

  • Sharapova ban a ‘powerful message’ – Judy Murray
  • Sharapova – The story behind her downfall

Sharapova says she has been taking meldonium, a heart disease drug, since 2006 for health issues. It became a banned substance on 1 January 2016.

She has admitted she continued taking the substance past that date, saying she was unaware it had been added to the banned list as she knew it by another name – mildronate.

The ITF tribunal ruling said Sharapova tested positive for meldonium in an out-of-competition test on 2 February, as well as in the aftermath of her Australian Open quarter-final defeat by Serena Williams on 26 January.

It treated both results as a single anti-doping violation, with Sharapova’s ban backdated to 26 January.

The World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) said it would “review the decision, including its reasoning” before deciding whether to appeal.

Aged 17, Sharapova became the first Russian to win Wimbledon, added the US Open in 2006 and the Australian Open in 2008, before completing a career Grand Slam with the French Open title in 2012.

She won the French Open again in 2014, but the 2018 tournament in Paris is the next major Sharapova can enter, unless her ban is reduced.

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Andy Murray and Ivan Lendl reunited at Queen's Club

  • Posted: Jun 14, 2016

Ivan Lendl returned to coaching duties with Andy Murray for the first time in over two years on Tuesday.

The Czech-born American took charge of an hour-long coaching session at Queen’s Club in London.

Murray is scheduled to play France’s Nicolas Mahut in his opening match at the Aegon Championships at around 13:00 BST.

However, their practice session was cut short by rain and more is forecast throughout the day.

Lendl arrived from the United States on Monday evening, having last week agreed a deal to resume his coaching role alongside Murray.

The pair split in March 2014 after a successful two-year period that saw Murray win his only Grand Slam titles at the US Open and Wimbledon, as well as Olympic gold.

Their practice session on Monday lasted an hour before the rain arrived, with British number seven Alex Ward providing the opposition across the net.

Lendl worked in tandem with Jamie Delgado, who joined Murray’s coaching set-up earlier this year, with the former world number one directing the drills.

Mahut, ranked 51st, should provide a stern test of Murray’s grass-court level when the pair meet, the Frenchman having won an ATP title on the surface in the Netherlands on Monday.

Murray, a four-time champion at Queen’s Club, lost to Mahut in the second round in 2012.

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In Halle, Federer Compliments NextGen's Potential

  • Posted: Jun 14, 2016

In Halle, Federer Compliments NextGen's Potential

Eight-time Halle champion looks for another positive tournament on grass this week

Roger Federer hopes to enjoy a long stay in Halle this week at the Gerry Weber Open, his second grass-court event in as many weeks. But the World No. 3 also thinks some up-and-coming players could make a deep run on the grass.

Monday’s Stuttgart champion Dominic Thiem and NextGen players Taylor Fritz and Alexander Zverev all have the potential to surprise some people at the ATP World Tour 500 event, Federer said.

“Regarding Thiem, it depends on how tired he is. He really fought his way through last week plus Paris before. That was a huge task last week,” Federer said of the 22-year-old Austrian, who beat Federer in the semi-finals in Stuttgart and reached the semi-finals at Roland Garros. “[Eighteen-year-old] Fritz surely has potential, he loves playing on grass. I played him last week. I think he will have a great career.”

Federer also thinks the 19-year-old Zverev, who faces Viktor Troicki in the first round, could make a run in his home country. “Troicki will not be easy but if he gets through that match and gets into a rhythm he might make it to the semis or finals, that’s absolutely realistic,” he said. “I like Alex’s game. Therefore, I am curious what he will achieve over the coming years.”

Federer also called Frenchman Lucas Pouille, who fell in three sets on Monday to World No. 6 Kei Nishikori, “a huge talent”.

The eight-time Halle champion also talked about himself. He said his back continues to feel better, and he’s glad to have another week of grass-court tennis ahead of him.

“It’s much better. I served normally last week, served a lot of aces and also quite a few into the net because I haven’t found my rhythm yet. But at the end it was quite good. I was happy,” Federer said of his back. “Every day that goes by is a step forward, and every match is a step forward.”

Federer won two matches at the MercedesCup in Stuttgart, beating Fritz in three sets and sweeping German veteran Florian Mayer in two sets before losing to Thiem. Federer, though, held a match point against the Austrian.

“I’m just hoping I can keep up a good level from Stuttgart. It got better as the tournament progressed. It was unfortunate that I couldn’t win against Thiem but after all I felt improvement throughout,” Federer said.

The top-seeded Federer will play German wild card Jan-Lennard Struff in the first round.

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