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Haas Kicks Off Kitzbühel, Bellucci Tops Dolgopolov

  • Posted: Jul 31, 2017

Haas Kicks Off Kitzbühel, Bellucci Tops Dolgopolov

Sousa, Lajovic also advance

Tommy Haas and wife Sara Foster kicked off the German’s last appearance in Kitzbühel in traditional Austrian style, donning Tyrolean outfits in front of Wilder Kaiser on Monday ahead of the Generali Open.

“I’m happy to be back in Kitzbühel. This is the paradise of the Alps,” said Haas. “I always enjoy coming back here. I’m looking forward to my last tournament here and hope that I can play well.”

Thomaz Bellucci, a winner of four ATP World Tour clay-court titles, held his nerve in a thrilling 6-2, 5-7, 6-4 victory over Alexandr Dolgopolov, who was making his debut in Kitzbühel. Dolgopolov led 3-2 in the deciding set, but could not convert two break points on Bellucci’s serve at 15/40. The Brazilian then broke for a fourth time in the penultimate game and will next challenge a German in sixth seed Jan-Lennard Struff or Haas.

Joao Sousa was solid on serve hitting nine aces and saving six of seven break points to beat former World No. 8 Mikhail Youzhny 7-6(4), 5-7, 6-3 in two hours and 13 minutes. Youzhny recovered from a 2-5 deficit in the second set, but was broken to 15 in the 12th game. Sousa now meets third seed and defending champion Paolo Lorenzi, the recent Plava Laguna Croatia Open Umag runner-up (l. to Rublev).

Dusan Lajovic needed one hour and 57 minutes to edge past Maximilian Marterer 7-5, 7-6(4) for a Kitzbühel second-round clash against fourth seed Gilles Simon.

Another Serbian, qualifier Miljan Zekic, recorded his first ATP World Tour match win by beating Andrey Kuznetsov 7-6(4), 7-6(6), closing out on his fourth match point opportunity. The 29 year old will now prepare to face second seed Fabio Fognini, who lifted his fourth trophy on Sunday at the J. Safra Sarasin Swiss Open Gstaad (d. Hanfmann).

You May Also Like: 30 Things To Watch In Washington, Kitzbuehel & Los Cabos

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Challenger Q&A: Norrie Reacts To Stunning Win In Binghamton

  • Posted: Jul 31, 2017

Challenger Q&A: Norrie Reacts To Stunning Win In Binghamton

Cameron Norrie sits down with USTA Pro Circuit broadcaster Mike Cation after claiming his first ATP Challenger Tour title in Binghamton

It was one of the more incredible comebacks of the year on the ATP Challenger Tour. Jordan Thompson had one hand on the trophy at the Levene Gouldin & Thompson Tennis Challenger, but Cameron Norrie pried it away from the Aussie in dramatic fashion.

The 21-year-old Brit, at No. 221 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, stormed back from a 1-4 0/30 deciding-set deficit to upset top seed and 86th-ranked Jordan Thompson for his first Challenger crown. Norrie, who would take the match 6-4, 0-6, 6-4, had dropped five consecutive service games in the second and third sets. A double fault put him to within two points of falling behind 5-1 in the decider. But the former Texas Christian University standout exhibited his great resilience, reeling off five straight games to take the title.

Norrie is the third player from Great Britain to win the Binghamton title, joining 2005 champ Andy Murray and 2015 titlist Kyle Edmund. The win also moves to the nation to 4-0 in Challenger finals this year, with Aljaz Bedene earning three titles from three finals.

Norrie, who rises 76 spots to a career-high No. 199 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, spoke about his breakthrough week…

You got broken five straight games and were down 1-4 0/30. Where’s your head at that moment?
I was completely down on myself. I turned to my coach Facu (Facundo Lugones) and was thinking that I just couldn’t do it. He quickly told me to fight and dig deep. Treat it like another college tennis match. I’ve had so many tight matches in college where I’ve fought back. I tried to get my serve in and absolutely battle. I felt like there was no one mentally tougher than me this week. At 4-1 down, I started putting a little more spin on my first serve and it fell in. I was serving better and better and found a lot more confidence from that. I was winning the longer rallies and managed to get over the line. I’m really, really happy to get my first title.

He was trying to pull you off the court with his cross-court backhand and it was hard for you to find a rhythm. It looked like you were able to control more points as the third set went on. What changed?
I felt like he stepped off the gas a little bit and I just stayed tough and waited for my moments. It was similar to my match on Saturday against Christian [Harrison]. I waited for the right balls and used my inside-out forehand really well at the end to keep him moving. All credit to him for playing a great match, but I’m really pleased with how I was mentally after getting broken those five straight games.

Heck of a finishing point too. [33-shot rally on match point]
Yeah, I was pretty tired and he dropped a couple balls short. I stepped in a little bit and managed to pull the trigger on the last one (a forehand winner down the line) and hit my spot where I wanted to hit it. I’ve been working countless hours with my coaches Devin and Facu on that ball. That is, to aim short a little bit. He calls it ‘the swirler’. That’s what happened on that last ball. It’s just a really great feeling to win the title this week and I don’t think I’ve ever felt like that.

On top of that, you’re into the Top 200 and the US Open qualifying. That has to be a load off your mind.
I’m so pumped for that. I got some messages from some coaches and one [Mark Hilton] said to me to not be satisfied yet. It’s just a great opportunity and I had everything to gain today. I’m really happy and looking forward to the US Open.

You’ve had the opportunity to train with Andy Murray. What have you learned from him?
I’ve watched Murray this summer and he’s an absolute beast. He doesn’t waste a point and doesn’t waste a ball. He’s 100 per cent all the time. I had one really good practice with him at Wimbledon, right before Eastbourne, and you can learn a lot from his professionalism and mentality to always get better.

And look at Jordan Thompson this week. He wasn’t playing his best tennis, but he’s just so mentally tough and he competes like an animal. That’s what my coach Facu said to me this week. Jordan is going to be mentally tough, but you need to be tougher than him. Thommo and Andy are two great role models.

It’s a quick turnaround going to Lexington, but how do you celebrate this?
My coach and I are going to New York City for the night and maybe go out to dinner. I fly from LaGuardia Airport to Lexington on Monday. It will be nice to spend the night there and take it easy.
In tennis, you have to back up great results so I’ll be all in, in Lexington. I’ll try to keep the momentum going.

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Kavcic Continues Canadian Dominance In Granby

  • Posted: Jul 31, 2017

Kavcic Continues Canadian Dominance In Granby

Revisit the week that was on the ATP Challenger Tour as we applaud the achievements of those on the rise and look ahead to who’s in action in the week to come

A LOOK BACK

Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby (Granby, Canada): Fourth seed Blaz Kavcic of Slovenia won his second Challenger title in Canada over the past month by defeating second seed and local favourite Peter Polansky 6-3, 2-6, 7-5. The 30 year old also defeated Polansky in the Winnipeg final. Meanwhile, Polansky has finished runner-up in three consecutive Challengers on home soil (Winnipeg, Gatineau, Granby) and is inching closer to a debut inside the Top 100 of the Emirates ATP Rankings.

Binghamton Challenger (Binghamton, New York): Cameron Norrie of Great Britain picked up his first Challenger title with an upset victory over top seeded Aussie Jordan Thompson 6-4, 0-6, 6-4. Norrie turned pro in June after an outstanding college tennis career at Texas Christian University. Thompson was aiming for his first title of the year after a dominant 2016 season on the ATP Challenger Tour that saw him rack up four titles.

Internazionali di Tennis di Cortina (Cortina, Italy): Fourth seed Roberto Carballes Baena saved his best tennis for the final, with the Spaniard recording a dominant 6-1, 6-0 win over third seed Gerald Melzer of Austria. Carballes Baena picks up his first Challenger title since 2015, with all three victories at this level coming on red clay.

Advantage Cars Prague Open (Prague, Czech Republic): Fourth seed Andrej Martin of Slovakia continued his solid season by taking the title 7-6(3), 6-3 over Yannick Maden of Germany. The 27 year old Martin also prevailed this March in San Luis Potosi. Despite the loss, Maden can take heart in reaching his first Challenger final of 2017.

Aamulehti Tampere Open (Tampere, Finland): Eighth seed Calvin Hemery of France scored his first Challenger title by ousting top seed Pedro Sousa of Portugal 6-3, 6-4. The 22 year old reached his first Challenger final this past June on home soil in Blois. Sousa was seeking his second Challenger title after winning his maiden crown this past April in Francavilla.

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WHAT THE PLAYERS SAID

Kavcic: “I was feeling tired a while back, but it was my coach who convinced me to come and play in these Canadian Challenger tournaments. I know that the fans today were cheering for Peter, but thank you for also cheering for me when I made good shots. Congratulations to Peter on a great match. We played about two weeks ago in the final in Winnipeg and both matches were long and hard fought. I hope that we don’t have to play against each other soon, because it is very tough to play against him.”

Polansky: “It was a pretty high level final. The match could have gone either way. The margins were really small and he got that last break at 5-6. He played well and made some tough shots. I thought it was a great match.”

Carballes Baena:  “I’m very happy. It was a special week for me. It was a tough week against Andrea Arnaboldi (in the second round) and yesterday against Marcel Granollers. But I played better in the final and left it all out there.”

A LOOK AHEAD

There are five Challengers on the schedule this week, with the $125,000 event in Biella, Italy, taking top billing as it returns for the 13th year. Local favourite Marco Cecchinato is the top seed and Spaniard Guillermo Garcia-Lopez is the second seed. Leonardo Mayer of Argentina, who emerged as a lucky loser to win the ATP World Tour event in Hamburg this past week, is the third seed. Carballes Baena looks for another title as the eighth seed and Hemery is also in the draw.

The $125,000 tournament in Chengdu, China, is back for the second year. Yen-Hsun Lu of Chinese Taipei is the top seed and Evgeny Donskoy of Russia is the second seed. A pair of #NextGenATP South Koreans, Duckhee Lee and Soon Woo Kwon, are the third and sixth seeds, respectively.

Segovia, Spain hosts a $100,000 Challenger event for the 27th consecutive year. Local favourite Marcel Granollers is the top seed and Peter Gojowczyk of Germany is the second seed. A pair of #NextGenATP players, Alex De Minaur of Australia and Christian Garin of Chile, are also in the draw.

The $75,000 event in Lexington, Kentucky, celebrates its 23rd consecutive year on the calendar. #NextGenATP player Alexander Bublik of Kazakhstan is the top seed and American Denis Kudla is the top seed. Another #NextGenATP player, American Michael Mmoh, is the fourth seed, while Norrie looks for another title on U.S. soil.

Lastly, the $50,000 Challenger in Liberec, Czech Republic, returns for the fifth consecutive year. Local favourite Adam Pavlasek is the top seed and Oscar Otte of Germany is the second seed. Former Top 5 player Tommy Robredo is the seventh seed.

View Draws & Watch Free Live Streams

ATP CHALLENGER TOUR ON TWITTER: The ATP Challenger Tour has launched a dedicated Twitter account for the latest news and information about players and events. Follow @ATPChallenger at twitter.com/ATPChallenger.

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Mayer Jumps 89 Spots, Mover Of The Week

  • Posted: Jul 31, 2017

Mayer Jumps 89 Spots, Mover Of The Week

ATPWorldTour.com looks at the top Movers of the Week in the Top 100 of the Emirates ATP Rankings, as of Monday, 31 July 2017

No. 49 Leonardo Mayer, +89
The Argentine (pictured) soars back into the Top 50 for the first time since May 2016 after becoming the second lucky loser in as many weeks (following Andrey Rublev’s triumph in Umag) to clinch an ATP World Tour title, with victory in the German Tennis Championships 2017. Despite bowing out in the final round of qualifying to 16-year-old Rudolf Molleker last Sunday, Mayer received a call-up to the main draw and went all the way as he held off German Florian Mayer to claim his second title in Hamburg. Read Report & Watch Highlights

No. 25 Fabio Fognini, +6
The former World No. 13 welcomed his first child in May and on Sunday, he celebrated his first ATP World Tour title as a dad with victory in the J. Safra Sarasin Swiss Open Gstaad final. The Italian took down first-time finalist Yannick Hanfmann 6-4, 7-5 to land his fifth ATP World Tour title, his first since Umag in 2016. The 30-year-old Fognini is coming off third-round showings at Roland Garros and Wimbledon and a quarter-final finish in Umag. Read Report

View Latest Emirates ATP Rankings

No. 47 Philipp Kohlschreiber, +11
A left leg adductor strain cost the former World No. 16 the chance of reaching a 17th career final last week when he retired while leading countryman Florian Mayer 6-4, 2-3 in the German Tennis Championships 2017 semi-finals. Kohlschreiber’s run, which included a second-round win over No. 4 seed Gilles Simon, was enough to see him return to the Top 50. The German finished runner-up on clay earlier in the season in Marrakech.

No. 59 Florian Mayer, +42
Florian Mayer surged back into the Top 100 with a run to the German Tennis Championships 2017 final, where he fell to Leonardo Mayer (not related). He was bidding to become the first German to win in Hamburg since Michael Stich in 1993. The 33 year old triumphed at the Gerry Weber Open in Halle last year, ranked No. 192 in the Emirates ATP Rankings.

No. 61 Federico Delbonis, +20
The left-handed Argentine rode a five-match winning streak through qualifying to reach his first ATP World Tour semi-final of the season in Hamburg. He took down third seed and #NextGenATP Karen Khachanov before he fell to eventual champion Leonardo Mayer. It was the 26 year old’s best result of the year, having reached the quarter-finals in Sao Paulo.

Other Top 100 Movers This Week
No. 8 Alexander Zverev +3
No. 48 Jiri Vesely, +7
No. 78 Nicolas Kicker, +18
No. 84 Blaz Kavcic, +16

You May Also Like: Ferrer Back On The Rise, Mover Of Week

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Bryan Brothers Storm To Atlanta Title

  • Posted: Jul 31, 2017

Bryan Brothers Storm To Atlanta Title

American duo pick up second title of 2017

Top seeds Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan got their American hard-court swing off to a flying start, taking the doubles title at the BB&T Atlanta Open with a 6-3, 6-4 win over Wesley Koolhof and Artem Sitak.

“After a tough first-round which we could have lost, I thought we played really well,” said Mike. “The support from the fans here has been great and it feels good to win our second title here.”

The Bryans required a single break in each set to prevail in just 54 minutes. The victory gives them a staggering 114th ATP World Tour title as a team and their second title in Atlanta (2015, 2017). It’s also their second title of the season after prevailing last month in Eastbourne (d. Bopanna/Sa).  Their solid 2017 currently has them at fouth in the Emirates ATP Doubles Race to London.

“This is huge momentum going into the hard-court swing for us here in the U.S.,” said Bob. “It’s really important for us in the [Emirates ATP Doubles Race To London] and going into the last Grand Slam of the year.”

You May Also Like: Isner Prevails For Fourth Atlanta Title

Koolhof/Sitak were playing together as a team for just the second time, with their debut last week yielding a quarter-final finish in Newport. Sitak was aiming for his first ATP World Tour doubles title of 2017, while Koolhof has prevailed with fellow Dutchman Matwe Middelkoop in Sydney and Rotterdam.

The Bryans pick up 250 Emirates ATP Doubles Rankings points and split a cheque for $34,810. Koolhof/Sitak walk away with 150 Emirates ATP Doubles Rankings points and split $18,300.

It was a good day for the Bryans’ coach, David Macpherson, who saw his charge John Isner win the singles title earlier in the evening. 

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Kitzbuhel 2017

  • Posted: Jul 31, 2017

Kitzbuhel 2017

The content of this article took place at Generali Open

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Isner Prevails For Fourth Atlanta Title

  • Posted: Jul 31, 2017

Isner Prevails For Fourth Atlanta Title

Isner wins all-American final over Harrison on Sunday

Second seed John Isner reigned supreme once again at the BB&T Atlanta Open, saving set point in both sets to pick up a 7-6(6), 7-6(7) win over fourth seed and fellow American Ryan Harrison.

“It was a battle. I needed every ounce of my energy out there, but I’m so happy to win this tournament again. This tournament has meant everything to me,” said Isner. “This is always going to be my favourite time of year. I seem to play well in America every single year, so I couldn’t have asked for a better start.”

Isner, who also prevailed last week in Newport (d. Ebden), earned his fourth title in Atlanta (2013-2015, 2017). He has reached the final in seven of the eight years this tournament has been held, and the semi-finals in all eight years. The victory gives Isner his 12th ATP World Tour title, 10 of which have come on U.S. soil. He’ll move up to No. 18 in the Emirates ATP Rankings on Monday and surpass Jack Sock as the top-ranked American player.

Harrison was seeking his second ATP World Tour singles title after winning his maiden crown this February in Memphis (d. Basilashvili). Despite the loss, the week in Atlanta was a major boost for the fourth seed, who hadn’t reached an ATP World Tour final prior to this season.

“Being back in the final again is a good result,” said Harrison. “I think I can put myself in this position more and more often. It was a great week and I’m looking forward to next week too.”

Isner picks up 250 Emirates ATP Rankings points and a cheque for $114,595. Harrison leaves Atlanta with 150 Emirates ATP Rankings points and a cheque for $60,355.

You May Also Like: Fognini Claims Fifth ATP World Tour Crown In Gstaad

Both men traded service holds throughout the opening set to force a tie-break. Isner went down set point at 5/6, but erased it with a big serve. He then earned a set point of his own at 7/6 and took full advantage with a forehand return winner to grab the early lead.

After 75 consecutive service holds dating back to last week in Newport, Harrison finally broke Isner for a 2-0 lead in the second set. However, Isner broke right back in the next game and the two Americans continued to comfortably hold serve for another tie-break.

Harrison saved a championship point at 5/6 with a forehand and earned a set point opportunity at 7/6, but Isner responded with a huge ace to level the score. The second seed made good on his second championship point, cracking a forehand up the line to end the contest in one hour and 47 minutes.

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