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Cincinnati Open: Venus Williams knocked out in second round by qualifier Ashleigh Barty

  • Posted: Aug 16, 2017

World number nine Venus Williams was knocked out in the second round of the Cincinnati Open by Australian qualifier Ashleigh Barty.

Barty, ranked 48 in the world, beat the Wimbledon finalist 6-3 2-6 6-2 to earn a first career victory over a top 10-ranked player.

Williams, 37, served up six double faults in an error-strewn performance.

Barty, 21, will now face the winner of Elena Vesnina against Caroline Wozniacki in the third round.

Elsewhere, Spain’s Carla Suarez Navarro eased through to the round of 16 with a 6-2 6-2 victory over Serbian Aleksandra Krunic.

American Madison Keys saw off Russia’s Daria Kasatkina in 6-2 6-1, where she will face Wimbledon champion and fourth seed Garbine Muguruza of Spain.

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Solid Dimitrov Beats Lopez In Cincinnati

  • Posted: Aug 16, 2017

Solid Dimitrov Beats Lopez In Cincinnati

Bulgarian star awaits Krueger or del Potro

Grigor Dimitrov recorded his 30th match win of the year on Wednesday for a spot in the Western & Southern Open third round.

The seventh-seeded Bulgarian hit 27 winners to knock out Spain’s Feliciano Lopez 7-6(5), 6-4 in 90 minutes and will now prepare to face Juan Martin del Potro of Argentina. Del Potro has a perfect 5-0 record in their FedEx ATP Head2Head series, with their last meeting coming at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia in May.

Dimitrov was reliable on serve in the opening set and almost broke Lopez on three occasions, prior to a strong start in the tie-break that he secured on his third set point chance. The 26 year old broke Lopez for a 2-1 lead in the second set and although he could not convert a match point opportunity on the Spaniard’s serve at 3-5, 30/40, in the next game he secured his third win in five meetings. The Bulgarian beat Lopez 5-7, 6-3, 7-6(6) in the Cincinnati second round last year.

Dimitrov got off to a strong start to the year going 16-1 with two ATP World Tour titles in Brisbane (d. Nishikori) and Sofia (d. Goffin). He is now 30-14 overall and will be hoping to better last year’s run to the Cincinnati semi-finals (l. to Cilic). Currently at No. 9 in the Emirates ATP Race To London, Dimitrov is hoping to qualify for the first time to the Nitto ATP Finals, to be held at The O2 in London from 12-19 November.

Del Potro, the 2012 and 2013 semi-finalist, broke serve at the end of both sets to defeat American qualifier Mitchell Kruger 6-4, 6-4 in a hard-fought encounter over one hour and 40 minutes. Del Potro, appearing at the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 tournament for the first time since 2013, saved five break points at 3-3 in second set and clinched his 18th victory of the year on his fourth match point opportunity.

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Nishikori Ends 2017 Season With Right Wrist Injury

  • Posted: Aug 16, 2017

Nishikori Ends 2017 Season With Right Wrist Injury

Japanese star sidelined, expects to return in 2018

Kei Nishikori announced on Wednesday that he will miss the rest of the 2017 ATP World Tour season in order to recover from a right wrist injury.

The Japanese star flew to Cincinnati, but withdrew from the Western & Southern Open when he felt a sharp pain in his right wrist during a practice session on Sunday at the Lindner Family Tennis Center.

A statement from Nishikori’s manager read, “Two days ago during practice in Cincinnati, Kei hit a serve and heard a ‘pop’ in his wrist. We went straight to the hospital to take an MRI. Yesterday, we went to see a very renowned wrist specialist, who works with many of the MLB baseball pitchers.

“We saw another specialist today to get a second opinion. On top of that we have sent MRI results to three other wrist specialists to ensure we get several independent opinions from specialists. After consulting with all of them, it has become clear that Kei has a tear in one of the tendons in the right wrist.

“At this stage, we have elected not to do surgery and Kei is in a cast. After the swelling comes down in the next weeks, we will evaluate next steps. Kei will withdraw from all the 2017 tournaments and work hard to be ready for next year.”

Nishikori, who is currently No. 9 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, ends 2017 with a 30-13 match record, including two final runs at the Brisbane International presented by Suncorp in January (l. to Dimitrov) and the Argentina Open in February (l. to Dolgopolov).

Recently, Novak Djokovic (right elbow) and Stan Wawrinka (knee) also announced their decision to recuperate from injury and return in 2018.

Moet and Chandon off-court news 

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Kei Nishikori: World number nine will miss the rest of the season after injury

  • Posted: Aug 16, 2017

Japan’s Kei Nishikori is out for the rest of the season after tearing a tendon in his right wrist.

The world number nine joins 12-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic and Stan Wawrinka in missing the US Open, which starts on 28 August.

Nishikori, 27, is also one of seven top-10 players to pull out of this week’s Cincinnati Masters.

“Kei hit a serve during practice and heard a ‘pop’ in his wrist,” said a statement from his manager.

“At this stage, we have elected not to do surgery and Kei is in a cast. After the swelling comes down in the next weeks, we will evaluate next steps.”

Djokovic, Wawrinka, Andy Murray, Roger Federer, Marin Cilic and Milos Raonic are the other top players missing in Cincinnati.

Spain’s Rafael Nadal, who is seeded first, will be the new world number one from Monday after Federer’s withdrawal.

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Broady Bounces Back With Fresh Focus

  • Posted: Aug 16, 2017

Broady Bounces Back With Fresh Focus

Former top junior rediscovers his form to reach second Challenger final

Expectations are high when a young prospect makes Junior Grand Slam finals. Those expectations are only amplified when said prospect is from a nation with as rich a tennis history as Great Britain.

For Liam Broady, a run to the second round at Wimbledon in 2015 catapulted him to a career-best No. 158 in the Emirates ATP Rankings. It came after reaching his first ATP Challenger Tour final in the preceding November where he had fallen to James Duckworth in Charlottesville.

Progress since his been jittery at best and the 23 year old Stockport native is the first to admit it. But a first Challenger final in three years in Aptos, California, on Sunday, went a long way to restoring belief that a revitalised focus was reaping rewards.

Broady went down in straight sets to Kazakhstan’s Alexander Bublik in the final. It was an impressive run, though, having won through qualifying to get there.

“I’ve always believed that I’m capable of competing and living with these guys. It’s telling me my work’s paying off and I’m back,” Broady told USTA Pro Circuit broadcaster Mike Cation. “I’ve been here before. I was probably overwhelmed the first time around but I feel comfortable with these guys and … it’s just showing people what I can do.”

You May Also Like: Challenger Q&A: Bublik Reacts To Winning In Aptos

Broady strung together seven straight match wins for the loss of just one set en route to the decider. Better still, the surprise run shot his Emirates ATP Ranking up 80 spots to No. 256, which meant he could avoid having to play Futures events and coming through Challengers qualifying.

“I was actually going to play a $25,000 [Futures event] in Illinois this week. Dave said ‘Do you want to play qualies in Aptos because it’s looking so strong or do you want to play a 25 in Illinois?’,” Broady said. “I said ‘Dave, look, I’m not sure I’m going to be able to carry on playing tennis if I go to a Futures in Illinois on my own when I know Aptos is going on because it’s one of the best tournaments that I play’ so he said ‘OK, I trust you to go play it’. I think the tennis gods responded and gave me a final out of this.”

The Brit admitted to frustrations as he made the transition from juniors to the professional ranks. His ranking was not rising anywhere near the rate he wanted it to, or as fast as the British public expected it to given his standout results, which took him as high as No. 2 in the junior world rankings.

“I’ve always felt pressured to get there as quick as I can, especially seeing my peers getting there so fast and kids younger than me now like Zverev, Kyrgios even Shapovalov,” Broady said. “I was playing Shapovalov a couple of months ago on the Challengers and it put such pressure on me not seeing my ranking going up as quick as those guys.

“But one of the big things for me over the last year or so is learning everyone’s path is different. Everybody gets to where they want to get to at different times. You can’t rush that. I think that’s one of the things that’s kind of matured in me.” 

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Zverev Riding Resolve And FortuneTo Success

  • Posted: Aug 16, 2017

Zverev Riding Resolve And FortuneTo Success

German keeps coming up clutch when pressure is on

A lone deciding-set tie-break each week is proving all Alexander Zverev needs to find form and send him on his way to a title-winning run. Such has been the German’s fate over the past fortnight, he’d be forgiven for looking at ease should he find himself in a similar situation at the Western and Southern Open this week.

The #NextGenATP star and Race to Milan leader is coming off back-to-back titles on North American hard courts, at the Citi Open in Washington, D.C. and last week’s Coupe Rogers in Montreal. In Washington, D.C., Zverev narrowly eked out a deciding-set tie-break triumph over Australian Jordan Thompson before he reeled off four straight matches to clinch the title.

Then, last week in Montreal he saved three match points and closed out Richard Gasquet in his opening match before again sweeping through his final four matches. Victory over Roger Federer in the final landed him a second ATP World Tour Masters 1000 title for the season.

“I feel well on court. I feel very confident,” Zverev said. “Obviously, feeling good about my game as well. I won both first rounds in Washington and Montreal 7-6 in the third and then after that I haven’t lost a set the whole tournament.

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“I think winning those kinds of matches helps as well. I really hope I don’t face 7-6 in the first round here again even though it’s kind of a good-luck charm. Would be nice to have a two-setter, maybe.

“Tennis is such a close game. You play the best players in the world and win those kinds of matches and it gives you a lot of confidence for the next few rounds.”

You May Also Like: Del Potro Makes Winning Return To Cincinnati

It has been a marked improvement from the 20 year old as he stands at a career-best No. 7 in the Emirates ATP Rankings and third behind only Federer and Rafael Nadal in the Emirates ATP Race to London. Since bringing former World No. 1 Juan Carlos Ferrero into the coaching fray in mid-July it has brought immediate success, although the improvements have been in the works for much longer.

“I think physically I’ve improved a lot, that’s probably been my biggest improvement,” Zverev said of his development in the past year. “The serve’s improved, my returns have improved, but all small things. In general my game has become faster.”

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Nadal, Zverev Begin Campaigns Wednesday In Cincinnati

  • Posted: Aug 16, 2017

Nadal, Zverev Begin Campaigns Wednesday In Cincinnati

Spaniard undefeated against Gasquet in FedEx ATP Head2Head series

View FedEx ATP Head2Head matchups for Day 4 of the Western & Southern Open and vote for who you think will win!
Nadal vs. Gasquet | Dimitrov vs. Lopez | Zverev vs. Tiafoe

View Wednesday Schedule

Top seed and 2013 champion Rafael Nadal, No. 4 seed Alexander Zverev and No. 7 seed Grigor Dimitrov are in second-round action on Wednesday at the Western & Southern Open. In addition, there are three other seeds trying to reach the third round: No. 11 Pablo Carreno Busta, No. 15 Sam Querrey and No. 16 Gilles Muller.

Nadal brings a 14-0 head-to-head record against Richard Gasquet in the final match on Center Court. Nadal, who has a 20-10 record in Cincinnati, will return to No. 1 in the Emirates ATP Rankings next Monday for the first time since July 6, 2014. This will be the fourth different time that the 31-year-old Spaniard has ranked No. 1 in his career. Nadal will hold the record for the longest gap between debut at No. 1 and most recent date at No. 1. 

FIRST AND LAST DAY AS NO. 1

Player              Debut at No. 1             Most Recent Date at No. 1       Time in Between
Rafael Nadal   Aug. 18, 2008              Aug. 21, 2017                          9 years, 3 days
Jimmy Connors July 29, 1974               July 3, 1983                             8 years, 339 days
Roger Federer  Feb. 2, 2004                Nov. 4, 2012                            8 years, 276 days
Andre Agassi   April 10, 1995              Sept. 7, 2003                           8 years, 150 days
Pete Sampras  April 12, 1993              Nov. 19, 2000                          7 years, 221 days

Also on Center Court, #NextGenATP stars Zverev and Frances Tiafoe meet for the third time (Zverev leads 2-0). Zverev, who became the first player to qualify for the ATP Next Gen Finals, is on a 10-match winning streak after capturing his second ATP World Tour Masters 1000 title of the season in Montreal on Sunday (d. Federer). The 20-year-old German has won a personal-best five titles in 2017 and is co-leader on the ATP World Tour (w/Federer). Tiafoe, who is No. 9 in the Emirates ATP Race to Milan, is looking for the biggest win of his career, having lost his only other match against a Top 10 player to Federer in Miami.

Play begins on Center Court with Dimitrov and Feliciano Lopez squaring off for the fifth time (tied 2-2). Two of their previous meetings were decided in a third-set tiebreak, including in this same round at the 2016 Western & Southern Open. The Bulgarian prevailed in that match 57 63 76. Lopez won the last meeting in the semi-finals at London/Queen’s Club in June. Dimitrov advanced to the semi-finals here last year and Lopez is making his 15th consecutive appearance in Cincinnati (QF in 2015).

WEDNESDAY BY THE NUMBERS

26 singles players
6 seeds
5 Americans
4 lucky losers
3 qualifiers
2 wild cards
1 former and future World No. 1

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