Tennis News

From around the world

Davis Cup final: France open 2-1 lead over Belgium after second day

  • Posted: Nov 25, 2017
Davis Cup Final: France v Belgium
Venue: Pierre Mauroy Stadium, Lille, France Dates: 24-26 November
Coverage: Watch live on BBC Sport website and Connected TV, 13:00-20:00 (Sat) & 12:30-20:30 (Sun)

France moved within one win of the Davis Cup title as Richard Gasquet and Pierre-Hugues Herbert sealed a doubles victory over Belgium despite never having played together before.

The duo beat Ruben Bemelmans and Joris De Loore 6-1 3-6 7-6 (6-2) 6-4 to claim a 2-1 lead in the best-of-five final.

On Friday, David Goffin won his singles tie with Lucas Pouille to put visitors Belgium ahead, with Jo-Wilfried Tsonga defeating Steve Darcis to level at 1-1.

Goffin and Tsonga meet on Sunday.

Victory for France’s world number 15 Tsonga in the 12:30 GMT match would secure the country’s 10th Davis Cup title and their first since 2001.

World number seven Goffin was runner-up at the ATP Finals in London, losing in three sets to Grigor Dimitrov on Sunday.

Pouille and Darcis will play a decisive fifth match, if needed.

France captain Yannick Noah surprisingly dropped Julien Benneteau and Nicolas Mahut on Thursday and Gasquet and Herbert rewarded him in front of a 28,500 crowd at the Pierre Mauroy stadium,

“It was a difficult decision because a lot of people did not have the same vision and even people within the group did not have the same vision,” Noah said.

“Personally, it’s good for me that they won because otherwise I would have been on a hot seat.”

France Belgium
17 (won nine, lost eight) Previous finals Two (won none, lost two)
Yannick Noah Captain Johan Van Herck
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (15) Players (world ranking) David Goffin (7)
Lucas Pouille (18) Steve Darcis (76)
Richard Gasquet (31) Ruben Bemelmans (118)
Pierre-Hugues Herbert (81) Joris de Loore (276)
Follow tennis with the BBC
Alerts: Tennis news sent to your phone
My Sport: Sign up to follow tennis news

Source link

France Earns 2-1 Lead In Davis Cup Final

  • Posted: Nov 25, 2017

France Earns 2-1 Lead In Davis Cup Final

Tsonga can clinch the title with a win over Goffin on Sunday

FRANCE 2, BELGIUM 1
Lille, France (Hard Indoor)

For a while, it appeared that Belgium was ready to shock the fans inside Stade Pierre Mauroy, as Joris De Loore and Ruben Bemelmans served for a two sets to one lead in Saturday’s doubles rubber in Lille, France. But Richard Gasquet and Pierre-Hugues Herbert battled the whole way in front of their home crowd to defeat the Belgians 6-1, 3-6, 7-6(2), 6-4 and move France within one match of capturing its 10th Davis Cup title.

Belgium, which is in its second Davis Cup Final in three years and third overall, now must win both reverse singles rubbers to triumph in the tie and claim their first victory at the event.

Yannick Noah’s charges sprinted to a 5-0 lead in the first set, even though Herbert — a Nitto ATP Finals qualifier with Nicolas Mahut — was playing with a new partner in Gasquet. But the Belgians did not go quietly, earning the second set and later serving for the third. But once the French broke back for 5-5, momentum was on their side, and they would win the first six points of the ensuing tie-break to help gain a lead of their own.

And when a De Loore forehand sailed long on match point, French fans erupted knowing their nation had earned a 2-1 lead in the tie.

The doubles rubber proved key the last time France was in the Davis Cup Final, in 2014. After entering Saturday knotted at 1-1 three years ago, a straight-sets loss gave Switzerland a 2-1 lead, which Roger Federer would use to clinch the title in Sunday’s first match against Gasquet.

This time around, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga will have an opportunity to clinch the title for France when he plays David Goffin in the tie’s fourth rubber on Sunday. The top-ranked player from each nation will clash for the seventh time, with Tsonga leading their FedEx ATP Head2Head series 4-2. Three of their matches on the ATP World Tour have gone three sets, and the pair has split their two meetings on indoor hard courts. In their only match this season, Tsonga defeated Goffin in the Rotterdam final to claim the trophy at the ABN Amro World Tennis Tournament 4-6, 6-4, 6-1.

If Goffin manages to extend the final to a live fifth rubber, his compatriot Steve Darcis is scheduled to play Lucas Pouille. 

 

Source link

ATP University Reaches 1,000 Graduates

  • Posted: Nov 25, 2017

ATP University Reaches 1,000 Graduates

Players learn about the inner workings of the ATP World Tour and tips to apply to their personal and professional careers

The end of the ATP World Tour season is rewarding for those who qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals. The top eight singles players and doubles tandems who earn the most points in the Emirates ATP Race To London guarantee their spot in the season finale at The O2. You can say they lead the tour class for the year.

But elsewhere in the same city, ATP University was just beginning. A group of 25 players graduated in this year’s London session across the river at the Marriott County Hall, bringing the total number of rising stars who have gone through the tutorial on life on the ATP World Tour to more than 1,000 graduates since the program’s inception.  

The weekend opened up with former World No. 2 and 1998 Nitto ATP Finals Champion Alex Corretja speaking to the group and offering advice based on his own journey. The players also listened and participated in presentations covering: Overview of the ATP, ATP Tournaments, Media Training, Nutrition, Player Relations, Social Media, Medical Services, ATP Communications, ATP Marketing, Rules and Officiating, Savings and Investments, Security, Communicated Threats, Anti-Corruption and Anti-Doping.

Outside of the classroom, the players enjoyed group dinners and a trip to the Nitto ATP Finals on Sunday to watch the doubles and singles finals.

At the end of the three days of sessions, the ATP IQ test was won by 23-year-old Canadian Filip Peliwo, who claimed the coveted GoPro prize, with Matt Reid finishing in second place and Stefano Napolitano in third place.

The London 2017 graduates included Peliwo, Reid, Napolitano, Felix Auger-Aliassime, Attila Balazs, Salvatore Caruso, Steven Diez, Mao-Xin Gong, Yannick Hanfmann, Roman Jebavy, Enrique Lopez-Perez, Dino Marcan, Maximilian Marterer, Nikola Mektic, Hugo Nys, Sebastian Ofner, Vaclav Safranek, Mohamed Safwat, Antonio Sancic, Brayden Schnur, Max Schnur, Denis Shapovalov, Andrei Vasilevski, Di Wu and Ze Zhang.

Source link

India Builds Momentum With Challenger Success

  • Posted: Nov 25, 2017

India Builds Momentum With Challenger Success

Two-week Indian swing concludes Saturday in Bengaluru

As players continue to rest and recharge following another exhilarating season, the focus is slowly shifting to 2018. The transition is underway, but there are still trophies to be won on the ATP Challenger Tour this week. The nation of India is making the most of its time in the spotlight.

The country is rapidly rising in the pro tennis landscape and their national programme has been surging in the final weeks of the season. With a pair of Challengers gaining in popularity and the nation’s ATP World Tour event finding a new home in January, enthusiasm for the game is surging. 

Last week, home hope Yuki Bhambri prevailed at the $50,000 event in Pune and the two-week swing concludes on Saturday at the $100,000 tournament in Bengalaru. While 25-year-old Bhambri has already cemented himself as one of India’s stars, its budding #NextGenATP – 20-year-old Sumit Nagal – is appearing in his first Challenger final in Bengalaru. Could the nation celebrate back-to-back champions on home soil? Bhambri hopes it is the start of an even bigger movement.

“It’s always great to play at home,” Bhambri told ATPWorldTour.com. “We travel so much and it’s nice to compete at home and play in conditions that we are comfortable with. I’ve always said that India needs a few Challengers and Pune is the one that has been constant in the calendar. We have many players ranked in the 300s and 400s who are waiting to make the jump and every time we’ve had Challengers at home, Indians have done well. Hopefully we can have more higher-level Challengers over here.”

Already the Silicon Valley of India, boasting the highest number of software companies in the country, Pune is fast becoming its tennis mecca, with the professional circuit growing long roots in the city. The KPIT-MSLTA Challenger celebrated its fourth edition, with a pair of native sons contesting the final (Bhambri d. Ramanathan), and was a prelude to the relocated ATP World Tour 250 event in January. The Tata Open Maharashtra welcomes a new era of Indian tennis after moving from Chennai.

“I consider Pune to be like a second home,” decorated Indian doubles star and former No. 3 Rohan Bopanna told ATPWorldTour.com. “I did my training here back in the day when I was 15 years old. There are lots of tennis enthusiasts in the city and I’m really happy that it will have a big tournament. It gives opportunities for youngsters to watch the top players as well.”

“I’m looking forward to coming back for the ATP World Tour event,” Bhambri added. “I’ve played for many years when it was in Chennai and I’m sure Pune will be a successful event. It’s a little cooler than Chennai, so players will enjoy that. The stadium is great and it deserves these two events. There are a lot of top guys coming for the 250, so I hope it is just as successful as the Challenger.”

Bhambri’s victory in Pune marked his first ATP Challenger Tour title in two years, as he continues his comeback following an elbow injury that derailed his 2016 campaign. Also a quarter-finalist at the Citi Open in August, the New Delhi native carries significant momentum into the new year and is projected to rise to a year-end Top 120 position, as the highest-ranked Indian in the Emirates ATP Rankings.

“It’s been a great year for me. I’ve played a lot of matches and a lot on the Challenger Tour, which helps in transitioning to the ATP events. Obviously Washington was a big moment and showed that I can win some matches on the ATP World Tour, and hopefully I can build on that next year.”

Bangalore

Meanwhile, in Bengalaru, Nagal will face British 19-year-old Jay Clarke in Saturday’s championship. It will be the first Challenger final for both players, who are the youngest in the Top 400 for their respective countries. Nagal is steadily mounting his assault on the Emirates ATP Rankings and is projected to rise at least 50 spots on Monday. A title would see him surpass his career-high of No. 261.

Tourism is an integral aspect of life in Karnataka – the state of Bengalaru – with the Mysore Palace and Virupaksha Temple its chief attractions. The proud culture of 1.3 billion people has been infused in its sporting identity and tennis is no exception. Fans packed the tournament all week, with Nagal stunning top seed Blaz Kavcic in the quarter-finals and routing Bhambri 6-4, 6-0 in the semis.

Bangalore

“Constantly having these Challengers in India helps,” Bopanna added. “And the Indian players get better competing at home, since we don’t have many tournaments. But it’s nice to see the sponsors coming out and helping tennis as well. That’s a big part in improving the game. Pune and Bengalaru have always had a big tennis culture and it’s nice to see it continuing. 

“Bengalaru is having a Challenger for the very first time. I live there and even this time of year the weather is really nice. Hopefully we can have even more Challengers and the Indian players will benefit from that… Tennis is a sport where you travel a lot and are constantly going to many different countries, so with India on the map, it will just help tennis in general.”

Bangalore

Source link