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Experience Prevails: Bryan Brothers Capture 37th Masters 1000 Title

  • Posted: Mar 31, 2018

Experience Prevails: Bryan Brothers Capture 37th Masters 1000 Title

Americans win their 115th tour-level title

Experience and style prevailed over power and youth on Saturday in the Miami Open presented by Itau doubles final. Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan, playing in their 172nd doubles title match as team, beat Russians Karen Khachanov and Andrey Rublev 4-6, 7-6(5), 10-4.

The 39-year-old Bryan twins captured their fifth Miami title, their 37th ATP World Tour Masters 1000 crown and their 115th tour-level championship as a team. It’s their biggest title since 2016 Rome and their first tour-level crown since 2017 Atlanta.

These are the ones you want to win. If you can win these, you’ll be at the top of the [ATP] Rankings at the end of the year. We came into the year, we had some goals of winning Masters [1000], maybe mix in a few Slams. But all the greatest teams in the world we’re in this tournament, and you have to win five matches. These are harder to win, because there’s no byes. So to beat five really good teams, some of the best teams in the world, it feels really good,” Mike Bryan said.

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Khachanov, 21, and Rublev, 20, were playing in their first doubles final as a team. “Congrats to these guys. You guys were in diapers when we turned pro,” Mike Bryan said to the Russians, who both competed in singles during the 2017 Next Gen ATP Finals. “So experience got you guys today, but when you guys grow up, you’re going to be rough.”

Khachanov and Rublev both remembered times when they were younger and watched the Bryans on television. “When we were 10 years old, we were watching them play. They were one of the best, they were winning everything. And now, still, they are one of the best, and I can say that they are in good shape,” Khachanov said. “We really enjoyed playing against you guys. Well done, well deserved.”

Rublev also complimented the Bryans, who will turn 40 on 29 April. “It’s a big honour and a pleasure to play with the best doubles players in history, and to have a great fight, and I think people enjoyed the match,” Rublev said. “They are the best. That’s it.”

The Americans’ first title of the season didn’t come easy, though. Early on, it looked as if the Russians had enough force and fearlessness to knock off the Bryans, who were playing in a Masters 1000 final on home soil for the second time this month (Indian Wells, l. to Isner/Sock).

You May Also Like: Miami Rematch: Zverev Takes On Isner For Masters 1000 Glory

 

Khachanov/Rublev broke in the opening game when Rublev smashed a forehand into the open court, and on their third set point, another forehand, this one from Khachanov, gave them a one-set lead.

The Russians were content to tee off from the baseline, whereas the Bryans tried to smother the net and make the Russians hit past them – or through them.

We just tried to make them play, tried to get into some more points. Then they actually played human there at the end, which was nice. But we were just trying to throw everything at them, using all of our experience and doubles prowess to beat them and luckily, it worked,” Mike Bryan said.

In the second set, the teams traded breaks until Mike Bryan closed out the tie-break with a well-placed first serve down the T. During the Match Tie-break, five first serves and the crowd, with chants of “U-S-A! U-S-A!”, carried the Bryans to victory, their first title in nine months.

“These two youngsters are going to be brutal in a couple of years,” Bob Bryan said. “We love coming to Miami, we look forward to coming back hopefully next year –”

“Ten more years!” Rublev interjected during the trophy ceremony.

Bob Bryan agreed, “Ten more years, yes.”

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Stephens beats Ostapenko to win Miami title

  • Posted: Mar 31, 2018

US Open champion Sloane Stephens beat Latvian Jelena Ostapenko 7-6 (7-5) 6-1 to win her first Miami Open title.

American Stephens looked tense at the start and there were eight breaks of serve in the first set before the home favourite prevailed in the tie-break.

The 25-year-old world number 12 relied heavily on her defence before putting her foot on the gas in the second set.

World number five Ostapenko, 20, was left to rue an unforced error count of 48 which cost her a first win in Miami.

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It was the first ever meeting between the pair, both Grand Slam winners in the past 12 months, and their nerves showed in the opening exchanges as the first four games went against serve.

Stephens had beaten three former Grand Slam champions – Garbine Muguruza, Angelique Kerber and Victoria Azarenka – to make the final, but she struggled initially against an aggressive Ostapenko.

Stephens hit just three winners in the first set, relying on 29 unforced errors from the Latvian to scrape through the tie-break.

French Open champion Ostapenko had not dropped a set all tournament until that point, and immediately broke the American in the second set.

Florida native Stephens showed her improved speed as she continued to return Ostapenko’s hits, before finally coming alive in attack at 3-1 with a deft drop-shot and a brilliant cross-court winner as the finish line came into sight.

The American, who will enter the world’s top 10 for the first time next week, ramped up the tempo and swept through the final games to win in one hour 31 minutes.

Having lost eight games in a row following her US Open triumph, Stephens has now responded to that slump with a sixth WTA title.

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Miami Rematch: Zverev Takes On Isner For Masters 1000 Glory

  • Posted: Mar 31, 2018

Miami Rematch: Zverev Takes On Isner For Masters 1000 Glory

Zverev seeks third Masters 1000 trophy against Isner, who’s pursuing his first

If someone told you that a player who lost his first match at the BNP Paribas Open and another who had two wins on the season entering the Miami Open presented by Itau would meet for the Miami title on Sunday, would you have believed them? Probably not.

But Alexander Zverev and John Isner have earned their places in the championship match at the second ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event of the year, and one of them will leave Crandon Park having made a major statement in the tournament’s last match at the facility.

View FedEx ATP Head2Head for the following matches from the 2018 Miami Open presented by Itaú & vote for who you think will win! 
Zverev vs Isner

Zverev had not had a bad season by any means, arriving in Florida with an 8-4 record. But three of the German’s four losses came against players outside of the Top 50 in the ATP Rankings. For someone who won five ATP World Tour titles — including two Masters 1000 trophies (Rome, Montreal) — last season, it was not the most inspiring start to the year.

But after surviving a third-set tie-break in the second round against Sydney champion Daniil Medvedev, Zverev has found some of his best tennis. He had to in his next match against former World No. 3 David Ferrer, who played at an extremely high level to take the first set before the German’s game became too overwhelming. Zverev has not lost a set since, ousting No. 17 Nick Kyrgios, Indian Wells semi-finalist Borna Coric and No. 16 Pablo Carreno Busta.

“I think I’m playing okay. I’m playing well now,” Zverev said. “Hopefully I can continue so in the final, and we’ll see how that goes.”

Across the net will be a familiar face in Isner. The American, who is into his fourth Masters 1000 final (0-3), has lost all three of his FedEx ATP Head2Head meetings against Zverev, including a Round of 16 heartbreaker against him last year. Isner was unable to convert on three match points in a three tie-break thriller against the current World No. 5, who Isner called after his semi-final “the best young player this game has”.

But the 32-year-old has played by far his best tennis of the year on Key Biscayne. From the Round of 16 on, he beat World No. 2 Marin Cilic, reigning Next Gen ATP Finals champion Hyeon Chung and BNP Paribas Open champion Juan Martin del Potro — arguably the favourite in Miami — all in straight sets while facing just one break point (against Chung, which he saved).

“With my game, if I’m doing the right things, it doesn’t really matter who I’m playing,” said Isner, who won the Indian Wells doubles title with Jack Sock. “I’m going to be very tough to beat.”

The key to the match will likely be Zverev’s second serve. Against Del Potro, Isner made it clear from the first ball that for better or for worse he was going to go after almost every one of the Argentine’s second deliveries, and it paid dividends. In 2017, the American won 41 per cent of second-serve return points, according to Infosys ATP Scores & Stats, but he won 45 per cent of those points against the most in-form player on the ATP World Tour on Friday.

In Isner’s and Zverev’s three previous FedEx ATP Head2Head meetings, Isner won just 39 per cent of second-serve return points against Zverev, while the German won 49 per cent of those points against arguably the best server in the sport. Entering Miami, Isner was third all-time in having won 56 per cent of his second-serve points. 

The German will have to avoid letting the World No. 17 take the first cut at the ball in rallies and will need to elongate points as much as he can and keep Isner on the defencive, behind the baseline. If the 20-year-old can control the pace of play, a third Masters 1000 title may very well be within his reach. But if he allows the match to slip to Isner’s racquet, forehands may zoom by him like they did Del Potro. And while he has beaten the American three times, he will not be looking to his past success on Sunday. 

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“It’s going to be a completely different match. I think he’s going to hit a lot of aces, a lot of winners,” Zverev said. “But I’m ready for it, and hopefully it will be another great one.”

For Isner, it will be a successful tournament regardless of the result, as he will break back into the Top 10 of the ATP Rankings on Monday for the first time since May 2014 despite winning just two matches this year prior to Miami. But he hopes to complete his massive turnaround in form to claim his maiden Masters 1000 title after losing to Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Andy Murray in his first three finals at this level.

“If I’m not playing too confidently out there and not doing the right things on the court, I can be beaten by anybody, as well,” Isner said. “It’s been a very streaky year so far, but I’m very happy to be on the good side of that streak right now.”

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Bryans Chasing Title No. 115 in Miami Final

  • Posted: Mar 31, 2018

Bryans Chasing Title No. 115 in Miami Final

Bryans vying for fifth title in Miami; Russians competing in only their fourth ATP World Tour level event as a team

For the most successful doubles team in history, an eight-month period without lifting a trophy is akin to an extended title drought. But Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan have the opportunity Saturday to snap that unwanted streak in the final of the Miami Open presented by Itau against Russian youngsters Karen Khachanov and Andrey Rublev.

The Bryan brothers, who turn 40 next month, are going for their 37th Masters 1000 title as a team. Saturday marks their 56th ATP Masters 1000 final and third straight final after runner-up finishes at Acapulco (l. to Murray/Soares) and Indian Wells (l. to Isner/Sock).

They’ve won 114 tour-level championships but the Bryans are seeking their first title since lifting the BB&T Atlanta Open trophy in July 2017 (d. Wesley Koolhof and Artem Sitak). In the previous round, the brothers ousted Australian Open semi-finalists Ben McLachlan and Jan-Lennard Struff 7-5, 6-4. The twins have finished No. 1 in the ATP Doubles Team Rankings 10 times (2003, 2005-07, 2009-14).

The young Russians, meanwhile, are better known for their work in singles action. The 20-year-old Rublev opened his 2018 campaign with a runner-up finish in Doha (d. Monfils), while the 21-year-old Khachanov claimed the Marseille title last month (d. Pouille). Prior to this week, their best result as a team was a third-round finish at the 2017 US Open (l. to Roger-Vasselin/Benneteau). 

Make no mistake, however: The young Russians’ inexperience as a doubles duo hasn’t meant much this week in Miami. They saved a match point in the first round against Fabrice Martin and Franko Skugor, winning 6-7(3), 6-3, 15-13, then eliminated sixth seeds Jamie Murray and Bruno Soares. From there, they disposed of No. 3 seeds and Australian Open champions Oliver Marach and Mate Pavic in the quarter-finals and then needed only 44 minutes to dismiss Americans Steve Johnson and Sam Querrey, 6-3, 6-1 to book their place in the final.

Watch the doubles final live on TennisTV.com, not before 3pm ET Sunday

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Zverev Surges Past Carreno Busta Into Miami Final

  • Posted: Mar 31, 2018

Zverev Surges Past Carreno Busta Into Miami Final

German to face John Isner for the trophy

The German wunderkind does it again.

Alexander Zverev reached his third ATP World Tour Masters 1000 final with a 7-6(4), 6-2 victory over Pablo Carreno Busta in the semi-finals of the Miami Open presented by Itau. The 20-year-old produced his finest tennis of the season to surge past his Spanish opponent in 1 hour, 28 minutes.

Zverev, who last season became the youngest player since Novak Djokovic to win multiple ATP World Tour Masters 1000 titles in one season after triumphs in Rome and Montreal, looked comfortable in the cool night conditions on Crandon Park’s Stadium court, striking 30 winners to 21 unforced errors. 

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The German was dominant on serve, crushing 10 aces and winning a total of 78 per cent of service points in the match. Although Carreno Busta held his own on serve in the first set, he was unable to keep with Zverev’s relentless pressure on return and surrendered two breaks of serve in the match, both coming in the second set. 

The first set was tightly contested, with both players trying to wrestle control of points from their preferred positions on the baseline. While Carreno Busta grinded away from the back of the court, looking to control points with his forehand when the opportunity arose, Zverev ruthlessly attacked with his backhand, pushing the 26-year-old Spaniard back and opening the court for a barrage of winners.

You May Also Like: Isner Hits Del Potro Off The Court To Reach Miami Final

The two contested a high-quality first set tie-break, with early momentum swinging Carreno Busta’s way, as he surged ahead 3/0 with an early mini-break. Zverev, however, raised his level to reclaim control, hitting a series of hot-shot backhands to eventually claim it in just under an hour. From there, it was smooth sailing for the World No. 5, who closed out victory with a service game to love, sealed with an ace.

“I tried to be more aggressive. I made some winners; made some backhand winners finally in the match and found my rhythm,” said Zverev, reflecting on the tie-break. “I think after that, I started to play really well, not only in the tie-break but also the second set.

After a slow start to 2018, Zverev appears to be rounding into form. The final in Miami Open is his first of the season and first since winning the Rogers Cup title in Montreal in 2017. The win will see him rise to at least No. 4 in the ATP Rankings next week; should he win the title, he’ll return to his career-high ranking of No. 3, achieved last November. 

“I’m happy where I am right now, and hopefully it will be another great match here and then I can go to the clay court season,” said the German.

Zverev will face American John Isner, who overcame Juan Martin del Potro in two sets earlier in the day, in the final.

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