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Troicki, Stakhovsky, Darcis Aim To Qualify For Roland Garros Main Draw

  • Posted: May 22, 2019

Troicki, Stakhovsky, Darcis Aim To Qualify For Roland Garros Main Draw

Garcia-Lopez looks to maintain record of main draw participation since 2004

Three ATP Tour veterans — Viktor Troicki, Sergiy Stakhovsky and Steve Darcis — will all be bidding to qualify on Thursday to compete in the Roland Garros main draw for a 10th time.

Former World No. 12 Troicki overcame Australia’s Jason Kubler 6-1, 7-6(9) in 86 minutes, saving two set points at 7/8 and 8/9 in the second set tie-break, on Wednesday. The Serbian will now prepare to face France’s Alexandre Muller in the qualifying round.

Sixth-seeded Ukrainian Stakhovsky struck 43 winners to beat Uladzimir Ignatik of Belarus 7-5, 6-4, saving one set point at 5/6 in the second set tie-break for a match against Russia’s Alexey Vatutin.

Belgium’s Steve Darcis, 35, recorded a 3-6, 6-1, 6-4 victory over Corentin Denolly of France in one hour and 44 minutes to set up a clash against Italian No. 13 seed Stefano Travaglia, who was a 6-4, 6-4 victor over Nino Serdarusic of Croatia.

Top-seeded American Tennys Sandgren, who is aiming to play in the main draw for the third straight year, swept past Germany’s Mats Moraing 6-2, 6-2 in 60 minutes, winning 40 of 46 first-service points for a match against Mathias Bourgue of France.

Spanish 12th seed Guillermo Garcia-Lopez struck 38 winners, including 15 aces, in a hard-fought 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 win over Serbia’s Pedja Krstin in one hour and 46 minutes. Garcia-Lopez has played in the main draw ever since his debut in 2004, including a career-best run to the fourth round (l. to Monfils). He’ll play German No. 23 seed Oscar Otte on Thursday.

Elsewhere, Dustin Brown was solid on serve — winning 28 of 31 first-service points—and hitting 31 winners in a 6-2, 7-5 victory over Emilio Gomez of Ecuador in 69 minutes. The German next faces No. 31 seed Salvatore Caruso of Italy.

Lukas Rosol, the Czech No. 19 seed who has not played in the main draw since 2016, blasted past American Marcos Giron 6-4, 6-4 with 29 winners to play Yannick Hanfmann in the qualifying round. Swiss fourth seed Henri Laaksonen, who has been unlucky in qualifying on four occasions, grafted for a 4-6, 6-4, 6-3 win over Facundo Arguello of Argentina in one hour and 55 minutes.

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Dzumhur Ousts Wawrinka In Geneva

  • Posted: May 22, 2019

Dzumhur Ousts Wawrinka In Geneva

Dzumhur to face Albot in quarter-finals

Damir Dzumhur put a quick end to Stan Wawrinka’s hopes of winning a third title at the Banque Eric Sturdza Geneva Open, defeating the second-seeded Swiss 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 in his second-round opening match Wednesday. Wawrinka had won the Geneva title in 2016-17.

Wawrinka led 3-0 to start the decisive set, but Dzumhur countered to win the next five games. He closed out the victory on serve in just under two hours. The 57th-ranked Dzumhur, a qualifier at the ATP 250 clay-court event, also rallied from a set down to defeat Feliciano Lopez in the first round. 

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“It looked good, but it didn’t finish well. It was a tough match out there for sure,” said Wawrinka. “Again, this is typical the match that I’m still losing, still missing. I know I’m playing well, I’m moving well, but maybe I think a bit too much with what I want to do, how I want to do it, and I don’t play simple enough. Those little moments in the second set and third set turned the match. That’s what I’m working forward to change up.

“Even if I lost today, in general I’m playing well, so I need to keep pushing myself, keep trying to find a way to win those tight match, and I know that things can change quickly.”

Dzumhur will next meet fifth-seeded Moldovan Radu Albot, who edged past Juan Ignacio Londero of Argentina 6-1, 6-7(3), 6-4 for a place in his third ATP Tour quarter-final of the year.

“There is no easy game in tennis,” said Albot, the Delray Beach finalist (d. Evans) in February. “It was a tough one. It was a good match to watch for spectators, with lots of rallies.”

Japan’s Taro Daniel knocked out third seed Cristian Garin, one of the most consistent clay-court performers of 2019, 6-2, 4-6, 6-4 in just over two hours. Daniel took a 3-0 lead in the first set and broke in the opening game of the decider against this season’s Houston and Munich champion, who is now 19-6 on red dirt.

Daniel will need to beat another Chilean, Nicolas Jarry, a 6-3, 6-3 winner over American Denis Kudla, if he wishes to reach his first ATP Tour semi-final since August 2018 in Winston-Salem (l. to Medvedev).

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Elsewhere, Argentina’s Federico Delbonis proved to be too strong for fourth seed and defending champion Marton Fucsovics of Hungary 6-4, 6-2. He next meets Spain’s Albert Ramos-Vinolas, who reached the Geneva quarter-finals for the first time in four years by saving all four break points he faced to beat Joao Sousa of Portugal 6-0, 6-3 in 77 minutes.

“I played really good today,” said Ramos-Vinolas. “I’m really happy. I was really concentrating during all the match, and I think I played a great level, maybe I played the same level as two years ago, when I was playing really good.”

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Read & Watch: Tsonga Happy To Pass Lyon Test

  • Posted: May 22, 2019

Read & Watch: Tsonga Happy To Pass Lyon Test

Former champion to face Basilashvili or Lamasine

Jo-Wilfried Tsonga extended his perfect record at the Open Parc Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes Lyon on Wednesday with a comeback win over Canadian qualifier Steven Diez.

The 2017 champion, who improved to 6-0 at the ATP 250 tournament, came within two points of losing, but ultimately booked his place n the quarter-finals with a 3-6, 7-6(2), 6-3 win over two hours and 42 minutes. The penultimate game lasted 14 minutes, with Tsonga failing to convert five match points. He finally closed out with a forehand drop shot winner.

“It was good for me to play a long match like this,” said Tsonga. “I haven’t played a match this long for a while. I am not playing my best level, but I am giving everything mentally and that gives me confidence.”

Diez, who is No. 262 in the ATP Rankings, notched the biggest win of his career in the Lyon first round by beating No. 82-ranked Bernard Tomic. Former World No. 5 Tsonga, winner at the Open Sud de France (d. Herbert) in February, is currently World No. 85 – 14 months on from left knee surgery.

Tsonga will now prepare to face top-seeded Georgian Nikoloz Basilashvili, a semi-finalist in Lyon last year, who defeated French lucky loser Tristan Lamasine 7-5, 7-5 one hour and 36 minutes. Basilashvili led 4-1 in the second set before coming through a tense finale.

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Djokovic, Nadal, Federer Lead 2019 Roland Garros Seeds

  • Posted: May 22, 2019

Djokovic, Nadal, Federer Lead 2019 Roland Garros Seeds

Four #NextGenATP players also seeded at clay-court major

Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer are the top three seeds for a second straight Grand Slam tournament. World No. 1 Djokovic will take his place on the top line of the 2019 Roland Garros draw, while 11-time champion Rafael Nadal will lead contenders in the bottom half as the No. 2 seed.

Third seed Federer, playing at the clay-court major for the first time since 2015, will need to wait until the draw ceremony on Thursday evening in Paris to see if he falls in Djokovic or Nadal’s half of the draw. Dominic Thiem, who handed Nadal a defeat en route the Barcelona title, will be in the other half as the No. 4 seed.

Alexander Zverev, Stefanos Tsitsipas, Kei Nishikori, Juan Martin del Potro, and a pair of recent first-time ATP Masters 1000 champions – Fabio Fognini (Monte-Carlo) and Karen Khachanov (Paris) – round out the Top 10 seeds.

Four #NextGenATP players will also be seeded at Roland Garros, with 20-year-old Tsitsipas leading the way at No. 6. Denis Shapovalov is No. 21, followed by Australian Alex de Minaur at No. 22 and 18-year-old Felix Auger-Aliassime at No. 26. 

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1.   Novak Djokovic
2.   Rafael Nadal
3.   Roger Federer
4.   Dominic Thiem
5.   Alexander Zverev
6.   Stefanos Tsitsipas
7.   Kei Nishikori
8.   Juan Martín del Potro
9.   Fabio Fognini
10.   Karen Khachanov
11.   Marin Cilic
12.   Daniil Medvedev
13.   Borna Coric
14.   Gael Monfils
15.   Milos Raonic
16.   Nikoloz Basilashvili
17.   Marco Cecchinato
18.   Diego Schwartzman
19.   Roberto Bautista Agut
20.   Guido Pella
21.   Denis Shapovalov
22.   Alex de Minaur
23.   Lucas Pouille
24.   Fernando Verdasco
25.   Stan Wawrinka
26.   Felix Auger-Aliassime
27.   Gilles Simon
28.   David Goffin
29.   Kyle Edmund
30.   Matteo Berrettini
31.   Dusan Lajovic
32.   Laslo Djere

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Federer set for French Open return as Nadal eyes 12th title

  • Posted: May 22, 2019
2019 French Open
Venue: Roland Garros, Paris Dates: 26 May – 9 June
Coverage: Live text and radio commentary on selected matches on the BBC Sport website and app.

Roger Federer returns to the French Open for the first time in four years to challenge Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic’s bids for more records.

Nadal is chasing a record-extending 12th Roland Garros title, while Djokovic can become the first man in the Open era to hold all four Grand Slam titles at once for a second time.

Federer, 37, missed the 2016 event with a back injury and skipped the past two clay-court swings to preserve his body.

The event in Paris begins on Sunday.

Swiss Federer, a 20-time Grand Slam champion, reached the Madrid Open quarter-finals this month in his first clay-court tournament in three years.

“I feel good about my game. I feel good on the clay,” he said.

Federer appears to have shaken off the leg injury that forced him to pull out of his Italian Open quarter-final last week, coming through a practice session on the Philippe Chatrier show court at Roland Garros on Tuesday without any strapping.

Serbia’s world number one Djokovic is expected to provide the sternest challenge to Spaniard Nadal, while American Serena Williams will aim for a record-equalling 24th Grand Slam singles title in the women’s singles – if she is fit.

Former world number one Andy Murray is not playing as he continues his recovery from a hip operation, leaving Johanna Konta and Kyle Edmund as Britain’s leading hopes.

  • From war to Wimbledon – how Belgrade bombings shaped Djokovic

In-form Konta leads British charge

Konta has raced up the rankings – and earned herself a seeding in Paris – on the back of an impressive clay-court season in which she has reached the final of the Morocco Open and Italian Open.

The British number one, who will be seeded 26th, has lost in the first round in her four previous French Opens.

Konta, 28, is the only British woman with direct entry into the main draw after 22-year-old Katie Boulter pulled out with a back injury.

British number two Heather Watson and number five Katie Swan must qualify to reach the main draw.

Edmund, Britain’s leading man, has suffered five successive first-round exits this season to drop to 31st in the rankings from 14th at the start of the year.

Cameron Norrie, who this week reached a career-high ranking of 41, and Dan Evans, who has qualified directly for a Grand Slam for the first time in two years, join Edmund in the main draw.

Britain’s Jamie Murray has won six Grand Slam doubles titles, although he has yet to reach a French Open final, where his best results are a quarter-final in the men’s doubles in 2017 and a semi-final in the mixed in 2011.

While some of the entry lists have not yet been published, other Britons to look out for are Joe Salisbury, Dom Inglot, Luke Bambridge, Ken and Neal Skupski in the doubles and Gordon Reid and Alfie Hewett in the wheelchair events.

Nadal ‘finally’ wins a title

Beating Nadal, the 17-time Grand Slam champion, on clay is widely considered the ultimate challenge in men’s tennis and, once again, he is the favourite at Roland Garros.

The 32-year-old triumphed in Paris last year to become only the second player to win the same Grand Slam 11 times, following Margaret Court at the Australian Open between 1960 and 1973.

Despite dominating clay-court tournaments in the build-up to the French Open in previous years, Nadal had not reached a final this year until his triumph at the Italian Open on Sunday.

He did not drop a set on his way to the final, where he beat Djokovic 6-0 4-6 6-1 to claim his first title since August.

“You were asking for titles. Finally, I have a title,” Nadal said after his 81st tournament win.

“For me, the most important thing is feeling myself playing well and healthy, with the energy that I need. If that happens, the experience is that I’m going to fight for titles sooner or later.

“I’m happy to reach that level in the last tournament before a Grand Slam.”

Click to see content: French_open_mens_champions

Who can stop the King of Clay?

Top seed Djokovic, 32, is bidding to hold all four Grand Slam titles for the second time in his career – after following Australian great Rod Laver in becoming only the second man to achieve the feat in 2016.

The 15-time Grand Slam champion, who won in Paris in 2016, warmed up for the tournament by winning the Madrid Open and reaching the Rome final.

“Nadal, number one favourite, without a doubt, then everyone else,” Djokovic said.

Djokovic also identified Austrian fourth seed Dominic Thiem and Italian 11th seed Fabio Fognini, both of whom beat Nadal on their way to winning the Barcelona Open and Monte Carlo Masters titles respectively, as possible threats.

Greece’s Stefanos Tsitsipas, 20, is the rising star on the ATP Tour and, having beaten Federer in Melbourne and Nadal in Madrid, the sixth seed will be fancied to make a challenge in Paris.

Serena has been ‘eating grass’ but will she be fit?

Williams, 37, made her Grand Slam comeback from maternity leave at the French Open last year but, after reaching the Wimbledon and US Open finals, has struggled with a persistent knee injury.

The problem forced the 23-time Grand Slam champion to pull out of the Italian Open last Tuesday before her match against sister Venus.

Since losing to Karolina Pliskova in the Australian Open quarter-finals in January, Williams has played in only three tournaments – Indian Wells, Miami and Rome – and has withdrawn from all of them.

“I’ve just been on this diet – it’s been awful,” Williams, who has practised at Roland Garros this week, told the official tournament website.

“When you’re sedentary, it becomes hard to manage your body. So you have to eat grass. That’s kind of what I did. It was a nightmare.

“But it worked and paid off. I feel like I’m taking it one day at a time. I’ve been really putting in the hours in terms of keeping my cardio as much as I could with a knee injury, which is really impressive how I’ve been able to do it.”

Halep looking to enjoy title defence

Romania’s Simona Halep says she has “no expectations” as she prepares to defend her maiden Grand Slam title.

Halep, then the world number one, beat American Sloane Stephens in last year’s final after losing in three previous Slam showpieces.

Only five women have successfully defended their titles at the French Open – Margaret Court, Chris Evert, Monica Seles, Steffi Graf and Justine Henin.

“I have no expectations because it’s the first time when I have to defend a trophy at a Grand Slam,” third seed Halep said.

“I just want to be relaxed, enjoy the tournament and try to win some matches. Nothing more.”

Japan’s world number one Naomi Osaka, who became the first woman since Williams in 2015 to win back-to-back Grand Slams with victory at the Australian Open, goes into her first major as the top seed.

The 21-year-old has never gone past the third round in Paris, but has reached at least the quarter-finals in each of her three clay-court tournaments this year.

Czech Petra Kvitova, who lost to Osaka in the Melbourne final, won her second WTA title of the year with victory on clay in Stuttgart last month, while Karolina Pliskova and Kiki Bertens of the Netherlands are also among the in-form players.

BBC coverage

There will be a selected radio commentary on the BBC Sport website and app, and there will also be daily live text commentaries – featuring all the best images and social media from Paris.

You can also follow BBC Tennis on Twitter and the BBC Sport Instagram account for more behind-the-scenes coverage from Roland Garros.

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Read & Watch: Shapovalov Fights Back On Lyon Debut

  • Posted: May 22, 2019

Read & Watch: Shapovalov Fights Back On Lyon Debut

Canadian to face Paire in last eight

Third seed Denis Shapovalov came within two points of losing on his Open Parc Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes Lyon debut on Wednesday, but fought back to beat Ugo Humbert of France 2-6, 7-6(3), 6-2 in two hours and 16 minutes. Humbert led by a set and 5-4, with Shapovalov serving at 30/30 before the #NextGenATP Canadian started his comeback for a place in the quarter-finals.

“I knew I was going into the match coming up against a very tough player, as he has played well all year,” said Shapovalov. “I have seen him a lot, and he has great potential. I wasn’t feeling it for a set-and-a-half, then once things clicked for me, I felt able to dictate the points and play better.”

Shapovalov will next meet France’s Benoit Paire, the Grand Prix Hassan II champion (d. Andujar) in April. Paire was a 6-4, 6-3 winner over Pablo Cuevas of Uruguay in 68 minutes and is now 9-3 on clay this season.

View Lyon Singles & Doubles Draws

Second-seeded Spaniard Roberto Bautista Agut drew on his big-match experience to knock out French wild card Corentin Moutet 4-6, 6-4, 6-3 in two hours and 20 minutes. Elsewhere, American Taylor Fritz reached his second ATP Tour quarter-final of the year (also the ASB Classic in Auckland) without hitting a ball when sixth-seeded French wild card Richard Gasquet withdrew ahead of their match due to back pain.

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Swan and Watson win French Open qualifying rounds

  • Posted: May 22, 2019
2019 French Open
Venue: Roland Garros, Paris Dates: 20 May-9 June
Coverage: Live text and radio commentary on selected matches on the BBC Sport website and app

Britain’s Katie Swan and Heather Watson are through to the second round of French Open qualifying after winning their opening matches on Wednesday.

Swan, who is ranked 208th, impressed in her Roland Garros debut with a straight sets 6-4 6-2 win over second seed Jil Teichmann.

Fifth seed Watson beat the Netherlands’ Bibiane Schoofs 6-2 4-6 6-4.

Swan will face China’s Wang Xiyu in the second round, with Watson set to take on Greece’s Valentini Grammatikopoulou.

Earlier this month, 21-year-old Teichmann won the Prague Open to seal her inaugural WTA title.

Swan is hoping to reach her first Grand Slam main draw outside Wimbledon, while Watson is bidding to come through qualifying at Roland Garros for the fourth time in her career.

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Novak Djokovic: How 1999 Nato bombings of Belgrade shaped his career

  • Posted: May 22, 2019

Looking up from the street, this concrete, angular building looks no different from the many Brutalist tower blocks dotted around Belgrade.

As you go inside, a prison-style gate with vertical metal bars guards the white front door of the first flat on the left.

This was the home of Novak Djokovic’s grandfather Vladimir.

Here, the world’s leading male tennis player sheltered as a small child while Nato bombed the Serbian capital between March and June 1999.

When the head-pounding drone of air-raid sirens rang out, families spanning several generations, along with neighbours and friends from nearby blocks, all filed down the stairs, through several steel doors and into the basement.

This was a formative time for Djokovic, now a 15-time Grand Slam singles champion and the man who will hold all four major titles for the second time in his career if he wins the forthcoming French Open.

As he celebrated his 12th birthday in May 1999, a decade-long crisis was tearing the Balkans apart and Belgrade was a focal point. Twenty years on, there is still tension over how Nato bombed Serbia for 11 weeks in an effort to push Serbian forces out of Kosovo, accusing them of atrocities against ethnic Albanians.

“When they sounded the alarm and the planes started to buzz, you never knew where the bombs would hit,” says Djordjo Milenic, an elderly man who was friends with Djokovic’s grandfather and lives in the adjacent block.

“They bombed whatever they wanted. ‘Collateral damage,’ they said. They bombed bridges, hospitals, pregnant women died.”

His voice trails off. “It’s hard, it’s hard.”

We are in Banjica, a residential area about 7km south of downtown Belgrade. Locals describe it as “an average suburb”, populated by working-class families from a Serbian ethnic background who live in moderately cheap high-rise flats.

Djokovic’s grandfather Vlada, as he was known by those close to him, lived in a two-bedroom flat here until his death in 2012.

Now it is unoccupied, owned – according to neighbours, at least – by one of Djokovic’s aunts, who they think lives in Switzerland.

Nevertheless, it will always be intrinsically linked to the story of how Djokovic rose from humble beginnings to become one of the greatest tennis players that has ever lived.

Djokovic was here with his widowed grandfather because his parents, father Srdjan and mother Dijana, spent most of their time away from Belgrade as they toiled to provide for their three sons – eldest Novak and his two younger brothers Marko and Djordje.

That meant spending most of the year in Kopaonik, a mountain resort near Kosovo, more than four hours’ drive from Belgrade.

By day they gave skiing lessons, by night they served pizza in the restaurant they owned. Srdjan and Dijana worked tirelessly to make ends meet while funding Novak’s burgeoning tennis career.

Not wishing to disrupt their children’s education, the Djokovic boys stayed with granddad Vlada.

“The basement is practically where we stayed. Everyone who could fit here they came, there was no limitation,” Novak said in an American TV documentary made by CBS in 2011.

“We were waking up every single night at 2am or 3am for two and a half months because of the bombings,” he said of those 78 days in 1999.

“In a way these experiences made me a champion, it made us tougher, made us more hungry for success.”

Many people around Banjica know the Djokovic family. Some shared the basement where they sheltered.

Milica Milivojevic is a 31-year-old woman who lives upstairs in Djokovic’s old block.

She says there were about “20 or 30” people inside the shelter, remembering it smelt of “moisture and humidity”.

“We heard bombs, but not while we were in the shelter,” she says.

“From outside we could hear bombs falling on Avala (a hill on the edge of Belgrade targeted because there was a telecommunications tower).

“Friends gathered in the basement, especially younger people. We played some board games – Monopoly or Risk – some older kids were drinking or doing drugs.”

She starts laughing: “A lot was going on.”

Of course there is no suggestion Djokovic, a child prodigy who had already appeared on national television proclaiming his dream was to win Wimbledon, took part in the ‘edgier’ adolescent activities.

He was too busy pursuing his dream of becoming world number one.

Bogdan Obradovic has seen a lot in a life which has been dominated by tennis and politics.

A promising junior player who moved into coaching aged 18, Obradovic was approached by Djokovic’s father Srdjan to guide his 10-year-old boy.

Later, Obradovic went on to become Serbia’s Davis Cup captain – leading them to one of the nation’s greatest sporting triumphs when the team containing Djokovic won the trophy in 2010. Now 52, he serves as a member of Serbia’s parliament.

“Novak’s father and I had some mutual friends and they told him I was a good coach and could maybe help him,” he says.

“We did one practice and I was completely shocked.

“He was completely prepared. He was warming up, he had a bottle of water, a banana, a towel, everything. I had never seen that from a kid so young.”

Obradovic knew he was a player – at that time “weighing around 25kg” – destined for the top.

During the bombings he says they worked together “every day”, going around Belgrade in search of courts they didn’t have to pay to use.

“By that time people knew Novak and he was already popular so they helped him a lot. We trained at many different clubs,” he says. “It was improvisation but that’s how we did it.

“You know Only Fools and Horses? We love it here. And that is actually our mentality. We do everything through fun. And we always think, like Del Boy, our luck will change.

“We were in a terrible situation during the bombings. You hear the sound and see on the news, people were killed and everything is destroyed. But you can do nothing, and we found a way how to make fun.

“I was with Novak all the time, we practised together and every day was like normal. He was focused but having so much fun at that time. He laughed so much.”

Djokovic often trained at the Partizan Tennis Club, an arm of the multi-sport body which also includes the 27-time national champion football team, plus successful basketball, water polo and volleyball sides.

Dusan Grujic has been the Partizan president for 22 years and says this is the club Djokovic “has in his heart”.

“When you spend 11 years somewhere, like he did here, I don’t know how we could say anything different,” he adds.

“Novak made his first steps at Kopaonik, but that was only for a short time. When he was six, he came to Partizan. We provided him with everything we could and everything he wanted.”

Photos of their greatest son, along with other alumni including 2008 French Open champion Ana Ivanovic, line the walls of a modest clubhouse.

One shows a boyish Novak wearing a Partizan baseball cap and scarf, alongside childhood friend Ivanovic. Djokovic’s neighbour Djordjo Milenic says he used to tell grandfather Vlada that Novak “should marry her”.

Another shows Djokovic at 16, wearing the club’s black and white stripes as he concentrates intently on gearing up a double-handed backhand, a shot he has since honed into one of his most potent.

The clubhouse is being given its annual lick of paint on the day we arrive. Chairs and tables are stacked in the middle of the room while dust sheets cover the windows.

Dragan Gavrilovic – one of the members responsible for maintaining the 75-year-old club – is more than happy to down tools and talk tennis.

Pulling out a cigarette with white emulsion flicked over his fingers, he says: “When Novak was still small, from about 12 to 15, he used to come to play here and people from all over the city came to watch.

“They knew – and we knew – he was destined for big things. Everybody wanted to see him. They wanted to see history being born.”

Back in Banjica, behind his old apartment block, a colourful mural shows Djokovic flanked on one side by the patriarchal grandfather he doted on, childhood coach Jelena Gencic on the other.

Locals wander past without blinking an eye. Some may not even realise Djokovic lived there, but not many.

A woman sweeping up leaves and dirt outside the one flat which has a garden stops to speak with us. “Yes, you should write about Novak, you should,” she says.

“He’s like from heaven. He’s not human, yet he is a modest, normal guy.”

She has lived here for 40 years. She points to the concrete football pitch behind us, where a few stray dogs are sleeping in the sun.

“That’s where he used to play football. When he had time, of course, because he trained so much.

“Then he became famous, but he would still come here as often as he could, if it was for one day or five minutes.”

The woman is reluctant to give her name and disappears back into her yard saying she doesn’t want to talk any more.

But she returns a few minutes later, clearly unable to stop herself sharing the pride and love she has for Djokovic.

She was one of the many who spent nights down in the basement bomb shelter. Once that subject comes up, she retreats again.

“Let’s not talk about that,” she says. “It’s not nice to talk about what your neighbours did in such a delicate time.”

Yet she adds: “When we were there I told the younger ones to run, to leave the country. At that time we thought they will not bomb the civilians. But they did.”

Nato – the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, the world’s most powerful regional defence alliance – began its air strikes against Serbia on 24 March 1999.

Accused of ethnic cleansing in Kosovo, Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic’s regime was targeted in an attempt to force their troops out and allow international peacekeepers in, after diplomatic efforts failed.

The bombing campaign ended on 10 June 1999, when Yugoslav troops began to withdraw from Kosovo.

Nato said intervention was necessary to “halt the humanitarian catastrophe that was unfolding”. But a number of attacks were “unlawful”, according to Human Rights Watch – an independent organisation which investigates rights abuses across the world.

Wounds still run deep in Serbia, and resentment towards Nato – and the countries which make it up – is prevalent on the streets of Belgrade.

“We are trying to be ‘part of Europe’. How come, when we are now part of Europe? How will they accept us, when we are European right now?” Djordjo Milenic, Djokovic’s old neighbour, says.

“They bombed us and now they say we are friends. That’s all organised by America and Britain.”

Kosovo especially remains a major topic. A political message outside the Partizan Tennis Club – one of many such slogans daubed around Belgrade – reads: ‘Kosovo is a holy Serbian land.’

Many feel the ‘Western’ media are obsessed with portraying a negative stereotype of the country as aggressive, unfriendly or hostile. That is another recurring topic of conversation in the city. And yet many others would rather move on.

“People think we are bad people,” says George Mitic, a 37-year-old taxi driver.

“But they don’t come and see for themselves. If you only watch the news you have a completely different view.”

He tells a story from the previous night.

“I picked up some Scandinavians from the airport, they had come for business. They said they were scared.

“I said, ‘why are you scared?’ They replied, ‘because you’ve had war here’.”

“I told them we are open and friendly people.”

Sasa Ozmo, a journalist for Sport Klub, describes Djokovic as a “national hero” who deeply understands the responsibility he has of promoting the nation’s image across the world.

“But not only is he an ambassador outwards to the world, but he is also an ambassador within,” he says.

“For example, there is a huge rivalry with Croatia – obviously there was the war and things stay fresh – but Novak is always very public about his support for the Croatian national football team.

“That doesn’t sit well with a lot of people here, but he is trying to change perspective. He’s really good at that responsibility.”

Recently Djokovic finished top of a national newspaper poll which asked young people in Serbia who they looked up to the most.

“He is a huge role model. We’ve had some really huge athletes who have inspired generations but they haven’t inspired people in the same way Novak has done,” Ozmo adds.

“For example, we have a basketball player called Vlade Divac who is also a huge global ambassador and played in the NBA during the bombings.

“But Novak’s range is much wider – he is a ‘catch all’ hero in Serbia. The way his personality is he can identify with people.

“Tennis is the country’s third sport behind football and basketball – but Novak is the most popular.”

  • What is Nato?
  • Serbia country profile
  • Nato and Serbia put bombing behind them

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Roger, Rafa Lead The Way In These Serve & Return Scenarios

  • Posted: May 22, 2019

Roger, Rafa Lead The Way In These Serve & Return Scenarios

Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers examines the Top 10 in the ATP Rankings when serving at 0/30 and returning at 0/15

Tennis has traditionally been a game of feel. How does the court feel? How heavy do the balls feel? How hot does the weather feel today? How do I feel going into the match?

So, it’s time to take a ‘feel’ test.

You have got to pick one of the following two scenarios that you feel would give yourself the best chance of winning the game. Do you feel more confident winning a game when you are serving with the score at 0/30, or is it better to be returning serve with the server trailing 0/15?

On one hand you are serving, but still four points from the game and your opponent is only two points away from breaking you. On the other hand, you are returning but you already have the first point in the bag and the server is still at love.

If you answered it feels better to be the returner at 0/15 rather than the server at 0/30, your feel for the better situation would be wrong.

An Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers analysis of the current Top 10 in the ATP Rankings winning games while serving at 0/30 and returning at 0/15, from the 2015 season up to the 2019 Internazionali BNL d’Italia, shows that serving at 0/30 is definitely the higher percentage option.

Current Top 10 Average: Winning The Game
Holding from 0/30 = 49.1% (1627/3316)
Breaking from 0/15 = 41.6% (4948/11891)
Difference = 7.5 percentage points

Holding from 0/30
It’s intriguing to learn that 0/30 is still a very even battle for the Top 10. In fact, five players posted a winning record, with Roger Federer leading the pack, holding 55.7 per cent (131/235) of the time. World No.1 Novak Djokovic came in second, beating big servers Kevin Anderson and Juan Martin del Potro.

Current Top 10: Holding from 0/30 since 2015

Position Player Games Won Total Games Win Percentage
1 Roger Federer 131 235 55.7%
2 Novak Djokovic 198 361 54.8%
3 Kevin Anderson 156 300 52.0%
4 Juan Martin del Potro 94 185 50.8%
5 Rafael Nadal 191 376 50.8%
6 Marin Cilic 177 369 48.0%
7 Kei Nishikori 189 395 47.8%
8 Dominic Thiem 229 480 47.7%
9 Alexander Zverev 183 428 42.8%
10 Stefanos Tsitsipas 79 187 42.2%
TOTAL/AVERAGE 1627 3316 49.1%

Breaking Serve From 0/15
World No. 2 Rafael Nadal was the only Top 10 player to be above 50 per cent breaking serve after winning the first point of the game when returning. Djokovic featured in second place again, while Kei Nishikori was third best in breaking serve from 0/15.

Current Top 10: Breaking From 0/15 Since 2015

Position Player Games Won Total Games Win Percentage
1 Rafael Nadal 710 1409 50.4%
2 Novak Djokovic 724 1481 48.9%
3 Kei Nishikori 604 1349 44.8%
4 Roger Federer 506 1191 42.5%
5 Juan Martin del Potro 311 738 42.1%
6 Alexander Zverev 524 1286 40.7%
7 Dominic Thiem 601 1492 40.3%
8 Marin Cilic 470 1296 36.3%
9 Stefanos Tsitsipas 188 554 33.9%
10 Kevin Anderson 310 1095 28.3%
TOTAL/AVERAGE 4948 11891 41.6%

The moral of the story is that breaking serve is still a very difficult proposition, even if you only have to win three points while the server has to win four. It also shows us that a 0/30 hole is not as deep as we think. In some cases, it’s not a hole at all.

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Roland Garros: When Is The Draw & More

  • Posted: May 22, 2019

Roland Garros: When Is The Draw & More

All about the clay-court Grand Slam tennis tournament

Roland Garros will feature a quartet of winners – Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer and Stan Wawrinka – in the field for the first time in four years. 

Nadal, whose 33rd birthday falls during the second week of the clay-court major, will be looking to win Roland Garros a record-extending 12th time in 2019. Last year in Paris, Nadal became the first man in tennis history to win 11 titles at the same Grand Slam championship.

Meanwhile, Djokovic will be attempting to achieve the ‘Nole Slam’ for the second time in his career. He previously held all four major titles three years ago, completing his set by winning Roland Garros. (Read: Djokovic Outlasts Murray For Historic Crown)

Federer, who clinched the career Grand Slam here a decade ago, makes his return for the first time since a quarter-final run in 2015, when he fell to countryman Wawrinka. The Swiss went on to win Roland Garros with victory over Djokovic in the final. 

Here’s all you need to know about Roland Garros: when is the draw, what is the schedule, where to watch, who won and more. 

More On Nadal’s 11th Title
* Q&A: ‘I’m An Ordinary Guy Achieving Extraordinary Things’
* Rafa Rolls To ‘La Undecima’
* How Rafa Triumphed In The Final
* Social Media Reacts To Nadal’s 11th Title

Established: 1891

Tournament Dates: 26 May – 9 June 2019

Tournament Director: Guy Forget

Draw Ceremony: Thursday, 23 May at 7:00pm at “l’Orangerie” in the Botanic Garden

Are You In? Subscribe Now!

Schedule (View On Official Website)
* Qualifying: Monday, 20 May – Friday, 24 May
* Main draw: Daily play begins at 11:00am from Sunday, 26 May
* Mixed doubles final: Thursday, 6 June
* Doubles final: Sunday, 8 June
* Singles final: Sunday, 9 June at 3:00pm

How To Watch
View TV Schedule

Venue: Stade Roland Garros
Main Court Seating: 15,116

Prize Money: €20,060,000   

Tickets On Sale: Buy Now

View Who Is Playing, Past Champions, Seeds, Points & Prize Money Breakdown

Honour Roll (Open Era)
Most Titles, Singles: Rafael Nadal (11)
Most Titles, Doubles: Max Mirnyi, Daniel Nestor (4)
Oldest Champion: Andres Gimeno, 34, in 1972
Youngest Champion: Michael Chang, 17, in 1989
Lowest-Ranked Champion (since 1979): No. 66 Gustavo Kuerten in 1997
Most Match Wins: Rafael Nadal (86)

You May Also Like: Remember Paris, 2005: Chang On Nadal’s First Triumph

2018 Finals
Singles: [1] Rafael Nadal (ESP) d [7] Dominic Thiem 64 63 62   Read & Watch
Doubles: [6] Pierre-Hugues Herbert (FRA) / Nicolas Mahut (FRA) d [2] Oliver Marach (AUT) / Mate Pavic (CRO) 62 76(4)  Read More

Social
Hashtag: #RG19
Facebook: @RolandGarros
Twitter: @rolandgarros
Instagram: @rolandgarros

Did You Know… Roland Garros was the first Grand Slam tournament to join the “Open” era in 1968, and since then many tennis greats have graced the famous clay courts, including Bjorn Borg, Ivan Lendl, Mats Wilander, Gustavo Kuerten, Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic. In 1983, Yannick Noah became the first, and so far only, Frenchman to win the singles title. 

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