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Alcaraz On Winning Newcomer Of The Year: 'I'm So Happy'

  • Posted: Dec 24, 2020

Carlos Alcaraz has been selected by fellow players as the winner of the Newcomer of the Year in the 2020 ATP Awards. The Spaniard received this honour for a breakthrough campaign in which he climbed 350 spots in the FedEx ATP Rankings to finish the season at World No. 141 after reaching a career-high of No. 136 in October.

“I wanted to thank the ATP and everyone who voted for me in the Newcomer of the Year Award. I’m so happy,” Alcaraz said. “Honestly, this wouldn’t be possible without my team. We did some great work this year despite the difficulties.

“I want to also congratulate all of the other nominees for this award. They’ve had a great year too and played at a high level, and I wish them the best of luck in 2021.”

The 17-year-old, who was the youngest player in the year-end Top 200, claimed his first tour-level win in dramatic fashion, outlasting veteran Albert Ramos-Vinolas in three hours and 37 minutes at the Rio Open presented by Claro in February. That set the tone for the teen’s ascent.

Alcaraz made his Challenger breakthrough when he lifted the trophy in Trieste, but the best was yet to come as he arrived on home soil. The Spaniard lifted back-to-back Challenger trophies in Barcelona and Alicante – the latter sealed with his second Top 100 victory of the year in the final against Pedro Martinez. As a result, Alcaraz added his name to an exclusive club of players who have won at least three Challenger titles before turning 18, joining Richard Gasquet, Novak Djokovic, Juan Martin del Potro and Felix Auger-Aliassime.

Five other #NextGenATP stars – Sebastian Korda, Lorenzo Musetti, Jurij Rodionov, Emil Ruusuvuori and Thiago Seyboth Wild – were also nominated in this category.

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Djokovic, Nadal To Lead Field At 2021 Australian Open

  • Posted: Dec 24, 2020

Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal, who have combined to win nine of the past 13 Australian Open titles, are set to lead the field at Australia’s Grand Slam championship in 2021.

Djokovic, the eight-time champion who has claimed back-to-back titles Down Under, tops the entry list as the No. 1 player in the FedEx ATP Rankings. The Serbian owns a 75-8 record at the season’s first major, where he is a perfect 8-0 in finals.

Nadal, the 2009 titlist, has found great consistency in Melbourne. The Spaniard has only lost before the quarter-finals once since 2005, and he has earned four runner-up finishes.

Two players to keep an eye on are World No. 3 Dominic Thiem and World No. 4 Daniil Medvedev. Thiem claimed his first Grand Slam title at this year’s US Open, and he had previously reached three major finals. The Austrian was close to a Slam breakthrough at the 2020 Australian Open, where he pushed Djokovic to a fifth set in the championship match.

Medvedev finished the season in peak form. The Russian lifted the biggest trophy of his career at the Nitto ATP Finals, where he became the first player to beat the top three players in the FedEx ATP Rankings at the season finale. Medvedev’s best run at a major came at the 2019 US Open, where he made the final.

Six-time champion Roger Federer is on the entry list. The Swiss star last competed at this year’s Australian Open due to a knee injury, which required two surgeries.

Ninety-eight of the Top 100 players in the FedEx ATP Rankings are entered in the first major of 2021, with all members of the Top 50 set to compete. The tournament will take place from 8-21 February due to COVID-19, but nonetheless Tournament Director Craig Tiley says organisers are ready to host another exciting event.

“We are looking forward to welcoming the world’s best players to Melbourne and what promises to be a spectacular Australian Open following a year of disruption on a scale none of us has ever experienced before,” Tiley said. “Although the AO will look a bit different to previous years, the safety of everyone is our top priority. We have the opportunity to stage a very safe, and happy Slam, and give the players the experience of competing in front of crowds again, something they’ve missed for most of this year.”

The tournament has awarded two of its main draw wild cards so far, with them going to Christopher O’Connell and Marc Polmans. Qualifying will be played from 10-13 January in Doha, before players and staff travel to Australia for a 14-day quarantine in accordance with local public health authorities.

The 2021 ATP Tour season begins on 6 January in Antalya and Delray Beach. After the Australian quarantine, the ATP Cup and two ATP 250s will all be played in Melbourne Park the week before the Australian Open.

 

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Season Portrait: Novak Djokovic

  • Posted: Dec 24, 2020

Over eight days, ATPTour.com has served up a season snapshot of the eight players who qualified for the Nitto ATP Finals. Illustrated by intimate portraits from British photographer Simon Owen, the series concludes today with a review of World No. 1 Novak Djokovic’s season.

Memorable Moment
Incredible as it may seem, Novak Djokovic came into 2020 having finished year-end No. 1 in the FedEx ATP Rankings just once in the previous four seasons. In reclaiming the year-end throne from Rafael Nadal, the Serb tied his idol Pete Sampras with six No. 1 finishes. In December, Djokovic joined Roger Federer as just the second man to reach 300 total weeks at No. 1.

Key Stat
En route to his eighth title at the Australian Open in January, Djokovic became the sixth player in the Open Era to reach 900 tour-level match wins with a third-round victory over German Jan-Lennard Struff. Interestingly, Djokovic’s 900-187 mark at the time exactly matched Rafael Nadal’s win-loss record when the Spaniard reached the same milestone in 2018. Djokovic needs 66 match wins to reach 1,000. Could he do it in 2021? He won 65 matches in 2016 and 82 in 2015.

Quotable
“I will keep striving to be a better player, hopefully have more success and break more records in a sport I love with all my heart.”

The Road Ahead
Should Djokovic remain atop the FedEx ATP Rankings in the first part of the season, he will break Federer’s record of 310 weeks at No. 1 on 8 March. Beyond that, he will try to set a new record of seven year-end No. 1 finishes. The owner of 17 Grand Slam titles will try to close the gap on Federer and Nadal’s record haul of 20. The 33-year-old will also look to build on his record 36 ATP Masters 1000 titles, which has him just one ahead of Nadal’s 35 victories at the level.

View Full Series

Photos: Simon Owen/Wonderhatch

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Inside The Court Call With Per Bastholt

  • Posted: Dec 24, 2020

The roar of the crowd as he steps out onto a big court, the intense focus of all the cameras, the adrenaline rush of performing under pressure… It might sound like the start of a Grand Slam final, but for members of the ATP Tour’s Medical Services team, it’s just another day on the job.

After a very challenging season, ATPTour.com sat down with longtime Sports Medicine Clinical Trainer Per Bastholt to learn from his unique experiences as a key member of the Tour’s Medical Services team as he prepares for 2021. He gave us an inside look at what it takes to keep the top players healthy – and what goes through his mind when he’s called on court.

A native of Denmark, Bastholt began his career as a clinical trainer in tennis in the early ‘90s at the Mont-Carlo Country Club, assisting the Tour during its annual Masters 1000 stop in the South of France. His diverse background includes a five-year spell working for professional football for Ligue 1 team AS Monaco (2008-2012), as well as three years private service to former Wimbledon finalist Tomas Berdych and one year with former WTA World No. 1 Victoria Azarenka.

“Per is one of our leaders among our ATP Medical Services Team,” said Todd Ellenbecker, ATP Vice President of Medical Services. “His longevity on tour speaks volumes for his ability to gain the confidence of our players and staff. He has managed key situations on the world’s biggest tennis stages and facilitated our players’ ability to recover and return to play following all types of injuries. Having this level of experience among our group is tremendously advantageous for ATP Medical Services.”

Since joining the Tour full-time in 1994, Bastholt has witnessed first-hand the evolution of the sport’s physicality and intensity, as well as its effects on a tennis player’s body.

“The players are physically better. The game is faster. The game has changed, the racquets have changed. Everything has changed. Only the size of the court stayed the same,” Bastholt joked. “But even the courts have changed, in quality, in speed. It’s just not the same game.

“But of course, we have evolved as well in trying to keep the players fit and trying to keep them healthy on the court. What has changed the most is the player preparation.”

Per Bastholt, Stefanos Tsitsipas
Bastholt treating World No. 6 Stefanos Tsitsipas during a court call at 2020 Roland Garros. (Photo credit: Peter Staples/ATP Tour)

While the most visible part of a clinical trainer’s job occurs on the court, the increased importance of physical conditioning means that most of Bastholt’s day-to-day takes place in the ‘treatment area’ located inside or adjacent to the player locker room.

Bastholt explained that the bulk of the team’s work involves pre-match preparation and post-match recovery, using his extraordinary level of expertise in biomechanics, stretching and musculoskeletal injury prevention to treat and condition the players. The team focusses especially on treating the players’ shoulders and lower backs, ‘concern areas’ that suffer the most wear and tear from tennis.

“At the big events, the days start somewhere like 9:00 in the morning, and we finish at midnight – and that’s on a good day. Sometimes we finish at two in the morning,” he said.

“The preparation is about us being ready to assist the players in all sorts of ways: Some people tape their toes to prevent blisters, some people tape their ankles if they’ve had previous injuries to prevent getting hurt again. If a player has a sore back or hasn’t really recovered from his previous match, we try to assist them in getting those little concern areas warmed up or stretched out before they go out to have them be in their best position to perform at the best level without hurting themselves.”

According to Bastholt, the first 30 minutes after a tough match are vital for a player’s efficient recovery. There are various techniques and methods that the Sports Medicine team applies to make sure players are ready for their next match, and each player requires a unique approach.

“Recovery is an art and it’s very individual,” Bastholt said. “Hydration and various recovery tools are available for the players. We assist with potential little nagging injuries, dry needling, stretching and specific tissue work. Many tournaments have sports massage therapy, ice baths, stationary bikes, all of it part of the recovery process that the players go through after each match.”

Novak Djokovic, Per Bastholt
Bastholt in action at the 2008 US Open treating World No. 1 Novak Djokovic. (Credit: Getty Images)

But no matter what – or who – Bastholt is working on, as soon as the call comes in from the chair umpire summoning a clinical trainer to the court, it’s go time. During a match, players can request a visit from the trainer during a changeover in the case of an injury and may receive a three-minute Medical Time Out. With only a pressure-filled 180 seconds to assess and treat anything from a sprain to a severe, match-terminating injury, Bastholt and his team must act quickly and decisively to maximise a player’s chances of staying healthy for competition.

“We drop everything we have in our hands if there is a court call,” he said. “We have a radio on us. If that radio goes, we go. Everybody in the room knows, even if we’re preparing a player for a match, that player will wait and his match will wait until we come back and then finish the preparation.”

For Bastholt, even 27 years after his first court call, there’s still a certain adrenaline rush whenever his radio goes off at a big event.

“There’s always a moment when your adrenaline starts pumping a little bit. And that’s not a bad thing, because it makes your attention to everything so much better,” he said. “I don’t get too nervous about it, and I never have been.

“My approach is calm. Getting into position, I always try to put myself lower than the player so the player doesn’t have to speak up. I’m looking straight into the eyes of a player and I always want to project calm.

“You run onto a big court, everyone’s attention is on you. I try not to focus on the music or the cameras or what’s going on or what the announcer is saying. I’m with the player, only with the player.”

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Farewell Leo Levin, A Tennis Pioneer

  • Posted: Dec 24, 2020

You may not know Leo Levin by name, but as a tennis fan, you have absorbed and benefitted from his brilliance for more than 35 years. Every time you watch a tennis match and hear a data point, pay a tribute and honour Leo’s legacy. Alas, the notion of legacy has surfaced in a tragic way, as Leo died on Saturday, December 19, at the age of 62.

Graced with a razor-sharp mind, a friendly, pun-laden brand of humour and a generous heart, Leo is surely one of tennis’ pioneers. Back in the early ‘80s, Leo was on the ground floor of rigorously charting and documenting all the details that tell the tale of how a tennis match shakes out.

What am I talking about? Leo was the ground floor. At a time when computers weighed 25 pounds, he lugged that machine around, starting out at college matches where he played on the same Foothill College team as Brad Gilbert. A terrific school in its own right, Foothill also happened to be located near NCAA powerhouse Stanford, giving Leo the chance to road test his nascent ideas with the best college team in the country.
Leo began to track and tally numbers with new levels of depth, insight and frequency.

Certainly others had previously done this, but nothing on the scope of what Leo did. The early product Leo helped create, CompuTennis, was the launching pad for a revolution in the entire sport’s ability to analyse match play. So much of the information that’s now instantly available on ATPTour.com and many other platforms – serves, returns, winners, errors, percentages and more – has its roots in what Leo started with his own personal tracking methods.

Leo joined IDS (now SMT) as its first employee in Jacksonville in 1988, working for the company until his untimely death.

It was Leo who brought to life such iconic terms as “unforced errors” and the “plus-minus differential”. It was Leo who sat close at hand to every major tennis broadcaster of the past five decades, from Mary Carillo and John McEnroe to Ted Robinson, Dick Enberg, Tony Trabert, Cliff Drysdale, Fred Stolle, Barry MacKay, Donald Dell, Patrick McEnroe, Chris Evert, Bud Collins and a host of others.

But it wasn’t just his ability to capture raw data that made Leo special. This was a man who loved tennis with his heart and soul. He’d been a ranked junior in Northern California, armed with crisp, flat strokes, a first-rate service motion and an even better tactical mind. All the wisdom Leo brought as a player made him a natural analyst, a person who could eloquently discuss the game with deep insight, passion and nuances. No wonder Carillo dubbed him, “The Doctor”.

Best of all, Leo was exceedingly gracious. Dozens – maybe even hundreds – of us who work in the media, especially in television, relied on Leo for help preparing to cover and analyse matches. Without fail, he was accessible and thoughtful. I know this personally. There was the time in Paris when I sent him an urgent e-mail at 7 a.m. Or was it 2 a.m. in Melbourne? Then there was that evening on Wimbledon’s Middle Sunday – in theory, a day off for the entire sport – when I needed details from the doctor. No matter what, no matter when, Leo had the answers – quickly and kindly, in precisely the right format.

Blended with this was a tender quality usually associated with people like my Jewish grandmother. In the TV world, Leo was known for his exceptional prowess at making brownies, providing many a tray for we sugar-crazed folk. That’s a darn good combination: data and chocolate.

For all of that, and so much more, Leo Levin will be dearly missed.

Leo is survived by his wife, Terri Coleman; his daughter, Anna; his mother, Marilyn Wellsandt; his sister, Maureen Julin; her husband, Doug and their son, Jeremy.

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