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Federer To Auction Memorabilia For Charity

  • Posted: Apr 29, 2021

For those dreaming of getting their hands on authentic Roger Federer memorabilia straight from his closet will have their chance in the near future. On Thursday, the 39-year-old Swiss announced he is putting a collection of personal items up for auction at Christie’s to raise money for his foundation. 

“Every piece in these auctions represents a moment in my tennis career and enables me to share a part of my personal archive with my fans around the world,” Federer said. “More importantly, the proceeds will support The Roger Federer Foundation to help us continue to deliver educational resources to children in Africa and Switzerland.”

On 23 June, a live auction will showcase 20 lots (one for each of his Grand Slam titles) with item prices ranging from £3,000-£70,000. A second online auction will be held in July with 300 lower-priced items such as the wristbands from his 1,500th ATP Tour match in Basel.

Items up for auction include:

•The outfit and racquet from his 2007 Wimbledon and 2009 Roland Garros final wins, respectively 
•The cardigan he wore while walking onto Centre Court to play the 2012 Wimbledon final
•The shoes from his 2005 Wimbledon final victory

The collection is estimated to be worth £1 million but the end result could be closer to £1.5 million.

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Klaasen/McLachlan Move Into Estoril Semi-finals

  • Posted: Apr 29, 2021

Raven Klaasen and Ben McLachlan made it through to their second semi-final of the year on Thursday at the Millennium Estoril Open.

The second seeds claimed 75 per cent of their first-serve points and won six of the final seven points of their quarter-final to defeat Nicholas Monroe and Frances Tiafoe 6-3, 6-7(4), 10-6. Klaasen and McLachlan, who also reached the Santiago semi-finals last month, are aiming to capture their second tour-level team trophy this week.

[WATCH LIVE 1]

The 2020 bett1HULKS Championship winners will meet Hugo Nys and Tim Puetz for a place in the final. Nys and Puetz defeated Marcelo Demoliner and Santiago Gonzalez 7-6(3), 6-1 on Wednesday to reach the final four.

Koolhof/Krawietz Advance To Munich Final
Wesley Koolhof and Kevin Krawietz earned their second straight-sets win of the week on Thursday at the BMW Open in Munich.

The Dutch-German tandem needed just 66 minutes to beat Matthew Ebden and John-Patrick Smith 6-4, 6-3 on Centre Court. Following their quarter-final win, Koolhof and Krawietz were handed a place in the championship match after the withdrawal of Yannick Hanfmann and Dominik Koepfer. Hanfmann was forced to withdraw from both the singles and doubles competitions due to a neck injury.

Koolhof and Krawietz will face third seeds Sander Gille and Joran Vliegen or German wild cards Dustin Brown and Peter Gojowczyk for the trophy. Brown and Gojowczyk earned their place in the semi-finals with a 6-4, 6-2 win against second seeds John Peers and Luke Saville.

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Moutet Ousts Top Seed Shapovalov In Estoril

  • Posted: Apr 29, 2021

After their rap song “Drip” welcomed them to the court at the Millennium Estoril Open, musical collaborators Corentin Moutet and Denis Shapovalov faced each other off the mic for the first time Thursday. The Frenchman upset the ATP 250 top seed 6-4, 2-6, 6-4 in two hours and six minutes to move into the quarter-finals. 

“It was a very close match,” Moutet said on-court. “Today I’m lucky that I won at the end. A few points decided the winner.”

The Canadian and Frenchman released their rap song together last year, following Shapovalov’s first single “Night Train”.

The victory marks his second Top 20 win of the year (he defeated Grigor Dimitrov in his semi-final run at the Murray River Open). Shapovalov was seeking his first win as a top seed.

After the 22-year-old lefties traded sets, Moutet broke to start the third set. Shapovalov recovered for a 3-1 lead, and then the World No. 14 misfired on a few key moments. Moutet had the win in his sights by reeling off four games in a row.

“It was who will play less worst today,” the World No. 73 said. “I think he didn’t play his best level. I’m really happy to win, of course, because he’s such a great player.”

Next up for Moutet is Albert Ramos-Vinolas as the Spaniard improved to 13-5 on clay this season with a 6-2, 7-6(3) win over Pierre-Hugues Herbert. It marks his first win over the Frenchman in three attempts.

Earlier on Thursday, Cameron Norrie defeated wild card Pedro Martinez 4-6, 7-6(1), 7-5. The Brit is into his fourth quarter-final of 2021 and takes on second seed Cristian Garin next. The Chilean didn’t take the court on Thursday after Richard Gasquet withdrew with a left adductor injury.

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Madrid Memories: Surface Switch Can't Slow Rafa, Model Ball Girls & Blue Clay

  • Posted: Apr 29, 2021

Editor’s Note: This story was first published on 4 May 2020

First held in 2002 on hard courts, the Mutua Madrid Open switched to clay and a new venue, La Caja Magica, in 2009. ATPTour.com looks back on memorable moments from Madrid.

2002: The First Edition
In the Casa de Campo, just minutes from the city centre, the Madrid Arena hosted the first edition of the Mutua Madrid Open, replacing a Masters 1000 tournament held in Stuttgart. Built for the unsuccessful Madrid 2012 Olympic bid, the indoor hard-court tournament concluded with then 32-year-old Andre Agassi capturing a then-record 15th Masters 1000 title without hitting a ball. His opponent in the final, Jiri Novak, had torn a groin muscle the day before, towards the end of his semi-final victory over Fabrice Santoro, who had beaten Roger Federer in the quarter-finals.

2004: Model Ball Girls
The Masters 1000 tournament replaced traditional ball boys and girls with female models for the third edition. Given two weeks training, the professional models, aged 19 to 28, were selected from Spanish agencies. Marat Safin, who beat David Nalbandian for the 2004 title, said, “The models mean people are still talking about tennis. Good publicity, bad publicity. It doesn’t matter.” Agassi, the inaugural champion, had initially joked, “It was difficult, to say the least, to concentrate on the ball. But I suppose I had an advantage, I’m used to playing with my wife [former WTA World No. 1 Steffi Graf].”

Nadal

2005: Nadal Edges Ljubicic For First Of Five Crowns
It was one of the best matches in Mutua Madrid Open history: 19-year-old Rafael Nadal, already a winner of 10 tour-level titles in 2005, coming up against Ivan Ljubicic, who was having one of the best seasons of his career. At a time when Masters 1000 finals were contested over the best-of-five sets, Ljubicic quickly took the opening two sets before Nadal showed great grit and determination to fight back for victory over more than four hours of play. “It is one of the best memories I have of this tournament,” said Nadal, looking back on his 3-6, 2-6, 6-3, 6-4, 7-6(3) triumph. “I remember that largely because of the support from the public, I was able to turn the match around and eventually win a final.” Now aged 33, Nadal has won a tournament record five titles (2005, 2010, 2013-14, 2017) from eight finals (2005, 2009-11, 2013-15, 2017).

2009: Under New Ownership, Venue & Date Switch
Ion Tiriac, a former player turned billionaire businessman, became the new owner of the tournament in 2009, coinciding with a switch from hard courts to a clay-court event; to La Caja Magica, a multi-purpose stadium with three courts in the Manzanares Park Tennis Center, and a calendar switch from October to May. Ten years on, Tiriac told his native Romanian press that holding the combined event now benefits the city of Madrid in excess of €107 million.

2012: Blue Clay
Keen for innovation, Tiriac proposed to turn Madrid’s red clay to blue for the 2012 edition, benefitting television viewers around the world. While a single outside blue court had been available for player testing in 2011, with capacity crowds inside the three show courts the following year, the blue clay proved to be too slippery and the consistency of the bounce was uneven. Nadal and defending champion Novak Djokovic were skeptical, and both lost early, while Federer went on to lift the trophy with a 3-6, 7-5, 7-5 victory over Tomas Berdych. The Madrid tournament organisers returned to red clay in 2013.

Djokovic, Murray, Federer, Nadal, Serena Williams

2013: In Memory Of Brad
Two days after the passing of Brad Drewett, the ATP Executive Chairman and President, aged 54, due to Motor Neuron Disease (also known as ALS or Lou Gehrig’s disease), stars of the ATP and WTA Tours took to the stadium court for a minute’s silence. Drewett, the former Australian player, had been involved in the sport for more than 40 years. Djokovic said, “It’s devastating news for not just us tennis players, but the tennis world. He was a very brave man with the courage to stand up and try to change some things in our sport for the better. We remember him as a very calm, composed and intelligent man, who loved this sport with all his heart, while he was playing, coaching and then as the President of ATP.”

2018: Santana Hands Over The Reigns
Manuel Santana, a winner of four Grand Slam singles titles, who helped Madrid become a world-class event as Tournament Director, had an assistant in the shape of Feliciano Lopez in 2018. Lopez, who had played in all 16 editions of the tournament, learned the ropes of event management before taking over in 2019. At the time, Lopez was the second active player to be named Tournament Director after Tommy Haas, the former No. 2, was named to the same position for the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells in June 2016. Santana, now the Madrid tournament’s Honorary President. said: “The Mutua Madrid Open is and always will be my home. It took us a lot of hard work to make this tournament happen and I will always be working to help it grow.”

2019: Djokovic Wins Third Madrid Title
Djokovic arrived at the Mutua Madrid Open two years ago looking to rekindle the kind of form that took him to the 2019 Australian Open title. With one quarter-final appearance in his past three tournaments, the World No. 1 beat two-time finalist Dominic Thiem 7-6(2), 7-6(4) in the semi-finals before overcoming Stefanos Tsitsipas 6-3, 6-4 for a then record-tying 33rd Masters 1000 title (with Nadal). “These are the best tournaments, biggest tournaments we have in our sport, in the ATP, of course alongside the Grand Slams,” said Djokovic, who also won the Madrid title in 2011 and 2016. “This is as important and as good as it gets.”

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Struff Reaches Fourth Munich Quarter-Final

  • Posted: Apr 29, 2021

Jan-Lennard Struff added a fourth quarter-final to his BMW Open resume in Munich on Thursday with a 7-6(3), 6-7(0), 6-2 victory against countryman Dominik Koepfer.

The 31-year-old recovered from 2-4 down in the first set and won the final four games of the match to reach the last eight in Munich after two hours and 39 minutes. Struff struck 11 aces throughout his first ATP Head2Head encounter against Koepfer and saved four of the five break points he faced to improve to 10-6 at the ATP 250.

“I am very, very happy that I turned around the first set,” Struff said in his on-court interview. “I played a not good second-set tie-break. Before [that] the set was okay, but I couldn’t lock into his service games that much… I am very happy that I broke him in the third set and I am very happy to be through. Dominik is a good guy and a very good player.”

[WATCH LIVE 1]

Struff will attempt to reach his second Munich semi-final (2014) when he faces fourth seed Filip Krajinovic on Friday. The World No. 44 lost his only previous match against the Serbian in three sets at the 2014 Hamburg European Open.

“I am really looking forward to my match tomorrow against Filip Krajinovic… I think it is going to be a very tough match. I played him in Hamburg [seven] years ago and lost in three sets. I hope I can beat him tomorrow.”

Nikoloz Basilashvili also reached the quarter-finals with a 6-4, 6-2 win against Daniel Elahi Galan. The fifth seed converted four of his seven break points to move past the Colombian qualifier in 77 minutes.

Basilashvili will meet Norbert Gombos in the last eight. The lucky loser reached his second quarter-final of the European clay swing with a 6-4, 6-1 win against Federico Coria.

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Nadal Takes Momentum Into Madrid; All You Need to Know

  • Posted: Apr 29, 2021

The 2021 Mutua Madrid Open returns to the calendar this year after a COVID-19-related hiatus in 2020. The ATP Masters 1000 field features eight of the Top 10 stars in the FedEx ATP Rankings, including Rafael Nadal, Daniil Medvedev, Dominic Thiem and Stefanos Tsitsipas.

Nadal enters with a record five Madrid titles and a recent 12th crown in Barcelona, while Tsitsipas carries momentum after capturing his first ATP Masters 1000 championship in Monte-Carlo and a run to the final in Barcelona. Medvedev will be making his clay-court season debut. The Russian has not played since losing in the Miami quarter-finals to Roberto Bautista Agut.

Note: The 2021 Mutua Madrid Open will be held in front of a reduced-capacity crowd due to COVID-19 precautions.

Established: 2002

Tournament Dates: 1-9 May 2021

Tournament Director: Feliciano Lopez

Draw Ceremony: Friday 30 April, 6:30pm

Are You In? Subscribe To Get Tournament Updates In Your Inbox

Schedule
* Qualifying: 1-2 May, 11:00am
* Main draw: Sunday 2 May – Sunday 9 May 
* Start times: Sunday – Sunday 11:00am and 7:00pm
* Doubles final: Sunday 9 May, 3:30pm
* Singles final: Sunday 9 May, 6:30pm

How To Watch
Watch Live On Tennis TV
TV Schedule

Venue: Caja Magica
Surface: Clay 

Prize Money: €2,614,465 (Total Financial Commitment: €3,226,325)

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

Honour Roll
Most Titles, Singles: Rafael Nadal (5)
Oldest Champion: Manuel Santana, 32, in 1970
Youngest Champion: Mats Wilander, 18, in 1982
Highest-Ranked Champion: No. 1 Ilie Nastase in 1973; No. 1 Rafael Nadal in 2009, 2011, 2018
Lowest-Ranked Champion: No. 65 Todd Martin in 1998
Most Match Wins: Rafael Nadal (61)

2019 Finals
Singles: [1] Novak Djokovic (SRB) d [8] Stefanos Tsitsipas (GRE) 6-3,6-4   Read & Watch
Doubles: Jean-Julien Rojer (FRA) / Horia Tecau (ROU) d Diego Schwartzman (ARG) / Dominic Thiem 6-2, 6-3  Read More 

Social
Hashtag: #mmopen

Facebook: @mutuamadridopen 
Twitter: @mutuamadridopen
Instagram: @mutuamadridopen

Did You Know?
Pista Central and Estadio 2 are named after Spanish four-time Grand Slam champions, Manolo Santana and Arantxa Sanchez Vicario, respectively.

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Krawietz/Koolhof Make Winning Start In Munich

  • Posted: Apr 29, 2021

Top seeds Wesley Koolhof and Kevin Krawietz kicked off their BMW Open campaign on Wednesday with a victory against Marcelo Melo and Mischa Zverev, 6-3, 6-3. 

Munich marks the first tournament together for the Dutch-German team. Koolhof reached three quarter-finals this year with Lukasz Kubot, while Krawietz partnered with Horia Tecau to reach a final in Rotterdam and posted a semi-final run in Dubai with Jan-Lennard Struff.

Koolhof and Krawietz won 100 per cent (18/18) of points behind their first serves and didn’t face a break point en route to victory in an hour and three minutes. The top seeds will next face Matthew Ebden and John-Patrick Smith in the quarter-finals. The Aussie duo needed two tie-breaks to defeat Tomislav Brkic and Nikola Cacic 7-6(3), 7-6(5).

[WATCH LIVE 1]

Also in action, German pair Yannick Hanfmann and Dominik Koepfer upset fourth seeds Marcus Daniell and Philipp Oswald 7-6(1), 6-4 to reach the semi-finals. Sander Gille and Joran Vliegen received a walkover from Federico Coria and Guido Pella to join them in the last four. 

Second Seeds Reach Estoril Quarter-finals
Second seeds Raven Klaasen and Ben McLachlan are into their third quarter-final of the year after taking down Simone Bolelli and Maximo Gonzalez at the Millennium Estoril Open.

Klaasen and McLachlan saved all four break points they faced as they closed out the 6-2, 6-3 victory in 62 minutes. The victory also avenges the South African-Japanese duo’s defeat in the Santiago semi-finals, where Bolelli and Gonzalez won 6-4, 6-4 en route to the title.

The second seeds will face the all-American team of Nicholas Monroe and Frances Tiafoe in the quarter-finals.

Elsewhere in Estoril, Luke Bambridge and Dominic Inglot are into the semi-finals after upsetting third seeds Austin Krajicek and Oliver Marach 7-6(2), 6-4. They are joined by Hugo Nys and Tim Puetz, who took down Marcelo Demoliner and Santiago Gonzalez 7-6(3), 6-1 to advance.

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The Nomadic Life With… Dominik Koepfer

  • Posted: Apr 29, 2021

Dominik Koepfer has taken an unusual route to life as a professional tennis player. The lefty only earned one Division I scholarship offer in the United States and he took it, attending Tulane University. Now, Koepfer is on the verge of cracking the Top 50 of the FedEx ATP Rankings for the first time.

The World No. 54 will play countryman Jan-Lennard Struff, the seventh seed, on Thursday for a spot in the quarter-finals of the BMW Open. ATPTour.com caught up with Koepfer, who turns 27 on Thursday, to learn about what life is like for him travelling on the ATP Tour…

What are two essential non-tennis items you always pack for trips?
I always have my laptop with me. [My] laptop is definitely number one, especially now during Covid times when we can’t do anything and are stuck in a hotel all day. Number two is probably a book, even though I hate reading a book, but my coach makes me. I’m reading the biography of [NBA legend] Dirk Nowitzki. I met him in Dallas last year. 

 

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A post shared by Dominik Koepfer (@dominik.koepfer)

What item did you forget to bring one time that caused you distress?
Definitely string, hard-court shoes when I was preparing for clay-court tournaments. All tennis-related stuff.

Do you enjoy travelling the world or consider it just something that needs to be done to be a pro tennis player? If you do enjoy it, what do you enjoy about travelling?
Obviously before Covid it was much more fun going to places I’d never been to, getting around the world, doing things most other people in normal jobs don’t have the chance to do and I have the chance to do for a living.

I love travelling, but it also gets [to be] a lot. If you travel 30 weeks a year but you’re in a hotel for 30 weeks, a hotel room is a hotel room. It doesn’t really change wherever you are… Once Covid calms down a little bit, I’m excited to see places again.  

Can you talk about a time you decided to play a specific tournament in part because you wanted to travel to that city?
If you have a choice between two tournaments, I definitely pick the cooler city, or a place I’m more excited to go to. If it comes down to it, I’d definitely pick the city I want to go to rather than the tournament. 

What is your favourite tournament city to visit and why?
Melbourne is a fun place, I really like Melbourne, Australia. Other than that, whenever there are tournaments in Germany, it’s home, that’s where I grew up. If it’s a choice between a grass tournament in England or a grass tournament in Germany, I’d definitely choose the one in Germany.

What is your craziest travel story?
It was a Challenger I played in Italy and then had to go to the Czech Republic two years ago. To get from the Czech Republic to home where I live, it was a 13-hour train ride and I had to change trains four times. After I lost, I went at 7 p.m. because I wanted to go home really badly.

I took the train during the night. It was brutal. I was by myself on the train, in the middle of nowhere in the Czech Republic, with all my tennis bags. It was a little sketchy. It was probably the most exhausting trip I’ve taken.

 

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A post shared by Dominik Koepfer (@dominik.koepfer)

As a tennis player, maintaining your body is of the utmost importance, so how do you take care of it during long trips?
If it’s a really long flight, I try to get upgraded so I can actually get some sleep and not [go without] sleep for like 48 hours straight. As long as you get enough sleep, I don’t think the travel is that bad.

Obviously your body feels pretty badly the days after, but sleep is definitely the biggest thing for me. Getting enough rest and continuing to eat healthy [is important]. I’ve gotten sick a few times from travelling long distances, and the body takes a beating every time you change timezones. You’ve got to readjust and it’s hard on the body, definitely.

Are there any routines or activities you do to create a sense of ‘home on the road’ to feel more comfortable?
I try to watch a lot of German Bundesliga, the soccer league, on the weekends. That’s for sure one thing I always look forward to when I’m on the road, because it gives me something to do and I’ve always been interested in watching and folowing along. [I also like] just following sports in general.

Now that I live in Tampa, I follow the Tampa Bay Lightning. Whenever the timezone makes it work, I try to watch the games. There’s only so much you can do. I try to FaceTime with friends and family, but being away in a different timezone definitely makes it harder to stay connected with home. 

How do you try to overcome jetlag and acclimate to the local timezone?
You just try to get some naps in if you’re too tired. After a few days or a week, it’s over. The first days I don’t think there’s really a secret. Just do your best to get enough sleep and it will eventually go back to normal. 

Are you someone who gets to the airport with lots of time to spare or do you cut it fine?
I’m usually pretty early. I don’t think I’ve missed the first flight yet. I’ve obviously missed connections, but I’ve been pretty good with being ready early enough to get to the airport on time. 

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