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#NextGenATP Fils Flies Past Bautista Agut In Montpellier

  • Posted: Feb 08, 2023

#NextGenATP Fils Flies Past Bautista Agut In Montpellier

Barrere stuns defending champ Bublik, Ruusuvuori beats Ymer

Arthur Fils’ big game is causing quite a stir this week at the Open Sud de France – Montpellier.

After notching his first ATP Tour victory Monday against three-time champion Richard Gasquet, the #NextGenATP Frenchman delivered another top-class, all-around performance on Wednesday night to take out fourth seed Roberto Bautista Agut 6-3, 6-4 at the indoor ATP 250 event.

“I had one plan… I was playing with no mistakes, a lot of winners, and sometimes a big serve,” said Fils after firing eight aces and converting four of eight break points in his 86-minute second-round win. “I respect him [so much] and I’m really happy about it… I will recover, see my dad, see my coach, and my manager, and then I will sleep!”

The 18-year-old Fils, who lost to Fabio Fognini in three sets on tour-level debut at November’s Rolex Paris Masters, has risen 22 spots to No. 141 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings as a result of his Montpellier run. His opponent in his maiden ATP Tour quarter-final will be fifth seed Alejandro Davidovich Fokina or fellow Frenchman Quentin Halys.


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Like his countryman Fils, Gregoire Barrere also enjoyed an upset victory Wednesday at the Sud de France Arena, where he prevailed 6-4, 6-7(12), 7-6(3) in a dramatic first-round clash to take out defending champion Alexander Bublik.

Despite Barrere letting slip three match points in a second-set tie-break that he ultimately lost, the World No. 75 kept his cool in the decider to seal a hard-earned two-hour, 28-minute win against the third seed. Barrere entered the tournament off the back of lifting his sixth ATP Challenger Tour title in Quimper last week, and his reward for an impressive opening showing in Montpellier is a second-round meeting with Nikoloz Basilashvili.

Earlier on Wednesday, seventh seed Emil Ruusuvuori eased to a 6-4, 6-0 victory against Mikael Ymer to book his second-round spot. It was the pair’s second meeting of 2023, after Ymer prevailed in three sets at the Adelaide International 2 in January, but Ruusuvuori converted five out of seven break points in southern France to take a 3-2 lead in his ATP Head2Head series against the Swede.

Jannik Sinner advanced to the quarter-finals after his opponent Marton Fucsovics withdrew from the pair’s second-round clash with a foot injury. The second-seeded Italian, who is chasing his first match win on his third appearance at the indoor hard court event, will play Lorenzo Sonego or Filip Krajinovic in the last eight.

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The Last Time With… Jack Sock

  • Posted: Feb 08, 2023

The Last Time With… Jack Sock

American recently attended the Country Music Awards in Nashville

Jack Sock is competing in his first tour-level event of 2023 this week at the Dallas Open. The 30-year-old Nebraska native has done a lot in his ATP Tour career, highlighted by his standout 2017 season during which he reached e a career-high Pepperstone ATP Ranking of World No. 8 after reaching the semi-finals at the Nitto ATP Finals.

But when was the last time he missed a flight, or strung his own racquet?

Before Sock plays countryman Taylor Fritz on Thursday in the second round in Dallas, we caught up with the four-time ATP Tour champion for the latest edition of our ‘Last Time’ Q&A series.


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When was the last time you missed a flight?
That’s a good question. I feel like i have a pretty good track record going right now. It’s been years. Other than the airline or something changing, I haven’t missed one for my own reasons. I’ve been on point.

When was the last time you lost something important?
I don’t know how many years ago it was, I was on my way over to Queen’s Club and Wimbledon, I think it was 2018 or 2017. I left my iPad in the seat-back pocket in front of me. I got off the plane and didn’t realise it. Disaster, so frustrated.

When was the last time you paid to rent a tennis court or buy tennis balls?
We just did a three-month offseason at home with my coach. We had cases of balls, figuring we’d need a lot. Right at the end we ran out of new cans. We were practising at a different club than we normally do, so we ended up buying two cans.

When was the last time being famous helped you?
There’s a few different things. Honestly, what is the most enjoyable about maybe having some notoriety is access to either tickets or passes to sporting events I want to go see, which I enjoy. Being from Kansas City, I’ve got some good connections with the Chiefs. I don’t have to worry about grinding for tickets to games.

I went to the Chiefs-Bills game at the start of the season in Kansas City.

When was the last time you strung a racquet?
Actually a couple years ago in the offseason. I needed one real badly and the club that we were training at at the time had [a stringing machine]. I had done them growing up as a kid. The stringer that we usually use was out of town, so I had to do it.

When was the last time you cooked a meal for yourself or others?
I made an omelette for my wife maybe two months ago at some point. That’s about it. I don’t do a tonne of cooking, that’s for sure.

I grill actually, that counts. I grill a good amount, so for friends or my wife, I’ll throw some steaks on.

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When was the last time you met a childhood idol?
Playing Andy Roddick back in my second US Open. He’s from Nebraska, I’m from Nebraska originally… He was my idol growing up as a kid.

When was the last time you asked someone for a selfie?
I was a huge Jimmy Butler fan for a bunch of years, and at the Olympics in 2016 actually I asked him for a selfie. When we were going out to the opening ceremony, it was like the tennis group was here, the basketball guys were right behind us. I went back and asked for a selfie. Cringe, but I did it.

When was the last time you went to a concert?
I went to the CMAs in November actually, the Country Music Awards in Nashville. It was incredible. I’m a huge country music fan so that was sick, unbelievable.

When was the last time you attended a live sporting event other than tennis?
I went to a Charlotte Hornets game on New Year’s Eve, just a month ago. That was a lot of fun, especially on New Year’s Eve.

When was the last time you made your debut at an ATP Tour event?
I was here [in Dallas] last year. With that being the inaugural event last year, I guess that would be a debut.

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Emotional Foki Consoles Injured Friend Humbert In Montpellier

  • Posted: Feb 08, 2023

Emotional Foki Consoles Injured Friend Humbert In Montpellier

Frenchman forced to retire from pair’s first-round clash at ATP 250 event

“I’ve known Ugo since we were kids. I’m going to cry because I was watching him cry.”

Alejandro Davidovich Fokina had just won a crucial point in a tense first-round clash on Wednesday at the Open Sud de France – Montpellier when a misstep from his opponent Ugo Humbert led to the Frenchman suffering a nasty fall. Despite the heat of the moment, the Spaniard’s only concern was the welfare of his long-time friend as he immediately rushed to Humbert’s side.

“I’ve known him since we were kids and I know him very well. It’s never easy to see a friend like this,” said a visibly emotional Davidovich Fokina in his on-court interview after Humbert was forced to retire with the resulting injury to his right leg. “He just flew on the court, and I was like, ‘Something happened’, because he was crying and [it was] tough.

“Then the match was over. He fought [very well], with all the crowd… I was doing my best. I wanted to play the third set, but it is never easy to play injured.”

The home favourite Humbert had claimed the first set 6-1 but trailed 1/3 in the second-set tie-break when the incident occured. Humbert courageously tried to play on, but after Davidovich Fokina went on to claim the second set, the 24-year-old was not fit to continue.

“I hope that he will recover and will play next week, but now he has to focus on recovering,” said Davidovich Fokina of Humbert, the World No. 85 who won two crucial singles points for France in the Davis Cup Qualifiers at the weekend. “He’s playing very good… He’s coming back [up the rankings] for sure.

“The first set he was killing me. I went to the bathroom, and I just said, ‘OK, he wants to fight, I will fight, let’s see what happens’. I was growing my game every game, I was fighting, hoping that he would do some mistakes. He did it and I took the second set.”

Davidovich Fokina, who reached the quarter-finals in Montpellier in 2021, will play Quentin Halys in the second round in southern France.

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Tiafoe Named To NBA All-Star Celebrity Game: 'This Is Crazy'

  • Posted: Feb 08, 2023

The NBA announced on Monday that Frances Tiafoe will compete in the 2023 All-Star Celebrity Game, which will be played on 17 February in Salt Lake City, Utah.

“It’s awesome, it’s awesome,” Tiafoe told ATPTour.com. “Heard the news a little while ago but [it’s] going public now, so I’ve just been trying to gear up for it and get ready. It’s an honour man, it’s an honour.”

Ahead of last year’s Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships, Tiafoe attended an exhibition NBA game between the Golden State Warriors and his hometown Washington Wizards. The American spoke with players including Stephen Curry, but he also enjoyed a conversation with NBA Deputy Commissioner Mark Tatum, who mentioned there was a chance he would be selected for the celebrity game.

“I was like, ‘Yeah right!’” Tiafoe said. 

But when he visited the NBA offices in New York during the offseason, Commissioner Adam Silver confirmed ‘Big Foe’ would get his big chance on the basketball court.

“I still didn’t really know until I got that email, but once I got that email that ‘You’re going to All Star’ I was like, ‘This is crazy!’” Tiafoe recalled. “I feel like it’s a big crossover. A lot of people have taken interest in me, a lot of people are following the game of tennis who usually wouldn’t because, A, the personality I bring out there on court and how I am, and being a person of colour. It’s touching a lot of people and I’m just happy.”

Tiafoe is the second ATP player to participate in the star-studded event, following in the footsteps of Milos Raonic, who dunked during the 2016 game, in which WTA star Eugenie Bouchard also participated. Will Tiafoe match the Canadian’s slam?

“Nah, I can’t dunk. I can’t dunk,” Tiafoe said, cracking a laugh. “I started relatively from scratch. Growing up the only thing I really played was tennis. But I started picking it up pretty good. I’ve always had an okay jumper, but [I’ve been] getting the footwork down and stuff. I’m pretty interested to see how it goes.”

Tiafoe has been playing basketball for “a couple of hours a day” over the past two weeks. But he is not focussed on scoring a certain number of points in the game.

“I think [I will] just go out there and have fun. I mean I don’t want to look dumb, that’s why I’ve been training the past couple weeks,” Tiafoe said. “But [it is about] just having fun and obviously All Star [Weekend] everyone is there, you meet so many cool people and people that I’ve been fans of forever. To see they want me there and call me a celebrity, I’m truly blessed and hopefully [it is] the first of many.”

The 2022 US Open semi-finalist has never been to an NBA All Star Game, which will make his time in Utah even more special. He will be on the team coached by legend Dwyane Wade and is excited to mingle with the NBA stars and celebrities he meets.

“The past four or five months since the Open I’ve met a lot of celebrities and became friends with them, but obviously I’m pretty locked in to the hooper community. That’s for sure,” Tiafoe said. “I know a lot of hoopers. I know some of the rappers like Cordae, and 21 Savage is on my team. But it’s going to be cool.”

It takes just one look at Tiafoe’s social media accounts to see he is a consistent presence at basketball games at both the professional and college level, including women’s basketball games. Through those experiences he has befriended players, with one standing out: Wizards star Bradley Beal, who has become a friend and a mentor.

“Brad Beal talks to me all the time, kind of just [tells me to], ‘Keep going, keep doing your thing, never get satisfied.’ Every time I see him at a game we always link up. He’s been wanting me to go over to the house for a bit but I haven’t because it’s always been bad timing,” Tiafoe said. “But he’s probably the closest guy I am [friends with] in the league. Obviously him coming to all those matches at the Open, we’re really close, and our relationship got me really close to the team.

“The Wizards team in general, all those guys I’m super cool with. When they’re doing shootaround I’m right next to them on the court. D.C. is definitely my city.”

Perhaps the most memorable moment Tiafoe has enjoyed at a Wizards game was with a member of another team: Los Angeles Lakers icon LeBron James. During the offseason, they shared a special courtside pre-game embrace. It was a meaningful moment for Tiafoe, who has used James’ ‘Silencer’ celebration in the past.

“It was unbelievable. During shootaround I’m standing there and he comes up to me, points to me after he’s done and then comes to me. That was awesome,” Tiafoe said. “I’m glad someone got that on video. It was awesome. He’s an absolute icon. Obviously he’s another guy I can’t wait to really get a big relationship with.”

Tiafoe will see James again in Utah. This time he will not just be a fan, but a player in the All-Star Celebrity Game.

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College Standouts Take The Challenger Route To Success

  • Posted: Feb 08, 2023

College Standouts Take The Challenger Route To Success

Former student-athletes share how college tennis assisted their development

The ATP Challenger Tour has long been an essential breeding ground for the game’s future stars to gain experience and make their initial professional breakthrough.

The Challenger Tour has also proven to be a great stepping stone for college players who have ambitions of turning their dreams into reality, like Ben Shelton, who won three consecutive Challenger titles to finish this past season and was a quarter-finalist at this year’s Australian Open.

The former University of Florida standout, who captured the 2022 NCAA singles title, is just one rising star whose roots are in collegiate tennis. Since Shelton claimed his college crown, the 20-year-old has made quick progress at the pro level.

ATP Challenger Tour 

The #NextGenATP star became the fifth player to win the NCAA Singles Championship and a Challenger title in the same season, marking the first time since Steve Johnson in 2012. The lefty has continued to build upon his momentum and is at a career-high No. 41 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings.

“College tennis doesn’t always get the respect it deserves,” Shelton told ATPTour.com in July. “There’s a lot of really good talent in college tennis. It helps mature you and teaches you how to be a leader.”

Former University of Illinois standout Aleksandar Kovacevic has also seen his game translate well to the professional level since graduating in 2021. The American won his maiden Challenger Tour title this past week in Cleveland, Ohio and was a semi-finalist at last year’s ATP 250 event in Seoul, where he lost to eventual champion Yoshihito Nishioka.

Two years prior to winning the Cleveland Challenger, Kovacevic was a senior in college competing in several Challenger events across the United States. In 2021, he advanced through qualifying en route to a semi-final run in Cleveland (l. to Fratangelo). Little did he know that a couple of years later he would be back in Ohio, but this time lifting the trophy.

<a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/aleksandar-kovacevic/k0az/overview'>Aleksandar Kovacevic</a> celebrates winning the Challenger 75 event in Cleveland, Ohio.
Aleksandar Kovacevic triumphs at the 2023 Cleveland Open. Credit: Ben Peskar

“I played a lot of pro tournaments my last season of college,” Kovacevic said. “It gave me a little bit of a cushion to make the jump to the pros. I was already ranked around 500 when I got out of college. Now after being on the pro tour for a bit, there [are] a lot of things I wish I knew even starting out on Tour, but a lot of it is a learning process and that’s okay.”

While nothing guarantees success, the college tennis path has worked for many players. Even legends like Arthur Ashe, Jimmy Connors, and John McEnroe tasted collegiate success before rising to the professional ranks. John Isner, Kevin Anderson, Rajeev Ram, Bob Bryan, Mike Bryan and Steve Johnson are more recent examples of student-athletes boasting a strong college career before breaking through on the ATP Tour.

Johnson, who turned pro in 2012, led the University of Southern California to four consecutive NCAA team titles and captured back-to-back singles crowns (2011, 2012). The American finished his college career on a 72-match winning streak.

“College tennis was instrumental in my growth as a tennis player and as a person,” Johnson said. “It gave me a chance to grow up, mature, and see what was important in my life. Without college tennis, I wouldn’t be here today and had the career I’ve had, I know that for sure. Peter Smith, George Husack, Brett Masi, those guys helped me along the way while I was at USC. They gave me the opportunities and abilities to learn on my own but also gave me all the guidance and gave me that push I needed.”

This season, the ATP announced a collaboration with the Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA) to accelerate the professional development pathway for players in the American collegiate system.

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ATP & ITA Unite To Accelerate Professional Development For US Collegiate Players

Players ranked in the Top 20 of the ITA final singles rankings at the beginning of June, who have finished their education, will be granted up to eight ‘accelerator spots’ at Challenger 50 and 75 tournaments, with opportunities split between main draw (Top 10) and qualifying (11-20). Players who reach the quarter-finals or better of the individual NCAA Division I Tennis Championships will also qualify for the accelerator programme if not already eligible via their ITA ranking.

The ATP-ITA partnership allows more opportunities for college players to see how their game fits at the highest level of the sport. And history shows that the college tennis path has been a successful route for many accomplished players.

Stars On Importance Of College Tennis

William Blumberg, who was a 10-time ITA All-American at the University of North Carolina: “At 17 or 18 years old, you’re so young and immature and to have those resources and basically go to school for free if you’re a top junior… You get free coaching, two or three coaches, fitness, strength and conditioning, nutrition, all paid for and all in one place as well as being able to be a human being. If I could stay and never leave, I probably would’ve.”

Brandon Holt, four-time ITA All-American at the University of Southern California: “Going to college allowed me to get a lot stronger because you have a lot of time in the weight room. It’s kind of hard when you’re on Tour to get a good training block, so college is like four years of consistently working out. Also, there [are] coaches that have a four year plan with your game. They’re like, ‘This is the player we think you can become.’ Then they have years to progress you to that point. You show up every day and they have one goal to get better and closer to that goal. They have a tailored plan for every player and I think that’s huge.”

Former University of Kentucky standout and 2022 Granby Challenger champion Gabriel Diallo: “What’s great about college tennis is you have the opportunity to play a lot of matches. It’s kind of like playing Davis Cup every weekend. You play for your school and if you buy into that college atmosphere, you become part of something bigger, like for me, ‘Bleeding Blue’ and ‘Big Blue Nation’…It’s an experience you’ll never get on Tour.”

<a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/gabriel-diallo/d0f6/overview'>Gabriel Diallo</a> claimed his first Challenger title at home in Canada.
Gabriel Diallo claims his maiden Challenger title on home soil in Granby. Credit: Tennis Canada Media Centre

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Garin Finds Footing On Cordoba Clay

  • Posted: Feb 08, 2023

Garin Finds Footing On Cordoba Clay

Sixth seed Coria outlasts Monteiro

Cristian Garin earned his first tour-level win of the 2023 on Sunday, beating Alexander Bublik to send Chile to the Davis Cup Finals.

On Tuesday, he continued his winning run with a 7-6(3), 2-6, 6-0 victory against seventh seed Pedro Martinez at the Cordoba Open. Prior to this month, Garin had not played a clay-court match since last July; he had not won on the surface since Roland Garros last June.

“This is my first ATP match on clay after six months, so it’s tough to get back to the rhythm of this surface,” the Chilean said post-match. “It’s nice to have another match tomorrow or Thursday… great week.”


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In the two-hour, 30-minute match, Garin attacked the Martinez second serve to great effect, winning 66 per cent of points on the Spaniard’s second delivery and breaking serve five times in 14 chances. After Martinez won five straight games to snatch the second set, Garin raced through the third set without allowing his opponent a game point.

The Chilean will next face Portgual’s Joao Sousa or Argentina’s Tomas Martin Etcheverry, with the pair set to open play Wednesday on Cordoba’s stadium court.

After reaching a career-high Pepperstone ATP Ranking of No. 17 in 2021, Garin fell out of the Top 100 following a first-round exit at the Australian Open. His Cordoba opening-round win lifted him six places in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings, putting him back into the Top 100 at No. 97.


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Garin’s match was the second three-setter of the day on centre court. In Tuesday’s opener, sixth seed and home favourite Federico Coria defeated Brazil’s Thiago Monteiro 6-7(5), 6-1, 6-2. The Argentine, who hit 12 aces and saved six of seven break points in the contest, awaits the winner of the Wednesday matchup between Facundo Bagnis and Marco Cecchinato.

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