Tennis News

From around the world

With New Hips, Nenad Zimonjic Returns In Sofia

  • Posted: Feb 06, 2019

With New Hips, Nenad Zimonjic Returns In Sofia

Veteran Serbian talks to ATPTour.com about his journey back

A lot of people think he is crazy to come back. His doctors can’t believe he played through the pain for so long. Yet almost seven months to the day after he underwent bilateral hip surgery, 42-year-old Nenad Zimonjic is returning to the ATP Tour this week.

After 10 years of pain and degenerative joint disease, the Serbian had no choice and underwent a two-and-a-half-hour operation on 8 June 2018 at the Endogap Clinic in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany in a bid to simply improve his future quality of life. Extending his professional tennis career to a 25th season was far from his thoughts.

“I knew I may have played the final match of my professional career,” Zimonjic exclusively told ATPTour.com, ahead of his return at the Sofia Open on Wednesday. “There were no guarantees that I would come back. It was risky, but in the past three or four years I experienced a lot of pain. I had no choice. I did my research and consulted with my doctors.”

The Serbian, who has always taken great pride in his conditioning and match preparation, was often ridiculed by fellow players for the time he spent on tournament physio tables, but only a select few, including Clay Sniteman, a Senior Director of Medical Services, and his ATP colleague, Graham Anderson, knew the full story.

“In 2008 at Wimbledon, I felt a really strong pain in my groin after one match with Daniel Nestor,” said Zimonjic. “After the match, Clay told me to do a CT scan and x-ray, which I did. They told me I had a really big problem with my right hip, to begin with. There was, at that time, already below 50 per cent cartilage. I had a couple of different suggestions regarding the operation, to do orthoscopy or clean it, but there was no guarantee to come back. I decided to wait on having surgery.”

Zimonjic battled on, rising to No. 1 in the ATP Doubles Rankings on 17 November 2008, but year after year, the pain increased to 24 hours a day. By early 2018, he began to research a solution at specialists in England, Germany and Serbia. “Everyone agreed that at some point I would need total reconstruction surgery,” said Zimonjic. “The past three to four years, it was extremely difficult and I came to the point where I needed to have surgery.”

Zimonjic

“For the past 10-11 years, I’ve done all of my rehab in Eden Reha, in Donaustauf, near Regensburg, with Klaus Eder, a physiotherapist with an amazing reputation, who has over 30 years of experience with tennis players, footballers, summer and winter Olympic athletes in Germany,” said Zimonjic. “He has also worked in the past with Boris Becker and he recommended that I have the operation in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany with Dr. Christian Fulghum and his partner, Dr. Andres Berger.

“Even before the operation they couldn’t believe I could play with my hips, sitting on a bench for seven hours at a time, then play for up for three-and-a-half, four hours the next day in a Davis Cup tie. They saw there was absolutely no cartilage in both hips and they said it was amazing how much pain I could handle and that I could play at a high level.”

On the morning of 8 June 2018, only a few days after playing his last doubles match at the BMW Open by FWU in Munich, Zimonjic had bilateral hip surgery, one procedure. Two days later, he started to take his first tentative steps on crutches along the corridors of the Garmisch-Partenkirchen hospital during a seven-day post-operation stay. “It wasn’t until two weeks after the surgery that I realised how much pain I’d gone through, for so long,” admitted Zimonjic, who walked unaided six days after the operation.

“Shortly before the operation, they asked me when I would come back to play professionally? I was very surprised, as I’d only thought I’d play recreational sport and be pain free. But they said, ‘If it everything goes well, you can come back and try to play.’ For sure, it was emotional. It was a little light at the end of the tunnel. Before, I’d joked with my wife, Mina, that I’d like to play just one tournament with both of my hips replaced.

“After the operation, it really was starting from scratch once again. How to walk, everything. I underwent my rehabilitation in Eden Reha once again for five weeks. I then went on a much-needed two-to-three-week vacation with his wife and our twins, Leon and Luna… Once I got the green light to play, I started with my fitness coach, Ivan Dimitrijevic, and my tennis coach Marko Nesic [who Zimonjic partnered to the national doubles title in 1993].”

“I was very motivated and I enjoyed the process. It was a long, long journey, being away from family in Germany. When I trained in Serbia for up to 10-11 hours each day, starting at 8-8:30 a.m. each morning, and would only take half-an-hour for lunch, sometimes finishing at 7 p.m., after manual therapy, electro therapy and work in the pool. I respected everything the doctors told me and Klaus and his team.”

Zimonjic’s journey has been captured on film, over the past three years by Billy Peterson, of Epic Match Media, who has charted the challenges the Serbian faced to become a professional player, a World No. 1, and now as an aging athlete with two new hips.

At an age when the vast majority of his contemporaries have retired, what does the 54-time tour-level titlist have to prove? When asked, Zimonjic explained, “I am returning for myself. I also hope, in doing so, that I can inspire others to continue to pursue their dreams, to come back and prolong their careers after major surgery.

“It is going to be difficult to play for the first time in months, but I’m very excited and ready. It’s not going to be easy, but I’m going on the court to see how I play. It’s going to be a case of one match, one tournament at a time. I’m going into an unknown territory, but it will be nice to play pain-free and enjoy those moments again. I am coming back because I love the sport.”

Source link

Vancouver, Heilbronn & Puerto Vallarta Named Best 2018 Challengers

  • Posted: Feb 06, 2019

Vancouver, Heilbronn & Puerto Vallarta Named Best 2018 Challengers

Vancouver and Heilbronn scoop top honours for second straight year; Puerto Vallarta wins on debut

The ATP has announced the 2018 ATP Challenger Tour Tournaments of the Year, with players voting for Vancouver (Canada) and Heilbronn (Germany) as two of their favourite Challenger Tour stops for the second consecutive year, along with Puerto Vallarta (Mexico) which made its debut on the ATP Challenger Tour calendar in 2018.  

The Challenger of the Year Awards recognise excellence in standards set across the global Challenger Tour comprising 159 tournaments staged in 40 countries last year. Vancouver’s Odlum Brown VanOpen, relaunched in 2017, and the NECKARCUP, staged for five years in Heilbronn, have continued ambitious improvements each year, while the Puerto Vallarta Open burst onto the calendar with an exceptional inaugural event.

ATP Challenger Tour Committee Co-Chairs, Alison Lee, ATP International Executive Vice President and Ross Hutchins, Chief Player Officer, said “These three Challengers are relatively new on the ATP Challenger Tour calendar and the organisers have set themselves very high standards to win these awards of excellence. It takes hard work, dedication and a passion for tennis to make successful tournaments, and players, fans, sponsors and media will have all seen these Challenger promoters’ enormous efforts come to fruition.”

Odlum Brown VanOpen Tournament Chair Carlota Lee said: “It is a thrill to be honoured as one of the 2018 Challenger of the Year Award winners for the second straight year. The Tournament of the Year Award represents the great work of our team, including Hollyburn Country Club members and staff, incredible partners, officials, volunteers and ball kids, and our steadfast and supportive title sponsor, Odlum Brown, whose commitment to tennis in Canada makes our tournament possible.”

“We are honoured to receive the prestigious Challenger of the Year Award for a second consecutive year as voted by the players. We offer a unique player experience and strive to improve on it year after year,” said Odlum Brown VanOpen Tournament Director Rik de Voest. “We look forward to this year’s event and upholding the reputation as one of the players’ favourite Challenger Tour tournaments in the world.”

NECKARCUP Tournament Director Metehan Cebeci and Chief of Organisations Mine Cebeci said: “You cannot imagine how lucky we feel to be awarded again for the best Challenger. This is the best news for us and is such an honour. The award is a great motivation for us, knowing the players are satisfied with our efforts. We really appreciate receiving this award as it shows us that all our efforts and passionate work lead to this success.”

Challenger

127-year-old TC Heilbronn Trappensee in Heilbronn, Germany

Puerto Vallarta Open Tournament Director, Francisco Javier Romero Gonzalez, said, “We are proud of promoting sports values among Mexicans. We sincerely thank ATP and are deeply grateful to all those who made PVO possible, not only those who worked and contributed their knowledge, but also those who believed in us and placed their trust in our first edition of the Puerto Vallarta Open.

“It is a source of great joy to be able to take the name of Puerto Vallarta to the highest place in world tennis and present it for what it is, one of the most complete and beautiful tourist destinations on the planet.”

You May Also Like: Sun, Scenery & History: Puerto Vallarta Sparkles In Challenger Debut

The ATP Challenger Tour is a launching pad for up-and-coming players to improve their skills, gain experience and necessary ATP Ranking points. Challenger tournaments provide ATP players with important playing opportunities for much of the year and provide local tennis fans with the chance to see world-class tennis and rising stars.

In 2018, the ATP Challenger Tour included 159 events in 40 countries which provided US$13.092 million prize money. More than 820,000 spectators attended these tournaments worldwide. ATP Challenger Tour matches are streamed live on www.atpchallengertour.com.

In 2019, a number of changes have been introduced to the Challenger Tour to further professionalise the sport and provide growth in prize money at the lower levels of men’s professional tennis, and lead to a greatly enhanced player pathway. The changes for 2019 are the result of an extensive strategic review the ATP has undertaken as it strives to enhance the player pathway and improve the viability of professional tennis at the lower levels of the sport.

The changes taking place from 2019 are across the following key areas of the ATP Challenger Tour:

➢ Draw Size
The Singles Main Draw size at ATP Challenger Tour events is increasing from 32 to 48, leading to an annual increase of approximately 2,400 available professional job opportunities with prize money and hotel accommodation included.

➢ Tournament Schedule
Tournaments will take place across 7 days from Monday to Sunday including qualifying, with no overlap from week to week between tournaments.

➢ Hospitality
Starting in 2019, all ATP Challenger tournaments are providing hotel accommodation for all Main Draw players.

➢ Prize Money
All Main Draw players will earn prize money. The increased Singles Main Draw size (from 32 to 48) will lead to 16 more players per tournament earning prize money from 2019. The highest-level Challengers will offer US$ 162,480 (€137,560) in 2019.

➢ Branding
ATP Challenger Tour tournament categories have been re-branded in accordance with the number of ATP Rankings points on offer to the respective tournament champion, similar to ATP Tour tournaments (ATP 250, 500, and Masters 1000). There are five ATP Challenger Tour categories – ATP Challenger 80, 90, 100, 110 and 125.

➢ On-Site Facilities, Conditions and Streaming
Increased services will be provided across ATP Officiating as well as ATP Medical Services, with better access on offer to qualified Physiotherapists. From 2019, all Main Draw Singles matches are intended to be streamed online, with more than double the number of matches available to viewers worldwide.

ATP Challenger Tour 

Source link

Munar Nears Second QF Of 2019

  • Posted: Feb 06, 2019

Munar Nears Second QF Of 2019

Cuevas, Delbonis advance

Jaume Munar dropped only five games to move into the second round of the inaugural Cordoba Open on Tuesday. The 21-year-old Spaniard broke Argentine Guido Andreozzi four times and advanced 6-1, 6-4.

Munar made the semi-finals of the 2018 Next Gen ATP Finals on debut (l. to De Minaur) and started his 2019 by reaching the quarter-finals (l. to Anderson) at the Tata Open Maharashtra in Pune. He will meet second seed Marco Cecchinato, a two-time ATP Tour clay-court titlist, for a spot in the quarter-finals.

You May Also Like: Berdych Passes Bachinger Test In Montpellier

Argentine wild card Juan Ignacio Londero, playing at a career-high No. 112, celebrated his first tour-level win 6-2, 7-6(5) against fifth seed Nicolas Jarry of Chile. The 25-year-old Londero saved all five break points and will next meet Italy’s Lorenzo Sonego.

Watch Live

Federico Delbonis of Argentina knocked out another seed in the final match on Cancha Central. Delbonis broke twice in the final set and advanced 6-4, 6-7(5), 6-3 against seventh seed Leonardo Mayer.

Six-time ATP Tour clay-court titlist Pablo Cuevas won 100 per cent of his first-serve points (25/25) and beat Facundo Bagnis of Argentina 6-4, 6-4 behind two breaks of serve. Cuevas faces sixth seed Malek Jaziri of Tunisia for a spot in the last eight.

How To Watch The Cordoba Open

Source link

Monfils Extends Perfect Record Against Troicki

  • Posted: Feb 05, 2019

Monfils Extends Perfect Record Against Troicki

Basilashvili beaten in straight sets

On his Sofia Open debut, Gael Monfils needed just under an hour to defeat Viktor Troicki 6-3, 6-4 on Tuesday.

The seventh-seeded Frenchman won 84 per cent of first-serve points (26/31) and saved all four break points he faced against the 2016 runner-up to reach the second round. With his fourth straight-sets victory over Troicki, Monfils improves to 5-0 in his FedEx ATP Head2Head series against the Serbian.

“I feel very good [in Sofia]. There is a great energy here, the people are very nice and it is an amazing stadium,” said Monfils. “It was a very good [match], I returned very good and the key was a great serve.”

Monfils will face Laslo Djere or Mikhail Kukushkin for a place in the quarter-finals. The 32-year-old owns a 1-1 FedEx ATP Head2Head series record against Kukushkin and has not met Djere at tour-level. 

Watch Live

Robin Haase defeated Dimitar Kuzmanov of Bulgaria 6-2, 6-4 in 74 minutes. The 31-year-old saved all three break points the wild card earned to book a second-round meeting against third seed Daniil Medvedev.

Daniel Brands upset fifth seed Nikoloz Basilashvili 7-6(7), 7-5 to book his place in the second round. The German qualifier, appearing in his first ATP Tour event this season, saved two set points in each set to claim his first tour-level victory since beating Marco Chiudinelli in the Bulgarian capital two years ago.

Are You In? Subscribe Now!

Fellow qualifier Yannick Maden also reached the second round, upsetting Adrian Mannarino 6-4, 7-6(4). Maden will meet eighth seed Andreas Seppi or Marton Fucsovics for a quarter-final spot.

There were mixed fortunes for Italian players in Sofia. Roman Matteo Berrettini defeated Denis Istomin 6-4, 7-6(7) to reach the second round, but Jan-Lennard Struff of Germany overcame qualifier Stefano Travaglia 6-4, 6-3. Berrettini will meet top seed Karen Khachanov in the second round, while Struff will face second seed Stefanos Tsitsipas.

How To Watch The Sofia Open

Source link

Berdych Passes Bachinger Test In Montpellier

  • Posted: Feb 05, 2019

Berdych Passes Bachinger Test In Montpellier

Gulbis through in straight sets

Seven years after lifting the trophy, Tomas Berdych made a winning return to the Open Sud de France on Tuesday.

The 33-year-old, who improves to 5-0 in Montpellier, recovered from a set down to beat Matthias Bachinger 5-7, 6-3, 6-3 in two hours and 12 minutes. Berdych landed 11 aces throughout the first-round contest and saved seven of 11 break points en route to victory.

Watch Live

Berdych has enjoyed an impressive return to action this year, after being forced to end his 2018 ATP Tour season in June, due to a back injury. The former World No. 4 reached his first final in over 19 months, in the opening week of this season, at the Qatar ExxonMobil Open (l. to Bautista Agut) before a straight-sets loss to Rafael Nadal in the Australian Open fourth round.

Berdych will meet eighth seed Benoit Paire or Evgeny Donskoy of Russia for a quarter-final spot. The Czech owns a 3-0 FedEx ATP Head2Head record against Paire and has not met Donskoy at tour-level. 

Ernests Gulbis fired 14 aces to defeat 2018 Next Gen ATP Finals qualifier Hubert Hurkacz 6-4, 7-6(5). The 30-year-old Latvian did not face a break point throughout the one-hour, 38-minute contest and will meet fifth seed Philipp Kohlschreiber or Radu Albot in the second round.

French qualifier Antoine Hoang earned his first tour-level victory, cruising past Steve Darcis 6-1, 6-2. The 23-year-old, who made his ATP Tour debut at last month’s Tata Open Maharashtra, converted five of six break points and will face countryman Jeremy Chardy for a place in the quarter-finals.

Are You In? Subscribe Now!

Filip Krajinovic also advanced, defeating Nicolas Mahut 7-6(7), 6-4 in one hour and 37 minutes. The 26-year-old Serbian saved one set point at 5/6 in the first-set tie-break before booking a second-round clash against second seed David Goffin.

Did You Know?
In 11 of the past 13 years, Berdych has reached the fourth round or better at the Australian Open.

Source link

GB hope first home crowd in 26 years can inspire Fed Cup success

  • Posted: Feb 05, 2019
Fed Cup 2019
Venue: University of Bath Dates: 6-9 February 2019
Coverage: BBC website will have live text commentaries on selected GB matches from 16:30 GMT on Wed-Fri.

Great Britain’s Fed Cup team are hoping that playing in front of a home crowd for the first time in 26 years can inspire them to end a painful recent record.

They can look forward to a sell-out crowd in Bath this week when they host an eight-team Europe/Africa round-robin event.

GB have been stuck in the third tier of the women’s team tennis competition since 1993 and play-off defeats in four of the past eight years have ended their promotion bids at the final hurdle.

“Those losses certainly hurt,” Fed Cup captain Anne Keothavong told BBC Sport.

While Britain’s men have enjoyed home ties in the Davis Cup, including in 2015 when they won the title, the women have played in 15 different countries since their last home match in Nottingham in May 1993.

“Hopefully it will be great because the players have always spoken about how much they want to play in front of a home crowd,” Keothavong said.

“We’ve seen with the men – the Davis Cup team – how the crowd has been able to inspire those guys when they are out there on the court and I’m hoping for the same for the women.”

Former world number one and three-time Grand Slam champion Andy Murray said in January that he will be retiring this year, and when asked if the Fed Cup team could lift the mood of British tennis fans still reeling from that announcement, Keothavong replied: “I hope so.

“Andy has been a great supporter of women’s tennis and women in sport and I’m sure he will be following how the team do very closely.

“I hope everyone gets to see the British women giving it their absolute best, playing with their all and passion out there. They have prepared the best they can and are in the best shape possible.”

GB’s round-robin matches
Wednesday, 6 February: Great Britain v Slovenia (16:30 GMT)
Thursday, 7 February: Great Britain v Greece (16:30)
Friday, 8 February: Great Britain v Hungary (16:30)
  • Fed Cup schedule, results & standings

Who is in the British team?

Keothavong has picked her strongest team of Britain’s top five players, including number one Johanna Konta.

  • One to watch – Johanna Konta

The British number one will be the third-highest-ranked player at the competition.

They are boosted by a strong run of form by 22-year-old Katie Boulter, who has this year overtaken Heather Watson as British number two and on Monday reached a career-high ranking of 83.

Asked if that might affect the team dynamic, Keothavong said: “I know how competitive the other girls are so that will spur them on to want to do better as well – so you have this knock-on effect.”

Also in the team are Katie Swan and Harriet Dart, who has dropped just one place below her career-high ranking of 121 this week.

Great Britain are in Group A with Slovenia, Greece and Hungary. While household names are lacking, the stiffest tests are likely to come in the shape of Greek world number 38 Maria Sakkari and Hungarian former world number one doubles player Timea Babos.

Group B features Serbia, Georgia, Turkey and Croatia, who boast the highest-ranked singles player at the event in world number 25 Donna Vekic.

Great Britain team Ranking Age Fed Cup appearances
Katie Boulter 83 22 2
Harriet Dart 122 22 0
Johanna Konta 39 27 19
Katie Swan 174 19 3
Heather Watson 110 26 31

The stats behind Britain’s Fed Cup

  • GB all of their most recent home ties in May 1993 – Luxembourg (3-0), Lithuania (3-0), Russia (3-0), Ukraine (3-0) and Turkey (3-0) to advance to the World Group.
  • They have qualified for the World Group II play-off four times – in 2012, 2013, 2017 and 2018.
  • Johanna Konta defeated 2018 US Open champion Naomi Osaka in straight sets in Japan at last year’s World Group II play-off.
  • Katie Swan became the youngest woman (16 years and 316 days) to represent Britain at this event when she made her debut in 2016.
  • Harriet Dart is making her Fed Cup debut this year.
  • Heather Watson is the most experienced member of GB’s team, having played every year since 2011.

The ‘brutal’ format – how does it work?

The eight teams are split into two groups. Each team plays three round-robin ties in their groups – with each tie comprising two singles and one doubles match.

The group winners face each other on Saturday, with the winner going through to April’s World Group II play-offs.

That play-off is the golden ticket to promotion – and it is at that stage where Britain fell short in 2012, 2013, 2017 and 2018.

The World Group in the Fed Cup is split into two divisions of eight teams, which means the winners of April’s play-off would have to earn another promotion in 2020 to be able to compete for the title in 2021.

“There is no room for mistakes, it is pretty straightforward – beat every nation you are up against and you go through. Lose and there’s nothing for another year,” Keothavong said.

“Mentally it’s tough on the players, coming out each day, the recovery, doing it all over again. Intensity levels are high, pressure is high, you just can’t underestimate any of those factors.

“It’s a brutal format,” she added, “The team put so much into this competition and they really want to do well, and despite things not going as well as we would like in those play-off matches, we’re still able to field a full-strength team and that says it all – they are back and they are hungry for more.”

Source link