Tennis News

From around the world

Tsonga Powers To Win On Stuttgart Debut

  • Posted: Jun 10, 2019

Tsonga Powers To Win On Stuttgart Debut

Shapovalov starts his grass campaign later today

Jo-Wilfried Tsonga got off to a winning start on his MercedesCup debut on Monday, powering past 2017 semi-finalist Mischa Zverev 6-3, 6-0 in 57 minutes. Tsonga, who won nine straight games from 3-3 in the first set, lost just four of his first-service points and hit 13 aces.

“It’s never easy to play your first match on grass, especially against Mischa, who is a good server,” said Tsonga, who was playing his first match on grass for two years. “With the year I’ve had last year, I just want to play and do my best during the grass swing. There is no special goal.”

Tsonga is now 18-9 on the season, which includes his 17th ATP Tour title at the Open Sud de France in Montpellier (d. Herbert). He awaits the winner of sixth-seeded Canadian Milos Raonic, the 2018 runner-up, and Alexei Popyrin, an Australian qualifier.

Elsewhere, 19-year-old Serbian Miomir Kecmanovic edged past 2013 and 2016 finalist Philipp Kohlschreiber 4-6, 7-5, 6-3 in one hour and 57 minutes. Kohlschreiber finished as runner-up to Fabio Fognini, when the event was played on clay in 2013, and to Dominic Thiem in 2016 on grass. Kercmanovic now plays sixth-seeded Canadian Denis Shapovalov or another German, Jan-Lennard Struff, who play later today.

Watch Live

Source link

Khachanov Breaks Into Top 10, Mover Of The Week

  • Posted: Jun 10, 2019

Khachanov Breaks Into Top 10, Mover Of The Week

ATPTour.com looks at the top Movers of the Week in the ATP Rankings, as of Monday, 10 June 2019

No. 9 (Career High) Karen Khachanov, +2
The 23-year-old advanced to his first Grand Slam quarter-final at Roland Garros after beating Juan Martin del Potro in four sets in the fourth round. Having entered the Round of 16 clash against Del Potro with an 0-3 record in Grand Slam fourth-round matches, Khachanov backed up wins over Cedrik-Marcel Stebe, Gregoire Barrere and Martin Klizan to reach the last eight.

Despite falling to eventual runner-up Dominic Thiem in the quarter-finals, Khachanov becomes the first Russian since Mikhail Youzhny in February 2011 to occupy a spot in the Top 10 of the ATP Rankings. The Moscow-born star rises two positions to a career-high at No. 9.

No. 10 (Career High) Fabio Fognini, +2
At the conclusion of a European clay-court swing which began with a first ATP Masters 1000 trophy at the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters (d. Lajovic), Fognini will enter the grass-court season as a Top 10 player. The Italian claimed three straight four-set wins at Roland Garros, which included a victory against Australian Open quarter-finalist Roberto Bautista Agut, before losing to Alexander Zverev in the Round of 16. Like Khachanov, Fognini also jumps two spots to a new career-high ATP Ranking, at No. 10.

You May Also Like: Fantastic Fabio! Fognini Makes History By Cracking The Top 10

No. 19 Stan Wawrinka, +9
Former champion Wawrinka reached his first Grand Slam quarter-final in two years at Roland Garros. The Swiss, who is rebuilding his ATP Ranking following two knee surgeries in August 2017, defeated in-form Chilean Cristian Garin, former World No. 3 Grigor Dimitrov and World No. 6 Stefanos Tsitsipas en route to the last eight. After a four-set loss to Roger Federer in the quarter-finals, the three-time Grand Slam champion leaps nine places to No. 19 in the ATP Rankings. This is the first time that Wawrinka has held a position in the Top 20 since 18 March 2018.

No. 28 Benoit Paire, +10
After picking up titles at the Grand Prix Hassan II (d. Andujar) and Open Parc Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes Lyon (d. Auger-Aliassime), Paire reached the Round of 16 at Roland Garros for the first time. The 30-year-old edged countryman Pierre-Hugues Herbert 6-2, 6-2, 5-7, 6-7(6), 11-9 in a memorable second-round clash en route to the last 16, where he fell in five sets to Kei Nishikori. Paire climbs 10 spots to No. 28 in the ATP Rankings, his highest position in almost three years.

Other Notable Movers 
No. 39 Marco Cecchinato, -20
No. 48 Leonardo Mayer, +20
No. 54 Hubert Hurkacz, -10
No. 58 (Career High) Juan Ignacio Londero, +20
No. 63 Damir Dzumhur, -11
No. 70 Daniel Evans, +10
No. 74 Jaume Munar, -21
No. 78 Steve Johnson, -13
No. 82 Pablo Andujar, +11
No. 90 Ernests Gulbis, -11
No. 99 (Career High) Yannick Maden, +15

Source link

'Nadal feat will be talked about in 200 years'

  • Posted: Jun 10, 2019

Rafael Nadal’s record tally of 12 French Open titles will still be talked about “in 200 years”, says former British number one Greg Rusedski.

Nadal, 33, is the first player to win a dozen singles titles at the same Grand Slam.

The Spanish second seed beat Austria’s Dominic Thiem 6-3 5-7 6-1 6-1 in Sunday’s final at Roland-Garros.

“This is the unbreakable record,” former US Open finalist Rusedski told BBC Sport.

  • Nadal beats Thiem to win 12th French Open
  • Relive Nadal’s win at Roland-Garros

Nadal’s third successive win on the Paris clay moved him clear of Margaret Court’s tally of 11 Australian Open titles.

The Spaniard is only the second player to win the same tour singles event a dozen times, with Martina Navratilova having won 12 titles at Chicago between 1978 and 1992.

“Most players don’t win 12 titles in their careers, he has won 12 clay-court majors at Roland-Garros,” Rusedski said.

“When we’re dead, in 200 years from now, people will be talking about Rafael Nadal winning 12 French Opens.

“It is incomprehensible.

“This is the Tour de France of tennis and to do it 12 times is superhuman.”

Most men’s singles titles at the same Grand Slam in the Open era
12 Rafael Nadal French Open 2005-2008, 2010-2014, 2017-2019
8 Roger Federer – Wimbledon 2003-07, 2009, 2012, 2017
7 Novak Djokovic– Australian Open 2008, 2011-2013, 2015-16, 2019
7 Pete Sampras– Wimbledon 1993-95, 1997-2000
6 Bjorn Borg– French Open 1974, 1975, 1978-1981
6 Roger Federer– Australian Open 2004, 2006, 2007, 2010, 2017, 2018

‘Big three’s longevity is unheard of’

By beating 25-year-old Thiem for the second successive year in the final, Nadal increased his tally to 18 major triumphs.

Only long-time rival Roger Federer has won more Grand Slams, sitting two ahead of the Mallorcan in the all-time list of men’s singles triumphs.

Serb world number one Novak Djokovic, who was denied the chance to hold all four Slams at the same time by Thiem in the semi-finals, is now three behind Nadal.

Nadal, 37-year-old Federer and 32-year-old Djokovic have won the past 10 Grand Slam titles between them.

Britain’s Andy Murray was the last player under 30 to win a Grand Slam men’s singles title when he won Wimbledon aged 29 in 2016.

  • Live scores, schedule and results
  • Alerts: Get tennis news sent to your phone

“The last ‘next generation’ had a lot of war wounds against the likes of Federer, Nadal, Djokovic and Murray, they didn’t necessarily believe they could possibly beat these guys,” Rusedski, 45, said.

“But I think the new guys – led by Stefanos Tsitsipas, Felix Auger-Aliassime, Denis Shapovalov – this generation may not have the same war wounds.

“And in a couple of years obviously Roger will be nearly 40 and Rafa and Novak will be in their mid-30s – if they are all still playing then.

“To do what they are doing is unheard of.

“It is still those big three and the other guys are trying to knock on the door.

“We want to see one of those younger guys take a Slam.”

‘Women’s game full of intrigue – and that will return to men’s game too’

With Nadal beating Federer and Thiem seeing off Djokovic, the men’s semi-finals at a major were contested by the top four seeds for the first time since the 2012 Australian Open.

By contrast, the women’s draw was wide open after early exits for top seeds like Angelique Kerber, Naomi Osaka and Serena Williams.

Only one of the last four – Britain’s Johanna Konta – had previously reached a Grand Slam semi-final, while two of the others – American Amanda Anisimova and runner-up Czech Marketa Vondrousova – were teenagers.

Eventual champion Ashleigh Barty claimed her first Slam singles title with a 6-1 6-3 victory over 19-year-old Vondrousova.

“On the women’s side there are about 10 to 15 women who could win,” Rusedski said.

“There is a lot of intrigue because you don’t know who is going to win – that’s great to have going into a Slam.

“We will see that level of intrigue come back in the men’s, of course we will. I can’t see the same domination.

“We had [Andre] Agassi and [Pete] Sampras and when they retired it was ‘what’s going to happen now?’. There was a two-year gap and then all of a sudden Federer, Nadal and Djokovic all showed up.

“Tsitsipas is going to be a big superstar in our game, you’ve got [Alexander] Zverev, you’ve got Thiem.

“There will be a little transition period, it might take a year or two, but there will be stars to replace the big three.”

Why Nadal is the King of Clay – the stats

  • 950 – Nadal’s victories on the tour, only Federer (1,207), Jimmy Connors (1,156) and Ivan Lendl (1,069) have more
  • 260 – The Spaniard’s number of Grand Slam victories, topped by only Federer (347) and Djokovic (270)
  • 93 – Nobody has won more matches at Roland-Garros than Nadal, with Federer (70) and Djokovic (68) his nearest challengers
  • 59 – Nadal has won more career clay-court titles than any other man, having eclipsed Guillermo Vilas’ previous record of 49 in 2017
  • 12 – Nadal has won every Roland-Garros final he has played

Source link

Venus Williams to play Birmingham event with Konta, Barty and Osaka

  • Posted: Jun 10, 2019

Five-time Wimbledon champion Venus Williams has confirmed she will play at the Nature Valley Classic in Birmingham.

American Williams, 38, will make her debut at the grass-court event after accepting a wildcard, joining world number one Naomi Osaka and French Open champion Ashleigh Barty in the draw.

Defending champion Petra Kvitova and British number one Johanna Konta are also playing in the tournament.

The tournament runs from 15-23 June.

Former world number one Garbine Muguruza has been forced to withdraw from the event held at Edgbaston Priory Club due to a left leg injury.

Source link

20 Things To Watch In Stuttgart, 's-Hertogenbosch

  • Posted: Jun 10, 2019

20 Things To Watch In Stuttgart, ‘s-Hertogenbosch

Zverev, Tsitsipas headline action on the ATP Tour this week

The 2019 ATP Tour grass-court season begins with ATP 250 events in Stuttgart and ‘s-Hertogenbosch this week. World No. 5 Alexander Zverev headlines a packed field at the MercedesCup, which features eight Top 25 players, while #NextGenATP Greek Stefanos Tsitsipas leads the way at the Libema Open.

10 Things To Watch In Stuttgart

1) Sascha Surprise: One day after losing in the Roland Garros quarter-finals, World No. 5 Alexander Zverev accepted a wild card from the MercedesCup, which along with the Libema Open, kicks off the ATP Tour grass-court swing. Zverev is playing his 12th tournament in the past 12 weeks of the ATP Tour calendar, highlighted by championship match appearances in Geneva (d. Jarry) and Acapulco (l. to Kyrgios).

2) All Grown Up: Zverev played at the MercedesCup in its final year on clay (2014) and first year on grass (2015), but he’s missed the last three editions. Local fans will hardly recognize him. Now 22 years old, Zverev is a three-time ATP Masters 1000 champion and two-time Roland Garros quarter-finalist who beat Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic en route to the 2018 Nitto ATP Finals title.

3) Welcome to the Club: Karen Khachanov breaks into the Top 10 of the ATP Rankings today at No. 9. The 23-year-old becomes the first Russian in the Top 10 since Mikhail Youzhny during the week of 7 February 2011. Khachanov reached his first Grand Slam quarter-final at Roland Garros.

4) Not Far Behind: It’s unlikely to take another eight years for a Russian player to be among the Top 10. That’s because Khachanov’s countryman and fellow 23-year-old Daniil Medvedev is ranked a career-high No. 13. Medvedev started the season 25-7, highlighted by a win over Djokovic at the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters. However, Medvedev enters Stuttgart on a four-match losing streak.

5) Oh, Canada: Canadians Milos Raonic, Felix Auger-Aliassime and Denis Shapovalov are seeded sixth, seventh and eighth respectively in Stuttgart. Raonic did not play on clay due to a right knee injury, but the 28-year-old remains a major threat on grass. He’s reached grass-court finals at three different tournaments: 2016 London/Queen’s Club, 2016 Wimbledon and 2018 Stuttgart.

Read MercedesCup: All You Need To Know

6) Phenomenal Felix: After advancing to finals in Rio de Janeiro and Lyon, the 18-year-old Auger-Aliassime surpassed Rafael Nadal as the youngest player to break into the Top 25 since Lleyton Hewitt in 1999. Auger-Aliassime will play the first grass-court match of his pro career in Stuttgart. His last match at any level on grass was the 2016 Wimbledon boys’ doubles final with Shapovalov.

7) Elusive Final: Shapovalov reached three Masters 1000 semi-finals before turning 20 on 15 April. But unlike his #NextGenATP countryman Auger-Aliassime, Shapovalov is still seeking his first appearance in an ATP Tour final. It wouldn’t come as a surprise if Shapovalov’s breakthrough were to come on grass. He ended his junior career as the 2016 Wimbledon boys’ singles champion.

8) Wild Thing: Like Zverev, Lucas Pouille was granted a MercedesCup wild card on Friday. Pouille is the only former champion in the field, saving a match point in his opener en route to the 2017 title. The 25-year-old Frenchman is 2-9 since defeating Raonic in the Australian Open quarter-finals.

9) Home-Court Advantage: Philipp Kohlschreiber, 35, is in the Stuttgart field for the seventh straight season, reaching finals on clay in 2013 and grass in 2016. For his career, Kohlschreiber is 125-66 with five ATP Tour titles in Germany (.654) and 339-293 with three titles elsewhere (.536).

10) Missing Title: The winningest doubles team of all-time is seeking a maiden MercedesCup title. Bob and Mike Bryan have captured a record 118 doubles titles across 35 different tournaments. But they lost semi-finals in their only previous appearances at the MercedesCup in 2016 and 2017.

10 Things To Watch In ‘s-Hertogenbosch

1) Next Gen Presence: No. 1 seed and World No. 6 Stefanos Tsitsipas leads seven #NextGenATP players from seven different countries in the field at the Libema Open, which along with the MercedesCup, kicks off the ATP Tour grass-court swing. The 20-year-old Tsitsipas and 12-time Roland Garros champion Rafael Nadal are tied for the most wins on Tour this season with 32.

2) One Year Later: Tsitsipas was ranked a career-high No. 37 when he reached the quarter-finals in his Libema Open debut last year. He’s achieved a career-high ranking 10 more times since then. Tsitsipas is seeking the first grass-court championship of his surging career, highlighted by three ATP 250 titles, two Masters 1000 finals and a run to the 2019 Australian Open semi-finals.

You May Also Like: Tsitsipas, De Minaur Lead #NextGenATP Charge On Grass

3) No. 1 Aussie: Like Tsitsipas, #NextGenATP player Alex de Minaur has shot up the ATP Rankings in the past 18 months. The 20-year-old Aussie has achieved a career-high 23 times since the start of 2018, peaking at his current position of No. 24. De Minaur is the No. 3 seed in ’s-Hertogenbosch.

4) Firsts for Foe: After winning his maiden ATP Tour title at Delray Beach in 2018, Frances Tiafoe has broken new ground this season. He reached his first Grand Slam quarter-final at the Australian Open on his 21st birthday and his maiden Masters 1000 quarter-final in Miami two months later.

5) Rest of the Next: Joining Tsitsipas, de Minaur and Tiafoe in the Libema Open draw are 17-year-old Jannik Sinner and 20-year-old talents Ugo Humbert, Jurij Rodionov and Alejandro Davidovich Fokina. Humbert (Marseille) and Davidovich Fokina (Estoril) have already reached semi-finals on the ATP Tour this season.

6) Coric’s Year: Borna Coric is the No. 2 seed after taking a wild card. The Croatian has been ranked between No. 12 and No. 15 all season and is aiming to reach his first final of the year. In 2018, Coric lifted the NOVENTI OPEN title and reached his first Masters 1000 final in Shanghai (l. to Djokovic).

Read Libema Open: All You Need To Know

7) Garin on Grass: All 20 of Cristian Garin’s wins in 2019, and 28 of his 30 career wins, have come on clay. Though the No. 7 seed seeks his first tour-level grass-court victory, he’s had some success on the surface. Garin earned three victories to qualify for Wimbledon in each of the past two years.

8) Dutch Hopes: Robin Haase is playing in the Libema Open main draw for the 12th time in 14 years. He’s joined this week by Dutch wild card Thiemo de Bakker, a former World No. 40 who has spent much of 2019 on the ATP Challenger Tour. It’s been 10 years since a Dutchman reached the ’s-Hertogenbosch final (Raemon Sluiter) and 16 since a home player captured the title (Sjeng Schalken).

9) Former Finalists: Reigning champion Richard Gasquet, 2018 runner-up Jeremy Chardy and 2015 finalist David Goffin return to the Libema Open. Since defeating Chardy in an All-French final last year, Gasquet has struggled with left hip, right wrist and groin injuries. He underwent groin surgery in January and did not make his season debut until the Mutua Madrid Open last month.

10) From Paris with Love: Chardy arrives in ’s-Hertogenbosch after reaching his first Grand Slam doubles final. Alongside fellow 32-year-old Frenchman Fabrice Martin, Chardy reached the Roland Garros men’s doubles championship match (l. to Krawietz/Mies). Chardy and Martin are unseeded in the Libema Open doubles draw, which is led by No. 1 seeds and 2017 champions Lukasz Kubot and Marcelo Melo.

Source link

Fantastic Fabio! Fognini Makes History By Cracking The Top 10

  • Posted: Jun 10, 2019

Fantastic Fabio! Fognini Makes History By Cracking The Top 10

Fognini is oldest first-time member of the Top 10 since 1973

Italian Fabio Fognini has made history.

On Monday, the 32-year-old World No. 10 became the oldest player to break into the Top 10 of the ATP Rankings for the first time since 38-year-old Ken Rosewall and 35-year-old Rod Laver on 23 August 1973, when the ATP Rankings were first established. Fognini is just the third Italian man to crack the elite group, joining Adriano Panatta and Corrado Barazzutti.

“To reach the Top 10 is like the fulfilment of a dream. I see myself as a kid on a tennis court with a racquet bigger than me and I think, ‘This kid has gone a long way’,” Fognini told ATPTour.com. “Right now I am happy and I want to thank my family, my wife, my son and all the people who have always been close to me.”

Italian Men To Reach The Top 10

 Player  Career-High
 Adriano Panatta  No. 4
 Corrado Barazzutti  No. 7
 Fabio Fognini  No. 10

Of the current Top 10, Kevin Anderson was the oldest to join the group for the first time, doing so at 29. The other nine stars were 24 or younger when they accomplished the feat.

“This is another piece of the puzzle which will push me to continue to give my all to the sport I love,” Fognini said. 

You May Also Like: Fognini Beats Lajovic To Win Monte-Carlo Title

Joining Fognini as a first-time entrant into the Top 10 Monday is Russian Karen Khachanov, who ascended to a career-high World No. 9, becoming the first man from his country to be ranked inside the Top 10 since Mikhail Youzhny the week of 17 January 2011. Khachanov and Fognini are the 164th and 165th players to earn a spot in the sport’s upper echelon.

Fognini had to sweat a bit more during Roland Garros than Khachanov, though. When the Italian lost in the fourth round in Paris, there was a chance that multiple players could pass him. But Khachanov defeated Juan Martin del Potro, guaranteeing Fognini would move ahead of the Tower of Tandil. If Del Potro had won that match, he would have passed the 32-year-old.

Watch ATP Uncovered presented by Peugeot: Fognini On Fatherhood & Fantastic Form

Former World No. 3 Stan Wawrinka would have returned to the Top 10 if he reached the final, but the Swiss lost in the quarter-finals against countryman Roger Federer.

Fognini has been a Top 100 stalwart for more than a decade. In fact, he has remained inside the Top 50 since September 2012. In March 2013, he reached what was then a career-high of No. 13. But this year was the first time he made a serious run at the Top 10. Fognini won his maiden ATP Masters 1000 title at the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters on 21 April to position himself for this breakthrough.

Source link

Evans Kicks Off Grass Season With Surbiton Crown

  • Posted: Jun 10, 2019

Evans Kicks Off Grass Season With Surbiton Crown

Revisit the week that was on the ATP Challenger Tour as we applaud the achievements of those on the rise and look ahead to who’s in action in the week to come

A LOOK BACK
Surbiton Trophy (Surbiton, U.K.): The three-week ATP Challenger Tour grass-court swing commenced in the London suburb of Surbiton, with home hope Daniel Evans taking the title on Sunday. Evans, who celebrated his 29th birthday two weeks ago, lifted the seventh Challenger trophy of his career and first on grass.

After fighting for a three-set win over Marius Copil in Saturday’s semi-finals, it was smooth sailing against Viktor Troicki in the championship. Evans clinched a convincing 6-2, 6-3 victory in just 65 minutes, securing his return to the Top 70 of the ATP Rankings for the first time since August 2017. It has been a career-year for the Brit, who also reached his second ATP Tour final on the hard courts of Delray Beach in February.

“It’s a great start to the grass-court season,” said Evans. “Viktor seemed a bit flat and I got on top early. I could have been even more clinical in the second set. It was a tough week of matches and I am just grateful to get those in and come through with no injuries. I lost to Jeremy Chardy here last year and Dustin Brown before that, so this was good. The quality and competition is always high at this tournament.”

The Birmingham native is the first British player to win a Challenger title on home soil since Evans claimed his maiden title in Jersey in 2009. He is also the first player from Great Britain to win a grass-court Challenger title since Alex Bogdanovic in Nottingham in 2005.

Moneta Czech Open (Prostejov, Czech Republic): If Pablo Andujar maintains this run of form, it won’t be long until the Spaniard returns to the Top 50 of the ATP Rankings. Andujar rose to No. 82 with the title in Prostejov, dominating all week in the Czech city without dropping a set.

After stopping top seed Casper Ruud in Friday’s semi-finals, the 33-year-old defeated Attila Balazs 6-2, 7-5 in Saturday’s championship. In his return from multiple elbow surgeries in early 2018, Andujar has been a ruthless force on the ATP Challenger Tour. He is now 6-0 in finals in that span and 18-1 overall on the circuit this year.

“It’s definitely one of the top Challengers, no doubt,” Andujar said of Prostejov. “The level is the same as some ATP 250 tournaments. The organizers really understand, which always helps. And small details then make a great tournament.”

Andujar

Poznan Open (Poznan, Poland): On a picture-perfect afternoon in Poznan, it was 37-year-old Tommy Robredo who became the oldest champion on the ATP Challenger Tour in 2019. Robredo secured a second title in as many years, battling for the trophy on the Polish clay. He rallied from a set down on two occasions, including a 5-7, 6-4, 6-1 comeback win over Rudolf Molleker on Sunday. The former World No. 5 contributed to the Spanish title trend over the weekend, with Andujar prevailing in Prostejov and Rafael Nadal capturing his 12th Roland Garros title.

Moreover, the Poznan Open entered a new era this year, celebrating 25 years on the Challenger circuit. Located in the western half of Poland, the city is the third-largest in the European nation. Last year, home hope Hubert Hurkacz secured his maiden title en route to an appearance at the Next Gen ATP Finals in Milan.

Oldest Challenger Champions

Player Age Title
Ivo Karlovic 39 years, 7 months 2018 Calgary
Dick Norman 38 years, 1 month 2009 Mexico City
Stephane Robert 37 years, 8 months 2018 Burnie
Bob Carmichael 37 years, 6 months 1978 Hobart
Stephane Robert 37 years, 5 months 2017 Kobe
Tommy Robredo 37 years, 1 month 2019 Poznan
Victor Estrella Burgos 37 years 2017 Santo Domingo

Robredo

Almaty Challenger (Almaty, Kazakhstan): Welcome to the winners’ circle, Lorenzo Giustino! At the age of 27 years and eight months, the Italian became the oldest first-time winner on the ATP Challenger Tour this year. He capped a breakthrough week with a 6-4, 6-4 win over Federico Coria in Sunday’s final.

The clay of Almaty was Giustino’s battleground all week, as the fifth seed fought for a trio of deciding-set wins and needed one hour and 28 minutes to dismiss Coria in the championship. He is the 20th first-time winner of the 2019 season and fifth different champion from Italy, joining Gianluca Mager, Jannik Sinner, Matteo Berrettini and Stefano Travaglia.

Giustino

Baptist Health Little Rock Open (Little Rock, Arkansas, USA): Torrential rain was the story of the inaugural Little Rock Open, as storms plagued the tournament all week. But, in the end, it was Israeli veteran Dudi Sela who emerged victorious. The 34-year-old survived the weather and a tough field, dropping just one set all week. He defeated 12th seed Duckhee Lee 6-1, 4-3 in the final, when the #NextGenATP Korean was forced to retire due to a heat-related illness.

It was only fitting that the Israeli would lift the trophy in Little Rock. In Hebrew, Sela means ‘rock’ and standing at just 5’9″, he is undoubtedly the ‘Little Rock’ of the professional circuit. Moreover, the player with the second-most Challenger titles in history has now added one more… No. 23 in total. He rises 45 spots to No. 164 in the ATP Rankings.

A LOOK AHEAD
The highly prestigious Nature Valley Open returns to the lawns of Nottingham, with 2018 runner-up Daniel Evans the top seed. The Brit is looking to go back-to-back on the grass following his triumph in Surbiton on Sunday. He is joined by Bernard Tomic, Ivo Karlovic and Marcel Granollers, along with #NextGenATP Swede Mikael Ymer, who is seeded 15th.

At the Open Sopra Steria in Lyon, two-time defending champion Felix Auger-Aliassime is not back to seek a three-peat, but 2016 titlist Steve Darcis is. The Belgian accompanies top seed Albert Ramos-Vinolas, Prostejov champ Pablo Andujar and #NextGenATP Frenchman Corentin Moutet in leading the field.

In Shymkent, Kazakhstan, Malek Jaziri leads the pack and fourth seed Lorenzo Giustino looks to extend his good run of form after his maiden triumph in nearby Almaty on Sunday. And in Columbus, USA, Michael Mmoh continues his comeback from injury. He is the top seed at the outdoor hard-court event.

ATP Challenger Tour 

Source link

'Drastic change' of attitude after injuries helped Nadal win 12th French Open

  • Posted: Jun 09, 2019

Rafael Nadal says winning his 12th French Open is extra special after a turbulent year where he considered taking an extended break because of injury problems.

Nadal, 33, played just three events in 2019 prior to the clay-court season.

But it ended with a 6-3 5-7 6-1 6-1 win over Austrian fourth seed Dominic Thiem in Sunday’s final at Roland Garros.

“I’ve had too many issues. So that makes these last few weeks very, very special,” he said.

“One possibility was to stop for a while and recover my body.

“And the other was to drastically change my attitude and my mentality.

“I was able to change and fight for every small improvement that I was able to make.”

World number two Nadal has been hampered by injury problems over the past two seasons, pulling out of 10 tournaments last year because of a combination of hip, knee, stomach and ankle problems.

After retiring from his US Open semi-final against Argentina’s Juan Martin del Potro in September with a knee problem, Nadal did not play for the rest of the year.

The Spaniard had ankle surgery in November, returning at the Australian Open in January when he lost in straight sets in the final to world number one Novak Djokovic.

He did not play again until March at Indian Wells, where he was forced to pull out before his semi-final against Roger Federer with another knee problem.

A five-week break leading up to the clay-court season followed, with Nadal reaching the semi-finals in Monte Carlo, Barcelona and Madrid.

That meant he did not win a tour title in 2019 until the Italian Open – the final Masters 1,000 tournament before Roland Garros.

“After Indian Wells, as I said couple of times, mentally I was down,” he said. “I lost a little bit of energy, because I had too many issues in a row.

“It is tough when you receive one and then another.

“Mentally I was not enjoying things. I was too worried about my health and, being honest, I was being too negative.

“After the first round in Barcelona, I was able to stay alone for a couple of hours in the room and think about what’s going on, what I need to do. And since that first match in Barcelona, I think things have been improving every single day.”

His coach Carlos Moya says his fellow Mallorcan has shown he is “mentally a genius” after battling through his injury troubles to triumph again at Roland Garros.

“It’s been the toughest period for sure since I’ve been there. It was really hard. He really had to push himself to the limit to be back on the court, to practise, to be motivated,” said Moya, who linked up with Nadal in 2017.

“He had an unbelievable attitude in those bad moments and that’s what took him to victory today.”

  • Nadal beats Thiem to win French open title
  • Relive Nadal’s French Open final win

‘You can’t be frustrated if your neighbour has a bigger house’

Nadal’s victory over Thiem on the Paris clay is his 18th major title, moving him within two of long-time rival Roger Federer’s all-time men’s singles record.

But Nadal has again said catching the Swiss is not on his mind.

“If I catch Roger or not, I am not very worried about it,” he said.

“You can’t be frustrated all the time because the neighbour has a bigger house than you, or a bigger TV, or a better garden.

“That’s not the way that I see the life.

“If, by the end of my career, I am able to win a couple of more Grand Slams and be closer to Roger, it will be unbelievable.

“I am going to try my best to keep enjoying tennis, giving myself chances to compete at the highest level and we will see what happens.”

I was closer than last year – Thiem

Thiem believes he is on the right path towards a Grand Slam title, despite again falling to Nadal in his second major final.

The 25-year-old Austrian lost in straight sets to the Spaniard in last year’s Roland Garros showpiece.

He has been reaping the rewards of his partnership with new coach Nicolas Massu, who replaced his childhood coach Gunter Bresnik earlier this year.

Thiem won his first Masters 1,000 title in March – the tier of tournaments behind the Slams – by beating Roger Federer in the Indian Wells final, and then claimed the Barcelona Open title in April, having defeated Nadal in the semi-finals.

“Even though I didn’t win this tournament, two finals in a row, it’s nice,” he said after his defeat on the Paris clay.

“I think that I have developed my game. I was also closer than last year in the final. So I’m on the right way.

“I failed today, but my goal and my dream is still to win this tournament or to win a Grand Slam tournament.”

Thiem matched Nadal for large parts of an intense opening set, breaking for a 3-2 lead before the Spaniard fought back to win the final four games.

Thiem responded by winning the second set before Nadal took control.

“He played outstanding because especially in the first two sets I played very good tennis,” the Austrian said.

“What he was performing I think is unbelievable.

“I played very good the first two sets, and then I had a little drop, which is against most of the players not that bad.

“But he took the chance and stepped right on me.”

Thiem had 24 hours fewer than Nadal to prepare after his weather-delayed semi-final against Djokovic finished on Saturday afternoon.

He had also played on four consecutive days because his quarter-final against Russian 10th seed Karen Khachanov was pushed back to Thursday after rain led to play being cancelled on Wednesday.

“I didn’t feel tired in the match,” he said.

“But at the same time, a match like yesterday, beating Novak over two days with all the interruption, it leaves traces on the body and also on the mind. That’s 100%.”

Reaction to Nadal’s 12th title

Women’s doubles champion and Thiem’s girlfriend Kristina Mladenovic: “12th Roland Garros titles is absolutely unreal! Very proud to see Domi standing next to this legend of our sport! Your turn is coming soon…”

Fifteen-time golf major winner Tiger Woods: “The King of Clay does not like to share his wealth. Congrats Rafael Nadal on #12!”

Former world number one and two-time Grand Slam champion Lleyton Hewitt: “I see it but I don’t believe it… someone can win 12 Roland Garros singles titles. Rafael Nadal what a performance!”

Eleven-time Grand Slam singles champion Rod Laver: “Simply magnificent Rafael Nadal. Winning a grand slam isn’t easy. Winning 12 French titles is beyond belief. Congratulations King of Clay!”

Former world number one and 12-time Grand Slam singles champion Billie Jean King: “There will never be another Nadal. Congratulations to Rafael Nadal on an incredible 12th French Open win. A genius on clay, with a tremendous work ethic, he’s a role model both on and off the court. Well done!”

  • Live scores, schedule and results
  • Alerts: Get tennis news sent to your phone

Source link

Tsitsipas, De Minaur Lead #NextGenATP Charge On Grass

  • Posted: Jun 09, 2019

Tsitsipas, De Minaur Lead #NextGenATP Charge On Grass

11 #NextGenATP players kicking off their grass-court seasons on Monday

In November, they met in the championship match of the Next Gen ATP Finals in Milan. This week in ’s-Hertogenbosch, though, Next Gen ATP Finals champion Stefanos Tsitsipas and finalist Alex de Minaur could meet in the semi-finals of the Libema Open in The Netherlands.

Tsitsipas and De Minaur are two of the seven #NextGenATP players in the 28-player draw as the grass-court season kicks off on Monday with the ATP 250 in ’s-Hertogenbosch and the MercedesCup, another ATP 250, in Stuttgart.

View The ATP Race To Milan | View ‘s-Hertogenbosch Draw | View Stuttgart Draw

The top-seeded Tsitsipas is looking to become the first player this season to win titles on all three surfaces following his triumphs this year on hard court in Marseille and on clay in Estoril.

De Minaur, on the other hand, is hoping to jumpstart his injury-plagued 2019. The 20-year-old Aussie missed the ATP Masters 1000 event in Miami, the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters and the Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell because of a hip injury. He’s only 11-7 on the season.

#NextGenATP At The Libema Open and MercedesCup

Ranking

Player

Age

Country

Tournament

No. 6

Stefanos Tsitsipas

20

Greece

Libema Open

No. 22

Felix Auger-Aliassime

18

Canada

MercedesCup

No. 24

Denis Shapovalov

20

Canada

MercedesCup

No. 25

Alex de Minaur

20

Canada

Libema Open

No. 34

Frances Tiafoe

21

U.S.

Libema Open

No. 61

Ugo Humbert

20

France

Libema Open

No. 85

Miomir Kecmanovic

19

Serbia

MercedesCup

No. 109

Alexei Popyrin

19

Australia

MercedesCup

No. 133 Alejandro Davidovich Fokina 20 Spain Libema Open

No. 201

Jurij Rodionov

20

Austria

Libema Open

No. 215

Jannik Sinner

17

Italy

Libema Open

In Stuttgart, a pair of #NextGenATP Canadians – Felix Auger-Aliassime and Denis Shapovalov – along with Aussie Alexei Popyrin and Serbian Miomir Kecmanovic, will lead the #NextGenATP effort. Auger-Aliassime will look to reach his third ATP Tour final of the season (Rio, Lyon), while Shapovalov is going for his first ATP Tour final.

Source link