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Nadal Turns Focus To Maiden Nitto ATP Finals Title

  • Posted: Nov 11, 2017

Nadal Turns Focus To Maiden Nitto ATP Finals Title

Spanish No. 1 to open London campaign against Belgian David Goffin

Fear does not come into the equation for Rafael Nadal. Having arrived in London for the Nitto ATP Finals, the Spaniard admitted he would not even allow a resurgent Roger Federer, nipping at his heels for a return to No. 1 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, to play on his mind in the latter part of 2017.

Having achieved so much already, reassuming top spot was a bonus, an unexpected reward for a season that has bagged titles in Monte-Carlo, Barcelona, Madrid, Roland Garros, Flushing Meadows and Beijing. The Spaniard begins his season-ending campaign with one less pressure hanging over his head.

Federer can nip at his heels all he wants. The year-end Emirates ATP No. 1 Ranking belongs to Nadal, regardless of results in London.

“I was not afraid at all,” Nadal said of Federer’s pursuit of the top spot. “It’s something that I was clear in my mind. I will not do a different calendar to try to be No.1 again. I did what I thought was best for my happiness, my tennis career and for my results. 

“It’s a very important achievement, especially for my age – No.1 in the world at the end of the season is a great achievement for me at 31.5 years old. For sure, it was never on my mind to be in that position again, but here, I made it happen, my team helped me to where I am today.”

Few big titles have eluded the Spaniard over his decorated career. Of his 75 titles, however, none have included the season-ending Nitto ATP Finals. 

“Yes it’s a goal in my mind, I’ve qualified 13 years,” Nadal said. “Of course being here is an important thing but for me, it is what happens during the year – competing in tournaments, almost every week with a very competitive level of tennis, and being healthy (that matter).”

Seventh seed David Goffin is his first round-robin assignment on Monday night. The pair has squared off twice, both times on the slower clay, both this year – at ATP World Tour Masters 1000 Madrid and ATP Masters 1000 Monte-Carlo – where Nadal prevailed each time in straight sets. 

“After what happened to him at Roland Garros (an ankle injury), it would be really unfair if he was not here,” Nadal said. “I’m very happy to see him recovered and playing well. Hopefully he won’t play that well on Monday but he’s 100 per cent here and he deserves to be.”

Nadal would have to progress beyond the group stage of the Nitto ATP Finals to have another shot at playing Federer. While he leads their FedEx ATP Head2Head series 23-15, the Swiss has claimed all four of their encounters in 2017. Any talk of revenge in London, though, is quickly downplayed.

“No I don’t need to beat Roger for good confidence,” Nadal said. “I’ve won enough to be confident. If I play him here it would be great to finish the year playing him again to give me another chance. 

“We cannot forget that we played all the times (in 2017) on surfaces that he likes more than me. I just accept that and find different ways to approach the match and if that happens (in London), I’m healthy enough so I hope I have my chances.”

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ATP World Tour Finals: Rafael Nadal says knee injury is 'not perfect'

  • Posted: Nov 11, 2017
ATP World Tour Finals
Venue: The 02 Arena, London Dates: 12-19 November
Coverage: Watch live on BBC Two, Red Button, BBC Sport website and mobile app, listen on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra and follow text updates online.

World number one Rafael Nadal says his knee is “not perfect” but expects to be fit enough to start the ATP World Tour Finals in London on Monday.

The Spaniard, 31, withdrew before his quarter-final match in last week’s Paris Masters with the injury.

Nadal will play Belgium’s David Goffin in his opening tie.

“If I didn’t believe I could be ready for Monday I wouldn’t be here,” said Nadal, who has won the US Open and the French Open in 2017.

Nadal, who has already guaranteed top spot in the world rankings at the end of the season, also faces Dominic Thiem of Austria and Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov in his group.

“The knee is not perfect, of course, after having to retire from Paris,” Nadal told BBC Sport.

“In a couple of days you cannot expect to be 100% but I had treatment and I’m expecting to be better and better every day. I’m here to try my best to give me a chance.”

World number two Roger Federer, 36, opted not to play in Paris, after beating Argentine Juan Martin del Potro to win the Swiss Indoors in Basel last month.

The Swiss 19-time Grand Slam champion has won seven titles in 2017, including Wimbledon and the Australian Open, and played a charity event against Britain’s Andy Murray in Glasgow on Tuesday.

“I feel fine,” said Federer, who opens his campaign on Sunday afternoon against American Jack Sock.

“I had a very slow last 10 days. I practised twice during the week in Paris and I only hit for an hour both times.

“I came here on Monday, then played the exhibition against Andy [Murray] in Glasgow and was then off again on Wednesday so I’ve been really taking it slowly to really just make sure I totally rested after Basel.”

How do the finals work?

ATP World Tour Finals singles draw
Pete Sampras group Boris Becker group
Rafael Nadal [1] Roger Federer [2]
Dominic Thiem [4] Alexander Zverev [3]
Grigor Dimitrov [6] Marin Cilic [5]
David Goffin [7] Jack Sock [8]

The best eight qualified singles players and doubles teams from the tour go head-to-head for the prestigious end-of-season titles.

Each player competes in three group matches, playing for a spot in the semi-finals.

Britain’s defending champion Andy Murray misses out after ending his season early through injury.

In the doubles draw, Britain’s Jamie Murray and his partner Bruno Soares will start their quest for the trophy against the American Bryan brothers.

Schedule

  • The event will be broadcast live on BBC television, radio and online.

Sunday (All times GMT)

  • 12:00: Kontinen/Peers v Harrison/Venus
  • Not before 14:00: Federer v Sock
  • Not before 18:00: Rojer/Tecau v Herbert/Mahut
  • Not before 20:00: Zverev v Cilic

Monday

  • 12:00: Murray/Soares v Bryan/Bryan
  • Not before 14:00: Thiem v Dimitrov
  • Not before 18:00: Kubot/Melo v Dodig/Granollers
  • Not before 20:00: Nadal v Goffin

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Sock Flying The Flag For America In London

  • Posted: Nov 11, 2017

Sock Flying The Flag For America In London

Sock’s season of ups and downs comes to a climax at the Nitto ATP Finals

Jack Sock might be the only non-European at the Nitto ATP Finals this year, but he certainly isn’t out of place. 

Having earned his place at the prestigious year-end event in London on the back of a surprising title run at the Rolex Paris Masters, Sock is flying the American flag amidst a field of Europeans. Although they might not share the same continent, they’ll share the same court over the next week of exciting matchups at The O2 arena in Britain’s capital.

Not since 2011 has an American qualified for the Nitto ATP Finals, when Mardy Fish capped off a sensational season with three tight matches at the round robin stage, and Sock’s victory in Paris, which halted a run of 69-straight ATP Masters 1000 titles won by Europeans, might just signal a continental changing of the guard in tennis.

“[Europe is] producing some amazing players year after year, but I think we have a great group of young guys coming up,” said Sock. “We’ve got a good group of us now that are holding steady at the top and a good wave coming through behind, so hopefully for the years to come there will be some change to that. 

“Obviously, being patriotic, I wish some of my friends were here, the other American guys, but [I’m] definitely excited for the week and ready to get things going on Sunday.”

Sock would be the first to admit that it hasn’t been the consistent year he had anticipated. Following an electric start to the season that saw him claim two titles and deep runs at the Masters 1000 events in Indian Wells and Miami, the 25-year-old’s results dipped disappointingly, particularly at events on home soil. 

But did he ever imagine himself qualifying for the Nitto ATP Finals?

“Through April, yeah, I envisioned being here – from June through November, maybe not,” said Sock, assessing his season. It was a good start to the year, kind of a rougher middle part and beginning to the fall and then obviously an amazing week to cap off what I thought was going to be my last week of the season.”

Although his odds were a long shot going into the Rolex Paris Masters, where he was ranked a far-off 24th in the Emirates ATP Race to London, Sock seized control of an open draw to defeat surprise finalist Filip Krajinovic, instantly qualifying him for the season-ending event.

“Going into Paris I was honestly hoping to play some matches and was getting ready to regroup mentally and get ready for my off-season at home. I genuinely had no idea mathematically that I could make London after the five, six-month stretch I had there in the middle to the end of the season,” said the American.

“It wasn’t until after the match I played Lucas Pouille in Paris that someone in the media mentioned ‘if you happen to win this week you can still make London,’” he added. “I kind of laughed it off and then was just focusing on one match at a time. Obviously the closer it got and the farther I got in the draw then it became more of a reality and was definitely a motivation there at the end of the week.

Sock’s Nitto ATP Finals campaign sees him in Group Boris Becker alongside Marin Cilic, Alexander Zverev and Roger Federer, who earlier in the season noted Sock’s penchant for playing on the biggest stages – and when the two face off against each other on Sunday, it will be put to the test.

“That’s a fair assessment by Roger, I do enjoy playing in front of a lot of people,” said Sock. “I think I have a fairly entertaining game … so I’m definitely looking forward to showcasing it and getting out there this weekend and into next week.”

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Chung Survives, Sets Sights On 1st Title

  • Posted: Nov 11, 2017

Chung Survives, Sets Sights On 1st Title

Chung will play Rublev in his first ATP World Tour final

Hyeon Chung was unstoppable. That was until he wasn’t.

The South Korean dominated round-robin competition, winning all three of his matches. And after winning the first two sets easily and going up a break in the third set of Friday’s semi-final at the inaugural Next Gen ATP Finals against Daniil Medvedev, it looked like he would cruise right into the final against Andrey Rublev, who he crushed in group play.

But then Medvedev dug into the match. The Russian found his rhythm and with it enough momentum to carry the encounter to a deciding fifth set. Chung looked vulnerable.

Not so fast. Chung impressively enough found perhaps his best tennis of the week when he needed it the most, putting on a scintillating display of aggression and mental toughness to oust Medvedev, 4-1, 4-1, 3-4(4), 1-4, 4-0.

“I had to stay calm,” Chung said. “Just trying to stay calm and he was playing good, so I had to play the same as I did in the first and second set.”

At 30/30 in the first game of the final set, Medvedev was just two points from breaking Chung and possibly running away with the match. But the South Korean stayed the course, holding and then breaking to earn a lead he would not give up for a spot in Saturday’s final.

There, Chung will play Rublev, who he beat in Group A play on Wednesday, 4-0, 4-1, 4-3(1), in 68 minutes. He also defeated the Russian this August at the Winston-Salem Open. So, at the moment, he is not worried about creating a gameplan from scratch to combat the top seed.

“I need a rest because it’s already 12, so I have to do my recovery first,” Chung said. “We know how to play each other, so I have to go sleep, only.”

Rublev managed to find his best tennis of the event as well to oust the previously undefeated Borna Coric in the day’s first semi-final.

Chung will be playing in his first ATP World Tour final, while Rublev claimed his maiden trophy earlier this year as a lucky loser in Umag.

If Chung goes on to win at the Fiera Milano, he will earn $390,000 as an undefeated champion, while Rublev can leave Italy with $335,000.

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Chung Survives, Sets Sights On 1st Title

  • Posted: Nov 11, 2017

Chung Survives, Sets Sights On 1st Title

Chung will play Rublev in his first ATP World Tour final

Hyeon Chung was unstoppable. That was until he wasn’t.

The South Korean dominated round-robin competition, winning all three of his matches. And after winning the first two sets easily and going up a break in the third set of Friday’s semi-final at the inaugural Next Gen ATP Finals against Daniil Medvedev, it looked like he would cruise right into the final against Andrey Rublev, who he crushed in group play.

But then Medvedev dug into the match. The Russian found his rhythm and with it enough momentum to carry the encounter to a deciding fifth set. Chung looked vulnerable.

Not so fast. Chung impressively enough found perhaps his best tennis of the week when he needed it the most, putting on a scintillating display of aggression and mental toughness to oust Medvedev, 4-1, 4-1, 3-4(4), 1-4, 4-0.

“I had to stay calm,” Chung said. “Just trying to stay calm and he was playing good, so I had to play the same as I did in the first and second set.”

At 30/30 in the first game of the final set, Medvedev was just two points from breaking Chung and possibly running away with the match. But the South Korean stayed the course, holding and then breaking to earn a lead he would not give up for a spot in Saturday’s final.

There, Chung will play Rublev, who he beat in Group A play on Wednesday, 4-0, 4-1, 4-3(1), in 68 minutes. He also defeated the Russian this August at the Winston-Salem Open. So, at the moment, he is not worried about creating a gameplan from scratch to combat the top seed.

“I need a rest because it’s already 12, so I have to do my recovery first,” Chung said. “We know how to play each other, so I have to go sleep, only.”

Rublev managed to find his best tennis of the event as well to oust the previously undefeated Borna Coric in the day’s first semi-final.

Chung will be playing in his first ATP World Tour final, while Rublev claimed his maiden trophy earlier this year as a lucky loser in Umag.

If Chung goes on to win at the Fiera Milano, he will earn $390,000 as an undefeated champion, while Rublev can leave Italy with $335,000.

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Rublev Races Into Milan Final

  • Posted: Nov 10, 2017

Rublev Races Into Milan Final

Russian will go for second title of ’17

Andrey Rublev started the inaugural Next Gen ATP Finals mired in a five-set battle against the World No. 305 Gianluigi Quinzi, the Italian wild card. The Russian looked uncomfortable and said he wasn’t so sure about the shorter format being used in Milan.

Three days later, it looks as if Rublev has acclimated well. The 20-year-old Moscow native handed Croatian Borna Coric his first loss of the tournament, sweeping the Group B winner 4-1, 4-3(6), 4-1 on Friday night to reach the title match of the inaugural Next Gen ATP Finals.

“Today I played my best tennis of the week. I’m really happy,” Rublev said.

On Saturday night, the top-seeded Russian will go for his second ATP World Tour title against either South Korean Hyeon Chung, who also hasn’t lost yet in Italy, or seventh-seeded countryman Daniil Medvedev. Chung and Medvedev are playing the second semi-final at the Fiera Milano.

Rublev celebrated his maiden ATP World Tour title in July in Umag, when, as a lucky loser, he raced through the draw and beat Italian veteran Paolo Lorenzi in the final. On Friday, the Russian looked ready to hoist another trophy this weekend.

Rublev was relentless against Coric, swinging away from the start. He broke when Coric double faulted for a 2-0 lead, and then the Russian held to love to gain a one-set lead after 15 minutes. Coric, who came back from two sets down against Russian Karen Khachanov on Thursday night, rallied in the second but couldn’t get over the hump during the tie-break. A single break sealed the match for Rublev in the third set.

“He was just playing too good for me today,” Coric said. “He was the better player on the court.”

Rublev finished with 17 winners to only eight unforced errors. Coric, meanwhile, hit 12 winners but 14 unforced errors.

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Hua Hin Championships: Naomi Broady and Monique Adamczak through to semis in Thailand

  • Posted: Nov 10, 2017

Britain’s Naomi Broady and her partner Monique Adamczak are through to the doubles semi-finals at the Hua Hin Championships in Thailand.

Broady and Adamczak needed only 74 minutes to overcome Thai pair Luksika Kumkhum and Nudnida Luangnam in a 6-2 6-4 win.

They will play third seeds Dalila Jakupovic and Irina Khromacheva in the last four.

Broady, 27, has never won an event on the WTA tour.

She is attempting to reach her first doubles final since losing at the Hong Kong Open with fellow Briton Heather Watson just over a year ago.

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Nadal, Federer, Shapovalov, Bryans, Tecau Honoured In 2017 ATP World Tour Awards

  • Posted: Nov 10, 2017

Nadal, Federer, Shapovalov, Bryans, Tecau Honoured In 2017 ATP World Tour Awards

Awards revealed at Nitto ATP Finals Official Launch Presented By Moët & Chandon at Tower of London

The winners of the 2017 ATP World Tour Awards presented by Moët & Chandon were revealed Thursday night as the year’s best eight singles players and doubles teams gathered at the Tower of London for the 2017 Nitto ATP Finals Official Launch, presented by Moët & Chandon.

Rafael Nadal was recognised for his achievement of clinching the year-end No. 1 Emirates ATP Ranking for the fourth time in his career, while the No. 1 doubles battle between Lukasz Kubot/Marcelo Melo and Henri Kontinen/John Peers will come down to the upcoming season finale, to start Sunday at The O2. Nadal will be presented the No. 1 trophy on court at the conclusion of the opening session.

Visit the official ATP World Tour Awards section on ATPWorldTour.com

Four other players competing at the Nitto ATP Finals – Roger Federer, Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan, and Horia Tecau – accepted their ATP World Tour Awards as part of the Official Launch festivities. #NextGenATP Canadian Denis Shapovalov, who was competing this week at the inaugural Next Gen ATP Finals in Milan, and South African Neville Godwin sent video messages acknowledging their honours. 

The 36-year-old Federer increased his record tally of ATP World Tour Awards to 36, adding three new trophies to his collection Thursday. He was selected by his peers as Comeback Player of the Year for the first time and as the recipient of the Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award for the 13th time. Federer, along with the Bryans, extended their reigns as the singles and doubles ATPWorldTour.com Fans’ Favourite presented by Moët & Chandon, winning the popular vote from fans for respectively a 15th and 13th straight year.

Eighteen-year-old Shapovalov also won multiple honours in the 2017 ATP World Tour Awards. He was voted by fellow players as the Most Improved Player of the Year, and will also be honoured as the ATP Star of Tomorrow presented by Emirates when he visits The O2 on Saturday, 18 November to collect his trophies in an on-court ceremony.

Tecau was named the recipient of the Arthur Ashe Humanitarian Award for his efforts in championing children’s rights and education in his home country of Romania, while Godwin won Coach of the Year after guiding countryman Kevin Anderson to his first Grand Slam final at the US Open earlier this year.

The ATP World Tour’s best tournaments in their respective categories were also honoured, with the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells (Masters 1000), the Abierto Mexicano Telcel in Acapulco (500) and the Qatar ExxonMobil Open in Doha (250) announced as the Tournaments of the Year.

Meanwhile, Argentina’s Guillermo Salatino was named the first Latin American journalist to win the Ron Bookman Media Excellence Award.

The evening also featured the official group photos in front of the iconic White Tower, where guests inside enjoyed a reception following a tour of the Tower of London grounds by Yeoman Warders. Players then took the stage in the New Armouries building in front of VIP guests, including President, CEO & COO, Nitto Denko Corporation, Hideo Takasaki, for the robin-robin group introductions and a short Q&A with Andrew Castle.

The Nitto ATP Finals welcomes more than 250,000 fans to The O2 arena each year, as well as generating a global TV viewership of more than 100 million, as the ATP’s best eight singles players and doubles teams compete over eight days at the biggest indoor tennis tournament in the world.

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#NextGenATP Set For Milan Semis

  • Posted: Nov 10, 2017

#NextGenATP Set For Milan Semis

Coric will play Rublev and Chung will take on Medvedev

After an exciting three days of round-robin play, two players have made themselves the favourites heading into knockout play at the Next Gen ATP Finals. But anything could happen in the semi-finals, with four players attempting to earn their spot in Saturday’s final.

Hyeon Chung and Borna Coric, who both who won their respective groups with a 3-0 round-robin record, will look to continue their excellent form as their group’s second-place finishers, Andrey Rublev and Daniil Medvedev, push for an upset.

The South Korean and Croatian both won nine of 12 sets and almost the same amount of games (Coric-43, Chung-41). Both players won five-set matches on Thursday to close out group play.

Fourth-seeded Coric won Group B and will play the top seed, Andrey Rublev, in the first match on Friday.

The duo are two of the seven first-time champions on the ATP World Tour this season. The 20-year-old Coric, who turns 21 next Tuesday, captured his first ATP title in Marrakech in April (d. Kohlschreiber). This is his first semi-final since then. On Thursday, already having clinched a spot in the final four, Coric rallied from two sets down to beat No. 2 seed Karen Khachanov, 3-4(3), 2-4, 4-2, 4-0, 4-2.

Rublev lifted his first ATP World Tour trophy in Umag in July (d. Lorenzi) as a lucky loser. The 20-year-old Russian beat third-seeded Denis Shapovalov 4-1, 3-4(8), 4-3(2), 0-4, 4-3(3) in a two-hour, two-minute battle to advance to his second ATP World Tour semi-final in 2017.

The sixth-seeded Chung won Group A and will face Medvedev for the first time.

Chung attempts to advance to his first ATP World Tour final, while Medvedev tries to reach his second — in the opening week of the season, the 21-year-old Russian was a finalist in Chennai (l. to Bautista Agut).

Medvedev finished 2-1 in Group B as he came back from a set down to defeat fifth-seeded Jared Donaldson 3-4(3), 4-2, 4-3(1), 4-0 on Thursday. Both players have cracked the Top 50 in the Emirates ATP Rankings this season with Medvedev reaching a career-high No. 48 on 24 July and Chung No. 44 on 11 September. Medvedev has won seven of 12 sets this week.

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