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The best five shots in GB defeat

  • Posted: Feb 04, 2018

Watch the best five shots as Great Britain were beaten 3-1 by Spain in their Davis Cup tie after Cameron Norrie lost in four sets to world number 21 Albert Ramos-Vinolas.

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GB beaten by Spain despite brave Norrie effort

  • Posted: Feb 04, 2018

Great Britain were beaten 3-1 by Spain in their Davis Cup tie after Cameron Norrie lost in four sets to world number 21 Albert Ramos-Vinolas.

It was another superb effort from Norrie, ranked 114, but he finally lost 7-6 (7-4) 2-6 7-6 (7-4) 6-2 in three hours and 43 minutes in Marbella.

Kyle Edmund could have played in a deciding fifth rubber had Norrie won.

Britain now face a play-off in September which they need to win to stay in the World Group in 2019.

Norrie, 22, had come back from two sets down on Friday to defeat world number 23 Roberto Bautista Agut.

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“I can’t speak highly enough of what Cam has done all weekend,” Great Britain captain Leon Smith said.

“People might have thought Friday was a one-off but he did it again against another high-quality player. He pushed him really close and I’m really proud of him.

“The only way is up for him.”

The first and third sets lasted 75 minutes and 76 minutes respectively with Norrie’s standard and energy levels finally dropping after he lost his second tie-break.

Ramos-Vinolas, who beat Liam Broady in the opening match of the tie on Friday, lost only two points on serve in the fourth set as he took Spain into April’s quarter-finals where they will face Germany.

Norrie impresses again but can’t keep the tie alive

While heavy favourites Spain ultimately prevailed, Norrie was the revelation of the weekend as he pushed two world-class clay-courters to the limit.

The Briton was quickly 4-0 down and faced two set points at 5-2 but somehow dragged himself to a tie-break in an incredible first set featuring eight breaks of serve.

A sensational pass from wide of the tramlines in the tie-break typified Norrie’s tenacity and inspiration but two errant forehands then cost him as Ramos-Vinolas closed out the first set.

The Briton would not go away though, holding from 0-30 down in his opening two service games of the second set, and winning five games in a row to level the match.

Norrie then fell 3-0 down in the third set but twice came back from a break down to force a second tie-break. Again, though, it was Ramos-Vinolas who took it with three Norrie errors in a row from 4-4 handing the Spaniard the set.

As well as Norrie played, he was never in front in the match and the effort of coming from behind finally told in the fourth set.

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Nishikori Captures Dallas Challenger Title

  • Posted: Feb 04, 2018

Nishikori Captures Dallas Challenger Title

Former World No. 4 drops one set all week to prevail at the ATP Challenger Tour event in Dallas, Texas

Mission accomplished! He sat on the sidelines for nearly six months with a wrist injury, but now Kei Nishikori has returned to the winners’ circle.

The Japanese star, who ascended to a career-high No. 4 in the ATP Rankings less than a year ago, is back with a vengeance after claiming the title at the ATP Challenger Tour event in Dallas. Nishikori defeated American Mackenzie McDonald 6-1, 6-4 on Saturday evening at the RBC Tennis Championships of Dallas, securing his first title at any level in exactly two years (Memphis 2016).

It was Nishikori’s sixth victory on the Challenger circuit and first since 2010. Seeking to rediscover his rhythm and find confidence in his return to the court, the 28-year-old competed in a pair of Challenger events to kick off his comeback. Following a first-round defeat in Newport Beach, California, he gradually improved as the week moved along in Dallas, culminating with his best performance of the tournament on Saturday.

Nishikori needed just one hour and 20 minutes to dismiss McDonald, turning aside all four break points faced. The World No. 27 will look to continue his climb back to the Top 10 at the inaugural ATP World Tour 250 event in New York and the 500-level tournament in Acapulco.

McDonald, meanwhile, is in the midst of an impressive stretch to open his 2018 campaign. The 22-year-old, who pushed World No. 4 Grigor Dimitrov to five sets at the Australian Open, reeled off wins over second seed Frances Tiafoe, former champion Tim Smyczek and an equally in-form Denis Kudla to reach the final. The former UCLA standout is projected to crack the Top 150 of the ATP Rankings for the first time in his career.

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Zverev beats Kyrgios to give Germany victory over Australia

  • Posted: Feb 04, 2018

German number one Alexander Zverev beat Nick Kyrgios in straight sets to give his country a 3-1 win over Australia in their Davis Cup World Group tie.

Zverev won 6-2 7-6 (7-3) 6-2 in Brisbane to put Germany into a quarter-final against Spain or Great Britain.

Kyrgios appeared troubled by an elbow problem and Zverev, the 20-year-old world number five, only faced two break points in the match.

“Hopefully this is just the beginning for us,” Zverev said.

“It’s awesome, it’s an amazing feeling and without my team-mates it wouldn’t have been possible.”

Kyrgios, 22, went into the match full of expectation after an impressive win over Jan-Lennard Struff in Friday’s opening singles.

His elbow problem became more noticeable as the game progressed, the Australian often shaking his right arm between points.

“It obviously affected me a lot,” Kyrgios said. “My serve is my biggest strength. I mean, I thought he played great today – but my serve was not really there and that affects the rest of my game.”

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Zverev – who was pushed for almost four hours before seeing off 18-year-old Alex de Minaur in five sets on Friday – was rarely troubled.

Kyrgios lost two of his first four service games to surrender the opening set in just 23 minutes. He served better in the second set, firing down eight aces, but at 4-3 he had a medical timeout for treatment on his arm. The Australian continued to serve well and had two set points on Zverev’s serve at 6-5, but the German saved both then played a superb tiebreak to take a stranglehold on the match.

Defending champions France and fourth seeds Croatia lead 2-1 in their ties against the Netherlands and Canada respectively heading into Sunday.

Italy lead Japan and Belgium are 2-1 up against Hungary.

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Zverev Beats Kyrgios To Lead Germany Into QFs

  • Posted: Feb 04, 2018

Zverev Beats Kyrgios To Lead Germany Into QFs

World No. 5 claims both his singles rubbers to help Germany advance

AUSTRALIA 1, GERMANY 3
Venue: Pat Rafter Arena, Brisbane, AUS (hard- outdoor)

Alexander Zverev guided Germany into the quarter-finals of the 2018 Davis Cup with a commanding 6-2, 7-6(3), 6-2 victory over Australian Nick Kyrgios Sunday in Brisbane.

Zverev was close to untouchable on serve, firing 15 aces, putting 71 per cent of first serves into play and winning 80 per cent of first-serve points. He also fought off all four break points he faced, while breaking Kyrgios four times. Kyrgios had won three of their four career FedEx ATP Head2Head meetings coming to the tie, including when they last met in the China Open semi-finals last year.

A frustrated Kyrgios was given a point penalty in the tie-break for smashing his racquet and was unable to pressure the World No. 5 in the third set. Zverev broke for a second time in the set in the final game of the match to secure the 3-1 victory for the Germans, who won Saturday’s pivotal doubles rubber in five sets.

It was a very different victory for Zverev, who on the opening day needed a fifth-set tie-break to beat 18-year-old Davis Cup debutant Alex de Minaur.

“It’s awesome, it’s an amazing feeling,” Zverev said on court after steering Germany to the quarter-finals for the first time in three years. “We’re super happy, but hopefully this is just the beginning for us.”

Germany will next play the winner of Great Britain and Spain.

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