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'Wimbledon qualifying could cope with Sharapova'

  • Posted: May 03, 2017

Wimbledon qualifying could cope with the levels of interest should Maria Sharapova take part in the Roehampton tournament, the All England Club says.

The Russian returned from a 15-month doping ban last month and could yet qualify directly or receive a wildcard when they are confirmed on 20 June.

Wimbledon’s qualifying event will be ticketed for the first time this year.

All England Club chief Richard Lewis is “absolutely confident” Roehampton could cope with Sharapova’s presence.

“We’re used to organising events where there’s a lot of pressure on our facilities, so it would be nothing unusual for us,” he told BBC Sport.

  • Sharapova likely to get wildcard – Murray

Lewis said Sharapova, the 2004 Wimbledon champion, has not yet requested a wildcard and there have been no discussions, either formal or informal, with her or her team.

Former world number one Sharapova, 30, reached the semi-finals in Stuttgart on her return to action last month.

As a result she is currently ranked 262nd – but she needs to be closer to the top 100 to qualify directly for the main draw at Wimbledon, or the top 200 for the qualifying tournament.

She has wildcards at this month’s events in Madrid and Rome, where she can pick up more points before the Wimbledon main draw entry deadline of 22 May and the qualifying deadline of 5 June.

Wimbledon’s qualifying tournament takes place from 26 to 29 June at the Bank of England Sports Grounds, and until this year has been an unticketed event with limited media facilities.

This year there will be 1,000 tickets for sale at £5 each, with proceeds going to the Wimbledon Foundation, along with video coverage of one court, inflatable covers on two courts and an improved player lounge.

Asked whether the changes were made with Sharapova’s possible presence in mind, Lewis said: “I know it does seem very convenient timing but it is actually unrelated, genuinely unrelated, and we know that qualifying needs to continue to be improved, just like we improve facilities here at the Championships. It’s part of an ongoing process.”

Sharapova was initially banned by the International Tennis Federation for two years after testing positive for heart disease drug meldonium at the 2016 Australian Open.

It was later reduced to 15 months by the Court of Arbitration for Sport, who found that she was not an “intentional doper”.

The issue of whether the French Open and Wimbledon, as Grand Slam events, should offer wildcards to a player returning from a doping ban has divided opinion.

Andy Murray and Caroline Wozniacki have been among those opposed to her receiving wildcards, while Venus Williams and Svetlana Kuznetsova were among the more supportive players.

The French federation will make its decision known on 16 May, while Wimbledon’s Tennis Committee meets to discuss who will receive wildcards on 20 June.

The committee will be made up of former British number one Tim Henman, three club members including club chairman Philip Brook, Debbie Jevans and Richard Stoakes, tournament referee Andrew Jarrett and two LTA members, Martin Corrie and Cathy Sabin.

“Wildcards are what they say that they are,” Lewis added.

“There’s a wide range of criteria that any tournament would consider and from our point of view it could be playing record, it could be whether they are British or not.

“And to pre-empt the next question, who knows what they will consider on the 20 June? That’s a matter for the committee and not something we can speculate on at this stage.”

Analysis

Russell Fuller, BBC tennis correspondent

Improvements to the Roehampton site have been on the All England Club’s agenda for a while, but I think it would be fair to say progress was given an extra sense of urgency by the possible appearance of Sharapova and all those her presence would attract.

The 2004 champion could well play herself into the main draw by reaching the semi-finals in either Madrid or Rome, which allowed Richard Lewis to answer questions about wildcards as purely hypothetical for now.

Past Wimbledon form and success in tournaments leading up to the championships, especially those on grass, are factors the committee will consider. Sharapova will score highly in at least one of those categories, and Lewis also told me that views expressed by some other players are not likely to prove relevant.

But he would not be drawn on how much weight Sharapova’s anti-doping violation would carry. That is the crux of the matter, and very much down to the seven people who will file into the All England Club on Tuesday, 20 June.

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Wimbledon will not invite Nastase to Royal Box

  • Posted: May 03, 2017

Ilie Nastase will not be invited to the Royal Box at Wimbledon this summer, tournament organisers have said.

Romania’s Fed Cup captain, a former world number one, is currently under investigation over comments he made about Serena Williams’ unborn child.

Williams accused Nastase of racism after he was overheard asking if the child would be “chocolate with milk”.

He also insulted British player Johanna Konta and captain Anne Keothavong, and called a journalist “stupid”.

At a news conference on Wednesday, Wimbledon also announced record prize money of £31.6m for this year’s event, an increase of 12.5% on 2016.

The men’s and women’s singles champions will earn £2.2m each, with an increase to benefit players at each round of the draw. First-round singles losers will earn £35,000.

Overall prize money for the last year’s edition was £28.1m, with the singles champions earning £2m.

This year’s event gets under way on 3 July, the latest start since the 1895 edition, when play began on 8 July.

All England Club chairman Philip Brook confirmed 70-year-old Nastase, who reached the Wimbledon final in 1972 and 1976, would not be present.

“His actions were not very good and we condemn them. In terms of an invitation to the Royal Box, he is not going to receive an invitation this year,” Brook said.

The International Tennis Federation (ITF) has launched an investigation into remarks Nastase made during April’s Fed Cup match, when he also directed an angry outburst towards Konta that left the British number one in tears.

In an interview with the BBC later in April, the Romanian defended his remarks about world number one Williams.

“English people considered it was racist and everybody picked it up like that,” he said.

“The only person who can get upset maybe is Serena, but not you people in England. Why does everybody else get upset? I don’t understand. Whatever.”

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Troicki To Meet #NextGenATP Khachanov In Istanbul

  • Posted: May 03, 2017

Troicki To Meet #NextGenATP Khachanov In Istanbul

Serbian seeking first title of season

Fifth seed Viktor Troicki won nearly half of his return points to beat Marcos Baghdatis 7-5, 6-4 on Tuesday at the TEB BNP Paribas Istanbul Open. Troicki is looking to capture his first title since winning the Apia International Sydney crown last year.

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The Serbian will next face #NextGenATP player Karen Khachanov, who converted six of his 17 break points against Georgian Nikoloz Basilashvili to advance 6-3, 6-7(2), 6-1 in two hours.

Troicki’s countryman Dusan Lajovic had to battle for two hours and 41 minutes to beat seventh seed and #NextGenATP player Borna Coric of Croatia 6-3, 6-7(1), 7-5. The 26-year-old Lajovic faces Russian Mikhail Youzhny in the second round. Bosnian Damir Dzumhur set-up a second-round clash against No. 2 seed Marin Cilic with a 6-4, 7-5 victory against Greek qualifier Stefanos Tsitsipas.

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Federer Commands In Cobra At Met Gala

  • Posted: May 03, 2017

Federer Commands In Cobra At Met Gala

Swiss star joined by wife for the famously fashionable event in New York City

When you’re invited to the gala known around the globe for hosting the biggest names in fashion, movies, music and modeling, what do you wear?

For Roger Federer, it was a Gucci tuxedo… with a crystal cobra on the back.

The 35-year-old World No. 4 and his wife, Mirka, looked stunning as they attended the ‘Rei Kawakubo/Comme des Garcons: Art Of The In-Between’ Costume Institute Gala at Metropolitan Museum of Art on Monday night. Among those in attendance at the hottest ticket in New York City were Alex Rodriguez, Jennifer Lopez, Serena Williams, Kim Kardashian West and Tom Ford, and the 91-time ATP World Tour titlist looked to have enjoyed sartorially schmoozing with Super Bowl champion Tom Brady.

Federer also managed to grab a photobomb by actor Hugh Jackman.

The Swiss star is no stranger to style. At the end of 2016, he was crowned 2016’s Most Stylish Man by GQ after fans voted him king. In April, Federer opened up to the men’s style magazine as he fashionably posed in the Swiss mountains.

Moet and Chandon off-court news 

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Del Potro Dominates In Clay Season Debut

  • Posted: May 03, 2017

Del Potro Dominates In Clay Season Debut

Argentine extends Portugal win streak to 10

Juan Martin del Potro was nearly perfect during his clay-court season debut on Tuesday. The fifth seed struck eight aces and saved the lone break point faced to beat Japan’s Yuichi Sugita 6-1, 6-3 at the Millennium Estoril Open.

Del Potro, a two-time champion of the Portugal Open (2011, 2012), which preceded the Millennium Estoril Open, extended his Portugal win streak to 10 matches and has now won 19 consecutive sets. Sugita came in at a career-high No. 73 in the Emirates ATP Rankings after beating Estoril No. 1 seed Pablo Carreno Busta last week to reach the Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell quarter-finals.

“I feel better than I thought before the match,” said del Potro. “I think I played a great match today. I feel good with my serve. I feel confidence all the time with my forehand, my backhand, my slices, and I feel I did well.”

The 28-year-old del Potro will next face American Ryan Harrison, who saved both break points in the third set of his 6-3, 2-6, 6-2 victory against Spanish veteran Guillermo Garcia-Lopez.

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Harrison’s countryman Bjorn Fratangelo saved six of seven break points to upset sixth seed and home favourite Joao Sousa of Portugal 6-3, 6-4. The American qualifier will next face Japan’s Taro Daniel, who outlasted Argentina’s Renzo Olivo 7-6(2), 4-6, 7-5 in two hours and 55 minutes.

Defending champion Nicolas Almagro made quick work of eighth seed Benoit Paire, needing only 53 minutes to advance past the Frenchman 6-3, 6-2. All 13 of Almagro’s titles have come on clay, and he said he has a little extra motivation to add another one to his collection following the birth of his son, Nico, in February. 

“I’m able to fight a little bit more on court because I want to win a title for him,” he said.

Joao Domingues, a 23-year-old Portuguese qualifier, celebrated his ATP World Tour debut in dramatic fashion in front of his home fans. The World No. 242 was down 2-5 in the third set but saved two match points in the decider to upset seventh seed Kyle Edmund of Great Britain 6-4, 3-6, 7-6(2).

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Grand Slams do not need Sharapova coverage – Murray

  • Posted: May 02, 2017

World number one Andy Murray says Grand Slams face a “different decision” from smaller tournaments when it comes to giving Maria Sharapova a wildcard.

Sharapova, 30, needs an invitation to compete at this month’s French Open after defeat in the Stuttgart Open semi-finals at the weekend.

The tournament was the Russian’s first since serving a 15-month doping ban.

“Loads and loads of press went there to cover the event – whereas the Slams don’t need that coverage,” said Murray.

“It probably doesn’t change their event much either way, so they have a different decision to make.”

There is something to be said for working your way back up the rankings

Andy Murray

Upcoming events in Madrid and Rome have also taken the decision to award wildcards to Sharapova, who was suspended in 2016 after testing positive for meldonium.

The five-time Grand Slam winner needed to reach the final in Germany to make the world’s top 200 and be eligible for French Open qualifying. But defeat to Kristina Mladenovic in the last four pegged her ranking at 262.

She requires a wildcard to compete in qualifying or the main draw at the tournament in Paris, which starts on 28 May.

The French tennis federation is set to announce its decision on 16 May.

Briton Murray, 29, said the French Open and Wimbledon can do “whatever they want” regarding wildcards but added “there is something to be said for working your way back up” the rankings.

“[Sharapova’s] playing at a level where she’s capable of winning a tournament like Stuttgart already – it would be a three-, four-week period before she’d be competing at the biggest events again,” he said.

“To reach the semis in the first tournament back shows that very soon she’s going to be back up at the top of the game. It will be a matter of months.”

Murray added, however, that he “wouldn’t imagine” Sharapova’s form would have any bearing on a Grand Slam tournament’s decision to issue a wildcard.

The decision to assist Sharapova’s return to the WTA Tour has been criticised by rival players, with 2014 Wimbledon finalist Eugenie Bouchard branding the former world number one “a cheat” who should not have been allowed to play again.

  • ‘When you cheat you forgo the privilege to take part in your sport’

‘My elbow is always sore’

Having missed Great Britain’s Davis Cup quarter-final defeat to France with an elbow injury before returning in Monte Carlo, Murray continued his comeback at the Barcelona Open where he was beaten by Dominic Thiem in the semi-finals.

He will next compete on clay at the Madrid Open, starting on Monday, followed by the Italian Open on 15 May.

“My elbow is always sore, so that’s nothing to do with the injury – for the last three or four years, it’s always been a bit stiff,” said Murray, speaking at The Queen’s Club, where he will defend his Aegon Championship title next month.

“It was great in Barcelona for the amount of tennis I played – I pushed it, playing three hours and then having to come back the next day and play again, and the elbow felt really good.

“I just need to start serving better which hopefully will happen over the next few weeks.”

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