Petra Kvitova described being able to move the fingers on her left hand again as “the greatest Christmas present I could have wished for”.
The Czech, 26, was stabbed at her home by an intruder on Tuesday and needed four hours of surgery on her hand.
“While what happened to me was very scary, I do not see myself as a victim, I do not feel sorry for myself and I will not look backwards,” said Kvitova.
“I will do everything to return to the sport I love as soon as possible.”
Kvitova, who won the Wimbledon singles title in 2011 and 2014, is expected to be unable to compete for at least six months.
The world number 11 wore a substantial bandage when she spoke to the media for the first time since the attack, and revealed movement had returned to her fingers during a session with her doctor on Thursday morning.
Tendons in all four of her fingers and her thumb were damaged, as well as two nerves.
“I’m happy to tell you I’m feeling well,” she added. “The medical staff, the police, my family and my team have all provided me with amazing support in this difficult situation.
“I want to thank each and every one of them for the important part they have played in the past four days.
“I have been overwhelmed by the flood of messages and love I have received from the tennis family, fans and the public – thank you.”
Kvitova’s attacker gained access to her apartment block in Prostejov by posing as a utilities man before pulling out a knife and putting it to her throat, and she sustained injuries while pulling the knife away.
Police released an identikit image of the attacker on Thursday.
Former Wimbledon doubles champion Horia Tecau is now a published author. The Romanian wrote a children’s book titled, ‘Viata in ritm de tenis’, translated in English to ‘Life in the rhythm of tennis’, to show children the importance of sports and reading.
The 110-page book encourages children to pursue their dreams through hard work and how to persevere through life’s challenges. “It’s full of lessons that I’ve learned through my tennis experiences,” Tecau said.
Buy The Book
Tecau provided space in the book for children to write their own dreams as well. He launched the book with about 300 kids on 12 December in Bucharest.
The 31-year-old Tecau has won 29 tour-level doubles titles, including 2015 Wimbledon, 2015 Barclays ATP World Tour Finals and two ATP World Tour Masters 1000 tournaments (Cincinnati, 2012; Madrid, 2016). He and Jean-Julien Rojer finished as the 2015 year-end No. 1 in the Emirates ATP Doubles Team Rankings.
Next November, the ATP World Tour’s brightest young stars will take the stage in Milan for the Next Gen ATP Finals. Billed as the ‘Next Generation’ during the campaign launch this past March in Indian Wells, this group of players unleashed their potential in 2016.
In total, 22 players aged 21 and under finished in the Top 200 of the Emirates ATP Rankings, including eight inside the Top 100. Continuing our season in review series, we look back on the 2016 campaigns of the top NextGen players.
No. 13 Nick Kyrgios (21 years, 7 months)
The Australian clinched a trio of titles in 2016 to place fifth among tour leaders behind Andy Murray (9), Novak Djokovic (7), Dominic Thiem (4) and Stan Wawrinka (4). Kyrgios held all 47 service games en route to his first title in Marseille, where he defeated No. 10 Richard Gasquet and No. 8 Tomas Berdych – two of his six victories against Top 10 players this season. He dethroned three-time defending champion John Isner at the BB&T Atlanta Open in August, and followed with the ATP World Tour 500 crown in Tokyo, where he rallied to defeat David Goffin in the final. Kyrgios also reached his first ATP World Tour Masters 1000 semi-final in Miami, helping him finish with 39 match wins and a career-high No. 13 Emirates ATP Ranking.
Read: Kyrgios’ Stellar Serving Sparks Best Year On Tour
No. 24 Alexander Zverev (19 years, 8 months)
With his triumph at the St. Petersburg Open, the 19 year old became the youngest player to win an ATP World Tour title since Kei Nishikori and Marin Cilic in 2008. He also became the first teen since Boris Becker in 1986 to defeat three Top 10 players in succession (d. No. 9 Berdych, No. 3 Wawrinka and No. 10 Thiem). Zverev, the 2015 ATP Star of Tomorrow presented by Emirates, reached two other finals – on clay in Nice (l. to Thiem) and on grass in Halle, where he upended eight-time champion Roger Federer in the semi-finals. Zverev reached four other semi-finals – Montpellier, Munich, Washington and Stockholm – finishing his campaign with 44 match wins, which was 10th among tour leaders (tied with Monfils). Zverev rose from a year-end No. 83 Emirates ATP Ranking in 2015 to World No. 20 by October.
Read: Opportunity Breeds Success For Zverev
No. 45 Kyle Edmund (21 years, 11 months)
From a No. 85 Emirates ATP Ranking going into the US Open, Edmund rose to a career-high No. 40 in October. At Flushing Meadows, he defeated No. 15 Richard Gasquet and Americans Ernesto Escobedo and John Isner before falling to No. 1 Novak Djokovic. Edmund broke into the Top 50 after reaching the Beijing quarter-finals as a qualifier (l. to Murray) and into the Top 40 after making his first ATP World Tour semi-final in Antwerp (l. to Gasquet). Ranked just outside the Top 100 to start the 2016 season, the Brit advanced to his first tour-level quarter-final in Doha as a qualifier in the opening week of the season (l. to Berdych). He also won a pair of ATP Challenger Tour titles in Dallas and Rome, and followed with a quarter-final showing at The Queen’s Club (l. to Murray).
No. 48 Borna Coric (20 years, 1 month)
Though no longer the youngest player in the Top 50 of the Emirates ATP Rankings, the 20-year-old Coric still enjoyed a couple age-related distinctions in 2016. In Chennai during the first week of the season, he became the first teenager to play in an ATP World Tour final since fellow Croatian Marin Cilic in 2008. Coric, the 2014 ATP Star of Tomorrow presented by Emirates, followed with another runner-up showing in Marrakech (l. to Delbonis). In Cincinnati this summer, Coric became the youngest ATP World Tour Masters 1000 quarter-finalist since Novak Djokovic in 2006 as he defeated Benoit Paire, Nick Kyrgios and No. 5 Rafael Nadal in succession. Though his season was cut short a month later when he underwent right knee surgery, Coric still finished inside the Top 50 for a second straight year.
Read: Coric Named In Forbes’ 30 Under 30 Sports List
No. 53 Karen Khachanov (20 years, 7 months)
The 20 year old joined Kyrgios and Zverev as one of three first-time winners from the group of NextGen stars in 2016, rising from a No. 101 Emirates ATP Ranking to No. 55 in the space of a week. At the inaugural Chengdu Open, Khachanov knocked out four seeded players, beating Joao Sousa, Feliciano Lopez and Viktor Troicki in straight sets before capping his week with a 6-7(4), 7-6(3), 6-3 comeback against Albert Ramos-Vinolas in the final. Only four months earlier, Khachanov had broken into the Top 100 after lifting his second ATP Challenger Tour trophy. He made a winning Grand Slam main draw debut as a qualifier at the US Open and finished his breakthrough season with a quarter-final result in Vienna.
Read & Watch: Khachanov Claims Maiden Title In Chengdu
No. 76 Taylor Fritz (19 years, 1 month)
The American followed in Borna Coric and Alexander Zverev’s footsteps this year, finishing as the youngest player in the Top 100 to be named the ATP Star of Tomorrow presented by Emirates. Fritz, who celebrated his 19th birthday at the end of the October, rose from No. 694 in October 2015 to the Top 100 by the end of February. Following success on the ATP Challenger Tour, where he claimed three titles from four finals, Fritz became the youngest finalist on the ATP World Tour since 2008 when he finished runner-up at the Memphis Open – only his third tour-level event. The California native won 15 tour-level matches and reached a career-high No. 53 in the Emirates ATP Rankings in August.
Read: Fritz’s Path To Another Banner Season
You are serving, down break point.
The initial element of a successful hold strategy is to make your first serve. You would think this would come naturally for the Top 20 players in the Emirates ATP Rankings – an innate ability to elevate their games in moments of crisis.
An Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers analysis of 13,295 break points against Top 20 players in both the 2015 and 2016 seasons actually showed just the opposite, with this elite group struggling like players at all levels of the game to find new heights when they need them the most.
Only four of the Top 20 in 2016 made more first serves down break point than they did on average during the season, which was even fewer than the seven who did in 2015. The standout this season was Rafael Nadal, who not only boasted the highest overall first-serve percentage of the Top 20 at 70 per cent, but he also doubled down to raise it to all the way to 79 per cent when facing break point.
First serves on break points matter greatly. Nadal has saved substantially more break points behind his first serve than his second serve during the past two seasons.
2016 Nadal Break Points Saved
First Serve = 69 per cent (162/236)
Second Serve = 52 per cent (32/61)
2015 Nadal Break Points Saved
First Serve = 68 per cent (202/298)
Second Serve = 49 per cent (62/127)
The four Top 20 players in 2016 who made a higher percentage of first serves on break point than their season average:
No. | Player | First-Serve Percentage | First-Serve Percentage Facing Break Point | Percentage-Point Improvement |
1 | Rafael Nadal | 70% | 79% | +9 |
2 | Kei Nishikori | 61% | 63% | +2 |
3 | Roberto Bautista Agut | 65% | 66% | +1 |
4 | Richard Gasquet | 62% | 63% | +1 |
Nadal and Kei Nishikori were the only two players to be ranked in the Top 20 in the 2015 and 2016 seasons and also make more first serves down break point than their season average. This season, Roberto Bautista Agut and Richard Gasquet both improved one percentage point in their first-serve average on break point.
The seven Top 20 players in the 2015 season to elevate their first-serve performance down break point:
No. | Player | First-Serve Percentage | First-Serve Percentage Facing Break Point | Percentage-Point Improvement |
1 | David Goffin | 55% | 63% | +8 |
2 | Stan Wawrinka | 66% | 69% | +3 |
3 | Rafael Nadal | 68% | 70% | +2 |
4 | Kevin Anderson | 63% | 65% | +2 |
5 | Novak Djokovic | 66% | 67% | +1 |
6 | Kei Nishikori | 60% | 61% | +1 |
7 | Feliciano Lopez | 57% | 58% | +1 |
David Goffin and Stan Wawrinka were the standout performers in 2015, with Goffin posting an impressive eight percentage point jump, from 55 per cent to 63 per cent. Nadal and Kevin Anderson bumped up two percentage points, while Novak Djokovic, Nishikori and Feliciano Lopez all improved one percentage point.
Overall in 2016, the Top 20 averaged making 62 per cent of their first serves, but just 61 percent when down break point. The 2015 season also saw a similar one per cent drop, from 61 per cent to 60 per cent. In both 2015 and 2016, the Top 20 made more first serves facing break point in the deuce court than in the ad court.
2016 Season
Deuce Court: 64 per cent
Ad Court: 60 per cent
2015 Season
Deuce Court: 61 per cent
Ad Court: 59 per cent
This kind of analysis helps players from Melbourne to Moscow to Madrid understand the hidden metrics that underpin the most important moments in a match.
Two-time Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova will be released from hospital on Friday after a knife attack left her needing surgery on her left hand.
Kvitova will miss at least six months of tennis afterTuesday’s attack by an intruder at her home in Prostejov.
The Czech, 26, faces 14 days of bed rest and a slow rehabilitation process after she had an operation to repair tendons and nerves in her playing hand.
The “best-case scenario” sees her on the practice court after six months.
Kvitova said on Tuesday she was “shaken” and “fortunate to be alive”.
She will speak publicly for the first time on Friday following her release from hospital.