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Female Bourne – GB's new tennis hope

  • Posted: Jan 27, 2016

Australian born, proudly British, thriving down under.

“Actually I am a tri-citizen, I’ve got a Hungarian passport as well. I’m pretty much the female version of Jason Bourne.”

Like fictional action-hero Bourne, Johanna Konta is proving herself capable of stunts to wow an audience.

Now an Australian Open semi-finalist, this Eastbourne resident has practically doubled her career prize money in under two weeks and left Australia wondering how they let her get away.

Konta’s career has taken her from Sydney to Eastbourne – via Gijon, Texas and Barcelona. Now, her own all-action production is gathering pace and even Bourne might not be able to handle her.

Turned away for being too good

Konta’s run makes her the first British woman to reach the last four of a Grand Slam since Jo Durie in 1983 and her formative years offered hope of a rise to stardom.

“Her parents brought her to my academy in 2005 but I said she’s too good, too strong and told her where she needed to go to train next,” said Justin Sherring, director of the Weybridge Tennis Academy.

Konta – 14 at the time – had just touched down in the UK after her Hungarian parents moved so father Gabor could take a job at the Marriot Hotel in London’s Docklands.

Eastbourne became home – and still is – but spells in academies in Spain and the US showed Konta’s will to move around in order to hone game.

“The first thing that struck me was she was really bubbly and enthusiastic,” added Sherring, who eventually coached Konta for a spell in 2010. “I’m not surprised at what she has done. Top players have that something different about them. She is incredibly passionate about the sport.”

Sacrifice, self analysis – and some What’s App

Konta – now British number one – has stated she once made her elder half-sister cry during a game of Monopoly.

Behind the humility she shows during warm interviews on court sits an obsession with becoming a better player.

“The only difference between try and triumph is a little oomph” reads a quote on her Twitter account.

Form has undoubtedly picked up since her LTA funding was cut last year- perhaps showing the defiance that burns inside Konta – who said the move “jeopardised” her career.

And self analysis at the highest level of sport can unearth tough realities. In attempting to battle anxiety during matches, Konta appointed a mental coach by the name of Juan Coto, who aids her with sessions via Skype or What’s App.

“You need to be humble, and to accept that a mental coach can help you,” Coto told the BBC. “You also need to be courageous to try different ways of thinking and behaving.”

Building a tight network

All of these things – the right coach, the right base, the right mindset – take time to harness. At 24, Konta has years left to make them pay.

It is reported her boyfriend is hitting partner Kether Clouder, offering a friendship, support and perhaps much needed distraction from the game during long spells on Tour.

“I think the package around her has really helped her to be much more in control of what she wants to do on the court,” said Fed Cup team captain Judy Murray. “You can go out and do relatively normal things and I think that helps you to stay much more emotionally stable.”

Konta’s Twitter account offers plenty of images of family gatherings.

Her father Gabor – who now works at Ashdown Park Hotel and Country Club, in East Grinstead – and mum Gabriella, a dentist, have refused to speak to media during the Australian Open. A clear focus on staying humble, focused and private seems to run though Team Konta.

She’s Eastbourne and they love it

Konta does not own a home, she says if she did she would happily remortgage it to see one of her music loves – U2.

But the lack of a mortgage does not weaken her ties with Eastbourne, where a pride in her professional exploits exists among the community in the south-coast seaside resort.

Groups of school girls attended the Devonshire Park Lawn Tennis Club to watch her quarter-final win over China’s Zhang Shuai, while the local newspaper – The Eastbourne Hearald – led their website with news of her win.

And Konta still relies on a local dealership to supply her Peugeot.

Simple interests

If not playing, enjoying her mum’s cooking in Eastbourne or being honed by coaches Esteban Carril and Jose-Manuel Garcia in Gijon, northern Spain, Konta will probably be found enjoying ice cream and listening to music.

“I play tennis during the day. Would love to go to concerts most nights. I take gelato very seriously,” reads her Twitter bio.

Van Morrison’s music is a particular love and in what seems anything but a standard relationship for a finely-tuned athlete, her passion for ice cream has led to some sponsorship from an Italian manufacturer.

A return to Australia? A flash in the pan?

The stunning run in Melbourne contrasts Konta’s previous Grand Slam performances, where she has five first-round exits in eight attempts.

But this is no one-off display according to Sherring, who says his former pupil is “where she deserves to be”.

“She looks like she believes in what she is,” he added. “She just looks much more confident, winning makes you feel good.”

The Sydney Morning Herald has been left asking how Konta slipped away from Australia, referencing she had spent “three years in English fog” by the time she reached 11th in the world junior rankings in 2008.

Australia would love to have her back.

“My home is Great Britain,” Konta told one reporter. “It has been for a long time now, over a decade. That’s where my heart is.”

Hard luck, Australia. Great Britain is closing in on being home to a first female Grand Slam winner since 1977.

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300: Federer Reaches Slam Milestone

  • Posted: Jan 23, 2016

300: Federer Reaches Slam Milestone

Swiss star tops Dimitrov; first man to win 300 matches at majors

Roger Federer climbed into rarefied territory on a rainy Friday at the Australian Open. With a 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4 third-round win over 27th seed Grigor Dimitrov in Rod Laver Arena, the No. 3 seed clinched the 300th Grand Slam match win of his storied career, becoming the first man to reach the milestone.

Only Martina Navratilova (306) stands in front of him.

The 48-minute first set went in Federer’s favour behind a service break at 3-all, the only interruption the opening, then closing, of Rod Laver Arena’s retractable roof due to rain. But the Bulgarian Dimitrov, who after three straight-sets losses took his first set off Federer in the Brisbane quarter-finals earlier this month, would get another to level the match at a set apiece, his aggressive play paying dividends against the 17-time Slam champ.

Federer didn’t wait long to assert himself in the third set, breaks coming in the second and sixth games for a 5-1 advantage. A game later he was ahead two sets to one. A forehand error from Dimitrov at 2-all, 30/40 in the fourth and final set would give Federer a seemingly insurmountable lead, and the Swiss went on to clinch the contest in two hours and 40 minutes. He finished with 47 winners, including 13 aces.

It was Dimitrov’s  seventh straight loss to a Top-10 player.

Federer, at 34 a decade Dimitrov’s senior, is the oldest man to reach the round of 16 at the Australian Open since Andre Agassi played his way into the quarter-finals in 2005. He is looking to become only the third man to win five Australian Open singles titles after Roy Emerson (six) and Novak Djokovic (five), having won the title in 2004, 2006, 2007 and 2010.

Dimitrov was bidding to reach the fourth round for the third consecutive year. His best Australian Open result is a quarter-finals showing in 2014 (l. to Rafael Nadal).

Federer advances to play No. 15 seed David Goffin of Belgium, a 6-1, 3-6, 7-6(2), 7-5 winner over No. 19 seed Dominic Thiem of Austria. The 25-year-old Goffin is through to the fourth round of a major for the third time, having also reached the last 16 at 2012 Roland Garros (as a qualifier) and 2015 Wimbledon. The right-hander will look to overturn a 0-3 FedEx ATP Head2Head record over Federer.

Federer Grand Slam Milestone Wins

 Win #
 Year Opponent
Tournament  Round  Score
1 2000 Michael Chang Australian Open 1R 6-4, 6-4, 7-6
100 2006 Tim Henman Wimbledon 2R 6-4, 6-0, 6-2
200 2010 Alejandro Falla Wimbledon 1R 5-7, 4-6, 6-4, 7-6, 6-0
300 2016 Grigor Dimitrov Australian Open 3R 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4

 

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Goffin Reacts To Victory Over Thiem

  • Posted: Jan 23, 2016

Goffin Reacts To Victory Over Thiem

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Federer too strong for Dimitrov

  • Posted: Jan 22, 2016
Australian Open
Venue: Melbourne Park Dates: 18-31 January
Coverage: Live radio and text commentary on all Andy Murray matches. Listen to Tennis Breakfast on Radio 5 live sports extra and the BBC Sport website from 07:00 GMT every day.

Roger Federer reached the last 16 at the Australian Open after proving too strong for Grigor Dimitrov in their highly-anticipated third-round match.

The Swiss third seed won 6-4 3-6 6-1 6-4 under the Rod Laver Arena roof as rain halted play on the outside courts.

It brought four-time champion Federer his 300th Grand slam match win.

Former champion Maria Sharapova was able to progress, with top seeds Novak Djokovic and Serena Williams featuring in the night session at Melbourne Park.

Sharapova needed three sets to beat unseeded American Lauren Davis, the Russian fifth seed dominating the latter stages to win 6-1 6-7 (5-7) 6-0.

Switzerland’s seventh seed Belinda Bencic beat Kateryna Bondarenko of Ukraine 4-6 6-2 6-4, while men’s seventh seed Kei Nishikori saw off Spain’s Guillermo Garcia-Lopez 7-5 2-6 6-3 6-4 despite requiring treatment on his wrist.

“It was a little bit sore in the beginning, but after the treatment it was fine,” said the Japanese player.

French ninth seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga won in three tight sets against compatriot Pierre-Hugues Herbert, 6-4 7-6 (9-7) 7-6 (7-4).

Federer finds his clinical edge

The 34-year-old Swiss had won a tight battle against Dimitrov in Brisbane in the build-up to the Australian Open, but was a more comfortable winner on the bigger Grand Slam stage.

Both men displayed the elegant shot-making they are known for but had Federer been more effective on break points in the second set, he might have won it in three.

Federer failed to recover an early deficit in the second set and had converted just one of eight break points going into the third, only to step on the gas and leave Dimitrov in his wake.

Federer closing on another record
Martina Navratilova holds the record for Grand Slam wins with 306 over 19 years – Federer will move to 304 if he takes the title in Melbourne.

Sharapova breaks new ground

It took two hours and 14 minutes for the five-time Grand Slam champion to see off Davis, the world number 103, and claim the 600th victory of her 15-year career.

“Wow. I’ve won 600 matches?” said the 28-year-old. “Is this like a friendly reminder that I’m getting old? Might be.”

Sharapova next faces a tough test against 18-year-old Bencic, with the winner earning a potential quarter-final against Williams.

Bencic, coached by Melanie Molitor, mother of Martina Hingis, has won her last 15 three-set matches dating back to the 2015 French Open.

“That’s good,” said the Swiss. “Because I was losing a lot, and then my dad and my coach were like, ‘You don’t have any fitness.’ I don’t know if it’s only fitness, it’s more the focus and confidence.”

British duel falls foul of weather

Among the many matches postponed on a day of rain in Melbourne was the all-British doubles clash between Johanna Konta and Heather Watson, and and Jocelyn Rae and Anna Smith.

With all four players in the GB Fed Cup squad, and team captain Judy Murray sure to be courtside, it could yet prove significant in terms of planning for next month’s qualifier in Israel.

The postponements mean a packed schedule on Saturday, with Johanna Konta up against Czech Denisa Allertova first on Hisense Arena at 00:00 GMT, and fellow British number one against Portugal’s Joao Sousa first in the Margaret Court Arena night session at 08:00.

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