Madrid Open: Kyle Edmund loses to Dominic Thiem in first round
Britain’s Kyle Edmund is still waiting for his first ATP win this year after losing to Dominic Thiem in straight sets at the Madrid Open.
Britain’s Kyle Edmund is still waiting for his first ATP win this year after losing to Dominic Thiem in straight sets at the Madrid Open.
Dominic Thiem continued his impressive record at the Mutua Madrid Open on Thursday when he moved past Briton Kyle Edmund 6-4, 6-1 to set up a second-round clash against Stefanos Tsitsipas.
The former World No. 3 has reached at least the semi-finals in four of his past five appearances in the Spanish capital and he looked in control throughout his first-round clash against Edmund.
Thiem struggled at the start of 2023, with his first-round defeat in Miami last month marking his ninth loss in 10 matches to that point in the season. However, he has begun to find form on the European clay, a surface he has won 10 of his 17 tour-level titles on.
Last month, the Austrian advanced to quarter-finals at ATP 250 clay-court events in Estoril and Munich, and reached the second round in Monte-Carlo to earn his first ATP Masters 1000 win since 2021. With his win against Edmund, he improved to 6-3 on the European clay-court season.
The Austrian won 86 per cent (24/28) of his first-serve points and remained strong under pressure, saving all four break points he faced to advance after 84 minutes and improve to 2-0 in his ATP Head2Head series against the 28-year-old Edmund.
“It was not easy in the beginning. First match on the centre court and I was mainly practising outside, so it is a different feeling,” Thiem said. “I have known Kyle since we were juniors. He has been a tough opponent since the young days, so I went in with a lot of respect. I had some crucial moments in the first set when I saved the break points and then I released a little bit and it got better and better.”
Bringing the heat 🔥 off both sides!@domithiem numbers on the rise📈
Today vs Indian Wells;
🆙 2.7 mph avg. Fh speed to 78.3 mph
🆙 264 rpm avg. Fh Topspin to 3099 rpm#TennisInsights | @atptour | @MutuaMadridOpen pic.twitter.com/xlsfJ7UaCq— Tennis Insights (@tennis_insights) April 27, 2023
With his victory, Thiem improved to 17-7 at the clay-court tournament, while he has climbed two spots to No. 91 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings.
“I love this court, I have great memories and played some great matches here,” Thiem said. “Results wise this is my best [ATP] Masters 1000 tournament by far, so it is time to work on that reputation. Once I was a very tough guy to beat on clay and it is not the case right now, but I am feeling that I am getting better and back to shape.”
Thiem will next play fourth seed Tsitsipas. The Austrian leads the Greek 5-3 in their ATP Head2Head series.
“I am looking forward to that one a lot,” Thiem said when asked about facing Tsitsipas. “I like him a lot. He is an unbelievable player, I like watching his matches. He is very elegant. We’ve had some great matchups.”
In other action, Argentine Tomas Martin Etcheverry downed Frenchman Adrian Mannarino 6-4, 6-0, while Roman Safiullin defeated Chilean Nicolas Jarry 6-2, 3-6, 6-3. Etcheverry next meets Frances Tiafoe and Safiullin plays Tommy Paul.
Matteo Arnaldi will not soon forget his first ATP Masters 1000 win. The 22-year-old Italian saved a match point en route to a 6-1, 3-6, 7-6(6) victory against Frenchman Benoit Paire on Wednesday in the first round of the Mutua Madrid Open to earn a clash with third seed Casper Ruud.
The match featured several momentum changes. Paire served for victory at 5-4 in the third set, then trailed 1/5 in the tie-break before he earned match point at 6/5. But Arnaldi, who competed in last year’s Next Gen ATP Finals, remained calm to triumph after two hours in front of a raucous crowd on Court 6.
The recent Murcia ATP Challenger Tour champion saved the match point he faced when Paire, who had won five consecutive points, missed a return. Arnaldi then capitalised on his first match point at 7/6 when Paire served and volleyed. The Frenchman slid into a forehand drop volley, but missed it wide. The pair shared an extended hug at the net.
Arnaldi faced a Top 10 opponent for the first time earlier this year in Dubai, where eventual champion Daniil Medvedev eliminated the Italian straight sets. The 22-year-old will try to claim the biggest victory of his career against Ruud, who recently lifted his first trophy of the season in Estoril.
In other action, Oscar Otte ousted lucky loser Pavel Kotov 6-3, 4-6, 6-4. The German, who is known for his aggressive game on grass, will try to translate that style to the Madrid clay against 18th seed Pablo Carreno Busta.
Another German advanced when Yannick Hanfmann battled past Peruvian Juan Pablo Varillas 6-4, 3-6, 6-3. Hanfmann will try to level at 1-1 his ATP Head2Head with 15th seed Lorenzo Musetti, who stunned World No. 1 Novak Djokovic in Monte-Carlo.
Did You Know?
Arnaldi successfully qualified for a Masters 1000 event for the first time this week. The 2022 Milan competitor defeated Filip Misolic and Arthur Fils en route to the main draw.
Stand deep and get caught out with a point-ending drop shot. Stand close and have a blistering forehand ripped through you. It’s the dilemma all players face against Carlos Alcaraz, especially on clay.
Daniil Medvedev has seen this first hand, most recently in Indian Wells. While the World No. 3 displays a unique style of play from the baseline, often resembling a brick wall and returning serves nearly in the stands, Alcaraz’s repertoire is like fire and ice. The 19-year-old can go big and bold or display deft feel around the court, sometimes drawing opponents in with a drop shot.
That is highly problematic for opponents.
“They are very disguised,” Medvedev said of the Spaniard’s drop shot. “One out of two he’s going to make a dropshot, but the one he doesn’t make, it’s going to be a bomb forehand, so you can’t just run for it because then it’s going to be a winner. I’m going to be interested to play him more and more to try and see how I can handle this part better.”
Alcaraz ended Medvedev’s 19-match winning streak in last month’s BNP Paribas Open final, where an overwhelming 6-3, 6-2 performance helped the 19-year-old return to World No. 1. In the second half of the ‘Sunshine Double’, Medvedev was crowned champion in Miami after he saw off a series of opponents who tried – but failed – to successfully copy Alcaraz’s winning drop shot tactic against ‘Deep-court Daniil’.
“I remember against [Carlos] in Indian Wells, I was like, ‘Yeah, I was not expecting this, the drop shot from this position!’ Medvedev said. “Then the next week in Miami I think a lot of guys maybe saw the final, so they started to do only drop shots against me. It’s not the same. It’s like, ‘Okay, continue doing it, I’m there!’ [and] against [Carlos], I’m not there. He’s playing great and everyone knows it. If you have him in your draw, it’s scary.”
Medevdev arrives in Madrid boasting a 31-4 season record and is No. 1 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Race To Turin. The 27-year-old is the only player to collect four trophies so far this year: Rotterdam, Doha, Dubai and Miami.
Medvedev will be in Madrid action Saturday, when he will meet Andy Murray or Italian qualifier Andrea Vavassori. While clay may not be his favourite surface, Medvedev believes his best chance to make a run on the red dirt could be in the Spanish capital.
“It’s definitely different,” Medvedev said. “I would say it’s a little bit like Roland Garros clay where it’s kind of on a harder surface. Also altitude, so the balls are flying. What I see from results of many people, I should be able to actually play better here than other clay court tournaments. So far, I was not able to do it. But every year is a new opportunity. This year is another one, and I’m going to try to just play my best and hopefully play some good tennis.”
Alexander Bublik came out smiling from a topsy-turvy first-round match on Wednesday at the Mutua Madrid Open.
The opening set of the Kazakhstani’s 7-6(15), 6-7(4). 6-4 win against Daniel Elahi Galan was ended by the longest tie-break of the 2023 ATP Tour season so far. After 25 minutes and 32 points of tie-break play, Bublik finally moved ahead by converting his fifth set point.
Galan had already spurned seven set points of his own in the opening set, although the Colombian made amends in the second as he won another tie-break to level the match. Galan was unable to complete the job from 2-0 in the decider, however, as Bublik rallied to a remarkable two-hour, 50-minute triumph at the Caja Magica.
“When you don’t win a lot, it’s tough to finish matches, and I never felt it before because [for the past few seasons I made] 35-plus wins on the season,” Bublik told ATPTour.com. “[So far this year] I only have five, so finishing matches is not easy. I hope to get the momentum back, play better, and win more matches.”
Now 5-14 for 2023, Bublik will next take on sixth seed Holger Rune at the clay-court ATP Masters 1000 in the Spanish capital. Wednesday’s marathon tie-break may serve as inspiration for the 25-year-old against Rune, although the World No. 55 would rather try and avoid winning the hard way again.
“It’s very tough playing tennis when you are out of shape, out of rhythm,” said Bublik. “That’s why this thing happened. Last year, if I’d played the same match, it wouldn’t have happened.”
Wildcard Mirra Andreeva becomes the third 15-year-old to win a WTA 1000 main-draw match after beating Leylah Fernandez at the Madrid Open.
“I was a kid when [he was on Tour], but I saw some videos of him on YouTube.”
Hugo Gaston may be too young to have witnessed the charismatic Younes El Aynaoui in his ATP Tour prime, but the 22-year-old Frenchman is well aware of the legacy of the man who has joined his coaching team for the 2023 European clay-court season.
“He is a legend of Moroccan tennis, African tennis, and tennis in general, so it’s nice to have some advice from him,” Gaston told ATPTour.com on Wednesday at the Mutua Madrid Open when asked about working with the former World No. 14. “He knows tennis, for sure, he was at the top for 20 years. He’s a really good guy, a really good player and a really good coach. So I’m happy with him.”
Gaston and El Aynaoui joined forces at the beginning of April at the Grand Prix Hassan II in Marrakech, where Gaston promptly secured his first tour-level win of 2023 against Jan-Lennard Struff. The World No. 106 believes that more time spent with the five-time ATP Tour titlist El Aynaoui can only boost his bid to rise back up the Pepperstone ATP Rankings.
“The relationship is pretty good for the moment, we will continue until Roland Garros and then we will see, but there is no reason to stop,” said Gaston, who defeated countryman Jeremy Chardy 6-3, 6-4 on Wednesday in Madrid to reach the second round. “We have a really good relationship. I feel good with him, I think he feels good with me as well, so it’s good and we can see what we can do.”
Gaston will hope to build on his opening win when he takes on 17th seed Borna Coric next at the clay-court ATP Masters 1000 event in the Spanish capital. The former World No. 58 can also look to some recent success on the ATP Challenger Tour for confidence: He holds an 8-3 record at that level this year, including a run to a championship match on clay in Vina del Mar, Chile.
“The Challenger Tour is really difficult now,” said Gaston, who competed at the 2021 Next Gen ATP Finals. “We can see that a lot of players that won a lot of matches on ATP Tour won a lot of matches on Challenger Tour too.
“It’s a different Tour but really difficult. In South American I played a lot of Challengers. I think that’s really helped me a lot. Now I’m really happy to win one match in Marrakech, one here [in Madrid], and I hope I can continue like that.”
Ten years on since Stan Wawrinka was a finalist at the Mutua Madrid Open, the Swiss is still competing at a high level in the Spanish capital.
On Wednesday, the 38-year-old downed World No. 39 Maxime Cressy 6-7(3), 6-3, 7-6(4), in opening-round action at the ATP Masters 1000 event. Three-time major champion Wawrinka, who is the oldest player in the Madrid draw, won 46 of 54 first-serve points and fired 19 aces to advance after two hours, 27 minutes.
“I’m super happy, I was expecting a really tough match,” Wawrinka said. “First time playing against him, he’s a tough player, putting a lot of pressure [on you], especially in fast conditions. It’s not easy to control the game, [not] a lot of rallies. I was staying calm and tried to be aggressive as I could on my serve. It’s great to win that battle.”
While Cressy stuck to his serve-and-volley tactics, Wawrinka stayed close to the baseline on first-serve returns and only retreated to handle the American’s hefty second delivery. The former World No. 3 Wawrinka remained steady from the baseline and displayed passing shots off both wings, ending with 41 winners to just 18 unforced errors.
Wawrinka will next meet Monte-Carlo champion Andrey Rublev for the first time since the 2020 Rolex Paris Masters. The Swiss leads their ATP Head2Head 2-1.
“It’s going to be a completely different matchup,” Wawrinka said. “Second round also, I have a match under my legs. I think I can play well, I’ve played him a few times already in my career. He’s in top form, it’s going to be a tough battle, but a great challenge for me. That’s the reason I keep playing, to play the top players and try to beat them.”
In other first-round action, Marrakech champion Roberto Carballes Baena ousted David Goffin 6-4, 6-4. The Spaniard will face two-time Madrid titlist Alexander Zverev in the second round. Alex Molcan, who was a semi-finalist last week in Banja Luka, cruised past Wu Yibing 6-2, 6-4.
Frenchmen Gregoire Barrere and Quentin Halys survived three-setters Monday. Barrere downed American wild card Emilio Nava 6-0, 5-7, 6-3 and Halys escaped Alexei Popyrin 4-6, 6-4, 6-4.
British number one Emma Raducanu withdraws from the Madrid Open with a hand injury hours before her first-round match.
The Zhuhai Championships will welcome the return of ATP Tour tennis to China for the first time in four years this September and today announced that former World No. 1 Daniil Medvedev will spearhead the field.
The ATP Tour 250 event, which serves the Greater Bay Area in China comprising 11 major cities and a population of more than 71 million, has secured one of the world’s best players to headline the celebration. Medvedev will make his debut in Zhuhai in the tournament running between 20-26 September 2023.
The 2021 US Open champion has been in brilliant form this season, winning four titles so far including the Miami Open earlier this month. The 27-year-old has won a tour-level title in 19 different cities.
Medvedev is looking forward to demonstrating his brilliance at the Hengqin International Tennis Center, the state-of-the-art facility which hosts the Zhuhai Championships, this year.
“I’m really looking forward to coming back to China and playing at the Hengqin International Tennis Center,” Medvedev said. “I can’t wait to see the city and the stadium, both of which I have heard a lot of good things about. It will be great to play again in front of the Chinese fans again after three years away. “I’m looking forward to seeing you all in September.”
The inaugural edition of the ATP Tour 250 tournament in 2019 set a high standard for excellence on and off the court and proved particularly popular with players. An innovative tournament in a nation with a growing passion for tennis, the Zhuhai Championships was an outstanding addition to the international circuit.
The return of the event to the world stage in 2023 promises to set a new bar of merit given the quality of the tennis stars interested in competing in the Zhuhai Championships. Aside from Medvedev, Zhuhai Championships officials have engaged in fruitful discussions with grand slam champions and other top-ranked players about the ATP 250 tournament.
Announcements regarding further major signings for the second edition of the tournament are imminent. As a bonus for local and international fans attending the tournament, the scheduling will be even more consumer friendly and allow greater opportunities to watch matches. Fan-friendly time slots mean patrons attending the weekend sessions will see more singles players in action than in 2019, when the tournament was played from Monday to Sunday.
The move to schedule the semi-finals and championship match on Monday and Tuesday night gives patrons from the region the option to attend elite tennis after finishing work.
Further, the timing of those finals broadens the capacity for audiences watching from afar to view a historic event on the ATP Tour that confirms the return of tennis in China. In the first edition in 2019 claimed by Australian Alex de Minaur, the Zhuhai Championships identified itself as a tournament of quality.
Alison Lee, who is the ATP Executive Vice-President for the International Region, said she is delighted the Zhuhai Championships has returned to the tour calendar.
“It’s certainly exciting to be returning to China, and we begin the China swing with one of my favourite tournaments in Zhuhai,” she said. “I was fortunate to visit the Zhuhai event in 2019 and experience the city and its surrounding areas. We begin the China swing with one of my favourite events in Zhuhai. I was fortunate to visit the event in 2019 and experience the beautiful city.
“This year, we will see some amazing tennis featuring some of the world’s best players including Daniil Medvedev at the Hengqin Tennis Center. Good luck to everyone and we look forward to seeing you all in September.”
Peter Lv, the Executive Director and General Manager of Huafa Sports, said the Zhuhai Championships provided a great opportunity for the entirety of the Greater Bay Area.
“As the highest level ATP Tour event in the Canton-Hong Kong-Macau Greater Bay Area, the 2023 Zhuhai Championships will definitely serve as a great benefit and gift for tennis fans after their three years of waiting,” he said. “As the promoter of the event, Huafa Sports has full confidence and a strong determination to present a high-quality and unique tournament which stands out among global ATP Tour events.”
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Zhuhai Championships tournament director Leon Sun said it was important fans in the Greater Bay Region had the chance to watch the best tennis players in action again.
“It’s great the Zhuhai Championships are back on the ATP Tour calendar this year,” he said. “We’ll certainly bring world-class tennis back again to Zhuhai and the Greater Bay Area and make sure all players and fans have the best possible experience here.”
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