Queen's: Champion Matteo Berrettini pulls out because of abdominal injury
Defending champion Matteo Berrettini withdraws from next week’s championships at Queen’s because of an abdominal injury.
Defending champion Matteo Berrettini withdraws from next week’s championships at Queen’s because of an abdominal injury.
Tallon Griekspoor fed off strong home support to complete a stirring championship-match comeback Sunday at the Libema Open in ‘s-Hertogenbosch.
The sixth seed clawed past Jordan Thompson 6-7(4), 7-6(3), 6-3 for an emotional victory at the grass-court ATP 250 in the Netherlands. Griekspoor held his nerve in the second-set tie-break before claiming the only break of serve in the decider in the sixth game to wrap a two-hour, 35-minute victory and claim his second ATP Tour title.
“[I want to] thank the crowd for getting me through today,” said Griekspoor. “In finals it’s so tough to play your best tennis. I had so many nerves today, I felt so tight today. I wanted it so badly. He was playing great. I had to try and focus on my own game and try and hang in there.
“Somehow I won the second-set tie-break and got it my way in the third, so [I have] no words for this one.”
Griekspoor is the second consecutive home champion in ‘s-Hertogenbosch, after Tim van Rijthoven lifted the trophy in 2022. He is the eighth Dutch player in the Open Era to win multiple tour-level titles, having also triumphed in Pune in January.
With his run in his homeland, Griekspoor has risen nine spots to No. 29 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings, with the Dutchman set to rise to a new career-high when the latest Pepperstone ATP Rankings are published on Monday.
It is the second time Thompson has fallen just short of the title in ‘s-Hertogenbosch, having also reached the final in 2019. Despite his championship-match disappointment, the 29-year-old Australian has risen 27 spots to No. 76 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings after reaching his second tour-level final.
Frances Tiafoe overcame Jan-Lennard Struff in a thrilling final at the BOSS OPEN on Sunday to lift his third tour-level title. The American saved one championship point to defeat the 33-year-old German 4-6, 7-6(1), 7-6(8).
In a heavy-hitting encounter at the ATP 250 event, Tiafoe and Struff exchanged blows for two hours and 12 minutes. Struff struck 56 winners to 36 from Tiafoe and saved all three break points he faced. However he fell agonisingly short of a maiden tour-level crown, with Tiafoe sealing victory in a dramatic third-set tie-break with a stretched volley winner.
The third seed, who saved the championship point at 6/7 in the third-set tie-break, will break into the Top 10 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings for the first time on Monday following his 27th win of the season.
With countryman Taylor Fritz No. 8, it will be the first time two Americans have been in the Top 10 since May 2012, when Mardy Fish and John Isner were No. 9 and No. 10, respectively.
The 25-year-old Tiafoe has now earned three tour-level trophies, having also triumphed in Houston earlier this year. It is the first time he has won a title on grass.
Struff, up three spots to No. 21 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings, now holds a 0-3 record in tour-level finals. The 33-year-old advanced to the championship match in Munich in 2021 and Madrid in May.
Katie Boulter wins her first WTA title with a dominant victory in Nottingham over Jodie Burrage in the first all-British tour-level final in 46 years.
Refreshed after his Roland Garros semi-final defeat against Novak Djokovic, Carlos Alcaraz is excited to compete on grass this week at the Cinch Championships, where he will make his debut.
The Spaniard arrived in London on Saturday and quickly took to court in an attempt to adjust from the Parisian clay to the lawns of west London.
“I arrived in London Saturday morning and I had my first practice on grass yesterday,” Alcaraz said during his pre-tournament press conference on Sunday. “I was not able to practise too much at home as we have no grass courts. I need to adapt my movement and shots on the grass, but I am really happy with the practice I have had here.”
Alcaraz is making just his third tour-level appearance at a grass-court event this week at the ATP 500, having advanced to the fourth round at Wimbledon last year. The top seed, who revealed he rested for four days following his defeat in Paris, has lifted 10 tour-level titles in his career, with seven coming on clay and three on hard courts.
Determined to make his mark on grass, Alcaraz shared his thoughts on the surface.
“The most difficult part is to move well on grass. You need to be more careful than other surfaces, so for me to move on grass is the most difficult,” Alcaraz said. “The most comfortable is going to the net and playing aggressively all the time. For me it is similar to other surfaces with my style. Playing that style is comfortable and I like it.
“There are a lot of players who slice on grass. I am not one of them, so I have to think about the movement. I have to be focused on every movement and shot. For me it is more tiring when you are moving on grass. It is totally different, so you have to be really specific.”
World No. 2 Alcaraz will begin the quest for his fifth tour-level title of the season against French qualifier Arthur Fils. The 20-year-old will be working alongside Samuel Lopez in London, with coach Juan Carlos Ferrero taking the week off to spend time with his family. The Spaniard will return to Alcaraz’s team next week ahead of Wimbledon.
Watch the winning moment as Katie Boulter beats British compatriot Jodie Burrage in straight sets in the final of the Nottingham Open.
Emma Raducanu says “sometimes I think to myself ‘I wish I’d never won the US Open'” as she speaks about her physical and mental struggles since then.
Andy Murray wins the Nottingham Open for back-to-back grass-court titles to maintain a perfect Wimbledon build-up.
After winning the Nottingham Open, Andy Murray is surprised to discover his children are in the crowd to support him on Father’s Day.
Nikola Mektic and Mate Pavic clinched their fifth tour-level grass-court title as a team on Sunday when they moved past Kevin Krawietz and Tim Puetz at the BOSS OPEN in Stuttgart.
The second seeds produced a strong serving performance at the ATP 250 event, winning 86 per cent (31/36) of points behind their first delivery to defeat the Germans 7-6(2), 6-3.
The Croatians have now captured 16 tour-level trophies as a team and two this season, also clinching the crown in Auckland in January. Pavic, 29, also triumphed in Stuttgart in 2022 with Hubert Hurkacz, while it is Mektic’s first success at the tournament.
Home favourites Krawietz and Puetz were seeking their first title of the season together. Earlier this season, they also reached the final on home soil in Munich.