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Struff On ATP Cup: 'I Think It’s Going To Be Really Great'

  • Posted: Nov 28, 2019

Struff On ATP Cup: ‘I Think It’s Going To Be Really Great’

World No. 35 hopes to help Germany through Group F in Brisbane

Jan-Lennard Struff enjoyed the best season of his career in 2019, climbing to a career-high No. 33 in the ATP Rankings, reaching two ATP Tour semi-finals and earning five wins against Top 10 opponents.

The 29-year-old will hope to carry that momentum into 2020, beginning the new season at the inaugural ATP Cup. Struff is Germany’s No. 2 singles player, and he will hope to help his country advance out of Group F, which also consists of Greece, Canada and Australia. Struff speaks to ATPTour.com about his German idols growing up, what makes competing on a team special, and more.

Which countrymen did you watch growing up and what did you admire about them?
A lot of players: Tommy Haas, Nicolas Kiefer, really a lot of them. Those are the two biggest names, I would say. I liked the way they played, I liked the style they played.

Tommy was an inspiration for me. When I played him in Munich and in Kitzbuhel it was unreal to play him. It was just crazy because he played his last match against me in Kitzbuhel. Obviously I liked his intensity on court and the way he hit the ball. It was just unreal, I really loved that.

What are your early memories of playing tennis in your home country?
I started playing with my parents, who were both tennis coaches. I really enjoyed playing. When I was a small kid, I always loved to go out and I played soccer, as well.

I just loved to do something with my friends, playing the sport and travelling with some guys from my practice group. We just had a fun time, playing club matches in the youth area, under 12, under 14, like four guys. We are very good friends and we were just enjoying the matches and practice sessions together.

Of course I watched so many Grand Slams on TV, it was unreal. When I was in school, the Australian Open was on TV. They started at 1 in the morning. I was waking up at 5 or 6 with my mom, watching interesting matches.

What do you think will be the most fun part of playing on a team?
I love to be part of a team. It’s an honour to play for my country. I’ve always dreamed about that. When I first listened to the national anthem when I was playing [for Germany] I had goosebumps. I was just tight. Everyone is tight playing for their country for the first time. I had an amazing match. It’s unreal.

We [spend] most of our time on Tour playing for ourselves. We have a team with our coaches and a physio and a fitness coach, and we kind of play for them as well, for our team. But to play with other players is just a great feeling…. The ATP Cup, the new event, I think will be really good.

What makes you excited about it?
It’s something new. It’s a new event and it’s in Australia. Australia is good for tennis. [It is] such a nice time always in December going to Australia and playing the Australian Open.

I think that this event at the beginning of the year will be a great kick-off, start of the year. Playing a team event is just exciting because you don’t know what it’s going to be like, but I think it’s going to be really great.

If you could take one stroke from any one of your countrymen, what would it be?
I would take the backhand of Zverev. It’s so consistent. He plays so well from the baseline and his backhand is outrageous.

What is the best practical joke a compatriot has played on you?
We do some fun things when we’re on a team. In Australia… we went to an escape room together and did some great stuff to make good team-building. We don’t take it too seriously on the team. I think everyone is just sometimes [making] a joke for themselves.

What are three things you love most about your country?
It’s very tough to pick three, not the weather, though. I really like the stability of the rules system in Germany. I enjoy the people a lot. I like to see my family and I like driving fast cars. That’s one of the big things on the Autobahn! That’s one of the good things we have in Germany. I’m very proud of our country and I think we have good rules.

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Rivalries Of 2019: Thiem vs. Federer

  • Posted: Nov 27, 2019

Rivalries Of 2019: Thiem vs. Federer

ATP Tour Season In Review: Best Rivalries

Continuing our Season In Review series, ATPTour.com revisits the fiercest rivalries of 2019. Today we feature Roger Federer vs. Dominic Thiem.

Years from now, Dominic Thiem will look back on the 2019 season as the year he became an all-court player, and for proof, he will need to look no further than his FedEx ATP Head2Head rivalry with Roger Federer.

Thiem and Federer were even (2-2) coming into 2019. The Austrian went 2-1 against the Swiss in 2016, including a straight-sets win on clay in Rome and a grass-court victory in Stuttgart, before Federer shut down his 2016 campaign after Wimbledon to rest his left knee (3 February surgery).

But the Swiss tied their series with a straight-sets win in quick conditions at the 2018 Nitto ATP Finals at The O2 in London. In 2019, however, Thiem would leave no doubt about who was in charge of their FedEx ATP Head2Head rivalry.

Thiem

BNP Paribas Open, F, Thiem d. Federer 3-6, 6-3, 7-5
Federer has dominated few ATP Masters 1000s as he has the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells. The Swiss is tied with Novak Djokovic for the all-time titles lead (five) and before 2019, he had reached the final in his past four appearances (1-3).

In March, the Swiss, fresh off his 100th title in Dubai, cruised into the Indian Wells final without dropping a set and was rested after Rafael Nadal withdrew (knee) from their semi-final.

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Thiem Topples Federer For Maiden Masters Title

Thiem, meanwhile, had only three wins on the 2019 season heading into the year’s first Masters 1000. But on the slow hard courts in Indian Wells, he blasted backhand after backhand against Federer, opening up the court and winning his first Masters 1000 title. Thiem fell behind a set but erased break points early in the second set to grab back momentum.

“I was in the zone the whole match,” Thiem said. “It’s a pleasure to compete against Roger in this great final. I lost my last two Masters 1000 finals, but I won this one and it feels as nice as a Grand Slam.”

Thiem

Mutua Madrid Open, QF, Thiem d. Federer 3-6, 7-6(11), 6-4
In May, at the Mutua Madrid Open, Federer was playing in his first clay-court tournament in three years, and he hadn’t beaten a Top 10 player on the red dirt since the 2015 Internazionali BNL d’Italia in Rome (Stan Wawrinka in the semi-finals).

Luck was on Federer’s side in his second match, though. The Swiss saved two match points against France’s Gael Monfils to set up the Masters 1000 quarter-final with Thiem, a two-time finalist in Madrid.

But against the Austrian, Federer was the player who saw match points come and go. Just like in Indian Wells, Thiem came from a set down to beat the Swiss. Thiem, riding a seven-match win streak, saved match points at 7/8 and 9/10 in the second-set tie-break and, with all the momentum on his side, broke in the third and ninth games of the deciding set.

I can hurt him with my strokes, especially on his backhand,” Thiem said. “Facing him, it always requires my absolute best game and also a little bit luck, which I both had in Indian Wells and also here, and that’s why I won these two matches.”

The loss marked the 21st time Federer had held match points and lost, and the first time since the 2018 Wimbledon quarter-finals (Kevin Anderson).

Watch Highlights: Thiem Stuns Federer In Madrid

Nitto ATP Finals, Group Bjorn Borg, Thiem d. Federer 7-5, 7-5
But at the season-ending Nitto ATP Finals, where Federer has collected a record six titles, surely the Swiss would turn around their 2019 rivalry. Federer had won his 10th Basel title in October and was eyeing another “Big Title” to go with his Miami crown (d. Isner) after near misses at Indian Wells and Wimbledon (l. to Djokovic).

Thiem, though, was finding his game on fast hard courts just in time. Before 2019, he had won 11 ATP Tour titles, but only two on hard court. He matched that total in October alone, winning the China Open in Beijing (d. Tsitsipas) and his home Erste Bank Open in Vienna (d. Schwartzman).

Beating a rested Federer in London presents another set of challenges, but Thiem met them all again. The Austrian, up a set, broke in the 11th game of the second set and fought off two break points while serving it out.

Thiem

To beat him, everything has to fit together,” said Thiem. “In general, it’s a very nice victory for me. Every time I play against him is a big honour. Beating him is even better, and especially on this surface indoors, where he’s feeling well usually.”

Two days later, Thiem became only the second player in tournament history (Alexander Zverev, 2018) to beat both Federer and Djokovic. He’d go onto reach the Nitto ATP Finals title match (l. to Tsitsipas).

Thiem is one of 74 players who have faced Federer at least six times, but only five of them, including the Austrian, have a winning record.

Winning Against Federer

Player

Record

Novak Djokovic

26-23

Rafael Nadal

24-16

Dominic Thiem

5-2

Alexander Zverev

4-3

Yevgeny Kafelnikov

4-2

Federer vs. Thiem In 2019

Event

Surface

Round

Winner

Score

BNP Paribas Open

Hard

F

Thiem

3-6, 6-3, 7-5

Mutua Madrid Open

Clay

QF

Thiem

3-6, 7-6(11), 6-4

Nitto ATP Finals

Hard

Group Bjorn Borg

Thiem

7-5, 7-5

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Rivalries Of 2019: Tsitsipas vs. Nadal

  • Posted: Nov 26, 2019

Rivalries Of 2019: Tsitsipas vs. Nadal

ATP Tour Season In Review: Best Rivalries

Continuing our Season In Review series, ATPTour.com revisits the fiercest rivalries of 2019. Today we feature Rafael Nadal vs. Stefanos Tsitsipas.

Stefanos Tsitsipas, following his second consecutive loss to Rafael Nadal last year, had a plan, or at least the makings of a plan, on how to beat the Spaniard.

At the Rogers Cup in Toronto, the 19-year-old Greek had become the youngest player to beat four Top 10 players at an event since the ATP Tour began in 1990. But his streak stopped against Nadal, who spoiled Tsitsipas’ 20th birthday by winning his 33rd ATP Masters 1000 title.

“Bust my ass more on the court. Work more hours and become stronger and a more solid baseliner. And withstand pressures, physical pressures on the court that, to him, just seem like nothing special. That’s the big difference between my game and his game,” Tsitsipas said.

In 2019, he wouldn’t have to wait long to see if the plan had worked.

Australian Open, SF, Nadal d. Tsitsipas 6-2, 6-4, 6-0
The two renewed their FedEx ATP Head2Head rivalry in the semi-finals of the Australian Open in Melbourne. Tsitsipas had beaten Roger Federer in the fourth round and persevered in five sets against Spain’s Roberto Bautista Agut in the quarter-finals to make his first Grand Slam semi-final.

Nadal, meanwhile, had revamped his serve in the off-season and had yet to drop a set en route to the last four at the season’s first Slam. The offensive onslaught continued against Tsitsipas as Nadal rolled into his 25th major championship final by winning 80 per cent (49/61) of his service points and hitting 28 winners. Nadal also won the final nine games.

“I have been playing well during the whole event. Every match, more or less, I think I did a lot of things well. Tonight was another one. I played solid – with my serve, playing aggressive. Probably the backhand was better today than the rest of the days,” Nadal said.

A devastated Tsitsipas struggled to find reasons for optimism in their rivalry. “Honestly, I have no idea what I can take from that match,” he said. “It’s not that I was even close to [getting] something. I only got six games from that match.”

Nadal

Mutua Madrid Open, SF, Tsitsipas d. Nadal 6-4, 2-6, 6-3
But the Greek would have his moment to cherish against Nadal on the most unlikeliest of surfaces: clay, where Nadal has won more titles than anyone in history. In Madrid, the Spaniard was still working his way into top form on the red dirt. Nadal had fallen in the semi-finals in Monte-Carlo and Barcelona, both tournaments he has won 11 times.

Tsitsipas, however, was bloated with confidence, having won his third ATP Tour title – and first on clay – at the Millennium Estoril Open (d. Cuevas) the week earlier.

Nadal had held in 26 of his 27 service games to reach the Masters 1000 semi-final, but Tsitsipas broke three times in the opening set alone to grab the lead. Nadal increasingly ran around his backhand to see more forehands in the second set and rallied to force a decider.

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Tsitsipas Stuns Nadal To Reach Madrid Final

But in the third set, Tsitsipas continued to attack and step into the court, and he broke for the third time in the set to beat Nadal for the first time. Overall, Tsitsipas broke the Spaniard six times and saved 11 of 16 break points faced.

“You cannot imagine the relief. It’s unbelievable. I don’t want to say this, but it almost felt like I lost hope at some point. [I lost] three in a row [against him],” Tsitsipas said. “I felt in Toronto when I played him I was very close, and this match gave me a bit of confidence [that] I can do it in the future, but then it was too much. [I’m] really happy that I overcame this and dealt with it mentally. Beating him on clay makes it even more special.”

Watch Highlights: Tsitsipas Stuns Nadal In Madrid SF

Internazionali BNL d’Italia, SF, Nadal d. Tsitsipas 6-3, 6-4
In Rome, the surface was the same, but Tsitsipas stared down a much different Nadal. The Spaniard, after much speculation from fans and pundits, had found his top level on the clay. Before meeting Tsitsipas in another Masters 1000 semi-final, Nadal had won his past six sets 6-0, 6-1, 6-1, 6-0, 6-4, 6-0.

The Greek would do better than Nadal’s prior opponents in the Italian capital, but he couldn’t replicate his Madrid magic. In slower conditions, Nadal broke twice and saved both break points to make the Rome final, where he beat Djokovic for his 34th Masters 1000 title.

Nitto ATP Finals, Group Andre Agassi, Nadal d. Tsitsipas 6-7(4), 6-4, 7-5
The two had one final meeting in store for fans, and it might have been their best of the year. At the 2019 Nitto ATP Finals, Nadal was fighting to have a chance at the semi-finals, and Tsitsipas was trying to end Group Andre Agassi play unbeaten.

Tsitsipas eked out a tight opening set by snagging a mini-break at 4/4 and closing out the set with an ace. But Nadal grew more comfortable in the second set and broke in the ninth game before serving it out. The Spaniard hit 11 winners to only six unforced errors and won 80 per cent of his service points (20/25) in the second set.

<a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/rafael-nadal/n409/overview'>Rafael Nadal</a> celebrates his comeback win over <a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/stefanos-tsitsipas/te51/overview'>Stefanos Tsitsipas</a>.

Tsitsipas ripped back momentum early in the third and would save four break points as The O2 crowd clamoured for more drama. But, serving at 6-5, he nudged a backhand volley wide, and Nadal broke for only the second time in the match.

The Spaniard didn’t face a single break point. Tsitsipas, however, would win Group Andre Agassi and go onto win the Nitto ATP Finals title, his biggest crown to date.

Nadal vs. Tsitsipas In 2019

Event

Surface

Round

Winner

Score

Australian Open

Hard

SF

Nadal

6-2, 6-4, 6-0

Mutua Madrid Open

Clay

SF

Tsitsipas

6-4, 2-6, 6-3

Internazionali BNL d’Italia

Clay

SF

Nadal

6-3, 6-4

Nitto ATP Finals

Hard

Group Play

Nadal

6-7(4), 6-4, 7-5

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Nominees Revealed For 2019 ATP Awards

  • Posted: Nov 26, 2019

Nominees Revealed For 2019 ATP Awards

Nadal, Federer, Auger-Aliassime, Tsitsipas among nominees

Welcome to the 2019 ATP Awards, where we recognise outstanding players and tournaments. View the nominees for the player-voted categories: Comeback Player of the Year, Most Improved Player of the Year, Newcomer of the Year and Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award.

ATP Awards winners, including ATPTour.com Fans’ Favourite, will be revealed in December.

Voted By Players

Comeback Player of the Year: The player who has overcome serious injury in re-establishing himself as one of the top players on the ATP Tour.

Andy Murray
Andrey Rublev
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga
Stan Wawrinka

Most Improved Player of the Year: The player who reached a significantly higher ATP Ranking by year’s end and who demonstrated an increasingly improved level of performance through the year.

Felix Auger-Aliassime
Matteo Berrettini
Daniil Medvedev
Stefanos Tsitsipas

Newcomer of the Year: The #NextGenATP player who entered the Top 100 for the first time in 2019 and made the biggest impact on the ATP Tour this season.

Felix Auger-Aliassime
Alejandro Davidovich Fokina
Miomir Kecmanovic
Corentin Moutet
Alexei Popyrin
Casper Ruud
Jannik Sinner
Mikael Ymer

Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award: The player who, throughout the year, conducted himself at the highest level of professionalism and integrity, who competed with his fellow players with the utmost spirit of fairness and who promoted the game through his off-court activities.

Roger Federer
Rafael Nadal
Diego Schwartzman
Dominic Thiem

Tournaments of the Year: The tournament in its category that operated at the highest level of professionalism and integrity and which provided the best conditions and atmosphere for participating players.

Categories:
ATP Masters 1000
ATP 500
ATP 250

Voted By Coaches

ATP Coach of the Year: Nominated and voted on by fellow ATP coach members, this award goes to the ATP coach who helped guide his players to a higher level of performance during the year.

Voted By Fans

ATPTour.com Fans’ Favourite (Singles, Doubles): The singles player and doubles team receiving the highest number of votes from ATPTour.com fans (voting closed 18 November). 

Determined By ATP Rankings

ATP Tour No. 1: The player who ends the year as World No. 1 in the ATP Rankings.

ATP Tour No. 1 Doubles Team: The team that ends the year as World No. 1 in the ATP Doubles Team Rankings. 

Chosen By ATP

Arthur Ashe Humanitarian Award: The person who has made outstanding humanitarian contributions. Previous winners include former South African President Nelson Mandela, Arthur Ashe, Federer, Nadal, Novak Djokovic, Andy Murray and 2018 recipient Tommy Robredo.

Ron Bookman Media Excellence Award: The journalist who has made significant contributions to the game of tennis.

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Rivalries Of 2019: Djokovic vs. Medvedev

  • Posted: Nov 26, 2019

Rivalries Of 2019: Djokovic vs. Medvedev

ATP Tour Season In Review: Best Rivalries

Continuing our Season In Review series, ATPTour.com revisits the fiercest rivalries of 2019. Today we feature Novak Djokovic vs. Daniil Medvedev.

Novak Djokovic was unbeaten in his FedEx ATP Head2Head series against Russian Daniil Medvedev before the 2019 season, dropping only one set in their two matches. The 6’6” Medvedev was a player, who, at times, could challenge Djokovic in rallies, but never for more than one set at a time.

All of that changed in 2019, however, as Medvedev became one of the breakout players of the season and learned how to win against the best in the sport, including the ultra-consistent Djokovic.

Australian Open, Round of 16, Djokovic d. Medvedev 6-4, 6-7(5), 6-2, 6-3
In Melbourne to start the year, Medvedev previewed in fits and spurts what was to come of his 2019. Against Djokovic in the Round of 16, Medvedev was trying to reach his first Grand Slam quarter-final, and he pushed the Serbian like he never had in their FedEx ATP Head2Head rivalry.

The two bludgeoned balls back and forth, tallying rallies of 40-plus shots. But Medvedev, after evening the match by winning the second set, faded.

The Russian had a 2-1 lead in the third and three consecutive break points as Djokovic served at 0/40. The World No. 1, though, snapped into action. Djokovic erased all three break points, broke in the very next game and won 12 of the next 15 points en route to winning the third and fourth sets.

It was hard to go through him,” Djokovic said. “It was kind of a cat-and-a-mouse game for most of the match. That’s why it was so lengthy. We had rallies of 40, 45 exchanges. That’s why I think it was physically exhausting because of the fact that we didn’t really allow each other to think that we [could] make a lot of unforced errors and give away points. His backhand is very, very solid. He didn’t give me much from that side, but you can’t always play on the forehand. You have to open up the court and try to be patient and construct the point.”

The Serbian would continue his dominance in Melbourne against everyone, beating Rafael Nadal to win a record seventh Australian Open title.

Djokovic

Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters, QF, Medvedev d. Djokovic 6-3, 4-6, 6-2
Few would have predicted clay would be the surface where Medvedev would earn his maiden win against the all-time great.

The Russian entered the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters with a 2-9 tour-level record on clay and a 1-11 mark against the Top 10 of the ATP Rankings. But he beat No. 8 Stefanos Tsitsipas of Greece and then upset Djokovic – his first win against a World No. 1 – for back-to-back Top 10 wins on clay and a place in the Monte-Carlo semi-finals.

It’s definitely the best match of my career. Not in terms of level of tennis, but definitely by the result. [It’s my] first [ATP] Masters 1000 semi-final, beating No. 1 for the first time in my life,” Medvedev said.

The Russian won the opening set, but Djokovic rallied to force a decider. In the third, however, Medvedev showed how much he had already improved since Australia. He failed to serve out the match in his first attempt but broke again, for the fifth time, for the win.

Djokovic said, “He improved his movement a lot since last year. He definitely deserves to be where he is.”

Watch Highlights: Medvedev Stuns Djokovic In Monte-Carlo

Western & Southern Open, SF, Medvedev d. Djokovic 3-6, 6-3, 6-3
Djokovic was playing in his first tournament since saving two match points against Roger Federer in the Wimbledon final for his 16th Grand Slam title.

Medvedev, however, was putting together a run of his own on the North American hard courts. Already he had reached two consecutive finals at the Citi Open in Washington, D.C., (l. to Kyrgios) and the Coupe Rogers in Montreal (l. to Nadal). And he continued his hard-court final streak against Djokovic, who, just last year, had won the Career Golden Masters in Cincinnati.

Medvedev fell behind 3-6, 2-3, 30/40, but erased the break point to begin the comeback. From there, on serve, Medvedev varied his pace and angles to prevent Djokovic from establishing any rhythm.

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Medvedev Rallies To Stun Djokovic, Reach Cincinnati Final

For much of the match, Medvedev essentially hit two first serves, and it worked. Djokovic hadn’t lost an ATP Masters 1000 semi-final after winning the first set in more than six years, since March 2013 against Juan Martin del Potro in Indian Wells.

“To be honest, I don’t know how I did it,” Medvedev told Brad Gilbert of ESPN. “I was so tired in the first set and playing Novak, I thought I wasn’t able to keep the intensity. Then, the one momentum change in the second set was the difference. The crowd gave me so much energy.

“Usually I’ll go bigger on my second serve when it’s not working, and Novak was just destroying me in the first set. At one moment, I said to myself, ‘Why do a normal second serve if I’m going to lose the point?’ I started to win much more after that.”

Medvedev continued winning much more after Cincinnati as well. He would win three titles (Cincinnati, St. Petersburg, Shanghai) from six consecutive finals, a run that included his first Grand Slam final at the US Open (l. to Nadal). In November, Medvedev made his debut at the season-ending Nitto ATP Finals in London and secured his best year-end ATP Ranking of No. 5.

Djokovic vs. Medvedev In 2019

Event

Surface

Round

Winner

Score

Australian Open

Hard

Round of 16

Djokovic

6-4, 6-7(5), 6-2, 6-3

Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters

Clay

QF

Medvedev

6-3, 4-6, 6-2

Western & Southern Open

Hard

SF

Medvedev

3-6, 6-3, 6-3

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Andy Murray documentary: Eight things we learned from Resurfacing

  • Posted: Nov 26, 2019

Andy Murray’s journey from a tearful admission that his career was likely to end after a major hip surgery to winning an ATP title less than a year later is one of 2019’s greatest sporting stories.

Now the British former world number one’s emotional journey over the past two years has been laid bare in a behind-the-scenes documentary, Andy Murray: Resurfacing, which is being aired on Amazon Prime from Friday.

Here are eight things we’ve learned from it:

His childhood experiences in Dunblane led to anxiety

Murray, 32, grew up in the Scottish town of Dunblane and was a pupil of the local primary school when Thomas Hamilton killed 16 children and their teacher in March 1996. He hid in the headmaster’s study when the tragedy happened.

Murray knew the gunman and opens up about the traumatic experiences of that day, along with other emotional family experiences which have shaped his life.

After previously being asked by director Olivia Cappuccini why tennis is important to him, the three-time Grand Slam champion finally responds in a powerful late-night voice message.

“Obviously I had the thing that happened at Dunblane, when I was around nine,” he tells Cappuccini, who is the partner of Murray’s brother-in-law, in December 2018.

“I am sure for all the kids there it would be difficult for different reasons. The fact we knew the guy, we went to his kids’ club, he had been in our car, we had driven and dropped him off at train stations and things.

“And within 12 months of that, our parents got divorced. It is a difficult time for kids, to see that and not quite understand what is going on.

“And then six to 12 months after that, my brother Jamie also moved away from home. He went away to train to play tennis. We obviously used to do everything together. When he moved away that was also quite hard for me.

“Around that time and after that, for a year or so, I had lots of anxiety that came out when I was playing tennis. When I was competing I would get really bad breathing problems.

“Tennis is an escape for me in some ways because all of these things are bottled up and we don’t talk about these things.

“Tennis allows me to be that child. That’s why it is important to me.”

  • Listen: Andy Murray – injuries, recovery and return

The tears in Washington came because he thought his career was coming to an end

Following a first hip surgery in January 2018 and a tentative return later that year, Murray had the more serious resurfacing operation in January this year in a bid to rid himself of the chronic pain he was still suffering.

One of the most striking moments of the first comeback was the scene where, after he had beaten Romanian Marius Copil in the Washington Open third round at 3:02am local time, the Scot sat down in his chair, draped a towel over his head and sobbed uncontrollably for several minutes on court.

Now we are told the full extent of his mental state. That was the moment when he felt his career was coming to an end.

In a video message filmed at 5:09am in the American capital, he says: “I was really, really emotional at the end of the match because I feel this is the end for me.

“My body just doesn’t want to do it any more and my mind doesn’t want to push through the pain barrier any more.

“I was just hoping I was gonna feel better than this after 16, 17 months.

“It’s just an emotional night because I felt I’m coming to an end. I’m really sad about that because I want to keep going but my body is telling me ‘no’.

“It hurts and I’m sorry, I can’t keep going.”

Wife Kim told him to quit after ‘bleak’ Christmas phone call

After another tough training block in Miami towards the end of 2018, Murray said he was getting “zero enjoyment” from being on court.

He calls his wife Kim, who was back home in London, in a phone conversation which she describes as “pretty bleak”.

“He always wanted someone to tell him to stop and I’d tried to explain nobody could because it was nobody’s decision to make other than his,” she says.

“I knew that is what he wanted and I knew what he was calling me for.

“I told him ‘you’re clearly not happy, you said you’d give it until Christmas – I was putting the Christmas tree up – call it a day’.”

He almost changed his mind about emotional Australian Open announcement

Although Murray had privately been thinking he was approaching the end, he had given few clues publicly and that meant a tearful announcement in a pre-tournament news conference at the Australian Open surprised the world.

Murray said he thought he could get through the pain until Wimbledon and then stop playing, although he also conceded the Grand Slam in Melbourne might be his last tournament.

Yet on the morning of his planned admission he still had doubts whether he should reveal all.

“I’m going to say something today, I know I’ll get emotional,” he says, two hours before facing the media.

“But I change my mind all the time. I need to say something. Or I don’t.”

Murray describes how he is feeling nervous, anxious and has butterflies in his stomach, while walking around that morning without much pain in his hip.

“When making a decision like that I want my leg to feel really sore,” he says.

That led to doubts. So he calls his physio Shane Annun. “I’m thinking I’m making a mistake,” Murray says.

His surgeon warned him of the dangers of making a tennis comeback

Murray eventually chose to have the resurfacing operation with renowned surgeon Sarah Muirhead-Allwood, who had previously operated on the Queen Mother, at the London Hip Unit.

At a post-surgery meeting, Murray speaks of how he is worried about damaging his hip again and needing further surgery if he goes back to playing tennis.

“What if I said, if you went back to playing first-class tennis, I think you’ve got a 15% chance that in the first seven years you could destroy the hip,” she tells him.

Murray laughs nervously.

“That is what it is like, it’s not it will or it won’t. It is chances. For seven years of tennis would you take that risk?”

Murray initially doubted whether he would return to the court because he said he was happy with being pain free and given a new lease of life.

But his mum Judy correctly predicts that will change.

“My gut is telling me he has unfinished business. He’s not fooling me,” she says.

He watched a gruesome video of the hip surgery

No holds are barred when it comes to seeing the footage from Murray’s two hip surgeries.

Early in the film, we see graphic images of his operation with Australian surgeon John O’Donnell in January 2018 and Murray assessing his post-op scar which he concludes looks “pretty neat”.

Later, after deciding in January this year he wanted to have the hip resurfaced, we see him watching a gory video of someone else having that operation.

“I find that funny, that they’re literally using a hammer,” he says.

Shortly after, he is having the operation for real. Everything from the moment he lies down on the surgical bed – including graphic images of bloody instruments working on the joint inside gaping flesh – is captured by the camera.

“It’s not a good idea to be running around a tennis court,” Murray says dryly as he comes around from the operation.

Wife Kim, along with fitness coach Matt Little and physio Annun, joke that the remark must be captured by the filmmaker because they know he will change his mind – again.

He has a bromance with his physio

Murray’s ‘bromance’ with Annun provides the lighter, and funniest, moments of the film.

“I’d love to marry Shane, I’d have so much fun,” says Murray.

Annun says Murray likes to tap into his weakness – being “gullible” – with his other physio Mark Bender saying he views the pair as an “old couple that know exactly what buttons to push”.

The pair’s relationship is again captured while they are starting Murray’s rehabilitation work after the second hip operation, a warm and funny scene where Murray shows his affection for the physio.

“The brilliant thing about having a sore hip is I can hug Shane and he can’t get away from me because otherwise he will hurt my hip. He can’t force his way out of my hug,” he laughs.

These exchanges show Murray’s sharp sense of humour and how he like to “wind up” his team. Bender also bears the brunt of Murray’s cheeky humour as we learn his nickname is ‘Slender’.

“It’s ironic because he’s not particularly slender,” giggles Murray.

He used to feel there was animosity towards him

Murray’s announcement at the Australian Open that an illustrious career seemed to be heading towards the end brought a universal showing of affection and respect towards him.

But it has not been until recent years – following Wimbledon, Olympic and Davis Cup triumphs which endeared him further to the British public – that he has felt it.

“He did used to feel there was a certain amount of animosity towards him,” his wife Kim says.

“I think he would accept now there is a lot of love out there. What he has done, I have to pinch myself sometimes. I can’t believe I’ve watched it happen.”

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ATP Tour 2019 Season In Review

  • Posted: Nov 26, 2019

ATP Tour 2019 Season In Review

A look back at a memorable 2019 season

It’s that time of the year again when we look back on the story makers and events of 2019 that made this year’s ATP Tour season one to remember.

We’re starting this week with a look at five of the best rivalries of the year. In Week 2 of the series we’ll focus on the best matches, biggest upsets and stunning comebacks.

We’ll also celebrate the first-time title winners of 2019, salute the champions who announced their retirements and look at the season’s most revealing statistics.

Enjoy!

Rivalries
Federer & Tsitsipas

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Rivalries Of 2019: Federer vs. Tsitsipas

  • Posted: Nov 25, 2019

Rivalries Of 2019: Federer vs. Tsitsipas

ATP Tour Season In Review: Best Rivalries

To kick off our Season In Review series, ATPTour.com revisits the fiercest rivalries of 2019. Today we feature Roger Federer vs. Stefanos Tsitsipas.

Stefanos Tsitsipas is among the legion of 20-somethings on the ATP Tour who counted Roger Federer among their heroes growing up. But for the lucky few, including Tsitsipas, Federer has also become their rival.

The 21-year-old Greek faced off with the 20-time Grand Slam champion four times in 2019. Fans savoured it all: the intergenerational battle, the one-handed backhands and fans’ internal conflict between rooting for more success for Federer, who turned 38 in August, but also supporting the exuberant underdog hungry to win everything.

Tsitsipas

Australian Open, Round Of 16, Tsitsipas d. Federer 6-7(11), 7-6(3), 7-5, 7-6(5)
To start the year in Melbourne, Tsitsipas and Federer kicked off one of the storylines of the 2019 season: Just how close would the Next Generation get to knocking the Big Three off their pedestal?

Ahead of the 2019 Australian Open, the Big Three had won 48 of the past 62 major championships since Federer’s first Grand Slam title at 2003 Wimbledon. And although Tsitsipas and his #NextGenATP cohort wouldn’t slow down Big Three dominance at Grand Slams this year, the Greek did his part in Melbourne against the six-time Australian Open champion Federer, who had won back-to-back titles in 2017 (d. Nadal) and 2018 (d. Cilic).

Tsitsipas came up big on serve again and again in the Round of 16 showdown, foreshadowing what was to come in their rivalry. Serving down 6-7(11), 4-5, Tsitsipas saved four set points and won the final four points of the second-set tie-break to even the match.

“I have massive regrets tonight… I felt like I had to win the second set,” Federer said. “I don’t care how I do it, but I had to do it.”

Tsitsipas surged with confidence from there and saved all 12 break points to become the first Greek player to reach a Grand Slam quarter-final after three hours and 45 minutes.

It was a very emotional moment. It was a beginning of something really big. I felt joy. I felt happiness. I felt a huge relief going out of my shoulders,” Tsitsipas said.

The 2018 Next Gen ATP Finals champion beat Roberto Bautista Agut to make his first Grand Slam semi-final and follow the trail blazed by South Korea’s Hyeon Chung, who won the 2017 Next Gen ATP Finals title and reached the Australian Open semi-finals two months later.

Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships, F, Federer d. Tsitsipas 6-4, 6-4
Federer, however, would not have to wait long to gain revenge against the Greek. In March in Dubai, the Swiss was trying to join American Jimmy Connors (109) and become only the second player in history to win 100 tour-level titles.

Federer won No. 99 in October 2018 at his home tournament, the Swiss Indoors Basel, and in his first opportunity to join the “Century Club”, he pounced. Federer quickly put the Melbourne loss behind him, breaking Tsitsipas twice and saving both break points faced to win in only 69 minutes.

Federer won his eighth Dubai title, making it four tournaments where he has won eight or more crowns (Halle, Wimbledon, Basel).

I think this one has a deep satisfaction, an immediate one, because I know what it means. I like these types of numbers or records,” Federer said.

A lot of people always emphasise all the Slams and all these things. I play on the ATP Tour. This is where I’ve won so many of them, been around for so long. I don’t rest between Slams all the time, like people think I might be. But I’m not. I think this number proves that. I think that’s why this was a very exciting week for me.”

<a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/roger-federer/f324/overview'>Roger Federer</a> celebrates his 100th title after triumphing in Dubai

Swiss Indoors Basel, SF, Federer d. Tsitsipas 6-4, 6-4
Some things in tennis seem like they’ll never change. Federer, with his aggressive and attacking style, dominates on quick surfaces, and his home courts in Basel fit that description.

Heading into this year’s edition, Federer’s 19th appearance, the home favourite had won his past 20 matches and owned a 71-9 record at the ATP 500.

But Tsitsipas, after a mid-season slump that included a first-round exit at Wimbledon and seeking inspiration from a book about Federer, was back to his old self, making the final in Beijing and the semi-finals at the ATP Masters 1000 event in Shanghai.

The Greek, however, could not slow down Federer. In a match that resembled the Dubai final, Federer broke twice to beat the #NextGenATP star in 79 minutes.

Federer won his 10th Basel title and his 103rd overall. The former Basel ball kid remembered to have a pizza party for the ball kids as well.

<a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/roger-federer/f324/overview'>Roger Federer</a>

Nitto ATP Finals, SF, Tsitsipas d. Federer 6-3, 6-4
Tsitsipas, though, saved his best for last at the Nitto ATP Finals in London. The 21-year-old was making his debut at the season finale and facing Federer, who holds the most season finale titles (six), for a place in the Nitto ATP Finals title match.

Federer had qualified for the semi-finals with one of his performances of the season, a 6-4, 6-3 win against No. 2 Novak Djokovic that saw the Swiss hit 23 winners to only five unforced errors. But Tsitsipas had won his group, going 2-1 and pushing World No. 1 Rafael Nadal to three sets in his only defeat.

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Tsitsipas: From Milan To London, The Emotions Of A Dream Come True

Against Federer in the semi-finals, their fourth and final FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting of the season, Tsitsipas played as if he were in Melbourne again. The Greek saved 11 of 12 break points to advance in straight sets and again leave Federer wondering, “What if?”

The next day, Tsitsipas would beat Dominic Thiem for the Nitto ATP Finals title, his biggest crown to date, marking the completion of his transition from Next Gen ATP Finals titlist in Milan to Nitto ATP Finals champion in London.

I remember myself being one of these kids here, watching the event and… I could never picture myself standing here, but it did happen,” Tsitsipas said after being Federer. “Dreams do come true.”

Watch: Tsitsipas’ Journey From Milan To London

Federer vs. Tsitsipas

Event

Surface

Round

Winner

Score

Australian Open

Hard

Round of 16

Federer

6-7(11), 7-6(3), 7-5, 7-6(5)

Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships

Hard

F

Federer

6-4, 6-4

Swiss Indoors Basel

Hard

SF

Federer

6-4, 6-4

Nitto ATP Finals

Hard

SF

Tsitsipas

6-3, 6-4

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Isner Launches The Isner Family Foundation

  • Posted: Nov 25, 2019

Isner Launches The Isner Family Foundation

American provides insight into his new foundation’s mission

John Isner has openly spoken about his mother’s battle against cancer and how much that has affected his family. Now the American is launching the Isner Family Foundation to provide support to hospitals in the Dallas-Forth Worth area to contribute towards others receiving world-class treatment to aid in their own battles.

“Cancer is something that affects a lot of people for those who get it, but it also affects their families. I think everyone knows someone who has been affected by cancer in a pretty negative way,” Isner told ATPTour.com. “But fortunately for our family, ours had a positive outcome. That’s what the foundation wants to touch on, to raise funds for incredible treatment, treatment like my mother got in North Carolina. It’s pediatric, but it’s not just pediatric care. Good, quality care in hospitals in the Dallas-Fort Worth area is what the foundation’s going to focus on.”

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My Point: Isner Inspired By Mom’s Courage

Isner has long participated in a myriad of charitable activities, whether supporting a fellow tennis player’s foundation or contributing to various causes. So why launch his own foundation now?

“I think mainly it’s because I have definite roots now in Dallas, Texas. This is where my family is going to be. Also on top of that I’ve gotten to know a lot of nice people in this town and I think it’s just a good opportunity for me, for my family to do a lot of good,” Isner said. “This is not just something for while I’m still playing. This is something that I want to continue when I’m not playing tennis. I have a good team of people that I’m working with on the foundation, so I think it can be very successful going forward.”

Read: Knowles, Blake, Haas & Bryan Support Hurricane Dorian Relief Efforts
Learn More About ATP ACES For Charity
ATP ACES For Charity: Isner

The American joins a large number of tennis players who have launched foundations both during and after their careers. The 34-year-old is excited to follow in their footsteps.

“I think it’s very nice. My friends before me, especially for American men’s tennis, have launched foundations before with Mardy Fish, James Blake and Andy Roddick’s foundation, which of course has been incredibly successful,” Isner said. “I just think it’s something that I’m definitely glad I started to do now and I also think it’s a very good time for it now just given the fact that I’m going to be in Dallas for a very long time. It’s a good spot for it and I’m in a good spot to devote a lot of time to it as well.”

Isner announced the launch of the Isner Family Foundation on 13 November, the same day he revealed that the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center named its multidisciplinary clinic in honour of Karen Isner, his mother, a two-time cancer survivor who underwent her treatment at that facility in North Carolina. Isner’s hometown is Greensboro, North Carolina.

“It was very cool. It was something that was a pretty long time in the making and glad I was able to do that,” Isner said. “That’s a cause that’s very close to my family, so it was a very cool day.”

Did You Know?
In 2014, Isner received a $15,000 grant from ATP ACES For Charity for the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center.

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