Tennis News

From around the world

Zverev beats Kyrgios to give Germany victory over Australia

  • Posted: Feb 04, 2018

German number one Alexander Zverev beat Nick Kyrgios in straight sets to give his country a 3-1 win over Australia in their Davis Cup World Group tie.

Zverev won 6-2 7-6 (7-3) 6-2 in Brisbane to put Germany into a quarter-final against Spain or Great Britain.

Kyrgios appeared troubled by an elbow problem and Zverev, the 20-year-old world number five, only faced two break points in the match.

“Hopefully this is just the beginning for us,” Zverev said.

“It’s awesome, it’s an amazing feeling and without my team-mates it wouldn’t have been possible.”

Kyrgios, 22, went into the match full of expectation after an impressive win over Jan-Lennard Struff in Friday’s opening singles.

His elbow problem became more noticeable as the game progressed, the Australian often shaking his right arm between points.

“It obviously affected me a lot,” Kyrgios said. “My serve is my biggest strength. I mean, I thought he played great today – but my serve was not really there and that affects the rest of my game.”

  • GB’s Murray and Inglot beaten in doubles – report
  • Live scores, schedule and results
  • BBC coverage times

Zverev – who was pushed for almost four hours before seeing off 18-year-old Alex de Minaur in five sets on Friday – was rarely troubled.

Kyrgios lost two of his first four service games to surrender the opening set in just 23 minutes. He served better in the second set, firing down eight aces, but at 4-3 he had a medical timeout for treatment on his arm. The Australian continued to serve well and had two set points on Zverev’s serve at 6-5, but the German saved both then played a superb tiebreak to take a stranglehold on the match.

Defending champions France and fourth seeds Croatia lead 2-1 in their ties against the Netherlands and Canada respectively heading into Sunday.

Italy lead Japan and Belgium are 2-1 up against Hungary.

Source link

Zverev Beats Kyrgios To Lead Germany Into QFs

  • Posted: Feb 04, 2018

Zverev Beats Kyrgios To Lead Germany Into QFs

World No. 5 claims both his singles rubbers to help Germany advance

AUSTRALIA 1, GERMANY 3
Venue: Pat Rafter Arena, Brisbane, AUS (hard- outdoor)

Alexander Zverev guided Germany into the quarter-finals of the 2018 Davis Cup with a commanding 6-2, 7-6(3), 6-2 victory over Australian Nick Kyrgios Sunday in Brisbane.

Zverev was close to untouchable on serve, firing 15 aces, putting 71 per cent of first serves into play and winning 80 per cent of first-serve points. He also fought off all four break points he faced, while breaking Kyrgios four times. Kyrgios had won three of their four career FedEx ATP Head2Head meetings coming to the tie, including when they last met in the China Open semi-finals last year.

A frustrated Kyrgios was given a point penalty in the tie-break for smashing his racquet and was unable to pressure the World No. 5 in the third set. Zverev broke for a second time in the set in the final game of the match to secure the 3-1 victory for the Germans, who won Saturday’s pivotal doubles rubber in five sets.

It was a very different victory for Zverev, who on the opening day needed a fifth-set tie-break to beat 18-year-old Davis Cup debutant Alex de Minaur.

“It’s awesome, it’s an amazing feeling,” Zverev said on court after steering Germany to the quarter-finals for the first time in three years. “We’re super happy, but hopefully this is just the beginning for us.”

Germany will next play the winner of Great Britain and Spain.

Source link

Robert Claims Slice Of Challenger History With Burnie Title

  • Posted: Feb 03, 2018

Robert Claims Slice Of Challenger History With Burnie Title

Frenchman notches second ATP Challenger Tour title in three months

It has been a historic week on the ATP Challenger Tour. Former World No. 4 Kei Nishikori is stealing the spotlight with a run to the final at the $125,000 event in Dallas, but the Japanese star’s comeback to professional tennis is not the only headline-grabbing story on the circuit.

At the age of 37 years and 8 months, Stephane Robert became the second-oldest winner in Challenger history on Saturday in Burnie, Australia. The Frenchman routed Daniel Altmaier 6-1, 6-2 in just 63 minutes to lift the trophy. Only Dick Norman was older (38 years, 1 month) when he claimed the title in Mexico City in 2009.

The win for Robert continues a hot streak for the 37-year-old, who has now captured two Challenger crowns in three months (Kobe, Japan) and also reached the final in Izmir, Turkey, in September. Having ascended to a career-high of No. 50 in the ATP Rankings in 2016, nine-time Challenger champion Robert is surging towards a Top 100 return in his comeback from injury. He is projected to rise to No. 164 on Monday.

Oldest Challenger Titlists

Player Age Tournament
Dick Norman 38 years, 1 month Mexico City 2009
Stephane Robert 37 years, 8 months Burnie 2018
Bob Carmichael 37 years, 6 months Hobart 1978
Stephane Robert 37 years, 5 months Kobe 2017
Victor Estrella Burgos  37 years Santo Domingo 2017

 

Source link

Davis Cup 2018: Germany and France take 2-1 leads heading into final day of ties

  • Posted: Feb 03, 2018

Germany took a 2-1 lead in their Davis Cup World Group tie against Australia after Tim Puetz and Jan-Lennard Struff won a tough five-set doubles rubber.

The duo beat John Peers and Matt Ebden 6-4 6-7 (1-7) 6-2 6-7 (4-7) 6-4 in three hours and 17 minutes in Brisbane.

German world number five Alexander Zverev will play Nick Kyrgios in the first singles rubber on Sunday.

Elsewhere, Ryan Harrison and Steve Johnson gave the United States an unassailable 3-0 lead in Serbia.

The Americans beat Nikola Milojevic and Miljan Zekic 6-7 (3-7) 6-2 7-5 6-4 in Nis to reach April’s quarter-finals, while Kazakhstan also secured their place in the last eight after their doubles victory over Switzerland in Astana.

Timur Khabibulin and Aleksandr Nedovyesov defeated Marc-Andrea Huesler and Luca Margaroli 6-4 6-4 3-6 6-7 (5-7) 6-3.

  • GB’s Murray and Inglot beaten in doubles – report
  • Live scores, schedule and results
  • BBC coverage times

Defending champions France and fourth seeds Croatia both took 2-1 leads after victories in their respective doubles matches.

Pierre-Hugues Herbert joined up with Nicolas Mahut for France to beat Netherlands’ Robin Haase and Jean-Julien Rojer 7-6 (8-6) 6-3 6-7 (3-7) 7-6 (7-2) in Albertville.

Australian Open finalist Marin Cilic and Ivan Dodig came from two sets down to give hosts Croatia a 2-1 lead against Canada, defeating 45-year-old Daniel Nestor and Vasek Pospisil 2-6 3-6 6-4 7-5 6-2 in Osijek.

There was also a doubles win for Italy’s Simone Bolelli and Fabio Fognini, who beat beat Japan’s Ben McLachlan and Yasutaka Uchiyama in Morioka to go 2-1 up.

Hungary’s Marton Fucsovics and Attila Balazs held off a fightback from Belgium’s Joris de Loore and Ruben Bemelmans to win 6-3 6-4 6-7 (2-7) 4-6 7-5 in Liege and keep the tie alive with the hosts’ lead cut to 2-1.

Source link

Davis Cup 2018: GB trail Spain 2-1 after Murray & Inglot lose doubles

  • Posted: Feb 03, 2018

Great Britain trail 2-1 in their Davis Cup World Group tie in Spain after Jamie Murray and Dominic Inglot were beaten in the doubles by Pablo Carreno Busta and Feliciano Lopez.

Murray and Inglot were second best throughout, losing 6-4 6-4 7-6 (7-4).

Britain must win both reverse singles rubbers on Sunday to be victorious in the tie on clay in Marbella.

Cameron Norrie and Liam Broady are due to play for GB but captain Leon Smith can select Kyle Edmund if he is fit.

The Australian Open semi-finalist was not chosen for Friday’s singles because of a hip injury.

Norrie is scheduled to play Albert Ramos-Vinolas before Broady faces Roberto Bautista Agut.

Sunday’s singles matches are live on BBC Two and the BBC Sport website from 10:00 GMT.

  • Germany and France take Davis Cup leads
  • Schedule, results and latest scores
  • Alerts: Get tennis news sent to your phone

“The Spanish guys played an awful lot better than ours, it’s as simple as that,” Smith told BBC Sport.

“The court definitely favoured them but they also played well. We would have needed to make an awful lot more returns to try and make some inroads into their service games, but they were holding so quickly and we never really got any momentum.”

Asked whether Edmund would play on Sunday, he added: “He’ll have another practice session this evening on the match court, play some points for an extended period of time and after that we’ll have a good conversation with him.

“First and foremost, it’s got to be his decision because he’s coming back from an injury. Then the medical team will have their say, and if he’s ready to go then of course he should go out and give it a go.”

Britain fail to build on Norrie’s victory

The momentum appeared to be with Britain in this first-round tie after world number 114 Norrie came from two sets down to shock Bautista Agut in Friday’s second singles rubber.

However, they were always trailing in the doubles after Inglot was broken in the opening game and the British pair failed to sustain any pressure, creating only one unconverted break point in the match.

The crowd was much more partisan than on Friday when it often sounded like Britain was the home team and Lopez and Carreno Busta seemed to be inspired by the atmosphere.

Inglot struggled when serving and returning and was responsible for eight of Britain’s nine double faults.

Britain did at least fight hard to make the match competitive, saving 10 of the 12 break points they faced, but it was always a rearguard action to stay in touch.

They saved four break points when Inglot was serving at 2-4 down in the second set, while Murray had to save two at 5-5 in the third set, but none of the escapes could inspire a breakthrough when the Spaniards were serving, with 36-year-old Lopez rock-solid.

He and Carreno Busta raced into an early lead in the third-set tie-break and sealed victory on their third match point in two hours 28 minutes.

History and rankings against GB

Norrie and Broady – or Edmund if he comes in – face a monumental task to turn this tie around.

Spain captain Sergi Bruguera can bring in world number 10 Carreno Busta for the singles, while all five players in their squad are ranked in the top 40. Spain have won 27 of their past 28 Davis Cup ties on clay.

The losers of the tie will face a relegation play-off in September to stay in the World Group in 2019.

Inspired to play tennis?

Find out how to get into tennis in our special guide.

Source link

Djokovic Announces ‘Small Medical Intervention’

  • Posted: Feb 03, 2018

Djokovic Announces ‘Small Medical Intervention’

The 68-time tour-level champion reveals details of a recent elbow procedure

Former World No. 1 Novak Djokovic revealed to his social media followers on Friday that he has recently undergone a “small medical intervention” on his right elbow.

“I owe you some news about my recovery,” Djokovic wrote on Instagram and Facebook. “I’ve been carrying this injury for the past two years, and during this time I’ve been seeing many doctors. Truth be told, there were many different opinions, different diagnoses, different suggestions… It was not easy for me to choose which way to go and what to do”.

Djokovic ended his 2017 season after The Championships at Wimbledon, where he retired in the second set of his quarter-final against Tomas Berdych. The 30-year-old returned to competitive play for the first time at the recent Australian Open, where he fell in the fourth round to eventual semi-finalist Hyeon Chung.

“I took six months off last season hoping to come back fully recovered, but unfortunately I still felt pain,” admitted Djokovic. “I really missed competing, it’s in my blood and I had to give it a try [at the Australian Open].

“I agreed with my team that I would try different methods after I finished in Australia. A few days ago I accepted to do a small medical intervention on my elbow,” revealed Djokovic. “It seems like I am on the good road now to full recovery. It’s quite a journey this one, I have to say. I’m learning a lot and for that I’m grateful.”

Source link