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China Open: Maria Sharapova beats Anastasija Sevastova in three-hour epic

  • Posted: Sep 30, 2017

Russia’s Maria Sharapova put her recent US Open defeat by Anastasija Sevastova behind her with a gripping three-hour win over the Latvian at the China Open.

Sharapova, playing for the first time since that defeat in New York 26 days ago, saved a match point as she won 7-6 (7-3) 5-7 7-6 (9-7) in Beijing.

The 30-year-old wildcard, ranked 104th, will face compatriot Ekaterina Makarova or Jennifer Brady of the US next.

Second seed Simona Halep and 10th seed Angelique Kerber also progressed.

Romania’s Halep beat American Alison Riske 6-3 3-6 6-2, German Kerber saw off Japan’s Naomi Osaka 6-2 7-5, and 12th seed Petra Kvitova beat fellow Czech Kristyna Pliskova 6-3 7-5.

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Sevastova, the world number 18, ended Sharapova’s return to Grand Slam tennis following a doping ban in the fourth round of the US Open, but the Russian prevailed in a remarkable rematch in Beijing.

The five-time Grand Slam champion led by a set and a break, and by a double break in the final set, but in the end had to fend off a match point as she finally converted her fourth after three hours and five minutes.

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Wuhan Open: Caroline Garcia beats Ashleigh Barty in final

  • Posted: Sep 30, 2017

France’s Caroline Garcia fought back to beat Australian Ashleigh Barty and win the biggest title of her career at the Wuhan Open in China.

Garcia, ranked 20th in the world, won the final – between two unseeded players – 6-7 (3-7) 7-6 (7-4) 6-2 to claim her fourth title.

World number 37 Barty served for the match twice but could not seal a fifth win of the week over a top-20 player.

“It was a such a fight all the week and especially today,” said Garcia, 23.

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“A title is the best thing you can have in tennis, that’s why you fight all year long. I’m over the moon.”

Barty, 21, could not cap a remarkable week with the trophy, having seen off players such as Karolina Pliskova, Johanna Konta and Agnieszka Radwanska in the earlier rounds.

The Australian only chose to return to tennis last year after an 18-month break, during which she played for Brisbane Heat in cricket’s Big Bash League.

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Goffin Advances to Third Final of '17

  • Posted: Sep 30, 2017

Goffin Advances to Third Final of '17

Belgian will meet Ukraine’s Dolgopolov

David Goffin advanced to his third final of the season by defeating Henri Laaksonen 7-6(7), 5-7, 6-3 at the Shenzhen Open on Saturday.

After cruising to a straight-sets victory over eighth-seeded Donald Young in the quarter-finals, Goffin was forced to dig deep against the No. 107 Laaksonen.

Goffin clinched the first set in a tie-break, then dropped the second after sailing a forehand wide at 6-5. The second-seeded Belgian immediately broke to open the third and broke again at 5-3 to earn the victory in two hours and 16 minutes.

“I’m feeling a little tired; I’ve never played him before but he’s a tough fighter,” Goffin said. “It was a tough battle, especially in the second set. I’m happy with the way I started the third set but it was a fight until the end.

“I’ve won three matches already in Shenzhen; I’m going to rest tonight to be ready for tomorrow.”

You May Also Like: Baghdatis Pulls Double Duty to Reach Chengdu Final

Goffin moves a step closer to his first title of the season. The World No. 12 failed to lift a tournament trophy in his two previous attempts this season. In February, Goffin fell to Grigor Dimitrov at Sofia and to Jo-Wilfried Tsonga at Rotterdam.

Laaksonen, the Swiss No. 3 behind Roger Federer and Stan Wawrinka, was playing in his third straight three-set match and his first ATP World Tour semi-final.

In the previous round, Laaksonen outlasted Chinese qualifier Zhizhen Zhang 6-4, 3-6, 6-2 in two hours and five minutes. In the Round of 16, the 25 year old battled from a set down to rally past Marius Copil 4-6, 6-4, 6-3.

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Baghdatis Pulls Double Duty to Reach Chengdu Final

  • Posted: Sep 30, 2017

Baghdatis Pulls Double Duty to Reach Chengdu Final

Cypriot will face Uzbekistan’s Istomin in title match

Marcos Baghdatis had to win two matches in one day on Saturday at the Chengdu Open but the Cypriot pulled it off and now, he’ll earn his reward: a chance to win his first ATP World Tour title since Sydney 2010.

The 32-year-old Baghdatis won the final game of his Chengdu quarter-final, beating Chinese Taipei’s Yen-Hsun Lu 6-3, 6-2 to reach his third semi-final of the season.

Later in the day, Baghdatis returned to take on Argentina’s Guido Pella, who had not dropped a set all tournament and had upset top seed Dominic Thiem in the second round. But Baghdatis hit 12 aces and lost his serve only once in the final two sets to advance past Pella 5-7, 6-4, 6-2 in just over two hours.

“I feel great because I think I kept a very good level throughout the match,” Baghdatis said. “I’m pretty happy I am improving and finding my movement back and my energy on court and keeping it for two hours.”

You May Also Like: Goffin Advances to Third Final of '17

The veteran Baghdatis will be playing in his 14th tour-level final and his first since February 2016 (Dubai, l. to Wawrinka). He will face Uzbekistan’s Denis Istomin, who reached his fourth tour-level final by knocking out fifth seed Yuichi Sugita 6-2, 6-7(4), 6-0.

Istomin won almost 80 per cent of his first-serve points to beat Sugita, the lone remaining seed in the draw. “I’m really happy with my serve this tournament. I was working a lot on my serve,” said Istomin, who finished with 11 aces on Saturday.  

The 31 year old leads his FedEx ATP Head2Head series against Baghdatis 2-1. Istomin will try to win his second title (Nottingham 2015).

“I’m just trying to bring my best tennis,” Istomin said. “It’s going to be tricky. I just go on court and try to do my best.”

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Spadea Serves Stars In 'Battle Of The Sexes'

  • Posted: Sep 29, 2017

Spadea Serves Stars In 'Battle Of The Sexes'

‘Hollywood Vince’ discusses role in movie, working with A-List stars 

Former Top 20 American Vince Spadea had already managed to parlay success on the tennis court into success in the business world. But his star is truly on the rise after his pivotal role in ‘Battle Of The Sexes,’ Hollywood’s take on the 1973 epic showdown between Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs.

In addition to his role as advisor to Oscar winner Emma Stone, who plays Billie Jean King, and actor/producer Steve Carell, who plays Bobby Riggs, Spadea also doubled as Riggs during on-court scenes. During one such scene, Spadea traded shots with Stone’s stunt double dressed as Riggs one minute, and fed balls to Stone in ball boy attire the next.

“There was a scene where the ball boy wasn’t getting the ball toss right; his rhythm was off,” Spadea said. “At Emma’s request, I stood in for the shot. “I had to get dressed up as the ball boy and throw her the ball.”

During his lengthy career (1993-2011), Spadea gained attention both on the court – 311 wins, a career-high ranking of 18, the 2004 Scottsdale title, 21 Top 10 wins, including over Pete Sampras, Andre Agassi and Andy Roddick – and off the court, as one of the game’s most colourful personalities. He dabbled in rapping, coining the phrase, ‘Spadea, I’m not afraid of ya’. So it should come as little surprise that the 43-year-old now finds himself in Hollywood.

Apart from that, Spadea stuck to his main job: to prepare Stone for her role as King before filming got underway. To do so, Spadea, an 18-year-veteran of the ATP Tour, studied tape of the match in order to pick up the nuances of King’s style and game, and to get a feel for the milestone event in general. Stone, who won the Academy Award for “Best Actress in a Leading Role” for her performance in 2016’s “La La Land,” was quick to pick up King’s mannerisms and overall on-court demeanor.

“I worked with Emma on things like King’s walk, where she put her head, rested her racquet during that match,” Spadea said. “We also worked on her grip and stroke production: her rotation, stance, swing and follow-through technique.

“It really was an artistic project. Emma was a super-hard worker and a great student. She transitioned into King quickly. You could see the differences from the first week to the fourth, sixth through the eighth, 10th to the 12th. It was great to synchronise [Stone’s] body; she doubled as King.”

During one of their training sessions, King dropped by to provide feedback and a few pointers.

“King wasn’t on set, but we did work together one time before production started,” Spadea said. “She demonstrated some technical things; the ball toss, where her eyes were on the ball, her slice [backhand]. She felt [Stone and I] worked well together and was happy with how things were turning out.”

Spadea was also instrumental in getting Carell into tennis form. With Spadea also serving as his understudy’s stunt double for some on-court scenes, the player paid visits to Carell’s house to iron out match sequences.

“Carell has a lot of confidence and already had a lot of tennis talent before we met,” Spadea said. “He was all business and we got along great. We practised lobs, slices, a wide range of shots that we’d use during filming.

“The production team wasn’t sure how much of Carell or me they were going to use during the shots of match play, so I had to be Riggs theatrically and work on getting Carell to be Riggs.”

Spadea, who credits his success running his talent agency, Vince Models, based in Beverly Hills, as the reason he was hired for the job, wasn’t restricted to transforming the actors into their tennis counterparts and a Los Angeles movie set into the Houston Astrodome. In addition, his role as “tennis choreographer/technical advisor” meant he was tasked with replicating the atmosphere and ambiance of the event.

“We paid a lot of attention to detail,” Spadea said. “I had some third party counseling, to get the right umpire, the right crowd, the right attire, to make it all look authentic. We had to find the same court surface, the same material that was used during that match, things like that.

“We found some private locations to work on scenes to get the feeling right. We wanted everything to be relevant, from where the umpires were standing to how they were standing.”

Besides the aesthetics, the velocity of the game itself has changed over the 40-plus years since the “Battle of the Sexes” showdown. Spadea analysed those aspects to give the on-court action scenes the perfect fit and feel.

“We had to assess how the players hit, served and moved,” Spadea said. “How big were their biggest shots? Hardest serves? We had to calibrate all of that. Obviously, we had to slow things down a bit, pull back a little bit, to replicate the times since the movie is set in 1973. Don’t get me wrong, Billie Jean hit hard, and Bobby played with some finesse; he was very fast. We had to take all that into account.”

In the 40 days Spadea was involved in shooting, work hours often stretched from early morning into the late evening. During that time, the player made friends and enjoyed some lighthearted moments, both on and off the set.

“I mingled with the actors during the shooting and I went to one of Emma’s charity events,” Spadea said. “It isn’t often you get to work with Oscar-winning talent, and my years of experience as a tennis pro was embraced by the Hollywood set.

“I ran into some of the cast at a preview of the movie in Los Angeles. That was interesting. You make a movie and it doesn’t come out until a year and a half later, but it was nice to see everyone again.”

Spadea

Vince Spadea in action on set, standing in for actor Steve Carell. Photo credit: Melinda Sue Gordon/FOX Searchlight

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Qureshi Seeks Fifth Title Of 2017, With Message Of Peace For Good Measure

  • Posted: Sep 29, 2017

Qureshi Seeks Fifth Title Of 2017, With Message Of Peace For Good Measure

The Pakistani could reach a personal milestone with Israel’s Jonathan Erlich in Chengdu, China

Whether you’d like to call it ‘five-for-five’ or ‘five-with-five’, ATP World Tour veteran Aisam-Ul-Haq Qureshi will attempt to win his fifth doubles title of the year with a fifth different partner at the Chengdu Open on Sunday.

“It’s obviously a very, very good feeling and a great feeling to reach four finals and win all four of them, especially playing with four different partners,” said Qureshi, who alongside partner Jonathan Erlich will play either Marcus Daniell and Marcelo Demoliner or Yen-Hsun Lu and Divij Sharan, who contest their semi-final Saturday. “[I] hope things go well and I can get another title this year, with a different partner again.”

Qureshi has had an inconsistent year, but not just in the way you might think. The Pakistani has now played with 14 different partners this season — 15, if you include Davis Cup. Yet it has arguably been one of the right-hander’s most successful campaigns. He started 2017 at No. 40 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, his lowest year-end finish since 2009 (No. 59). Yet Qureshi won four titles by the end of July, and is on the doorstep of a fifth, which would break his own personal record of four titles in one season (2011).

“Honestly speaking I had no idea I had won four titles in the past in a year,” the former World No. 8 admitted.  “That’s a great statistic, I had no clue about it. Obviously would be awesome if I could break that record of mine.”

Qureshi has climbed back to No. 29 in the rankings, despite tough finishes at the Grand Slams. His best result at a major this year — of course, with three different partners — was a third-round appearance at Wimbledon with Florin Mergea. The North American hard court swing was also tough for Qureshi, who lost five matches in a row — with four different partners — after capturing the Newport title with Rajeev Ram.

“Tennis is a funny sport, you know? Before the summer I won four titles and won a Challenger as well and was feeling pretty good,” said Qureshi, who wouldn’t let the disappointment send him into a funk. “I think it’s just about telling yourself you’re playing well and you’ve got to keep working hard and stay in the process and don’t think about the results too much. I feel like if you’re doing the right things with the right attitude, good things happen.”

Good things have certainly happened this week in Chengdu for Qureshi and Erlich, who beat the top-seeded duo of Oliver Marach and Mate Pavic, the Wimbledon finalists, in the first round. And while they did not form their partnership because of it, Qureshi hopes that playing with Erlich, an Israeli, sends a positive message to people in their countries and around the world. He once before played with Erlich in Houston in 2015, but made worldwide headlines more than a decade earlier when he partnered another Israeli, Amir Hadad, at Wimbledon in 2002.

“I think winning a title with Jonathan would be very, very special,” Qureshi said. “The message we send or the people get from it obviously is about friendship and about peace and I hope we can change or influence a few people’s lives… the message people can get, hopefully the positive one, is going to be a bonus [in addition to the results] for both of us.”

Then, there is the question of age. Qureshi, 37, is closer to the end of his career than he is to the beginning, but don’t bring up that number to him. If you ask Qureshi, he’ll point out the success of Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal this season.

“I know I’m 37, but I still feel like I’m 27. That’s how my heart feels,” Qureshi said. “I’m really happy to bounce back obviously after a very, very rough summer and hopefully can turn things around again and have a great end of the season and finish the year hopefully Top 20, if not Top 15.”

If there’s one thing you should know about Qureshi, it’s that he still has goals he wants to achieve and he will do everything in his power to accomplish them.

“I still have a lot of motivation and [I’m] still motivated to get back into Top 10 and to win a Slam and to be World No. 1. I think that’s what drives me to make me work harder every day and every week and hopefully I can achieve these goals,” Qureshi said. “I think I still really have a few more good years in me and hopefully I can spend those years in the top of the game.”

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Get To Know Spain's Latest #NextGenATP Carlos Taberner

  • Posted: Sep 29, 2017

Get To Know Spain's Latest #NextGenATP Carlos Taberner

Taberner is the top-ranked Spaniard in the Emirates ATP Race to Milan

Carlos Taberner, a quarter-finalist this week at the BFD Challenger event in Rome, knew what he was getting himself into even before the 2017 season began. 

The #NextGenATP star entered the season with the purpose of staying active and playing as many Challenger events as possible. After what he admitted weren’t the ideal results, Taberner has now reached at least the quarter-finals each of the past three weeks.

“My goal at the beginning of the year was to compete full-time in the Challenger Tour,” Taberner said. “I’ve been working really [hard] from the beginning of the season.

“I would come through qualifiers and not do well in the main draw. The results didn’t come and the months were passing. Now I’ve reached two Challenger finals in a row — in Banja Luka [Bosnia and Herzegovina] and Sibiu [Romania]. I am very happy with my form. I’ve started to play better and have more confidence now.”

Taberner has a chance to make it three Challenger finals in a row with an impressive showing this week. On Wednesday, he powered past Portugal’s Pedro Sousa, 6-3, 3-6, 6-1 to book a spot against Argentina’s Patricio Heras in the quarter-finals.

Despite the busy schedule and recent runs deep into tournaments, Taberner doesn’t feel fatigue will be a factor in his match against Heras. The Spaniard is most comfortable on clay — his favorite surface — and relishes the opportunity to play in Rome.

“I’m very happy because I won two matches this week and I will play in the quarter-finals on Friday,” Taberner said. “It will be tough, but I am prepared for that match.

“This is very special to me because after Spain, Italy is my second country; I like it so much here. Rome is very beautiful and the club is also very nice. I’m happy here.”

The recent string of positive results has propelled Taberner to a career-high No. 199 in the Emirates ATP Rankings. Currently, he’s the top Spaniard in the Emirates ATP Race to Milan at No. 23 and one of five players from Spain in the Top 50.

Still, one thing has eluded him so far that two of his #NextGenATP countrymen have achieved: an ATP Challenger title.

17-year-old Nicola Kuhn, ranked No. 27 in the Emirates ATP Race to Milan, captured the Braunschweig Challenger in Germany as a qualifier in July. Less than a month later, Jaume Munar, ranked No. 34 in the Emirates ATP Race to Milan, earned his maiden ATP Challenger Tour title in Segovia, Spain.

For Taberner’s part, he feels no pressure to compete for trophies. Instead, he’s choosing to focus on how to enhance his own game, knowing that his fellow #NextGenATP stars aren’t his only competition: Seasoned stalwarts returning from injuries as well as grizzled veterans also lurk week in and week out on the Challenger Tour.

“[Kuhn and Munar] did really well to win Challenger titles; that isn’t easy,” Taberner said. “But to be honest, I am only thinking of myself and trying to improve day by day; I try to be a better player every day.

“The level [on the Challenger Tour] is very high because there are really good players here. There are some top players that were injured and coming back as well as some of the young players trying to make it on the Tour. It’s a really high level of play.”

Based on his own high level of play as of late, Taberner is proving he can hold his own against all types on the Challenger Tour.

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Goffin Cruises As Zverev Is Upset

  • Posted: Sep 29, 2017

Goffin Cruises As Zverev Is Upset

Laaksonen advances to his first ATP World Tour semi-final

Second seed David Goffin cruised to his fourth ATP World Tour semi-final of the season with a 6-2, 6-3 victory over eighth-seeded Donald Young at the Shenzhen Open on Friday, advancing in 64 minutes.

“I was moving really well. I served also really well from the start. I was really aggressive. And I finished really well,” Goffin said. “I’m really happy the way I played today.” 

Goffin set the tone early, breaking Young in the opening game of the match for what would be the first of five times on the day. The Belgian reached at least deuce in all but two of the American’s service games, winning 68 per cent of second-serve return points. 

The biggest moment of tension in the match came early in the second set, when Young broke back against Goffin to even the set at 2-2. But the right-hander won four of the next five games, breaking twice, to seal his spot in the semi-final. 

The World No. 12 inched closer to a breakthrough in 2017, as Goffin is in pursuit of his first title of the year. The first Belgian man to ever break into the Top 10 of the Emirates ATP Rankings — which he did in February — has reached two finals this season (Sofia l. Dimitrov, Rotterdam l. Tsonga), and can make it three Saturday should he defeat World No. 107 Henri Laaksonen.

Sixth seed Damir Dzumhur caused the upset of the tournament when he beat World No. 4 Alexander Zverev, 6-4, 7-5 in 90 minutes.

Despite falling behind a break in both sets, Dzumhur was undeterred. After the German led 2-0 in the opening set, he won six of the next eight games to gain the lead. In the second set, Dzumhur overcame a larger 1-4 deficit to win six of the next seven games and with it, the match. The 25 year old was opportunistic, breaking Zverev on four of his seven opportunities.

Dzumhur, who won last week in St. Petersburg, is in-form, having now won eight matches in a row, and 16 of his last 19 since reaching the Los Cabos semi-finals in August. The World No. 40 will reach a career-high in the Emirates ATP Rankings next week. 

Laaksonen ended the dream run of Chinese qualifier Zhizhen Zhang, 6-4, 3-6, 6-2, to reach his first ATP World Tour semi-final in two hours and five minutes. It looked like the Swiss might be destined for heart-break for the second time this season — he lost to David Ferrer in the Bastad quarter-finals despite holding two match points — when Zhang earned break point at 1-1 in the third set, but Laaksonen recovered to break the next game and would not look back.

The 25 year old fought off a break point while up 3-1 in the deciding set and two deuce points at 4-2 before breaking his opponent to finish the match. Zhang was attempting to become only the second Chinese man to advance to an ATP World Tour semi-final (Bing Pan, 1995).

Fifth seed Alexandr Dolgopolov advanced to his third semi-final of 2017, 6-3, 4-6, 1-0 when Dudi Sela retired.

Second Seeds Escape In Deciding Tie-Break

Second-seeded Alexander Peya and Rajeev Ram overcame a second-set hiccup to defeat Max Mirnyi and Philipp Oswald, 6-4, 3-6, 10-3 in the only doubles match of the day. They will face either top-seeded Nikola Mektic and Nicholas Monroe or Andre Sa and Sela.

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