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Behind The Scenes At Winston-Salem 2016

  • Posted: Aug 30, 2016

Behind The Scenes At Winston-Salem 2016

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Emirates ATP Rankings 29 August 2016

  • Posted: Aug 30, 2016

Emirates ATP Rankings 29 August 2016

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Djokovic Elected As President Of ATP Player Council

  • Posted: Aug 30, 2016

Djokovic Elected As President Of ATP Player Council

Djokovic to lead player respresentatives

The new ATP Player Council elected World No. 1 Novak Djokovic as President and Kevin Anderson as Vice President last week, ahead of the start of the US Open.

“First of all, it’s an honour to be elected to be part of the Council,” said Djokovic on Monday, after his first-round victory over Jerzy Janowicz. “I gladly accepted it, because it’s a calling. It’s a responsibility.

“Of course, I’ll do my best to contribute to the evolution of this sport for the time being. The first Council meeting was very long, but productive. I was elected the President. Kevin Anderson is Vice President.

“On the Council we are all even. We are all equal. It was interesting to really sit there and hear and talk about, discuss, debate about different subjects that are ongoing right now. New ideas [and] new prospects.

“We are all in the same ship basically: the Council people, the [ATP] Board people, and, at the end of the day, tournaments as well… We are all part of the same governing body. We’re all part of the same organisation. We’re all on the same mission to make this sport better.”

Djokovic had previously been a member of the ATP Player Council in 2008-10.

Members elected by their peers to serve on the ATP Player Council through June 2018 are:

* 1-50 Singles: Kevin Anderson, Novak Djokovic, Andy Murray, Gilles Simon
* 51-100 Singles: Yen-Hsun Lu, Rajeev Ram
* 1-100 Doubles: Jamie Murray, Bruno Soares
* At-Large: Marcelo Melo, Sergiy Stakhovsky
* Alumni: Colin Dowdeswell
* Coach: Claudio Pistolesi

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Worth The Wait! Chiudinelli, Zverev Taste Grand Slam Victory Again

  • Posted: Aug 30, 2016

Worth The Wait! Chiudinelli, Zverev Taste Grand Slam Victory Again

Swiss, German notch first-round wins in New York on Monday

Good things come to those who wait. Just ask Marco Chiudinelli and Mischa Zverev.

For the 34-year-old Swiss and 29-year-old German, the interlude between Grand Slam match wins had been long and arduous and laden with injuries. But both veterans put an emphatic halt to their respective slides on Monday at the US Open, with Chiudinelli claiming his first victory in a major in six years and Zverev notching his first in seven years.

“It feels great now, but on court I tried to not think about it,” Zverev, who defeated Pierre-Hugues Herbert 6-4, 7-6(6), 4-6, 6-0, admitted to ATPWorldTour.com. “If you think about it, it will bite you in the end. I was trying to focus on my game, especially when I was up in the fourth set. I wanted to distract myself from thinking about it. You have to trick your own brain sometimes.

“Now that I look back, I made it through qualies for the first time ever at the US Open, I won my first match ever here and won my first Grand Slam match in seven years, so it feels great. It’s nice to see that I’m a little older and can still do it.”

Entering the tournament, Zverev had not earned a main draw match win at the Grand Slam level since Wimbledon 2009. After staring at a catalogue of injuries, including a broken right wrist in 2009, herniated disc and fractured ribs in 2010, patella tendon tear in 2013 and surgery on his left wrist in 2014, he says it is gratifying to finally have this experience in New York.

“For many years I didn’t work as hard and try as hard, maybe because I was injured a lot. But I took a mental break for tennis and regrouped. When my brother started playing well again, we helped each other and started pushing each other to play better. When I was here many years ago, I was by myself. Now we’re here with the whole family and our puppy. It’s a different atmosphere and more enjoyable and fun. I just feel better on the court.

“I actually had a lot of good friends around me who have supported me and encouraged me to enjoy my time on tour. That is, just stay positive and hope that the next day is going to be better than the one before. Since I played Kitzbuhel, it’s been like that. I won a round there, almost qualified in Toronto, but then qualified in Atlanta, qualified and won a round in Los Cabos and qualified in Cincinnati, which was really tough.”

Chiudinelli had endured a similar fate in recent years, battling through multiple ailments that kept him on the sidelines. Now fully healthy, the Swiss earned his first Grand Slam victory since the 2010 US Open.

But the similarities between Chiudinelli and Zverev don’t end there. Both players had captured a trio of match wins in qualifying to reach the main draw, and both entered the fortnight in Flushing Meadows with an ATP Challenger Tour title under their belts in 2016. Chiudinelli lifted the trophy in Wroclaw, Poland, and Zverev did the same on the green clay of Sarasota, U.S.A. in April.

The Swiss believes it was a significant moment in his comeback campaign.

“I played really well at the beginning of the year and reached the semis and final at the Challengers in Bangkok and Manila. Lost both times to Youzhny, who had such a great run. In Wroclaw, Poland, it was the third time I went far already this year and finally I got through. It meant a lot to me, since I hadn’t lifted a trophy in a while. It was a big relief.”

On Monday, Chiudinelli, a former World No. 52 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, rallied to defeat fellow qualifier Guilherme Clezar 2-6, 7-6(6), 6-2, 6-4 in exactly three hours. The fighting spirit has never left the Swiss, and, as he has done to return to the highest levels of the sport following three major surgeries – elbow, knee and shoulder – he battled from a set and a break down to prevail.

“I’m really happy about it. It’s been six years, which is a really long time. But I didn’t think about it like this. I didn’t take it into the match. I’m happy I won another match at a Grand Slam and I hope it’s not the last. I’ve won two second-round matches here in the past and I hope I can add a third one Wednesday.

“This year, I’ve been healthy and I’ve been able to play since January 1st. I didn’t have a week where I wasn’t at my best with my elbow. I’m happy with the way things are going physically. Two years ago, I lost a really close match and last year I lost in the last round of qualies. I think I could have done better, but I knew that this is the Grand Slam where I have the best chances. That is the mental state I have and obviously my goal is to do well. So far, I’m happy that it’s working out well.”

Zverev will face 26th seed Jack Sock in the second round, while Chiudinelli battles 24th seed Lucas Pouille.

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Djokovic Steadies To Pass Opening Test

  • Posted: Aug 30, 2016

Djokovic Steadies To Pass Opening Test

World No. 1 opens campaign for third US Open title

Novak Djokovic got his US Open title defence off to a winning start on Monday night with a topsy-turvy four-set triumph over Jerzy Janowicz on Arthur Ashe Stadium. The top seed prevailed 6-3, 5-7, 6-2, 6-1 to keep his bid for 10 straight semi-finals or better at Flushing Meadows intact.

Cruelled by knee and lower back injuries for the first half of the season, Janowicz came into the match at No. 247 in the Emirates ATP Rankings and looking to reach the second round in New York for the first time since 2014.

With Djokovic holding for 3-2 in the opening set, the Serbian called for the ATP physio to massage his elbow. He went on to break for 4-2 and survived two break points when serving for the set, reeling off four straight points to take it when Janowicz pushed long.

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The 25-year-old Pole is a former Wimbledon semi-finalist and began to show glimpses in the second set of the form, which has taken him as high as No. 14 in the world. He began to find his range on his big serves and thumping forehands, screaming himself on with encouragement when he broke the Serbian’s serve for 4-2.

Despite surrendering the break, Janowicz again dug deep to save three break points for 6-5. It was just the confidence boost he needed. A double fault from the World No. 1 gave Janowicz two set points, with a forehand lofted well long handing the Pole the set for 7-5.

Just when he looked to have stolen momentum, Djokovic put the foot down. He broke to open the third set and took the set 6-2 on his second set point with an off-forehand winner.

A net-cord backhand winner down the line brought up three break points at 3-1 in the fourth and Djokovic converted for 4-1.

A double fault from Janowicz brought up match point for the two-time champion. Djokovic took it when the Pole pushed a forehand narrowly long to book a second-round meeting with lefty Jiri Vesely, a player who claimed their only prior FedEx Head2Head encounter at the Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters earlier this year.

The Czech ground out a near-four hour result against unheralded Indian qualifier Saketh Myneni, 7-6(5), 4-6, 2-6, 6-2, 7-5. 

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Raonic Fires Into US Open Second Round

  • Posted: Aug 30, 2016

Raonic Fires Into US Open Second Round

Canadian cruises against Brown

Milos Raonic scored a confident opening-round win at the US Open on Monday, downing Germany’s Dustin Brown 7-5, 6-3, 6-4 in one hour and 46 minutes. The No. 5 seed will face American qualifier Ryan Harrison in the second round.

Raonic, who started the match on his serve, never trailed in the match. The Canadian diffused Brown’s unpredictable shotmaking and broke serve five times in the pair’s first FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting. Using his power judiciously, Raonic finished with 41 winners to Brown’s 27 while making nine fewer unforced errors (19 to 28).

The quick first-round victory will help Raonic maintain his energy level as he aims to reach the second week at the US Open for the fourth time in five years. The 2016 Wimbledon finalist has never been past the fourth round in Flushing Meadows but has reached the fourth round or better at all three Grand Slams this year.

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Harrison upended Adrian Mannarino 6-4, 7-6(5), 6-3. The 24 year old was punishing on return games, breaking Mannarino’s serve seven time in the two hour, 18-minute encounter. He beat Raonic in the pair’s first FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting in Indian Wells five years ago. Raonic beat Harrison en route to his second San Jose title the following year. 

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NextGen Edmund Reflects On First US Open Victory 2016

  • Posted: Aug 30, 2016

NextGen Edmund Reflects On First US Open Victory 2016

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Nadal Untroubled In US Open First Round

  • Posted: Aug 30, 2016

Nadal Untroubled In US Open First Round

Rafa meets little resistance in opening-round win

Rafael Nadal improved his perfect record in US Open first-round matches to 12-0 Monday as he began his quest for a third US Open title. Nadal defeated Uzbekistan’s Denis Istomin 6-1, 6-4, 6-2 to charge into the second round.

Champion here in 2010 and ’13, Nadal advances to play Italian veteran Andreas Seppi, a 6-2, 3-6, 6-4, 6-3 winner over Frenchman Stephane Robert.

Nadal is chasing his third title of 2016 (Monte-Carlo, Barcelona). Since his 2013 US Open triumph, Nadal has won just one hard-court title, more than two and a half years ago in Doha, 2014.

The Spaniard has won 14 majors, tied with Pete Sampras for second all-time, behind only Roger Federer with 17. 

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US Open 2016: Rafael Nadal & Angelique Kerber through first round

  • Posted: Aug 29, 2016
US Open
Venue: Flushing Meadows, New York Dates: 29 August-11 September
Coverage: Live radio commentary on Radio 5 live sports extra plus live text coverage on the big matches on the BBC Sport website and app.

Spain’s Rafael Nadal and Germany’s Angelique Kerber were among the leading names to make early progress on day one of the US Open in New York.

Kerber, seeded second in the women’s draw, led Polona Hercog 6-0 1-0 when the Slovenian succumbed to leg cramps.

Nadal, the men’s fourth seed and a two-time former champion, swept past Uzbekistan’s Denis Istomin 6-1 6-4 6-2.

World number one Novak Djokovic plays Poland’s Jerzy Janowicz in the first night-session match at 00:00 BST.

Nadal, who missed the French Open and Wimbledon with a wrist injury, said: “The most important thing is that I am here in New York. Injuries are part of the career. I had a hard time this year.”

There was an early shock in the men’s draw as Britain’s Kyle Edmund upset French 13th seed Richard Gasquet 6-2 6-2 6-3.

John Isner, the 20th seed, almost followed Gasquet out of the tournament but the American came back from two sets down to beat 18-year-old compatriot Frances Tiafoe 3-6 4-6 7-6 (7-5) 6-2 7-6 (7-3).

“It hurts, it hurts a lot,” said Tiafoe, who served for the match in the fifth set. “Especially not getting over the line.”

Women’s third seed Garbine Muguruza of Spain avoided an upset as she fought back to beat Belgian Elise Mertens 2-6 6-0 6-3.

Olympic champion Monica Puig was beaten in her first match since winning gold in Rio, going down 6-4 6-2 to China’s Zheng Saisai.

Kerber resumes bid to be number one

Australian Open champion Kerber made it through to round two without dropping a game, as she looks to land a second major title and end Serena Williams’ 185-week run at the top of the rankings.

Kerber, 28, came within one match win of toppling the American eight days ago in Cincinnati, and Muguruza and Agnieszka Radwanska also have a chance to do so in New York.

“To be one day number one, I think this is a goal from everybody, especially also for me,” said Kerber.

“But I will not put too much pressure on myself because I know that when I put the pressure on, I’m not playing my tennis then.”

Monfils takes time out

Gael Monfils overcame Luxembourg’s Gilles Muller – and a close encounter with an on-court scoreboard – to progress to round two.

The Frenchman, seeded 10th, won 6-4 6-2 7-6 (7-5) to take his summer hard-court record to an impressive 15-2.

However, he almost came a cropper when he collided with a courtside clock on court 17, causing it to topple over and break.

“When you are in the moment you don’t feel really anything,” said Monfils. “Just jump. I saw a wall, but it was quite lucky.”

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