Wednesday 31 August 2022

Koolhof & Skupski First Team To Qualify For Nitto ATP Finals

Wesley Koolhof and Neal Skupski became the first team to qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals on Wednesday when they reached the second round of the US Open. The Dutch-British tandem will compete in Turin at the season finale, which will be held from 13-20 November.

Koolhof will compete in the Nitto ATP Finals for the second time after lifting the trophy alongside Nikola Mektic in 2020. This is the first time Skupski has qualified for the year-end championships.

The first-placed team in the Pepperstone ATP Live Doubles Teams Rankings has won six doubles titles together this season, highlighted by ATP Masters 1000 victories in Madrid and Montreal. They have also triumphed at ATP 250 events in Melbourne, Adelaide, Doha and ’s-Hertogenbosch. This is the first year Koolhof and Skupski have competed as a pair.

"It will be my first experience of playing it and it's been a goal of mine for many years," Skupski said. "It's a nice goal to tick off and hopefully we can do well. Hopefully Wes can show me the way to winning the title."

"It's a great showcase for doubles with only the best eight teams in the world and I'm really looking forward to it," Koolhof said.



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Nick Kyrgios gets US Open umpire to issue smoking warning after 'marijuana' complaints



NICK KYRGIOS claimed someone was smoking marijuana in the US Open crowd.

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Ruud Continues Hunt For No. 1 With Comeback Win

Fifth seed Casper Ruud continued his under-the-radar push towards becoming the new World No. 1 at the US Open after rallying from a set down Wednesday to defeat Dutchman Tim van Rijthoven.

After dropping the first set in a tie-break, the Norwegian rebounded strongly to win 6-7(4), 6-4, 6-4, 6-4.

[ATP APP]

Ruud, who reached his first major final this year at Roland Garros, saved six of seven breaks points and withstood 52 winners – including 20 aces - from van Rijthoven and will next play the winner of Americans Tommy Paul and Sebastian Korda.

Ruud must make the US Open final to have a chance of finishing the tournament No. 1 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings.



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Harriet Dart helps out Emma Raducanu after British No 1 loses in US Open first round



EMMA RADUCANU's US Open title defence ended in the first round.

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Roger Federer's former coach feels Emma Raducanu is getting herself 'in trouble'



EMMA RADUCANU was knocked out in the first round of the US Open on Tuesday evening.

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Murray Masters Nava In New York

Andy Murray had plenty of thinking to do early in his second-round clash against #NextGenATP American Emilio Nava at the US Open on Wednesday, but the former World No. 1 raised his level to prevail 5-7, 6-3, 6-1, 6-0 and reach the third round in New York.

The 20-year-old Nava clinched a lung-busting 84-minute opening set with a stunning forehand pass to heap pressure on his experienced opponent, but Murray bided his time and began to unpick the Nava game with some consistent baseline hitting on Arthur Ashe Stadium. The 2012 champion won 14 of the final 15 games to reach the third round in New York for the first time in six years.

Murray was particularly strong on return against Nava, breaking the wild card’s serve eight times in his three-hour victory. The Briton next faces 13th seed Matteo Berrettini or Frenchman Hugo Grenier.

More to follow…

[ATP APP]



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Tuesday 30 August 2022

Serena Williams given hope of securing emotional US Open glory - 'Anything is possible'



SERENA WILLIAMS is playing what is thought to be the final tournament of her career at the US Open.

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Wimbledon winner Rybakina out of US Open after claiming she didn't 'feel like a champion'



ELENA RYBAKINA crashed out of the US Open in the first round.

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Carlos Alcaraz advances at US Open as Sebastian Baez forced to retire with cramps



CARLOS ALCARAZ is through to the US Open second round.

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Gamers: Why Bonzi Says 'You Have To Disconnect From Tennis'

Benjamin Bonzi has a big opportunity on Wednesday evening in the second round of the US Open, where he will play Nick Kyrgios.

Like Kyrgios, Bonzi enjoys video games. ATPTour.com caught up with the Frenchman to discuss his favourite games, e-sports and basketball. It is safe to say Bonzi and Kyrgios will not agree on their favourite team!

Tell us about your love of video games. When did you start playing, and what are some of the earliest games you remember playing?
I started around maybe 10 or 11 when my parents bought me the Game Boy. I started with that. This is pretty old, but I remember this. I played a lot of Pokemon on this one, like every kid. I think Pikachu is the best. I liked it.

Now this is different. Now we have PlayStation. This is not the same games, but I used to play a lot.

Of course you played a lot of tennis as a kid, but was it nice to have other hobbies like playing video games to not only focus on tennis?
I think it’s important not to be focussed too much on tennis. We have a lot of hours on the tennis court. Then we have fitness and everything. We have maybe five, six, seven hours of focus on tennis every day and at a moment you have to disconnect from it, just try to relax, try to chill and there is music, video games, TV, whatever. But you have to disconnect from tennis.

What systems do you have now?
I do have one PlayStation and the Nintendo Switch as well to play Mario Kart. We played a lot of Mario Kart in Davis Cup in France, but I don’t travel every time with it. Maybe on long travel. I think this is better now with the quarantine. We have some countries where if you are positive you have to wait, so it helps.

Who is the best French tennis player at video games?
It depends on the game. Mario Kart, me for sure. No question, it’s me. [My favourite character] is Yoshi.

You’re used to long flights by now, but how much do video games help make the time go by?
With the Switch, you can take it on the flight and play Zelda or whatever you want. You have so many hours to spend on travel, so you have to find something to be patient and spend it.

Do you follow e-sports?
Actually I’m watching a lot of Twitch players, French players of course like in Warzone, Call of Duty. This is my main streaming on Twitch and I have some friends on the game now because I wrote them and they answered me.

What do you think about the rise of e-sports?
They are so good. You can play video games for fun. You can try to be good, but those guys are taking the level so high in their games. This is crazy. I play a think of Warzone, but I am so bad in comparison to those guys. Even if you play a lot, they play more, and they are doing this for maybe six, seven, eight, nine years on different games. But this is always the same and they are so good.

Is there a streamer you enjoy in particular?
A French one. His name is Chow H1. He is a friend of Gael Monfils as well. I met him in Montpellier this year. He is living in Montpellier, so it’s not so far from my home and there is a tournament there, so I met him this year.

You know how much it takes to be a professional athlete, so how much do you appreciate the work they put in to do what they do?
If you want to be good on Twitch, be a good streamer, you have to find something. It’s very difficult because random guys can say okay Twitch is easy, you’re just playing video games and that’s it. But this is not as simple as that and you have to be maybe in the one per cent of the best players to have a chance. And even if you are the best, maybe you are not a good streamer and have a community. You have to be focussed, you have to think about every detail. I think this is close to a professional athlete.

What are your favourite games now?
Warzone was pretty good the past two years, but they destroyed the game with everything they put in. Now I think the best is NBA 2K, the NBA game.

Which NBA team is your favourite? How much do you follow it?
The [Golden State] Warriors. For the past two years, I tried to be follow more results, to follow more teams, trades and everything. I am not the best, I am trying to improve on that, but I love the game.

Who is your favourite player and why?

Steph Curry. This is crazy to see all his pre-match routines when he’s shooting. It’s crazy.



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US Open star shares emotional post on Grand Slam 'tortures' that top players get to avoid



DARIA SAVILLE wrote a heartfelt post about the "chaos" of playing a Grand Slam as a lower-ranked player.

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Rare footage of teenage Cameron Norrie predicting he would 'go pro'



RARE footage of teenage Cameron Norrie has been unearthed, showing the British tennis star predicting that he would "go pro".

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Alcaraz Advances At US Open After Baez Retirement

Leading an entertaining US Open matchup against Sebastian Baez 7-5, 7-5, 2-0 on Tuesday, Carlos Alcaraz advanced to the second round at the final Grand Slam of the year when his opponent was retired due to a leg injury.

The 19-year-old Spaniard had prevailed in two scintillating sets on Arthur Ashe Stadium against the World No. 37 Baez. Both players produced plenty of high-quality all-court tennis, but it was the 2021 quarter-finalist Alcaraz who had found something extra to clinch a crucial break of serve in the 12th game of both sets.

“No one wants to see the end of a match like this,” said Alcaraz in his on-court interview. “I think both players don’t deserve the end like this, but I just say that Sebastian is a great player. He fights until the last ball, so he decided the best thing.”

[ATP APP]

The first two sets had been a showcase of two of the biggest-hitting young talents on the ATP Tour. Both Alcaraz and 21-year-old Baez struck the ball crisply from deep, but they also demonstrated plenty of variety in stifling conditions in New York. Particularly in the second set, Baez used his lob to good effect to manoeuvre Alcaraz around the court as he broke for a 4-3 lead, but Alcaraz’s trademark retrieving helped him recover to take the set 7-5.

“It was really, really tough. The second set, it was really tough for me to stay at the level, physically and mentally,” said Alcaraz, who converted his fourth set point with a screaming forehand winner that he followed with a crowd-pleasing roar. “Obviously the energy I received from [the fans] was something special. Thanks to that I handled that heat and that tough moment.”

Baez began to struggle physically at the start of the third set and the Argentine opted not to risk further injury by continuing on his tournament main-draw debut. Alcaraz’s next assignment at Flushing Meadows is a second-round match against Tallon Griekspoor or Federico Coria.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Should Alcaraz make it as far as the final in New York, the 19-year-old has a chance of becoming the youngest No. 1 in the history of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings on 12 September. That would cap 12 months of stunning progress for the Spaniard, who was No. 55 when he reached his maiden Grand Slam quarter-final at Flushing Meadows a year ago.

“I remember last year was one of the best moments of my life and of my career,” said Alcaraz. “One year later being No. 4 in the world is something special for me. To come back here to Arthur Ashe, one of the biggest stadiums in the world, is unbelievable for me.”



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Monday 29 August 2022

Murray Earns Confidence-Boosting US Open Win

Former World No. 1 Andy Murray maintained his strong first-round record at the US Open on Monday, when he downed 24th seed Francisco Cerundolo 7-5, 6-3, 6-3.

The Scot, who lifted the trophy in New York in 2012, fired his backhand through the court, while he recovered from squandering a 5-2 lead in the first set to eventually advance after two hours and 41 minutes.

"It was very tricky conditions today," Murray said in his on-court interview. "Very humid and hot. I am very happy with the way I got through that one, it was not easy. He has had a brilliant year this year and I knew I had to play well and I did in the important moments."

[ATP APP]

Murray is up six spots to No. 45 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings with his victory and has improved to 15-1 in first-round matches at the US Open. The 35-year-old will next face Australian John Millman or American wild card Emilio Nava. Murray coached by Ivan Lendl when he captured his maiden Grand Slam title in New York 10 years ago. The Czech coach was courtside during Murray's victory against Cerundolo.

"To have him [Lendl] there supporting me is really important," Murray said when asked about having Lendl in his box. "We have had great results together. He is still there supporting me at this stage in my career when many people wouldn't. So I really appreciate the time he is taking to do that."

Murray now holds a 20-14 record on the season, having reached finals on hard in Sydney and grass in Stuttgart.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

French lucky loser Corentin Moutet reached the second round in New York for a third consecutive year after former World No. 3 Stan Wawrinka was forced to withdraw from their clash.

Moutet led 6-4, 7-6(7) when the action was halted. The 23-year-old will next play Czech qualifier Tomas Machac or Dutchman Botic van de Zandschulp.



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Daniil Medvedev admits old grudge fuelled US Open 'revenge' mission vs Stefan Kozlov



DANIIL MEDVEDEV started his US Open title defence with a win.

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Lehecka Says Challenger Tour Was His Springboard

#NextGenATP star Jiri Lehecka has caught himself by surprise this season. In February, the 20-year-old made the Rotterdam semi-finals as a qualifier and broke into the Top 100 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings, a mark that Lehecka couldn’t quite believe.

“The guy who did the post-match interview came to me and said, ‘Congrats! With this win, you achieved the Top 100!’ and I was like, ‘Woah, when? Unbelievable!’” Lehecka recalled.

The Czech No. 1 has continued to find success in 2022. Now an entrenched member of the ATP Tour and sixth in the Pepperstone ATP Live Race To Milan, Lehecka still cites his roots on the ATP Challenger Tour as the foundation of his success, and even returned - with success - to the Challengers earlier this month.

Lehecka collected his third Challenger title three-weeks ago, when he defeated Spaniard Nicolas Alvarez Varona 6-4, 6-4 to win the Liberec Challenger in front of a home crowd.

“The fans there were just unbelievable,” Lehecka said. “The way they supported me the whole tournament, especially in the semi-final and final was unbelievable. I’m so glad I got this experience this year to play in front of my home crowd.”

The former Wimbledon boys’ doubles champion (w/ Forejtek) broke through the Challenger Tour scene in 2021, when he made back-to-back finals in Tampere and Poznan, triumphing in Tampere, which was his first Challenger final.

Having started this season as the World No. 141 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings, Lehecka has climbed within the Top 60 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings. The Challenger Tour has played an essential role for the youngster’s development.

“The Challenger Tour is a very important part of everyone’s journey. I won my first Challenger last year in Finland, that was one of the best moments of my life so far.”

Lehecka earned the biggest win of his career in February, when he defeated Denis Shapovalov to capture his first ATP Tour main draw win in Rotterdam. He then took down Botic van de Zandschulp and Lorenzo Musetti en route to reaching the semi-finals at the ATP 500 event (l. Tsitsipas).

In January, the Czech qualified for his first Grand Slam main draw at the Australian Open before falling short to Grigor Dimitrov in the first round. As a direct entrant into Roland Garros and Wimbledon this summer, Lehecka was unable to get past the first round, including a tough five-set loss to Filip Krajinovic at the All England Club.

Lehecka will look to strengthen his claim on a spot at the eight-player Intesa Sanpaolo Next Gen ATP Finals by claiming his maiden Grand Slam victory at the US Open, where he faces Chilean Cristian Garin in the first round.



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Novak Djokovic confirms new tournament after US Open ban



NOVAK DJOKOVIC has updated his schedule after being unable to play the US Open.

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Medvedev Cruises Through Opener In New York

Reigning champion Daniil Medvedev started his US Open title defence with victory Monday, cruising past American Stefan Kozlov 6-2, 6-4, 6-0 to reach the second round in New York.

The top seed, who defeated Novak Djokovic to lift his maiden major title in Flushing Meadows last year, quickly found his range on the hard courts. He struck his flat groundstrokes with consistency as he overpowered Kozlov to advance after two hours and one minute in their first ATP Head2Head meeting.

The 26-year-old now holds a standout 21-4 record at the final Grand Slam of the year. The 14-time tour-level champion next plays Quentin Halys or Arthur Rinderknech as he looks to continue his quest to become the first player to win consecutive US Open titles since Roger Federer lifted the trophy for five consecutive years from 2004-08.

“I am pleased to win. Not easy conditions. Pretty hot and humid here,” Medvedev said in his on-court interview. “I was sweating a lot but I thought there were some good points. I managed to be pretty solid and I thought the serve was key today. I am happy to go through to the second round.”

[ATP APP]

With his No. 1 spot in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings on the line, Medvedev will need a deep run in New York. He is one of five players – Rafael Nadal, Stefanos Tsitsipas, Carlos Alcaraz and Casper Ruud - who have the opportunity to finish the US Open as the World No. 1. All but Nadal must reach the championship match to have a chance of leaving New York as World No. 1. More On Key Matches In Battle For No. 1.

Medvedev, who arrived in New York off the back of a semi-final run in Cincinnati, looked in control in the opening match of the tournament on Arthur Ashe Stadium. The 26-year-old struck 37 winners and committed 19 unforced errors as he moved through the gears to outmanoeuvre the American, who was making his main draw debut on home soil.

Medvedev is seeking his second major title and second tour-level title of the year this fortnight, having triumphed in Los Cabos earlier this month.



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Sunday 28 August 2022

Andy Murray details 'surreal' US Open celebrations with Sir Alex Ferguson and Sean Connery



ANDY MURRAY has spoken about his US Open victory - and the afterparty - 10 years on.

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Cameron Norrie names 'realistic' target as Brit tries to build on Wimbledon joy at US Open



CAMERON NORRIE is setting his sights on glory after reaching the semi-finals at Wimbledon earlier this summer.

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Nick Kyrgios wants US Open 'to be over' so he can 'go home' despite Aussie's Wimbledon run



NICK KYRGIOS is feeling homesick ahead of the US Open

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US tennis star makes locker room claim over Novak Djokovic's Flushing Meadows ban



NOVAK DJOKOVIC has been banned from competing at the US Open, continuing what has been a turbulent year for the Serbian star.

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Andy Murray receives test results after US Open preparations blighted by mysterious issue



ANDY MURRAY is preparing for the US Open

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Rafael Nadal 'wants' Novak Djokovic at US Open as Dan Evans shares 'disappointment' on ban



NOVAK DJOKOVIC had to pull out of the US Open due to Covid travel rules.

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Emma Raducanu ready to embrace phase two of her career after US Open



OPINION: Anniversary of Flushing Meadows triumph offers symbolic chance for Britain's teenage star to turn the page after testing year.

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Saturday 27 August 2022

Mannarino Makes History With Winston-Salem Title

Adrian Mannarino's started his week by saving four match points in the first round of the Winston-Salem Open. After surviving three tie-breaks in his opening match, the Frenchman did not drop another set on his way to the ATP 250 title.

With a 7-6(1), 6-4 victory against Laslo Djere in Saturday's final, the 34-year-old became the oldest champion in the tournament's history, as well as its first French champion.

[ATP APP]

Mannarino saved two break points to avoid going down a double break in the opening set before converting on his first break chance to level at 4-4. He then sprinted into the lead by winning the final six points of the tie-break.

Set two opened with four love holds before the Frenchman made the crucial breakthrough in the set's seventh game. After missing out on a match point on return at 5-3, he clinched victory with his fourth love hold of the one-hour, 44-minute match.

Finishing with 20 winners, Mannarino was dominant behind first serve, winning 83 per cent (30/36) of points on his first delivery. After a slow start, he grew into the match and commanded the late stages against Djere, who played three sets in each of his first four matches before a grueling two-set semi-final victory against Swiss qualifier Marc-Andrea Huesler.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

For some added history, Mannarino is also the second left-hander to win the Winston Salem title after Jurgen Melzer in 2013. Melzer was the event's oldest champion at 32 until Mannarino's victory.

The Frenchman is the fourth lefty to win a tour-level title this season (Rafael Nadal, 4; Cameron Norrie, 2; Albert Ramos-Vinolas, 1). With his title run, he has moved up 20 places this week to No. 45 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings.

More to follow...



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Ebden/Murray Win Winston-Salem Title In Team Debut

New partner, similar success for Matthew Ebden and Jamie Murray. Teaming for the first time this week in Winston-Salem, the pair claimed the title with a 6-4, 6-2 win against Hugo Nys and Jan Zielinski on Saturday.

The third seeds saved all five break points against them in the final as they finished the week with just one set lost. The title is Ebden's seventh and Murray's 27th at tour-level.

"When we spoke last week about playing here, I thought immediately it works perfectly," Ebden said post-match. "Jamie plays on the deuce court, I've been playing on the ad [side]. We've known each other a long time. First time [playing] together but we've known each other, we've seen each other around many times.

"You never really know how its going to go, but I like to think we both know what we're doing out there and we're lucky we executed a lot of good points and played a lot of big points well. That was the key to the week."

[ATP APP]

Ebden and Murray boast three Grand Slam titles between them, with Ebden victorious at Wimbledon this year with Max Purcell and Murray at the 2016 Australian Open and US Open with Bruno Soares.

Thanks to their past success, both men are very familiar with the effort it takes to win a title on the ATP Tour.

"Really happy to win a title," Murray said. "I think the level is so high on the Tour these days, it's not easy to win.

"For me it was like, come here, play with Matt, a great partner, enjoy the week, see what we get out of it. We managed to go all the way and got a trophy over our heads."

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

While they only dropped one set on the week, the pair saved at least two break points in every match, including seven in the opening round. Both men credited strong serving under pressure for their title run.

"Even the set we did lose, I said to Jamie it wasn't a bad set," Ebden noted, reflecting on their quarter-final win against Americans Robert Galloway and Alex Lawson. "We had a break point we didn't get, they had one they did get. That was it, that's how it goes.

"To play eight or nine really good sets going into the US Open, it couldn't be better."



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Serena Williams gets US Open approval for emotional Venus Williams team-up for last time



THE WILLIAMS sisters have been given a wildcard to play in the ladies' double at the US Open, Serena's final tournament.

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Molcan Reflects On Challenger Tour Roots

Alex Molcan enters the 2022 US Open as a Top 40 player, a vast improvement from this time last year, when he advanced through the qualifying as the World No. 138 before reaching the third round at Flushing Meadows (l. Schwartzman). He has not forgotten his roots.

In 2021, the Slovakian spent much of his time on the ATP Challenger Tour and attempting to qualify for Tour-level events. This season, Molcan has made it onto the ATP Tour and has found success that he eagerly awaited.

“I’m not surprised that I’m there (Top 40). I always knew if I can play well and stay healthy, I can be Top 50.” Molcan said. “I wasn’t surprised but I don’t think it came crazy fast. I was trying for many, many years to be Top 100 but I didn’t do it. Last year, it was surprising when I went from 300 to 90 at the end of season.”

The 24-year-old holds two Challenger Tour titles, Liberec and Helsinki, which he won in 2021. After spending several years on the Challenger Tour, Molcan has many fond memories of the annual progress he achieved.

“When I won my first Challenger, that was great. Before that, I was happy when I played some semi-finals, I was like ‘Woah, 30 points!’ and I was so happy. Three years ago, it was a great memory when I played quarter-finals. There are a lot of good memories, every year is some other memory.”

During the clay-court season this spring, Molcan reached a career-high No. 38 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings. Amidst his rise on the ATP Tour, the Presov native has found the margins are slim between the Challenger-level and the ATP Tour.

“The level at Challengers is not easier than the ATP Tour. They play the same speed of serve, same speed of forehand, of course there are some factors why the guys in the Top 20 or 30 are better, but the level is similar.”

In May, Molcan claimed his first win over a Top 10 player when he saved a match point en route to defeating Felix Auger-Aliassime in the second round of the ATP 250 event in Marrakech. The lefty then reached his second Tour-level final before falling short to David Goffin. The following month, the World No. 40 reached another final in Lyon (l. Norrie). Molcan’s first ATP Tour final came in 2021 in Belgrade, where he lost to then World No. 1 Novak Djokovic.

Now, Slovakia’s top-ranked player looks to improve upon his three finals to collect his first ATP Tour title.

“I’m happy with the way I’m playing. I still want to play better. I have very good coaches, every member in my team is very professional in what they do. We understand each other and we believe in each other. I played two finals (this year) at ATP 250s, could be better, because in some other tournaments I lost first or second round. I’m happy anyway with my results and still trying to improve my game.”

Djokovic’s former coach, Marian Vajda, has been working with Molcan since May. Vajda, a fellow Slovakian, spent 15 years with Djokovic. During Molcan’s first tournament teaming with the 2018 ATP Coach of the Year, he felt butterflies in his stomach as the highly rated coach looked on.

“Our first tournament together was Rome. I remember I lost in qualies first round and I was so shaky and nervous because he was there. After that, I just let it be and wasn’t thinking about that at all and since then everything is good. He has a lot of experience, he’s telling me a lot of things.”

Molcan, 26-20 this season, will face Brazil’s Thiago Monteiro in the first round of the US Open on Monday. Monteiro won their only meeting at the 2018 Szczecin Challenger.

Did You Know? Four of the 16 qualifiers from the 2021 US Open are now ranked within the Top 40 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings: Botic van de Zandschulp, Holger Rune, Maxime Cressy, and Molcan.



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From Soda To Stardom: Inside The Rise Of Sebastian Baez

Sebastian Baez met his longtime coach, Sebastian Gutierrez, for the first time when he was 15. He was in Brazil for an ITF event, where Gutierrez was coaching the Argentine players.

It did not take long for them to make a connection, but not on the court. Gutierrez wasted no time commenting on something that some coaches would not do for weeks, if not months.

“I drank Coca-Cola every day, every time. I ate all foods,” Baez recalled. “He looked at me and said, ‘Why do you drink Coca-Cola every time?’”

Baez was already one of the best juniors in Argentina. But being a good junior and a top professional are worlds apart. That first meeting with Gutierrez set Baez on a path to where he is now, the No. 37 player in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings.

“I said, ‘I really like Coca-Cola! It’s the best thing!’ He said, ‘No, you have to drink water.’ I said, ‘Okay’. It was a difficult change in that moment, but I think that was the first thing he told me,” Baez said. “The other coaches from my country just told me how I have to hit the ball and everything. He was focussed outside the court and that is what makes all the difference.”

Some juniors would be fussed if their coach bothered them about enjoying a soft drink at such a young age. Baez realised in that moment Gutierrez was the coach for him. Gutierrez explained that it is important for upcoming players to have good habits, both on and off the court.

“Seba drank a lot of Coca-Cola [and] he liked to eat ice cream for dessert every day,” Gutierrez said. “When they are children, sometimes you have to try to make them understand that in the road, having those good habits will for sure make a difference in the future.”

[ATP APP]

From then on, Baez shifted his mindset. Now, the Argentine focusses on controlling everything he can in order to get the most out of his game, whether that is nutrition or fitness off the court or maximising his practice time.

“I think one of the keys was to be focussed to be better. Just to focus on me. To say, ‘Okay I have to do these things, I have to do them perfectly’,” Baez said. “If I do that good, okay. But you can do that better than you think. That started me [wanting] to do better every day. That was the big key to be here and of course to be on the top I need to do perfect compared to [what I do] today.”

By the end of Baez’s junior career, he was the junior World No. 1. But it was not easy for him to make the jump to the next level.

“I started to play Futures and everything [as a] professional, from the start to the Futures, it was too different to the juniors. I think that was the worst thing, to change the age and the circuit,” Baez said. “In professionals, you have to start at zero. At the beginning, it was hard.”

Some of it had to do with the level of players he was facing. But it was also the realisation of what it takes to be a professional. Baez bought a stringing machine to save on the expenses of paying for someone to do the job for him.

“I had to learn to string a racquet and in the tournament, we would take the machine [too],” Baez said, before cracking a laugh. “But I didn’t string the racquet any more because my coach said, ‘Now we are in the tournament, I want you to have the racquets good so I will do them. You are terrible!’”

The Argentine cracked the Top 500 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings in October 2019, but five months later his progress came to a halt due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Instead of letting slip his momentum, Baez made even more of a focus on maximising his potential every day.

Ever since, he has been on the rise. Last year, Baez won six ATP Challenger Tour titles — tied for second-most in a season — and qualified for the Intesa Sanpaolo Next Gen ATP Finals. According to Baez, his biggest breakthrough came this clay-court season, when he claimed his first ATP Tour title in Estoril.

“It was a big moment for me and I think I changed a little bit in my mind after that tournament,” Baez said. “I can be there. Of course I have to do better, to win a lot of tournaments to be on the top. But I think I can. Why not me?”

Watch Estoril Final Highlights:

The 5’7” Argentine has drawn comparisons to a countryman of the same height: Diego Schwartzman. Both men agree they are not that similar as tennis players, though.

“I think he is playing very, very aggressive. I’m different. I think he has a very good serve, a fast serve. So he’s improving a lot,” Schwartzman said. “It’s the first year for him playing these kind of tournaments, he’s doing so well. He’s improving. It’s important for our tennis. He’s playing so many different tournaments that he was not playing before, so obviously he is going to change some parts of his game in the future.

“I think we have similar things, but not enough to say we are similar. Maybe because of the size and how we [wear] our hat, we’re similar. But not enough to have a similar game. I think we are a little bit different and that’s a good thing, I think.”

Baez will try to show the world his game in a tough first-round test against third seed Carlos Alcaraz. It will be a rematch of their semi-final clash in Milan last year, which Gutierrez called “a beautiful experience”.

“I think it will be a different match. Seba already has more experience on Tour but at the same time it is a good opportunity to add another great match on his shoulders. Seba is also only 21 years old, he is very young and a match like this can give him a lot to be a better professional,” Gutierrez said. “One of the most positive things of this season is to capitalise on each of these moments, that he has been able to play all the Grand Slams or that he has played in big stadiums, against great rivals.

“Every day he tries to be a little better.”



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Friday 26 August 2022

TopCourt: McDonald’s Decision-Making Digest

Mackenzie McDonald is not afraid of taking big decisions. On or off the court.

The 27-year-old American has established himself as a consistent performer on the ATP Tour since turning pro in 2016. A skilful and resourceful all-around talent, the World No. 77 has become adept at countering physically bigger, more powerful opponents with his adaptable counter-punching game.

Now a TopCourt ambassador, McDonald takes tennis fans back to where it all began, honing his rock-solid net game with his first coach, and explains how hard work on the practice court helped breed confidence in his ability when moving forward. The 2016 NCAA singles and doubles champion also reveals how his difficult decision to delay going pro and instead play college tennis at UCLA ultimately paid off, giving him perfect preparation for the rigours of life on the ATP Tour.

Technique: McDonald’s aggressive forehand is particularly effective at capitalising on attacking positions during a rally. The American demonstrates how he adapts his regular forehand technique for this unique shot, which is the perfect weapon to punish short balls from opponents and seal points from dominant situations.

Drills: Shot selection is a key skill for players of all levels, and McDonald’s “Full Court Movement” drill focusses on how to recognise your opponent’s ball as early as possible. A top-class mover around the court himself, McDonald then showcases how to move efficiently towards the ball once you have identified the most appropriate shot to play.

Follow McDonald’s Tutorials at TopCourt.com.



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Alcaraz: 'I'm Just Trying To Be The Same Kid'

So much has changed for Carlos Alcaraz since he arrived at the US Open last year. Then outside the Top 50, he is now the No. 4 player in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings with two ATP Masters 1000 titles to his name.

The Spaniard does not see himself any differently as he enters the season’s final major, though.

“I [do not] feel at all the difference between last year, for example, and now,” Alcaraz said. “I’m just trying to be the same kid as always.”

Last year, the teen was chasing his dreams and still relatively unknown to casual fans. Now, Alcaraz is one of the most beloved tennis players in the world. But his attitude towards the spotlight has remained the same.

“It's difficult, but that's how I am. The same kid as always,” Alcaraz said. “[It is important] to be humble, and I always will be the same.”

Another difference for Alcaraz is that he is considered one of the favourites to lift the trophy at Flushing Meadows. The Spaniard is the only singles player who has won multiple Masters 1000 titles this season (Miami, Madrid) and he is seeded third in New York.

Alcaraz admitted in Montreal, where he lost his opening match against Tommy Paul, that he did start to feel the weight of expectations.

“I think in Montreal I felt the pressure and I tried to [not] think about that, just to enjoy. My pressure here is to enjoy every match, show my best game,” Alcaraz said. “Obviously, I want to do a good result here. It's a really important tournament for me. But I know that if I don't feel that pressure as a bad part, I will go forward.

“Obviously, my goal here is to enjoy. I think if I do that, I will do a good result.”

[ATP APP]

When the draw was released Thursday, it was revealed that Alcaraz could play Rafael Nadal in a blockbuster semi-final. Nadal leads their ATP Head2Head series 2-1, with all three of their clashes coming in the past 16 months at Masters 1000 events.

“Of course, it would be amazing for me to play a semi-final here against Rafa, but there are great matches ahead. There are a lot of days before going to a semi-final,” Alcaraz said. “Of course, Rafa has to win his matches, as well. So it's a long process.”

Most importantly, Alcaraz knows he can succeed in New York. The teen showed no fear of the big stage last year, when he upset Stefanos Tsitsipas en route to the quarter-finals.

“I feel stronger and more prepared than last year,” Alcaraz said. “I did quarter-finals in Roland Garros, as well. I have played long matches, of course, tough matches this year against the top players. I think I'm more ready in this tournament than the last year.”

Did You Know?
If Alcaraz wins the US Open, he will become the youngest No. 1 in the history of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings (since 1973).



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Nadal Ramping Up Intensity Ahead Of US Open

Treading lightly in Cincinnati as he returned from an abdominal tear, Rafael Nadal played just two practice sets before his appearance at the ATP Masters 1000, where he lost a three-setter to eventual champion Borna Coric in his opening match.

Ahead of the US Open, where he's set to compete for the first time since he won the 2019 title, the Spaniard is ramping up the intensity on the practice court in preparation for his bid for a record-extending 23rd Grand Slam singles title.

"I took it very easy in Cincinnati, in the practices," he said on Friday's US Open Media Day. "The match, I tried my best without putting all the effort there on the serve."

[ATP APP]

In New York, practising in front of crowds during US Open Fan Week, Nadal has been hitting at full tilt.

"[I'm] taking care with the serve, being honest," he said, noting that the service motion can be "dangerous" and "risky" for his abdominal tear. "But in general terms, I am practising at a high level of intensity. I'm quite happy the way that I am playing. Of course, we need to compete later. But it's already two weeks on the Tour, even if only one match professional, official. But practising every day with the guys helps me, without a doubt. I played sets every day for the last five days. That helps, of course.

"Before Cincinnati I just played two sets there before the tournament started, so it's difficult.  Even if I had my chances [against Coric], the preparation had been not very long, but I gave myself a chance there. It was not possible [to win].  Let's try here again, with a better preparation.  From my perspective, I am practising quite well. Let's see what can happen, but I am happy with the practices."

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Nadal has won the US Open four times, in 2010, 2013, 2017 and 2019, more than any other Slam outside of Roland Garros. Set for his 16th New York appearance, he will open against Australia's Rinky Hijikata on Tuesday evening in Arthur Ashe Stadium.

"Happy to be back," he said. "Couple years without having the chance to be here since 2019.  Of course, [I'm] excited to play here. It's one of the most important places in my tennis career, without a doubt. So just looking for every single practice to be better and better, just be competitive from the first round. So let's see."



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Emma Raducanu speaks out on injury fears after tears at US Open ahead of title defence



EMMA RADUCANU is the reigning US Open champion and begins the defence of her title next week.

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Rafael Nadal reacts to Novak Djokovic being banned from US Open with Roger Federer comment



NOVAK DJOKOVIC will not be playing this year's US Open.

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Thursday 25 August 2022

When Will Medvedev, Nadal, Kyrgios Play At The US Open?

The US Open revealed Thursday that Daniil Medvedev and Nick Kyrgios will play their first-round matches on Monday, while Rafael Nadal will begin his chase for a fifth title at Flushing Meadows on Tuesday.

The top half of the men’s singles draw will compete on Monday and the bottom half will play on Tuesday.

Along with Medvedev and Kyrgios, other stars taking the court Monday will include fourth seed Stefanos Tsitsipas, fifth seed Casper Ruud, sixth seed Felix Auger-Aliassime, former World No. 1 Andy Murray and 2020 US Open champion Dominic Thiem.

On Tuesday, joining Nadal in action will be third seed Carlos Alcaraz, seventh seed Cameron Norrie, eighth seed Hubert Hurkacz and 2019 Intesa Sanpaolo Next Gen ATP Finals champion Jannik Sinner.

[ATP APP]

The tournament announced that Monday’s full order of play will be released by 6 p.m. ET on Friday.

View Men's Singles Draw



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Kokkinakis & Kyrgios Blockbuster Headlines US Open Matches To Watch

There were plenty of intriguing first-round matches when the US Open draw was revealed on Thursday, led by a tantalising clash between close friends Nick Kyrgios and Thanasi Kokkinakis.

ATPTour.com highlights five matches to watch in the opening round at Flushing Meadows.

No. 23 Nick Kyrgios vs. Thanasi Kokkinakis
The 'Special Ks' have been one of the most exciting doubles teams on the circuit this season. They started their season off with a bang by winning the Australian Open. At the time, Kokkinakis said: “To be a Grand Slam champion with my boy, we have known each other since we were eight, nine years old, done some serious things together, have had some serious experiences, but this is incredible.”

The Australians often refer to each other as “brothers”, but only one can advance to the second round at Flushing Meadows. Their first-round clash will be their first ATP Head2Head meeting and first match against one another since they competed on the ATP Challenger Tour in 2014.

Kyrgios is one of the world’s most in-form players. The 27-year-old has shown the most consistency of his career to reach the final at Wimbledon, win the Washington title and advance to the quarter-finals in Montreal, where he eliminated World No. 1 Daniil Medvedev. However, nobody on Tour knows him better than Kokkinakis, who thrives on the big stages with an aggressive game of his own.

Kokkinakis’ resume includes a win against Roger Federer, and last year he pushed Stefanos Tsitsipas to five sets at the Australian Open. That makes for a blockbuster showdown between the great friends.

No. 12 Pablo Carreno Busta vs. Dominic Thiem
Dominic Thiem will have to be sharp for his first match at the US Open since lifting his maiden major trophy at Flushing Meadows two years ago. The Austrian will face 12th seed Pablo Carreno Busta, who recently claimed his first ATP Masters 1000 title in Montreal.

Thiem has struggled to find his best form since returning from a wrist injury in March. He does have one thing on his side, though: a 7-0 ATP Head2Head advantage against Carreno Busta. One of those clashes came at the US Open in 2016, when Thiem rallied for a four-set victory.

Form tilts in the Spaniard’s direction after his Canadian breakthrough, and his solid baseline game will force the Austrian to come up with the spectacular winners he has so often hit throughout his career. Will Thiem be able to rely on their past history to earn a first-round upset?

[ATP APP]

No. 24 Francisco Cerundolo vs. Andy Murray
One year ago, 2012 US Open champion Andy Murray suffered a heartbreaking loss in the first round in New York against Tsitsipas. The Scot will have another chance to oust a seed in the opening round when he plays 24th seed Francisco Cerundolo.

Murray showed signs of good form in Cincinnati, where he emerged victorious from a two-hour, 58-minute epic against Stan Wawrinka and pushed Cameron Norrie hard in the second round before cramping got the best of him.

But his first ATP Head2Head meeting against Cerundolo should prove tricky. Although the 24-year-old has lost three consecutive matches since reaching the Hamburg semi-finals, the rising Argentine has found success on hard courts before. Earlier this year, he made a stunning run to the Miami semi-finals with wins over stars including Gael Monfils and Jannik Sinner.

No. 3 Carlos Alcaraz vs. Sebastian Baez
Last November, Carlos Alcaraz met Sebastian Baez in the semi-finals of the Intesa Sanpaolo Next Gen ATP Finals. Alcaraz was World No. 32 and Baez No. 111. Ten months later, both men have come a long way. Alcaraz is the third seed at the US Open and Baez was the last player who did not receive a seed. 

In their first meeting, Alcaraz prevailed in Milan 4-2, 4-1, 4-2. His powerful game is capable of blasting through all opponents. Baez is plenty aggressive himself, though, and he will try to take it to the Spaniard to play on his own terms.

The Argentine is 1-3 against Top 10 opponents, with his victory coming in the Bastad semi-finals against Andrey Rublev. Will Baez be able to earn another big win against Alcaraz?

No. 14 Diego Schwartzman vs. Jack Sock
There are few fans in the world like those in New York at the US Open. Jack Sock, who thrills crowds throughout the world with his flashy play, will try to use that to his advantage against 14th seed Diego Schwartzman.

The pair's only meeting came in 2017 on clay at the Internazionali BNL d'Italia, where Sock prevailed in three sets. Since then, both men have spent time in the world's Top 10 and have proven their ability against the best players on Tour. Sock will try to dominate the action with his forehand and speed around the court, while Schwartzman has almost no weaknesses and will try to attack the American's backhand.

Schwartzman is a two-time quarter-finalist at the US Open. The favourite will try to avoid an early exit this edition of the year's final major.



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Jack Draper gets US Open advantage ahead of debut with easy Dominic Thiem victory



JACK DRAPER is closing in on a top 50 debut ahead of his maiden appearance at the US Open.

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US Open draw free live stream, UK start time as Raducanu, Murray, Nadal, Serena learn fate



THE US OPEN is set to get underway on Monday.

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Wednesday 24 August 2022

Nadal, Swiatek, Gauff Lead Ukraine Support At US Open

The world’s best tennis players will face one another over the next fortnight with the US Open trophy at stake. On Wednesday evening, however, they banded together for a Tennis Plays For Peace exhibition in support of Ukrainian humanitarian relief.

Rafael Nadal, Iga Swiatek, Coco Gauff, John McEnroe and many more stars thrilled a packed Louis Armstrong Stadium for two hours of tennis to raise money for those suffering in Ukraine, with recently retired Ukrainian players Sergiy Stakhovsky and Olga Savchuk in attendance.

“[It has been a] very tough couple of years in terms of [the] pandemic, now with the war,” Nadal said. “Excited to be back of course, always a pleasure to play in New York and in front of probably the best crowd of the world.”

After an opening ceremony featuring Stakhovsky, Savchuk and host Patrick McEnroe, the Ukrainian national anthem was performed and Nadal took the court for a mixed doubles match alongside Swiatek against Gauff and McEnroe.

“Being on the court with John, Rafa and Iga, World No. 1, it’s really crazy here in New York,” Gauff said. “I’m happy that I’m able to do it for this cause and you guys all know me, I like to speak out when it’s right. I’m glad that I was able to be a part of this.”

Olga Savchuk, Sergiy Stakhovsky, Rafael Nadal and Iga Swiatek
Savchuk and Stakhovsky chat with Nadal and Swiatek during the exhibition.
Swiatek snuck in a joke about ‘Coach Rafa’: “On the last point [he] told me that John is going to serve wide and he was wrong. He’s wrong sometimes, wow!” she said as Nadal laughed. Swiatek has previously held her own charity event in support of Ukrainian children. The World No. 1 was happy to spend her time for the cause again.

“I’m pretty happy that we are united and that we as public persons and athletes are doing so much. For sure the event that I did in Poland was a great experience for me. That was the first event that gained so much attention in tennis in Poland,” Swiatek said. “I’m pretty happy that we raised so much money for kids in Ukraine, mostly because their lives have changed and it’s right next to my country, so I was pretty emotional and pretty happy that I can use my sport that way and that we’re doing this today. It’s great.”

McEnroe, who also ironically spent time as the chair umpire later in the event, grew up 15 minutes from Flushing Meadows. The former World No. 1 thanked the crowd for their support.

“I just want to say for this event, we’re all a fraternity, the tennis players. We’re pulling for each other,” McEnroe reflected. “Obviously we all want peace and hopefully this will do something towards helping the situation over in Ukraine.”

All matches during the event were tie-breaks with the winning team being the first to 10. Americans Jessica Pegula and Ben Shelton faced Canadians Felix Auger-Aliassime and Leylah Fernandez (with John McEnroe in the chair), Italian Matteo Berrettini and Ukrainian Katarina Zavatsksa played Greeks Maria Sakkari and Stefanos Tsitsipas, Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz and American Frances Tiafoe took on Americans Taylor Fritz and Tommy Paul, and Tiafoe stayed on the court to partner Ukrainian Dayana Yastremska against American Sebastian Korda and Ukrainian Daria Snigur.

While these were exhibition matches — at one point Paul used a giant tennis racquet, drawing roars from the crowd — the stakes were raised. Before Sakkari served to Berrettini, Tsitsipas said he would donate $10,000 if the Italian missed the return. Berrettini missed it, and Tsitsipas happily reaffirmed his donation.

All proceeds from the event will benefit Global Giving's Ukraine Crisis Relief Fund. The USTA has previously announced that it expects to raise at least $2 million for the cause during the US Open.



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Draper Wears Down Thiem To Reach Winston-Salem QFs

Jack Draper has lived up to his billing as the 13th seed in his Winston-Salem Open debut by beating two big-name players who have spent a large chunk of their ATP Tour careers playing with a number next to their name on the draw sheet.

After a three-set victory against Fabio Fognini, the #NextGenATP Briton overwhelmed Dominic Thiem in a 6-1, 6-4 Wednesday win to reach the quarter-finals at the ATP 250. It's Draper's third quarter-final of the season after runs to the Eastbourne semis and the Montreal quarter-finals.

"I was really good behind serve, really solid," he said post-match. "In the second set it was tough because he was coming up with some amazing shots. It was a real honour to be on court with Dominic. He's an amazing player."

[ATP APP]

In his first ATP Head2Head meeting with Thiem, the 20-year-old raced to a 5-0 lead in the opening set and did not face a break point in the 80-minute match. The Austrian picked up his aggression in the second set, approaching the net 12 times, but also hit six double faults as he took more risk on his delivery. 

"I started confidently, I started well," said Draper. "I was hitting through the ball, felt good in the conditions. It was a difficult start because I felt like everyone was supporting Dominic and I knew that I needed to come out confidently and sharp, and that's what I did."

Thiem saved two break points at 2-2 in the second set and another at 3-3 but Draper's pressure told in the ninth game of the match. Despite two roped returns from Thiem to create a 15/30 opening, the Briton held his nerve to close it out without further drama.

Finishing a clean performance with 10 winners and four unforced errors, Draper next faces the winner of the stadium court evening finale between 11th seed Ilya Ivashka and Marc-Andrea Huesler.

[FOLLOW ACTION]

Fourth seed Maxime Cressy and 14th seed Lorenzo Sonego contested Wednesday's most dramatic match, with the American owning the tie-breaks in a 6-7(4), 6-2, 7-6(3) win. Cressy was broken just once in the match on the only break point against him as he surrendered an early lead in the deciding set. But he did not drop a point on serve in the deciding tie-break after dropping just one service point in the opening tie-break.

Cressy will meet Adrian Mannarino in the quarter-finals after the Frenchman's 6-3, 6-3 upset against eighth seed Albert Ramos-Vinolas.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Second seed Botic van de Zandschulp continued his efficient march through the Winston-Salem draw with a 6-3, 6-3 win against 15th seed Jaume Munar. He has not dropped a set in two matches this week and will look to extend that streak against 10th seed Benjamin Bonzi, a 7-5, 6-2 winner against Thiago Monteiro.

Both Richard Gasquet and Laslo Djere have required a deciding set in all three of their wins this week and will now meet each other in a quarter-final that will test the fitness of both men. Gasquet's latest three-set win was a 6-7(3), 6-4, 6-3 decision against American Steve Johnson, while Djere was a 7-6(4), 6-7(9), 6-3 winner against Jason Kubler.



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Simon Survives Qualifying Scare At Farewell US Open

Gilles Simon's Grand Slam career lives on for at least another day thanks to yet another heroic comeback by the Frenchman in Wednesday's US Open qualifying action.

After his memorable five-set win against Pablo Carreno Busta in his farewell Roland Garros, the Frenchman made an even greater escape in a 2-6, 7-5, 6-1 win against home favourite Michael Mmoh. Down a double break at 2-5 in the second, Simon raised his level with his back against the wall as he won 11 of the final 12 games at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center.

[ATP APP]

Simon, who is set to retire after the 2022 season, used an efficient performance on return to complete the turnaround, converting on six of seven break chances after failing to create a look in the opening set. The 37-year-old denied Mmoh on two attempts at serving out the match at both 5-2 and 5-4 in the middle set.

He will continue to play for his 15th US Open main-draw appearance in a Thursday meeting with Matteo Arnaldi in the second of three qualifying rounds. The #NextGenATP Italian was a 6-2, 2-6, 6-2 winner against 24th seed Ryan Peniston in the opening round.

Max Purcell, already a Grand Slam champion this season after his Wimbledon doubles triumph alongside fellow Aussie Matthew Ebden, made a strong start in his bid to qualify for a second straight major singles draw. (He earned his way into the Wimbledon singles draw before losing a five-set first-round match to Adrian Mannarino.)

The 24-year-old was a 6-0, 6-4 winner against Serbia's Nikola Milojevic. He will next face second seed Daniel Elahi Galan, a 6-3, 6-2 winner against #NextGenATP Italian Luciano Darderi.

[FOLLOW ACTION]

Two-time US Open quarter-finalist Fernando Verdasco also advanced on Wednesday as he seeks his 18th main-draw appearance in New York and his first since 2019. The Spaniard downed Italy's Gianluca Mager 7-6(5), 6-3.

Popular Belgian Zizou Bergs was also among the winners after he scored a tidy 6-2, 6-4 result against Argentina's Renzo Olivo, saving all four break points against him.

In the day's biggest upset, Portugal's Pedro Sousa dismissed third seed Henri Laaksonen 7-5, 6-2.



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Rafael Nadal's pregnant wife in hospital and 'could undergo operation' days before US Open



RAFAEL NADAL'S wife, Mery Perello, has been admitted to hospital in the final stretch of her pregnancy.

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US Open qualifier Liam Broady fires shots as Novak Djokovic remains in main draw



NOVAK DJOKOVIC is still waiting to learn if he can play in the US Open.

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Daniil Medvedev responds to fears Wimbledon ban may harm US Open hopes of defending title



DANIIL MEDVEDEV returns to the US Open as the reigning champion.

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Jack Draper faces Dominic Thiem in strange scenario after US Open champ loses last set 6-0



JACK DRAPER will take on a Grand Slam champion as he prepares for his US Open debut.

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Rafael Nadal left Daniil Medvedev hurting from 'scar tissue' with US Open fears raised



RAFAEL NADAL and Daniil Medvedev will be two of the favourites for the US Open.

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Tuesday 23 August 2022

Draper Downs Fognini In Winston-Salem

In his first match since his breakthrough quarter-final run at the Montreal ATP Masters 1000, #NextGenATP Briton Jack Draper claimed another statement win on Tuesday at the Winston-Salem Open.

The 20-year-old outlasted Fabio Fognini 6-2, 4-6, 6-1 to set up a third-round showdown with Dominic Thiem, who moved past top seed Grigor Dimitrov after the Bulgarian's second-set retirement.

Draper, seeded 13th, ran out to a 5-0 lead in the final set, but had to save seven break points in doing so. After he escaped 15/40 in the set's opening game, he erased five break chances in a five-deuce fifth game, the longest of the two-hour match. The Briton saved 10 of 13 break points in the contest while breaking on six of 10 chances on return.

[ATP APP]

Entering the week at a career-high of No. 55 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings, Draper moved up three places in the Live Rankings to No. 52 following his opening victory. He could enter the Top 40 by winning his first tour-level title this week.

After saving two match point against J.J. Wolf on Monday night, Thiem made a sluggish start against Dimitrov before finding his legs in the second set. But as the Austrian raised his game, his opponent faded physically and was ultimately forced to retire while leading 6-0, 2-4.

"The most important [thing] today is that Grigor gets well very soon again," Thiem said post-match. "The match is not the priority; that's never the way I want to win a match, especially against Grigor."

After failing to conver from 0/40 in the opening game of the match, Thiem lost seven straight games before a love service hold got him back on track in the second set.

"Playing-wise it was very tough in the first set," he said. "I had a good start actually, and then he somehow broke and it was really difficult.

"I could pick up a little bit my intensity better [in the second set].Yesterday was really tough, over three hours. I finished late, I got to bed at 3:30 and then it was not easy to get the intensity straight up again. It's very humid, you lose a lot of liquid here, a lot of sweat. So that's tough and I was not able to have my intensity straight away, but in the second set it got a little bit better."

[FOLLOW ACTION]

Second seed Botic van de Zandschulp closed play on the stadium court with a 7-6(5), 6-3 win against fellow Dutchman Tallon Griekspoor. He will next face 15th seed Jaume Munar, a 6-3, 6-4 winner against Tseng Chun-Hsin.

Other seeded players to advance included Maxime Cressy, Albert Ramos-Vinolas, Benjamin Bonzi and Ilya Ivashka. Laslo Djere upset 19th seed Joao Sousa in dramatic fashion, 4-6, 6-3, 7-6(5).



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Former US Open Boys' Champ Wu Earns Win In Qualifying Debut

China's Wu Yibing translated his red-hot form on the ATP Challenger Tour into a debut victory in Grand Slam qualifying on Tuesday at the US Open. 

The 2017 US Open boys' singles champ and former junior World No. 1 earned a 6-4, 6-3 win against 18th seed Ricardas Berankis to move within two victories of his maiden main-draw appearance at a major. 

The 22-year-old was an efficient three of four on break point opportunities while saving six of seven break points against him in the match. He will next face Italy's Stefano Travaglia, a 6-3, 6-4 winner against Michael Geerts.

Travaglia was one of seven Italian men to advance on Day 1 of the US Open Qualifying Tournament, led by 10th seed Franco Agamenone. The 29-year-old Agamenone hit seven aces in a 4-6, 6-3, 6-1 win against Argentina's Francisco Comesana.

[ATP APP]

Fourth seed Camilo Ugo Carabelli lost 7-5, 6-3 to Turkey's Altug Celikbilek, while fifth seed Juan Pablo Varillas was upset 6-2, 6-2 by France's Gregoire Barrere.

Five Americans advanced, including Bjorn Fratangelo, Christopher Eubanks, Brandon Holt, Zachary Svajda and Ethan Quinn. Both Fratangelo and Holt secured victory in a third-set tie-break, with Fratangelo edging Argentina's Juan Bautista Torres 7-6(4), 3-6, 7-6(10-4) and Holt downing France's Alexandre Muller 3-6, 6-4, 7-6(10-5).



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ATP's 50 Game-Changing Moments (Part 3)



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ATP's 50 Game-Changing Moments (Part 2)



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ATP's 50 Game-Changing Moments



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Monday 22 August 2022

Thiem Saves 2 MPs, Wins Rain-Delayed Winston-Salem Opener

Dominic Thiem’s first hard-court match since March 2021 featured a one-hour, 52-minute rain delay, two match points against and plenty of drama, but the Austrian found a way to advance on Monday evening at the Winston-Salem Open.

The former World No. 3 worked hard to defeat J.J. Wolf 6-7(5), 7-5, 7-6(6) after three hours and 10 minutes. Thiem will play 2017 Nitto ATP Finals champion Grigor Dimitrov, the top seed, in the second round.

After the lengthy rain delay at 3-2 in the third set, the players served their way into a tie-break, which Thiem led 4/1. When Wolf surged to a 6/4 lead, in part due to sloppy play from his opponent, the home favourite was in good position to move on.

But Thiem found his best tennis when it mattered most, crushing a backhand winner on the first match point and a forehand winner on the second to get out of trouble before blasting a forehand passing shot to clinch his victory.

[ATP APP]

Thiem showed some inconsistency early on, making uncharacteristic errors. In the crucial moments of the first set, Wolf was able to take control of rallies and capture the first-set tie-break.

But 2020 US Open champion Thiem also flashed his trademark brilliance on Stadium Court, blasting one-handed backhands down the line and threading the needle with perfect passing shots on his main draw debut at the ATP 250.

In the same section of the draw, former Top 10 star Fabio Fognini defeated Dusan Lajovic 7-5, 7-5 in a rematch of the 2019 Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters final. The Italian will next play 13th seed Jack Draper.

Earlier in the day, #NextGenATP standout Chun-Hsin Tseng clawed past lucky loser Marton Fucsovics 6-1, 1-6, 6-3 to earn a clash against 15th seed Jaume Munar.

There were two opening-round matches that went to final-set tie-breaks. Adrian Mannarino outlasted Christopher O’Connell 7-6(4), 6-7(3), 7-6(3) after three hours and 31 minutes, while James Duckworth rallied past Thanasi Kokkinakis 4-6, 6-3, 7-6(5) after two hours and 15 minutes.

Kyle Edmund continued his comeback from left knee surgery with a 6-2, 7-5 win against Greek ATP Cup team member Michail Pervolarakis 6-2, 7-5. The Briton will next challenge 10th seed Benjamin Bonzi.

[ATP APP]

Top Seeds Advance In Doubles Draw
Croatians Nikola Mektic and Mate Pavic have won four titles this year. On Monday, the top seeds began their charge for a fifth trophy in 2022 with a 6-4, 6-3 victory against Aleksandr Nedovyesov and Aisam-Ul-Haq Qureshi in Winston-Salem.

The second seeds’ day did not go as smoothly. Simone Bolelli and Marcelo Melo eliminated Ivan Dodig and Austin Krajicek 6-4, 7-6(3). In a battle of Americans, Robert Galloway and Alex Lawson defeated Nathaniel Lammons and Jackson Withrow 6-3, 5-7, 10-6.



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Choose Which #ATP50 Rivalry, Hot Shot & More Should Feature In The Insider

Tennis fans, we need your help in selecting which #ATP50 Game Changing moments to feature in our August issue of the ATP Tour Insider newsletter!

Which is your favourite rivalry from the past 50 years of the ATP? Will it be the modern matchups between Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic, or perhaps John McEnroe against Jimmy Connors, Bjorn Borg or Ivan Lendl, or Andre Agassi vs Pete Sampras?

Which hot shot wowed you the most? Who has your vote for most courageous comeback and best celebration? From the 1972 World Championships Tennis Finals clash between Ken Rosewall and Rod Laver, to Andy Murray’s phenomenal performance at the 2016 season finale to clinch World No. 1, which final had you on the edge of your seat? 

Check out our immersive ATP 50 features – you’ll especially want to see all the hot shots in full – before making your picks. Celebrations has 12 choices, while the others categories each have 10, and we want you to select your top three.

10 Memorable Title Matches In ATP History
There Will Always Be Hot Shots
10 Defining Rivalries In ATP History
10 Courageous Comebacks
* Signature Celebrations

You can cast your votes once a day. With this special ATP Tour Insider issue set to come out on August 31st, we've now extended voting through Friday, August 26th, so bookmark this page and return daily to support your favourite #ATP50 moments. Make sure you’re also subscribed to the ATP Tour Insider to find out the results!

 

Founded as a players' association at the 1972 US Open, ATP has since undergone a journey of evolution over the course of its rich 50-year history. Today boasting hundreds of millions of fans, a global Tour across more than 30 countries each season and iconic superstar athletes, the ATP Tour has grown into one of the world’s pre-eminent sports entertainment platforms.

To mark this major milestone, ATP's ‘Game Changing’ campaign celebrates 50 years of iconic moments, influential figures and changing styles that shaped the game known and loved by fans around the world.



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Nadal, Medvedev Lead Five-Way Battle For No. 1 At US Open

Daniil Medvedev enters the US Open as the No. 1 player in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings but there will be fireworks at Flushing Meadows, where five players have a chance to claim the top spot.

When players next Monday drop their 2021 US Open points, Nadal will be in pole position to recapture World No. 1 for the first time since 2 February 2020. Medvedev, Stefanos Tsitsipas, Carlos Alcaraz and Casper Ruud need deep runs to challenge him.

Since Nadal did not compete last year in New York, he is not defending any points. When 2021 champion Medvedev drops the 2,000 points he is defending, Nadal will be No. 1 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings with 5,630 points. 

Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings Points (as of 29 August)

 Player  Points
 1) Rafael Nadal  5,630
 2) Alexander Zverev  5,040*
 3) Daniil Medvedev  4,885
 4) Stefanos Tsitsipas  4,800
 5) Carlos Alcaraz  4,740
 6) Casper Ruud  4,650
*Zverev is not competing in the US Open due to an ankle injury
The 36-year-old lefty will have a 590-point lead over Alexander Zverev, who does not have a chance to claim No. 1 because he is not competing at the US Open due to an ankle injury. Medvedev, who has held World No. 1 since the week of 13 June, will be 745 points behind. 

Medvedev, Tsitsipas, Alcaraz and Ruud will all need to at least reach the US Open final to have an opportunity to leave New York as World No. 1.

Tsitsipas will be confident after reaching the Western & Southern Open final. However, the Greek has not moved past the third round at Flushing Meadows in four previous appearances.

Alcaraz, who defeated Tsitsipas at last year's US Open en route to the quarter-finals, has a chance to make history. If the 19-year-old Spaniard climbs to World No. 1 on 12 September, he will become the youngest No. 1 in Pepperstone ATP Rankings history, breaking the record Lleyton Hewitt set in November 2001 as a 20-year-old.

Ruud, who has climbed as high as World No. 5, can become the first Norwegian in Pepperstone ATP Rankings history to reach World No. 1.



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Nick Kyrgios snubs himself and Rafael Nadal when making US Open winner prediction



NICK KYRGIOS picked his US Open winner and didn't include himself or four-time winner Rafael Nadal

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ATP Masters 1000: Tournaments, Records, Stats

ATP Masters 1000, which debuted as a series in 1990, features the best men's tennis players at nine top tournaments on the ATP Tour calendar. Champions at Masters 1000 events earn 1,000 Pepperstone ATP Rankings points. 

Masters 1000 Reigning Champions

Taylor Fritz, Carlos Alcaraz, Pablo Carreno Busta and Borna Coric joined the list of ATP Masters 1000 champions in 2022. Fritz kicked off proceedings by winning his hometown title at the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells by defeating Rafael Nadal, a winner of 36 Masters 1000 titles.

An 18-year-old Alcaraz clinched his first Masters 1000 title at the Miami Open presented by Itau, while fellow Spaniard Carreno Busta joined the elite club at the age of 31, in August at the National Bank Open presented by Rogers. Alcaraz backed up his Miami triumph with an impressive run in May at the Mutua Madrid Open, defeating Nadal, Novak Djokovic and Alexander Zverev in succession.

Coric continued the parade of first-time Masters 1000 champions, as he became the lowest-ranked titlist in the history of the Western & Southern Open, propelling him 123 spots to No. 29 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings.

Tournament  City 2022 Dates Defending Champion
BNP Paribas Open Indian Wells 10-20 March 2022: Taylor Fritz (Recap)
Miami Open presented by Itau Miami 23 March - 3 April 2022: Carlos Alcaraz (Recap)
Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters Monte-Carlo 10-17 April 2022: Stefanos Tsitsipas (Recap)
Mutua Madrid Open Madrid 1-8 May 2022: Carlos Alcaraz (Recap)
Internazionali BNL d'Italia Rome 8-15 May 2022: Novak Djokovic (Recap)
National Bank Open presented by Rogers Montreal 7-14 August 2022: Pablo Carreno Busta (Recap)
Western & Southern Open Cincinnati 14-21 August 2022: Borna Coric (Recap)
Rolex Shanghai Masters Shanghai  cancelled 2019: Daniil Medvedev (Recap
Rolex Paris Masters Paris  31 Oct - 6 Nov  2021: Novak Djokovic (Recap)

Masters 1000 Title Leaders

There have been 75 different champions crowned since the Masters 1000 series began in 1990. Only six players have won more than 10 Masters 1000 titles. With his victory at the 2021 Rolex Paris Masters, Novak Djokovic took sole possession of the ATP Masters 1000 titles record, breaking the record he previously shared with Rafael Nadal. He took his Masters 1000 haul to 38 by winning the 2022 Internazionali BNL d'Italia.

 Player Titles
Novak Djokovic 38
Rafael Nadal 36
Roger Federer 28
Andre Agassi 17
Andy Murray 14
Pete Sampras 11

Masters 1000 Win Leaders

Rafael Nadal leads Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic in the battle among Masters 1000 match win leaders, with the Spaniard pulling ahead of the Swiss at the 2019 Rolex Paris Masters. Nadal first broke Federer's long-held record in August 2019, with his 379th Masters 1000 victory at this elite level during the Coupe Rogers. Stan Wawrinka entered the Top 10 leaderboard after reaching the third round at the 2019 BNP Paribas Open, overtaking Tommy Haas (144-107 match record).
Player W-L Titles
Rafael Nadal 406-87  36 
Novak Djokovic 381-83 38
Roger Federer 381-108  28
Andy Murray 223-91  14 
Andre Agassi  209-73  17
Tomas Berdych 191-117
Pete Sampras 190-70 11
David Ferrer 189-122
Andy Roddick  157-70  5
Stan Wawrinka  157-111  1

* numbers following 2022 Western & Southern Open
 

Masters 1000 Greatest Champions

Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal, Roger Federer, Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan dominate the titles leaderboard for the Masters 1000 tournaments.
City Singles Doubles
Indian Wells Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer (5) Mark Knowles, Daniel Nestor (4)
Miami Andre Agassi, Novak Djokovic (6) Bob Bryan, Mike Bryan (6)
Monte-Carlo Rafael Nadal (11)  Bob Bryan, Mike Bryan (6) 
Madrid Rafael Nadal (5) Bob Bryan, Mike Bryan, Daniel Nestor (5)
Rome Rafael Nadal (10) Bob Bryan, Mike Bryan (4)
Canada Rafael Nadal (5) Mahesh Bhupathi, Bob Bryan, Mike Bryan (5) 
Cincinnati  Roger Federer (7)  Bob Bryan, Mike Bryan, Daniel Nestor (5)
Shanghai  Novak Djokovic (4) Marcelo Melo (3)
Paris Novak Djokovic (6) Bob Bryan, Mike Bryan (4)

Masters 1000 Sweeps

The "Sunshine Double", winning Indian Wells and Miami in the same season, has been achieved 12 different times since the series began in 1990, most recently by Roger Federer in 2017. The fall Masters 1000 sweep has been completed five times, twice by Novak Djokovic, while four players have won Canada and Cincinnati back-to-back. Rafael Nadal, the most recent player to accomplish the North American summer sweep, is also the only one to have captured all three clay Masters 1000 titles consecutively. 

ATP Masters 1000 Sunshine Double (Indian Wells, Miami)
2017: Roger Federer
2016: Novak Djokovic
2015: Novak Djokovic
2014: Novak Djokovic
2011: Novak Djokovic
2006: Roger Federer
2005: Roger Federer
2001: Andre Agassi
1998: Marcelo Rios
1994: Pete Sampras
1992: Michael Chang
1991: Jim Courier

ATP Masters 1000 Spring Sweep (Clay)
2010: Rafael Nadal (Monte-Carlo, Rome, Madrid)

ATP Masters 1000 Summer Sweep
2013: Rafael Nadal (Montreal, Cincinnati)
2003: Andy Roddick (Montreal, Cincinnati)
1998: Patrick Rafter (Toronto, Cincinnati)
1995: Andre Agassi (Montreal, Cincinnati)

ATP Masters 1000 Fall Sweep
2016: Andy Murray (Shanghai, Paris)
2015: Novak Djokovic (Shanghai, Paris)
2013: Novak Djokovic (Shanghai, Paris)
2007: David Nalbandian (Madrid, Paris)
2004: Marat Safin (Madrid, Paris)

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Big Four Dominance At Masters 1000

From 2008 Madrid through 2017 Madrid, Novak Djokovic (26), Rafael Nadal (18), Andy Murray (13) and Roger Federer (12) combined to capture 69 of the 78 Masters 1000 titles (88.5%). During that stretch, only six other players won their first Masters 1000 title:
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (2008 Paris)
Ivan Ljubicic (2010 Indian Wells)
Robin Soderling (2010 Paris)
David Ferrer (2012 Paris)
Stan Wawrinka (2014 Monte-Carlo)
Marin Cilic (2016 Cincinnati).

In comparison, in the 21 series events from 2017 Rome to 2019 Cincinnati, nine players won their first Masters 1000 title:
Alexander Zverev (2017 Rome)
Grigor Dimitrov (2017 Cincinnati)
Jack Sock (2017 Paris)
Juan Martin del Potro (2018 Indian Wells)
John Isner (2018 Miami)
Karen Khachanov (2018 Paris)
Dominic Thiem (2019 Indian Wells)
Fabio Fognini (2019 Monte-Carlo)
Daniil Medvedev (2019 Cincinnati)



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Sunday 21 August 2022

Coric Captures Maiden Masters 1000 Crown In Cincinnati

Borna Coric crowned a remarkable injury comeback Sunday when he captured his first ATP Masters 1000 title, overcoming Stefanos Tsitsipas 7-6(0), 6-2 in the Western & Southern Open final.

The Croatian, who was competing in his first tour-level final since 2020, defeated Rafael Nadal en route to his second Masters 1000 final. With the pressure on, Coric demonstrated courage against the Greek, rallying from 1-4 in the first set, before he blitzed his way past the fourth seed in the second set to triumph after one hour and 57 minutes in Cincinnati.

Coric missed the majority of last season due to a shoulder injury and entered the Cincinnati draw with a protected ranking, sitting at No. 152 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings. However, he is up to No. 29 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings following his fairytale run, while he has improved to 2-1 in his ATP Head2Head series against Tsitsipas.

Borna Coric Pepperstone ATP Live Ranking

“It was a very, very tough match. At the beginning I wasn’t playing very well and he was pushing me very hard. But I started to serve better and play better and I was fighting hard,” Coric said in his on-court interview. “Then in the second set I thought I played the best set of the whole year.”

[ATP APP]

Coric dropped just one set during his run to the championship match in his sixth appearance at the hard-court event, also defeating Lorenzo Musetti, Nadal, Roberto Bautista Agut, Felix Auger-Aliassime and Cameron Norrie. The 25-year-old has now clinched three tour-level titles, having soared to success on clay in Marrakech in 2017 and on grass Halle in 2018.

“Thank you to my parents, who are not here, my sister and my team. It has been very tough for us,” Coric added during the trophy ceremony. “With my physio, if I didn’t have him I wouldn’t be on the court... Then of course to my tennis coach, Mate. We have been working very hard and now we are here.”

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Tsitsipas flew out of the blocks in an enthralling first set as he opened his shoulders to race into a 4-1 lead. Coric showed signs of nerves in the opening exchanges, but started to settle as the set went on. The Croatian began to find his spots on serve, while he hit with greater depth and pace off the ground to claw back to 4-4. With a tie-break left to decide the first set, it was Coric who raced into top gear, capitalising on untimely errors from Tsitsipas to lead.

After hitting 18 winners in the opener, the 25-year-old continued to look comfortable at the start of the second set. Coric hit his water-tight groundstrokes with consistency on return and gained the decisive break in the sixth game of the set against a tiring Tsitsipas. The Croatian, who committed just 14 unforced errors, then fended off pressure from Tsitsipas when serving, before he broke again to earn the biggest win of his career.

Coric looked to step inside the baseline and attack Tsitsipas in the second set in a move that worked. As shown in his INSIGHTS: Conversion Score, the Croatian was clinical, holding a conversion rate of 87 per cent, well above the 66 per cent Tour average.

Stefanos Tsitsipas and Borna Coric's Conversion Scores in the second set of the Cincinnati final.

Tsitsipas was aiming to capture his third Masters 1000 title and 10th tour-level trophy. The Greek, who retained the title in Monte Carlo in April, edged Daniil Medvedev in a hard-fought semi-final win and is up to No. 5 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings.

The 24-year-old has also risen to second in the Pepperstone ATP Live Race To Turin as he looks to qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals for a fourth consecutive season. He lifted the trophy at the season finale on debut in 2019.

Did You Know?
Coric is the first player to win a Masters 1000 title and an ATP Challenger Tour title in the same season since Mikael Pernfors in 1993. It's only happened three times since ATP Masters 1000 debuted as a series in 1990. Coric won a Challenger Trophy in Parma, Italy, in June.



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Rafael Nadal concern shot down by tennis legend ahead of US Open title bid



RAFAEL NADAL goes into the US Open with little momentum following a comeback loss in Cincinnati.

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Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina almost quit tennis months before title win



ELENA RYBAKINA won the biggest title of her career at Wimbledon last month.

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US Open 2022: Draws, Dates, History & All You Need To Know

The fourth and final Grand Slam of the season will see reigning champion Daniil Medvedev and four-time winner Rafael Nadal lead the field at the US Open.

Here's what you need to know ahead of the tournament in New York:

When is the US Open?

The 2022 US Open will be held from 29 August – 11 September. The hard-court Grand Slam tournament, established in 1881, will take place at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York, United States. The tournament director is Stacey Allaster.

Who is playing at the 2022 Western & Southern Open?

The US Open will feature stars including World No. 1 Medvedev, 22-time major champion Rafael Nadal, two-time ATP Masters 1000 titlist Carlos Alcaraz and Greek Stefanos Tsitsipas.

When is the draw for the US Open?

The US Open draw will be made Thursday, 25 August at a time to be confirmed.

What is the schedule for the US Open?

*Qualifying: Tuesday 23 August-Friday 26 August
*Main Draw: Monday 29 August-Sunday 11 September at 11:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m.
*Doubles Final: Saturday 10 September at TBC.
*Singles Final: Sunday 11 September at 4:00 p.m.

View On Official Website

[ATP APP]

What is the prize money and points for the US Open?

The Total Financial Commitment for the US Open is more than $60,000,000.

SINGLES
Winner: $2,600,000/2,000 points
Finalist: $1,300,000/1,200 points
Semi-finalist: $705,000/720 points
Quarter-finalist: $445,000/360 points
Fourth Round: $278,000/180 points
Third Round: $188,000/90 points
Second Round: $121,000/45 points
First Round: $80,000/10 points

DOUBLES ($ per team)
Winner: $688,000/2,000 points
Finalist: $344,000/1,200 points
Semi-finalist: $172,000/720 points
Quarter-finalist: $97,500/360 points
Third Round: $56,400/180 points
Second Round: $35,800/90 points
First Round: $21,300/0 points

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

How can I watch US Open?

US Open Broadcast Schedule

How can I follow the US Open?

Social
Hashtag: #USOpen
Facebook: @usopentennis
Twitter: @usopen
Instagram: @usopen

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Who won the last edition of US Open in 2021?

Daniil Medvedev won the 2021 US Open title with a 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 victory against Novak Djokovic in the championship match. Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury lifted the doubles trophy, defeating Jamie Murray and Bruno Soares 3-6, 6-2, 6-2 in the final.

Who holds the US Open record for most titles, oldest champion, youngest champion and more?

Honour Roll (Open Era)
Most Titles, Singles: Jimmy Connors, Roger Federer, Pete Sampras (5)
Most Titles, Doubles: Bob Bryan, Mike Bryan, Daniel Nestor (5)
Oldest Champion: Ken Rosewall, 35, in 1970
Youngest Champion: Pete Sampras, 19, in 1990
Highest-Ranked Champion: No. 1 Jimmy Connors in 1974, 1976, 1978, John McEnroe in 1981, 1984, Ivan Lendl in 1986-87, Pete Sampras in 1996, Roger Federer in 2004-07, Rafael Nadal in 2010, 2017, Novak Djokovic in 2011, 2015
Lowest-Ranked Champion: No. 20 Andre Agassi in 1994
Last Home Champion: Andy Roddick in 2003
Most Match Wins: Jimmy Connors (98)

View Who Is Playing, Past Champions, Seeds, Points & Prize Money Breakdown



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