Tuesday 28 February 2023

'This Is Not Forever': Feliciano Lopez Savours Farewell Season

Just before the new year, Spain's Feliciano Lopez announced that he will say adios to life as a player on the ATP Tour this season. The 41-year-old will finish his career with farewell appearances at a select few tournaments, the first of which is this week at the Abierto Mexicano Telcel presentado por HSBC.

After more than 20 years as a professional, Lopez is finding it hard to say goodbye.

"Since I decided this is going to be my last year on Tour, it's been a little bit difficult because it's something that you don't want to do, because I love what I do," Lopez told ATPTour.com in Acapulco. "I have a passion for tennis. Even though I know this is my last year, I wish I could continue playing and it's a little bit sad. But on the other hand, I have to do it because I'm 41 years old and this is not going to be forever; I understand."

[ATP APP]

The former world No. 12 has made the most of his Acapulco wild card this week, earning his first tour-level singles victory since July 2021 with a 7-6(3), 6-4 win against Christopher Eubanks—a player 15 years his junior—on Monday night. It was his first competitive match in nearly five months.

"It's been a while since I won my last ATP match," Lopez reflected. "To be honest, I had this in mind because last year was difficult for me. I couldn't win any matches on Tour, even though I played only a few tournaments. But still it's something that I had in mind and it was kind of a relief moment when I finally won my match yesterday."

After playing a light schedule in 2022, competing in just 11 tour-level matches, Lopez's win was reward for an intense effort in what was his last offseason training block.

"I knew this was going to be very challenging and very difficult," he said of returning to the ATP Tour after the layoff. "That's why I was preparing myself to be ready here in Acapulco. I think considering all the circumstances and all the challenges that I've faced in the last year I think I played great tennis overall.

"The match was great, I was feeling great physically and of course my tennis has some room to improve but I think the level overall was very decent."

Having earned his way back into the win column, Lopez will next face sixth seed Frances Tiafoe on Wednesday in a marquee match in front of the Mexican crowd. Lopez won their lone previous ATP Head2Head meeting in Antwerp in 2018, but the in-form American comes into this matchup as World No. 15, just one spot off his career-high Pepperstone ATP Ranking achieved earlier in February.

"I know it's a very difficult match," Lopez said. "Probably the most difficult one that I'm facing in the last three or four years because Tiafoe is one of then best players in the world, especially now that he's been playing great tennis in the last year and a half. I know it's going to be very difficult but I have nothing to lose. I'm here to enjoy myself.

"My only goal tomorrow is to play the best I can... to be myself on the court, to be aggressive. It's one of the matches that you really want to play."

Beyond Acapulco, Lopez has already been confirmed as a wild card in Barcelona and Mallorca. He is also hoping to return to The Queen's Club in London, where he won his two most recent tour-level singles titles in 2017 and 2019. He also won the doubles title there with Andy Murray in a 2019 trophy sweep, and later claimed the 2022 Acapulco doubles crown with Stefanos Tsitsipas.

While Lopez is hoping for a wild card to this year's Cinch Championships in London, he says it will be tough based on what he has heard at the moment.

"It's one of the tournaments I would really love to play there one more time," he shared.

Of course the Spaniard will understand the complexity of the situation, given his role as tournament director at the Mutua Madrid Open since 2019. It's a position that can provide some solace to Lopez and his many fans: The seven-time tour-level champion may be stepping off the court, but he is not leaving the game of tennis.



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The 'Great News' For Djokovic In Dubai

Novak Djokovic suffered a scare Tuesday at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships, where he needed to claw through a final-set tie-break to dispatch Tomas Machac. But the World No. 1 said there was good news beyond the result.

“I wasn't thinking about my leg today, which is great. It was not bothering me at all. That's great news,” Djokovic said. “But [an] injury is an injury. There's a muscle memory and it plays with your mind a little bit, it plays with your biomechanics, with your preparation for the shot, execution for the shot. I do feel a difference definitely comparing to the level that I had and the kind of execution I had in Australia.”

It was in Melbourne where Djokovic lifted his 10th Australian Open trophy despite battling through an injury, which noticeably hindered his movement in the early rounds. After finding a way past Machac, the 35-year-old is now 13-0 on the season.

“Of course, there's a lot to be happy about tonight. I think the fighting spirit was there. Tie-break was as good as it can be,” Djokovic said. “[I will] take it day by day and see where it can go.”

While Djokovic admitted he is still finding his best form, the Serbian also complimented Machac, who was trying to earn the biggest win of his career at the ATP 500 event.

“Credit to him, he did surprise me. Never faced him. I did my analysis of his game and prepared myself well," Djokovic said. "Credit to him, he went for his shots, especially down the line backhand, serve and volley. He didn't miss one volley. It was unbelievable. He played on such a high quality. He wasn't missing at all.”

After the match, the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships celebrated Djokovic’s 378th week atop the Pepperstone ATP Rankings. This week the Serbian passed Stefanie Graf for the most weeks as the world’s No. 1 singles player in men’s or women’s tennis.

“I work as hard as anybody else. I'm really, really committed to the sport. And I try. There's a lot of challengers that are coming up in the new generations. Alcaraz being there, probably one of the leaders of the next generation. Rune. Then you have Tsitsipas. These guys are just playing on a high level constantly,” Djokovic said. “They're playing a lot of tournaments, a lot of weeks. I'm not playing as much, and I don't plan to play as many weeks as they do.

“I guess eventually they'll take the No. 1, then I'll bring it back again, then they'll take it again, then we go in circles.”



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Coco Gauff reveals how she really feels about Emma Raducanu rivalry



Coco Gauff won the first head-to-head meeting of the pair at the Australian Open in January.

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Alcaraz & Norrie Withdraw From Acapulco

Carlos Alcaraz and Cameron Norrie withdrew from the Abierto Mexicano Telcel presentado por HSBC on Tuesday, Alcaraz due to the right leg injury he aggravated in Rio de Janeiro and Norrie because of fatigue.

“Unfortunately I won't be able to play in @AbiertoTelcel. I have a grade 1 strain in my right hamstring that will keep me out for several days, according to the tests we did this morning,” Alcaraz tweeted. “I’m really sad I can't compete here, but now it's time to think about recovering and being ready as soon as possible. I hope to see you all soon!”

Alcaraz owns an 8-1 record on the season after winning the Argentina Open and reaching the final of the Rio Open presented by Claro. The Spaniard missed more than three months following last year’s Rolex Paris Masters due to injury.

Norrie claimed the biggest clay-court title of his career in Brazil, where he battled past Alcaraz in the final. The left-handed Briton leads the ATP Tour in match wins this season with 18 (18-3).

"Unfortunately I have to withdraw from Acapulco," Norrie said in an Instagram Story. "It's one of my favourite tournaments, so it's really tough for me to withdraw."

"We wish you both a speedy recovery,” the Acapulco tournament wrote on social media.

Both players will be replaced in the draw by a lucky loser at 5:30 p.m. local time.



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Novak Djokovic admits to being in 'trouble' during Dubai win against world No 130



Novak Djokovic just about got the job done against Tomas Machac at the Dubai Tennis Championships.

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Monday 27 February 2023

Jaziri Ends Storied Career In Dubai

The curtain came down on Malek Jaziri’s 20-year career on Monday when he lost to Alejandro Davidovich Fokina at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships.

The 39-year-old Tunisian enjoyed a historic career, becoming one of five Arab men to reach the Top 50 in the history of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings (since 1973), rising to a career-high No. 42 in 2019.

"I hope I have been a good inspiration for a lot of generations in Tunisia," said Jaziri of his homeland, which boasts current WTA World No. 4 Ons Jabeur, who has been as high as No. 2. "[Inspired] the next generation in Tunisia. Tennis has improved a lot in the past few years in Tunisia. A lot of clubs have opened and a lot of people follow tennis.”

Jaziri, who clinched his first tour-level win at the Davis Cup in 2005, reached his only tour-level final in Istanbul in 2018. He earned three Top 10 wins in his career, defeating Grigor Dimitrov, Marin Cilic and Alexander Zverev, while he captured eight ATP Challenger Tour titles.

“Emotions were very high,” Jaziri said. “When you play your last tournament, it could be your last match and it was my last match. I tried to enjoy all the moments on court. I am happy to be here in Dubai, it means a lot to me. Dubai has a piece of my heart. I have been here for many years, so I am happy I had my last tournament in Dubai.

”I didn’t think a lot about the decision. Last year I had a lot of injuries, so it wasn’t easy at all. I was playing and then I was stopping. The decision was natural, but it is not easy to stop. I have played for more than 20 years. To take a decision to [stop] something that has been such a part of your life everyday. You wake up, practise. Do a lot of things to make you [achieve] your objectives. Top 100, Top 50 or whatever. Doing that routine everyday. Now I think my routine is going to change, so let’s see what is next.”

[ATP APP]

The World No. 444 was competing for the first time this season after receiving a wild card into the ATP 500 event in Dubai, where he reached the semi-finals in 2018. Jaziri’s best result at a Grand Slam came at the Australian Open in 2015 when he advanced to the third round.

“I have played on most of the big centre courts," he said. "When it is a full house, it is very emotional and very nice. I played in the best era they say now. It has been good to be Top 50 at the same time as Federer, Djokovic, Rafa, Murray. It is a pleasure to be part of the circuit and share the court with them. Thanks to ATP for the past few years and everything tennis has given me.”



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Zverev: This Is What I Learned From Federer, Nadal, Djokovic & Murray

Alexander Zverev appeared in danger of suffering his second straight-sets loss of the year to Jiri Lehecka on Monday evening at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships. But despite still searching for form as he continues his comeback from an ankle injury, the German found a way to rally past the in-form Czech 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 for a place in the second round.

“I didn’t start off the match very well. But these kind of matches are extremely important for me right now. I found a way to win and I’m sure that the next few matches I’ll be playing much better,” Zverev said. “Sometimes that’s what makes the best players… If you’re not playing well, you sometimes have to find a way to win.

“That’s what Roger, Rafa, Novak, Andy did throughout the last 20 years, so kind of trying to learn from them.”

Zverev entered the match with a 3-6 record on the season and without a victory against Top 50 opposition. But he maintained his composure against World No. 47 Lehecka, a powerful 21-year-old who blasted his way to the Australian Open quarter-finals and the semi-finals last week in Doha.

The two-time Nitto ATP Finals champion Zverev had high praise for last year’s Next Gen ATP Finals runner-up.

[ATP APP]

“I played him my first match back in Sydney and I had absolutely no chance whatsoever in that match, so I’m obviously happy that I have progressed, I have improved since then,” Zverev said. “He’s been playing amazing. He made it to the quarter-finals of the Australian Open, beat incredible players last week. He could have won the tournament, lost to Andy with match points like so many did this year.

“I think he’s an incredible young player. Yes, he’s barely inside the Top 50, but my coach said by the end of the year he’s going to be Top 12, I think he’s going to be Top 20, definitely.”

Seventh-seeded Zverev will next play Finland's Emil Ruusuvuori or Australian qualifier Christopher O'Connell.



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Andy Murray shares reasons for Dubai withdrawal after ‘ridiculous’ Doha run



Andy Murray pulled out of the Dubai Championships on Monday.

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Novak Djokovic speaks out on Andy Murray dramatics as Serb denied Dubai meeting



The world No.1 and Australian Open winner will compete at the Dubai Tennis Championships this week

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ATP Tennis Podcast: Alcaraz On Battle For No. 1, Bellucci Talks Retirement

This week on the ATP Tennis Podcast...

CARLOS ALCARAZ ON HIS DESIRE TO RETURN TO WORLD NO. 1 – “It’s a great goal for me, but it’s going to be really tough as Djokovic deserves so much to be there. But I’m really hungry to go to the tournaments, to win them and to return to No. 1. That’s a big goal for me this year.”

TOMAZ BELLUCI ON HIS DECISION TO RETIRE – “I’m happy with what I’ve achieved in my career. I made the decision in the middle of last year as I played a tournament and wasn’t feeling well physically. I was having so many injuries, so I think that was the moment when I felt I need to choose different for my life.”

STAN WAWRINKA ON HIS DESIRE TO RETURN TO THE TOP – “My game is high, when I enter the court I believe I can beat any player in front of me. Now I have to do it and I have to do it in repetition in the same week. But the year is long and I’m always looking for the full year, to the big picture, controlling what I can control and the matches and results will come.”

ARTHUR RINDERKNECH ON THE NEXT WAVE OF FRENCH PLAYERS COMING THROUGH – “It’s a new generation for sure, with Monfils not playing for the last year, Tsonga of course retired, Gilles Simon retired… Richard Gasquet still shows he can win, but behind that there is a new generation coming, so hopefully we can do, maybe not as good as them, but get as close as possible.”

FABRICE MARTIN ON LEARNING FROM DIFFERENT COACHING SYSTEMS – “When I went back to France I felt it was more about technique, more tactical, whereas in the States it was more focused on you and your game, and on your strengths. So sometimes it fits you and sometimes it doesn’t, but I used a bit of everything.”

PLUS DANIIL MEDVEDEV ANSWERS QUIZ QUESTIONS ON HIS OWN CAREER

- Podcast presented by Seb Lauzier
- Interviews by Seb Lauzier, Richard Connelly, Chris Bowers and Candy Reid
- Medvedev feature by ATP Uncovered



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Cameron Norrie wins fifth title of career with revenge on US Open champion Carlos Alcaraz



The British No.1 came from a set down to beat Carlos Alcaraz in the Rio Open final on Sunday.

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Sunday 26 February 2023

Record Breaker: Djokovic Surpasses Graf With 378th Week At No. 1

Novak Djokovic has today achieved another historic milestone in his career, overtaking Stefanie Graf’s record for most weeks by a men's or women's tennis player as World No. 1.

The Serbian already held the record for the most weeks as No. 1 in the history of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings (since 1973) when he surpassed Roger Federer’s mark of 310 weeks in March 2021. Now he has moved past Graf by beginning his 378th week on top of tennis’ mountain. 

Djokovic, currently on 6,980 points in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings, returned to No. 1 last month for the first time since last June by winning a record-extending 10th Australian Open crown.

ALL-TIME WEEKS AT NO. 1 (MEN AND WOMEN)

No. 1 Player  Total Weeks 
1) Novak Djokovic 378
2) Stefanie Graf 377 
3) Martina Navratilova 332
4) Serena Williams 319 
5) Roger Federer 310

The 35-year-old, who is competing at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships this week, first rose to No. 1 aged 24 years and 43 days on 4 July 2011, and spent a personal-best 122 consecutive weeks at the summit of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings between 7 July 2014 and 6 November 2016.

Djokovic is one of 28 players in the history of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings to hold the top spot. He finished 2021 as year-end No. 1 for a record seventh time (also 2011-12, '14-15, '18 and '20).

Graf, who hit the top of the women’s rankings for the first time in 1987, won 107 titles in her career, including 22 Grand Slam crowns.



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Alcaraz Upbeat Despite Rio Defeat: 'I Had My Chances'

Carlos Alcaraz battled hard on Sunday in the Rio Open presented by Claro final to claim his second title in as any weeks. But after a two-hour, 42-minute clash full of momentum changes, Cameron Norrie triumphed 5-7, 6-4, 7-5 to earn the trophy.

“It [was] a really tough final. I had my chances to win the final, had a break up in the second set and 0/30 to [earn] a second break,” Alcaraz said. “I couldn’t do it and I said before, when you have chances and you don’t make it, it’s really tough to come back against this kind of player. It’s really tough.

“At the end unfortunately I couldn’t [find] my best level physically and it’s really tough to come back in these kind of tournaments against this kind of player. But I would say it has been a good final given that.”

In the middle of the second set, Alcaraz began visibly struggling with a right leg injury. The 19-year-old dialled up his aggression to shorten points, but ultimately fell short of extending his winning streak to nine.

“Even with the injury and the pain, after all the match I could say I’m happy with my performance this whole week and the level that I played in these matches,” Alcaraz said. “But of course playing against Norrie is always tough and it’s great to see him win a title.”

The pair also met last week in the championship match of the Argentina Open in Buenos Aires, where Alcaraz triumphed. It was the Spaniard's first tournament of the season after missing more than three months due to injury. He is now 8-1 on the season.

Alcaraz explained that he will evaluate his condition with his doctor and physiotherapist. He is scheduled to compete next week in Acapulco at the Abierto Mexicano Telcel presentado por HSBC.

“I really like Acapulco,” Alcaraz said. “I really want to go there and play in front of the Mexican fans.”



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Norrie Battles Past Hobbled Alcaraz For Rio Title

Carlos Alcaraz appeared well on his way to a second consecutive Rio Open presented by Claro title on Sunday, when he led Cameron Norrie 7-5, 3-0 0/30. But a resurgent Norrie and physical issues for the Spaniard proved too much to overcome.

Second seed Norrie rallied for a 5-7, 6-4, 7-5 victory after two hours and 42 minutes in the ATP 500 final. The triumph marked the Briton’s fifth ATP Tour final and his first hardware of the season.

Alcaraz was not at his best in the early going, but when he crushed a backhand return winner to capture the opening set, momentum was fully on his side. Norrie showed frustration as he relinquished an immediate service break in the second set and the match appeared to be slipping away.

But the lefty refocused just in time to stay in the match and Alcaraz’s right leg began to bother him. The Spaniard had it wrapped in the middle of the second set and his movement thereafter became noticeably hindered, as did his serve.

As Norrie acted as a wall at the back of the court, Alcaraz tried everything possible to fight his way to the finish line. From serving and volleying to crushing returns and rushing forward, the Spaniard searched for solutions despite his physical struggles.

The World No. 2 played ultra-aggressive tennis to rally from a break down in the third set and put himself within a few more big shots of victory. From jaw-dropping power from the baseline to making consistent use of his drop shot to end points quickly, the Spaniard kept his hopes of a second consecutive title in Rio de Janeiro alive.

But Norrie never panicked and let the tidal wave of Alcaraz's shotmaking overwhelming. After crushing an ace down the T to end the match, Norrie dropped to his knees and let our a roar to celebrate.

Did You Know?
Alcaraz defeated Norrie in the final of the Argentina Open last week in Buenos Aires. This was the first time two players have played finals against one another in back-to-back weeks since Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray split titles in Madrid and Rome in 2016.



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Djokovic ‘Feels Good On Court’ In Dubai

Who can stop Novak Djokovic in 2023? So far, nobody has.

The Serbian, who said Sunday he is approaching full health after suffering a hamstring injury in January in Australia, will next bring a perfect 12-0 record for 2023 to the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships.

Djokovic is back in action this week for the first time since collecting his record-equalling 22nd Grand Slam title at the Australian Open. His unbeaten season record will be put to the test at the Dubai ATP 500, where he feels right at home.

“Dubai in the last 10 or 15 years has become one of the most important places and bases for tennis players, both men and women,” Djokovic said. “So many players come here in the offseason, including myself. I try to use a week or two in December and come play the tournament [in February]. Fantastic climate, very international, the conditions, facilities, everything is phenomenal.

“People love tennis [here]. People appreciate tennis players here. I feel comfortable. I feel welcomed. I’ve had plenty of support in previous years when I’ve played in Dubai. I’m really looking forward to a great atmosphere on the court.”

The 35-year-old has tallied a 43-7 match record at the outdoor hard-court event including titles in 2009-11, 2013, and 2020. In 2022, Djokovic suffered a quarter-final exit to eventual finalist Jiri Vesely.

[ATP APP]

Already a two-time titlist this year (Adelaide, Australian Open), the World No. 1 said he is feeling close to 100 per cent. When he captured his record-extending 10th title at Melbourne Park, the Belgrade native played through a left hamstring injury. Even so, Djokovic dropped just one set at the season's first major.

“It was challenging,” Djokovic said. “I knew what I was going through and my team members [did also]. That makes the victory in Melbourne even greater because I had to face [adversity].

“I [didn’t] practise one single day between matches. I just warmed up for the match and played. Luckily I [had] a great preparation prior to Australia and plenty of tennis.

“Right now, I haven’t felt pain for the last week or so. I feel good on the court, still building and getting to 100 per cent. I’m still not there, but it’s a process.”

On Monday, the 93-time tour-level champion will make more history. Djokovic, who will enter his 378th week as World No. 1 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings, will surpass Stefanie Graf with the most weeks atop the sport for men or women. Following his title in Melbourne, Djokovic reclaimed the No. 1 spot and his leap from World No. 5 marked the biggest jump to top spot in history (since 1973) from one edition of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings to the next.

Top seed Djokovic will begin his quest for a sixth Dubai crown against Tomas Machac. The winner will meet Tallon Griekspoor or Constant Lestienne. Djokovic could meet eighth seed Hubert Hurkacz or Andy Murray in the quarter-finals.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]



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'It's Very Important': Santiago Stars Raise Money For Those Affected By Chilean Fires

Players at the Movistar Chile Open did their part Saturday to help support those suffering due to the wildfires in Chile.

Chilean trio Cristian Garin, Alejandro Tabilo and Nicolas Massu were joined by defending Santiago champion Pedro Martinez for an exhibition to raise money for Desafío Levantemos Chile.

“It’s very sad of course and for me it’s very important to support in some way. I think with this exhibition we are trying to get as much as possible,” Garin said. “Today many people came and it was nice to help in some way the south of Chile in this time. I know the people are suffering a lot, so we try to send love and money of course.”

[ATP APP]

Fans who attended made voluntary donations to benefit those affected by the fires in the south of the country. Money raised will be used to support those in the impacted areas.

“It’s very important. I know everybody over there has been struggling a lot. One of my best friends lives there and is from there, and my coach is also from there, so it’s a very sensitive spot for the whole team,” Tabilo said. “Happy to help and always very excited to help.”

Martinez won his first ATP Tour title in Santiago last year. The Spaniard was happy to do his part to help those in need.

“It’s always good to do tennis things for a great cause. I’m feeling good here in Santiago,” Martinex said. “I hope all the people who suffered from the fires will recover as soon as possible.”



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Emma Raducanu faces Wimbledon problem after last-minute illness halts tournament comeback



Emma Raducanu was due to turn out at the ATX Austin Open this week.

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Billionaire tennis player given worst birthday present ever and eats Doritos to ease pain



The world No.3 was knocked out of the Dubai Tennis Championships at the semi-final stage

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Saturday 25 February 2023

Djokovic Arrives In Dubai; Puts Perfect Season Record To Test

Novak Djokovic will put his unbeaten record in 2023 on the line this week at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships.

The Serbian, who is 12-0 this season, will be in action this week for the first time since collecting his record-extending 10th Australian Open title. On Saturday, Djokovic practised with Croatian Borna Coric ahead of the ATP 500 event.

The 35-year-old will begin his quest for a sixth Dubai crown against a qualifier before meeting the winner of Tallon Griekspoor and Constant Lestienne. Djokovic could meet eighth seed Hubert Hurkacz or Andy Murray in the quarter-finals.

On Monday, the 22-time major champion will add to the record books. Djokovic, who will enter his 378th week as World No. 1, will surpass Stefanie Graf with the most weeks atop the sport. Following his title in Melbourne, Djokovic reclaimed the No. 1 spot in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings and his leap from World No. 5 marked the biggest jump to top spot in history (since 1973).

In 2022, Dubai was Djokovic’s first tournament of the season. He suffered a quarter-final exit to eventual finalist Jiri Vesely. Already a two-time titlist this year (Adelaide, Australian Open), Djokovic aims to continue his sizzling start to the year in the United Arab Emirates.

[ATP APP]



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Norrie Reaches Third Final Of 2023 In Rio

One week after a narrow defeat to Carlos Alcaraz in the Buenos Aires final, Cameron Norrie has done his part to earn a rematch in the Rio Open presented by Claro title match.

The Briton edged Bernabe Zapata Miralles 6-2, 3-6, 7-6(3) on Saturday in Brazil to reach his third final of the season and improve to 17-3 on the year. Norrie, who also reached the Auckland final last month, leads the ATP Tour in wins in 2023.

A pair of one-sided sets gave way to a thrilling decider on Court Guga Kuerten. Norrie won five games in a row to win the opener without facing a break point before Zapata Miralles levelled behind a 3-0 start in set two, denying Norrie a break chance in the set.

"It was good from him and I was a little bit impatient," Norrie said of the turnaround after a strong opening set. "I tried to finish the points a little bit too early. I was a bit overconfident. But credit to him, he came back strong."

[ATP APP]

Following a trade of breaks midway through the third, Norrie fended off a break point at 5-5 with a brave approach and a deft drop volley placed just out of the reach of the sliding Spaniard. Norrie opened the tie-break with a clever forehand drop shot from the frontcourt and never trailed, winning the final three points to seal his final place.

After the two-and-a-half-hour win in what was his eighth match in the past 11 days, Norrie was pleased with his ability to grind out another gruelling win. 

"That's all it was today was physical in that third set," he said. "I just found a way, it was really tough. He fought hard. I'm serving much better, hitting my spots much better.

"I'm going to have to finish the points [in the final] and execute and execute well otherwise I'm going to have no chance."

Norrie will meet either top seed Alcaraz or Nicolas Jarry in the final. Alcaraz will bid to improve his perfect 2023 record to 8-0 when he takes on the Chilean in the day's second semi-final.

Zapata Miralles, who reached his first two ATP Tour semi-finals in consecutive weeks (l. to Alcaraz in Buenos Aires), has guaranteed himself a Top 50 debut. The 26-year-old is up 21 places to No. 42 this week in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings.



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Andy Murray sent classy message by Daniil Medvedev after Brit denied Qatar Open triumph



Andy Murray starred at the Qatar Open and clashed with Daniil Medvedev in Saturday's final.

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Andy Murray losing Qatar Open final to Daniil Medvedev has repercussions for Rafael Nadal



Andy Murray was defeated by Daniil Medvedev in straight sets in the Qatar Open and it could have a wider impact

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Novak Djokovic on Andy Murray collision course and could face Daniil Medvedev test



Novak Djokovic is set to compete in his first tournament since the Australian Open at the Dubai Tennis Championship

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Friday 24 February 2023

Tennis fans split over Novak Djokovic Indian Wells decision after 'disgrace' comments



Novak Djokovic is reportedly set to miss out on playing at Indian Wells due to the entry requirements in place for the United States.

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Doubles Stars Make Their 2023 Preditions

After the ATP singles stars made their 2023 predictions, the world’s best doubles teams sat down to make their picks for the year.

Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury have been a consistent force at the top of the Pepperstone ATP Doubles Team Rankings, but have never finished as the year-end No. 1 duo. However, they were a popular pick to claim the honour in 2023, with Juan Sebastian Cabal/Robert Farah and Nikola Mektic/Mate Pavic among the teams to choose the American-British pair.

“Salisbury and Ram because they have been playing well the past two years,” Farah said.

[BREAK POINT]

When asked to pick which team would win the most ATP Masters 1000 titles, Lloyd Glasspool/Harri Heliovaara and Wesley Koolhof/Neal Skupski were among the teams that jokingly picked themselves before locking in on Mektic and Pavic.

“They have always been a great team, making it to the final at [the] Nitto ATP Finals in Turin [last year],” Koolhof said.

When it came to the breakthrough team of the season, Julian Cash and Henry Patten were a popular pick, with four teams choosing the Brits. Cash and Patten enjoyed a standout 2022, winning 10 ATP Challenger Tour titles.

“They are very good players. They are new on the Tour this year,” Glasspool said.

Koolhof and Skupski won seven tour-level titles last year, but were unable to capture a Grand Slam. Marcelo Arevalo and Jean-Julien Rojer were one of the teams confident the Dutch-British team will achieve that feat in 2023.



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Andy Murray provides reasoning for marathon matches with Zverev and Berrettini named



Andy Murray has won all of his matches in final sets this year, including a run to the Doha semi-final.

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Andy Murray getting closer to goal of 'multiple titles' as he explains Aus Open lift



Andy Murray is through to his first semi-final since June at the Qatar ExxonMobil Open in Doha.

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Thursday 23 February 2023

Emma Raducanu can learn from Carlos Alcaraz after experiencing similar post-US Open slump



Carlos Alcaraz's tale of a tough period after the US Open could serve as inspiration to Emma Raducanu.

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Monterrey, Mexico Hosts ‘High-Quality’ Challenger

The ATP Challenger event in Monterrey, Mexico is not only a fan favourite, but consistently ranks towards the top of players’ lists as well.

Club Sonoma, where the Challenger 125 event is hosted, sits under breathtaking views of the Nuevo León mountains. The tournament has a plethora of off-court activities for fans to enjoy alongside world-class tennis. Next week, there will also be a WTA 250 event at the venue. Autograph sessions and interactive kids clinics are organised throughout the week. A hospitality area is filled with food trucks, vendors and games for fans to enjoy.

Among players’ favourite aspects of the tournament are the views, first-class organisation, and everything that Monterrey has to offer as one of Mexico’s largest cities.

ATP Challenger Tour 

“The Challenger 125s tend to be higher quality and I think this one is special even among those. We have everything here,” World No. 103 Nuno Borges told ATPTour.com. “I really like the views. The hotel and the club have nice views, that was my first impression. The courts are pretty quick too because it’s at altitude.

“I’d like to go for a hike in Monterrey, but it’s not very energy efficient! Hopefully when I’m done with the tournament, I can explore a little bit.”

Past champions at the Abierto GNP Seguros include David Ferrer (2018), Alexander Bublik (2019) and Fernando Verdasco (2022). Now in its eighth edition, the Monterrey Challenger always finds ways to improve.

“It’s one of the best Challengers I’ve played, it might be number one, honestly,” World No. 124 Aleksandar Kovacevic said. “The fans here are unbelievable. I don’t know where they come from. I guess they do a good job of marketing the tournament. It’s amazing, I love it here. The other night against Adrian Mannarino was one of the coolest experiences in tennis and I’ve played in some decent stadiums, so I would say that’s saying something.

Aleksandar Kovacevic greets fans at the 2023 Monterrey Challenger.
Aleksandar Kovacevic greets fans at the 2023 Monterrey Challenger. Credit: Abierto GNP Seguros

“I wouldn’t consider myself in any sense a big shot. Having that many people ask for my autograph is flattering but also a bit confusing. I hope in the future to have more of those moments.”

Mexican doubles players Miguel Angel Reyes-Varela and Hans Hach Verdugo, who saved three match points Thursday to advance to the semi-finals, are aiming to collect the trophy on home soil this weekend. The duo shared that the minute details of the tournament go a long way to leave a strong impression on players.

“It’s special for us to be at home, we look forward to it,” Reyes-Varela said. “I think tournaments in Mexico are very well organised, that’s a common thing you hear from players. Puerto Vallarta and Monterrey have both won Challenger Of The Year before. They try to take care of players.”

“I don’t think many Challengers have the stadium we have here,” Hach Verdugo said. “The amount of courts we have for practice is a lot, like seven practice courts. There’s always people taking care of the players’ lounge and transportation. It’s a great atmosphere. Mexico likes to host and have foreigners. That’s why they’ve won many awards on the Challenger Tour.

“They’ve had a bunch of activities, I heard the players’t party was out of this world but I wasn’t able to attend, I was still in Delray Beach. They want to do things right. Every year is better.”

[NEWSLETTER FORM]



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Cabal/Melo Cruise Into Rio Doubles SFs

Juan Sebastian Cabal and Marcelo Melo dominated the Argentine team of Tomas Martin Etcheverry and Diego Schwartzman on Thursday at the Rio Open presented by Claro. The second seeds earned a 6-1, 6-2 win in the all-South American quarter-final, not allowing a break point in the match.

Home favourite Melo is lone Brazilian remaining in the singles or doubles draw at the ATP 500.

The Colombian-Brazilian duo will meet Frenchmen Sadio Doumbia and Fabien Reboul in the semi-finals after their 7-5, 6-4 win against Americans Nathaniel Lammons and Jackson Withrow.

Fourth seeds Francisco Cabral and Horacio Zeballos also advanced to the last four with a 6-4, 7-6(4) win against Gonzalo Escobar and Tomislav Brkic.

[ATP APP]

Marseille Success For Home Favourites
Three Frenchmen are through to the semi-finals at the Open 13 Provence in Marseille after Thursday wins.

Second seeds Nicolas Mahut and Fabrice Martin progressed with a 6-3, 6-4 result against Jonathan Eysseric and Denys Molchanov, while Edouard Roger-Vasselin and Mexican Santiago Gonzalez — the top seeds at the ATP 250 — scored a 6-2, 6-4 victory against Luca Sanchez and Petros Tsitsipas. Neither team has lost a set in their two Marseille matches.

Mahut/Martin will face N.Sriram Balaji and Jeevan Nedunchezhiyan after their 3-6, 7-6(4), 13-11 win against Dustin Brown and Aisam-Ul-Haq Qureshi. After leading 9/6 in the Match Tie-break, the Indian duo erased a match point at 10/11 before clinching victory on their fifth chance.

Gonazlez/Roger-Vasselin will meet Romain Arneodo and Sam Weissborn, who received a walkover in the quarters.

Doha Final Set
Third seeds Rohan Bopanna and Matthew Ebden will meet Constant Lestienne and Botic van de Zandschulp in the Qatar ExxonMobil Open final after both teams advanced on Thursday at the ATP 250.

Bopanna/Ebden were 6-4, 6-3 winners against Britons Daniel Evans Jonny O'Mara, while Lestinne/van de Zandschulp edged the Finnish pair of Patrik Niklas-Salminen and Emil Ruusuvuori 6-3, 5-7, 10-8 by winning the final two points of a neck-and-neck Match Tie-break.

The final will open Friday's play on centre court at 3:30 p.m. local time.



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Marathon Murray's Roller Coaster Matches In 2023

For a 35-year-old with a metal hip, Andy Murray has spent quite a bit of time on court this season: more than 20 hours across his past six matches, to be exact. Given his age and recent injury struggles, it might be assumed that those marathon matches would favour his opponents. The reality is the opposite, far from the first time the Briton has proven conventional wisdom wrong.

Murray has notched five ATP Tour victories this year. Each one of them was won in a deciding set.

"The last couple of years I lost quite a lot of close matches, and it's something I spoke to my team about last year," Murray said this week in Doha, where he has won three three-setters to advance to his 102nd tour-level semi-final. "I think the work I did in the offseason on my game, physically has given me a bit more belief in those moments.

"I think when you're in better shape, when you start to fatigue, it helps you make better decisions. If you're struggling quite a bit physically towards the end of matches and in those important moments, it makes you maybe try and shorten the points, or play a different way, which doesn't give you the best chance of wining. I feel like that improvement physically has helped in those moments."

After a pair of marathon five-setters at the Australian Open, Murray has continued his penchant for long-running matches this week at the Qatar ExxonMobil Open in Doha. The 35-year-old's most recent win came on Thursday, a 4-6, 6-1, 6-2 comeback against Alexandre Muller in the quarter-finals of the ATP 250. Clocking in at two hours and four minutes, that match wrapped up the blink of an eye compared to Murray's other recent exploits.

The former World No. 1 opened his Doha campaign Monday by saving three match points in another come-from-behind effort, a 4-6, 6-1, 7-6(4) win against Lorenzo Sonego that required two hours, 30 minutes. On Wednesday, he was on the court for more than three hours in a 7-6(5), 2-6, 7-5 upset of Alexander Zverev. While he did not have to save a match point in that second-round contest, he was twice two points from defeat as he served to stay in the match at 4-5 in the third.

"Obviously I would like to win the matches quicker," Murray said after defeating the fourth-seeded German. His mother, Judy Murray, chimed in on Twitter earlier in the week: "A straight-sets win once in a while would be nice. 🎢" she wrote.

But as long as he's winning, neither will mind too much. No doubt Murray is taking confidence from his ability to back up one gruelling victory with another, just as he did at the Aussie Open last month.

[ATP APP]

The word "epic" is perhaps too freely thrown around to describe many tennis matches, but Murray's two Melbourne wins define the term.

Facing 13th seed and returning AO semi-finalist Matteo Berrettini in the first round, Murray earned his first Top 20 victory at a Grand Slam in more than five years with a 6-3, 6-3, 4-6, 6-7(7), 7-6(10-6) result. Match time: four hours, 49 minutes.

“I’ll be feeling this this evening and tomorrow, but right now I’m just unbelievably happy, very proud of myself," Murray said after the instant classic, in which he saved a match point at 4-5 in the fifth before clinching victory with a friendly net cord in the decisive tie-break.

He flirted with the five-hour mark again in the second round, staging an inspired comeback to knock off home favourite Thanasi Kokkinakis 4-6, 6-7(4), 7-6(5), 6-3, 7-5 after four hours, 45 minutes. In his record 11th comeback from two sets down, Murray withstood 102 winners, including 37 aces, from the Aussie. Murray's Melbourne run was ultimately ended by Roberto Bautista Agut, but not until another three hours, 29 minutes of drama unfolded.

On Friday in Doha, Murray will seek that elusive straight-sets win against AO quarter-finalist Jiri Lehecka. The good news for the Briton: at the very most, he only has six more sets to play this week.



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Medvedev Survives O'Connell Scare In Doha

Daniil Medvedev extended his winning streak to seven matches Thursday when he clawed past Christopher O’Connell 6-2, 4-6, 7-5 to reach the semi-finals at the Qatar ExxonMobil Open in Doha.

With his one-hour, 55-minute victory, Medvedev has improved to 2-0 in his ATP Head2Head series against O’Connell. The 27-year-old will continue the quest for his 17th tour-level title when he plays second seed Felix Auger-Aliassime or seventh seed Alejandro Davidovich Fokina in the last four.

"At 5-5 in the third, you have a last chance to break him and then serve for the match. I managed to play quite a good game," Medvedev said. "He missed a few shots that he didn't miss before. It was an important moment in the match and that made me win today."

The third seed was zoned in during the first set, striking with consistency to outlast the Australian in the baseline exchanges to move ahead. Medvedev suffered a dip in the second set, though, as O'Connell started to close the net effectively to push his opponent into errors and force a decider. However, Medvedev remained calm and increased his level deep in the third set, gaining the crucial break in the 11th game before holding serve to advance.

"Everything depends on small moments," Medvedev said. "Sometimes confidence, sometimes pure luck. I have lost close matches in my life and won some. I am trying to use my experience to make it better. I am happy it worked today."

Medvedev arrived at the ATP 250 event in red-hot form, having captured the crown in Rotterdam. His victory in the Netherlands moved him back inside the Top 10 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings. The World No. 8, who is 12-2 on the season, is making his debut in Doha. He defeated Liam Broady in straight sets in his opening match.

O’Connell was aiming to reach his second tour-level semi-final, having advanced to that stage in San Diego last season.



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Wednesday 22 February 2023

‘Going Up Together’, Watanuki Rises With Brother By His Side

Yosuke Watanuki has enjoyed a strong start to the year following a career-best season on the ATP Challenger Tour. The Japanese player is doing it all with his brother by his side.

The 24-year-old, who is competing at this week’s Monterrey Challenger, is coached by his brother Keisuke, who is roughly five years older. Yosuke, World No. 130 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings, claims they are a dynamic duo.

“I think it works for me and makes us stronger,” Watanuki said. “He cares about me so much. Sometimes people think it's not good enough because he wasn't a top player before, he's young, or because he hasn’t coached a Top-50 player. But we are going up together, it's good for us. He can hit and he's good with the mental side of the game. I think that's really good for me. Sometimes we fight, like brothers do!”

ATP Challenger Tour 

Watanuki has consistently kept his coach's corner within the family. Before Keisuke came on board, the eldest of the three brothers, Yusuke, was his full-time coach until about three years ago.

After a strong finish to 2022, Watanuki isn’t selling himself short for what he can achieve this year. The former junior World No. 2 has his eyes set on climbing into the Top 100 and beyond to have a shot at fulfilling a childhood dream.

“My goal for this year is Top 80,” Watanuki said. “Because next year is the [Paris] Olympics, I really want to play there. It's my dream. And Top 80 will give me a chance to play the Olympic games next year.”

Watanuki’s late-season surge in 2022 wasn’t without challenges. Three games into his first-round match at the ATP 250 in Seoul, the Japanese star rolled his ankle and was forced to retire against Jaume Munar. Watanuki then forfeited his wild card at the ATP 500 event in Tokyo, which would’ve been his first tour-level event on home soil since 2018, when he advanced through qualifying en route to his maiden tour-level main-draw victory (d. Haase).

Yosuke Watanuki in action at the 2023 Canberra Challenger.
Yosuke Watanuki in action at the 2023 Canberra Challenger. Credit: Anastasia Kachalkova

After recovering from the ankle injury, Watanuki went on a hot streak. He won 14 of 15 Challenger-level matches to close the season, including back-to-back titles at the Kobe and Yokkaichi Challengers. The first week of the Asian Challenger swing, Watanuki was a finalist in Yokohama, Japan, before winning 10 consecutive matches.

“I was playing well those three weeks,” Watanuki said. “I was coming back from injury, I hadn't played that well the first half of the year, and my ranking had dropped. But I tried to play my best and I was surprised to be in the Yokohama final. Then I went to Kobe, lovely place, I won my first Challenger title there (2019). The first week, Yokohama, I was so happy. The second one I was more surprised [to be in another final].”

This year, Watanuki was a semi-finalist at the season-opening Canberra Challenger, where he lost to eventual champion Marton Fucsovics. Watanuki built upon his momentum to qualify for his maiden Grand Slam at the 2023 Australian Open.

“When I got into the main draw, I was so happy because I tried to qualify for a Grand Slam seven times before,” Watanuki said. “I had made the final round of qualifying two times and lost both. I was a little bit nervous this time because I wanted to make a Grand Slam this year for sure. When I won the final round of qualifying, I was so happy. The first match, I was so excited to play.”

Watanuki earned a straight-sets victory over Frenchman Arthur Rinderknech in the opening round before falling to eventual quarter-finalist Sebastian Korda.

Yosuke Watanuki made his Grand Slam debut as a qualifier at the 2023 Australian Open.
Yosuke Watanuki made his Grand Slam debut as a qualifier at the 2023 Australian Open. Credit: Martin Keep/Getty Images

The Saitama native is the third highest-ranked Japanese male, only behind Yoshihito Nishioka and Taro Daniel. Watanuki draws inspiration from former World No. 4 and countryman Kei Nishikori, who was a finalist at the 2014 US Open and earned the bronze medal at the 2016 Rio Olympic games.

Watanuki shared that he admires what Nishikori has accomplished and how he’s carried the torch for Japanese tennis the past decade. Nishikori, who has been plagued with injuries, has not competed since October 2021. The 12-time tour titlist has even offered advice to Watanuki.

“Kei made history,” Watanuki said. “A Japanese guy to be World No. 4, that's good for [other Japanese players] because we think, 'We can be there because another Japanese player is there!' Also, Naomi [Osaka] winning four Grand Slams. They give me so much power like, 'I can be there!'

[ATP APP]

“Also, Kei told me some things technically and mentally. It's not easy to get advice from a Top-4 player, but that is so good for me.”

Life on the Challenger Tour isn’t easy. With constant traveling and pressure mounting as players aim for their professional breakthrough, Watanuki has a unique escape from tennis.

“When I stay in Japan, I love to drive my car after midnight, late-night drives!” Watanuki said. “Tennis can be so stressful, so much pressure. When I drive in that moment, it's like I feel nothing. It’s relaxing.”

[NEWSLETTER FORM]



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Thomaz Bellucci Says Goodbye To Tennis: 'It’s A Beautiful Time Of Transition'

Editor's note: This article was translated from ATPTour.com/es.

Life after tennis is not something that worries Thomaz Bellucci, who played his last ATP Tour match on Wednesday at the Rio Open presented by Claro. However, the clarity he now feels over his future is in stark contrast to the concern he felt at 16 and 17 years old, when he was close to an early retirement from the professional game. A left-knee injury sidelined him for almost a year and he was close to never coming back.

Back then, when he was a mere blip on the Pepperstone ATP Rankings, it took him six months to recover from surgery, followed by a long period of uncertainty. He started to read books on economy and thought about dedicating his time to his studies.

“I was in a lot of doubt,” Bellucci recalled to ATPTour.com. “I didn’t know if the best thing was to continue in tennis. I wanted to have fun doing other things.”

[ATP APP]

Any thoughts of another vocation clashed with two strong forces in his life: the love of a sport that he learned at the age of three, playing with his parents in Tiete, Sao Paulo; and the dream of becoming a professional tennis player. It was a dream that, incidentally, was born in the 90s as he watched his countryman Gustavo Kuerten, former World No. 1 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings.

“When 'Guga' won Roland Garros in 1997, I was just a boy. I was nine years old,” Bellucci said. “When I saw him on television, I said, ‘If he can do it, as a Brazilian, I think someday I can be at the big tournaments too’. 'Guga' made me think that getting there, although it seemed very difficult, was more of a possibility. He has helped convince a lot of us Brazilians that you can dream despite all the difficulties.”

His love for tennis and the dream inspired by ‘Guga’ would be hard to let go of at 17 when he was considering a life away from the sport.

“I didn’t want to have regrets in the future. I had to try a little more,” Bellucci said. “I thought, ‘I’m going to recover and go back and try again, but if in two years I haven’t played well, I’ll retire.’ That’s what I did, and at 19 I was already among the Top 200. I made a good choice. That moment taught me perseverance and to always be strong.”

His decision laid the foundations for a brilliant career. In 2010, as World No. 21, he became the second-highest ranked Brazilian man ever, only behind his hero Kuerten. Bellucci reached eight ATP Tour finals, winning four of them, all on clay: Gstaad (2009, 2012), Santiago (2010), and Geneva (2015). He also amassed 200 tour-level wins, two of which came against Top-5 opponents: World No. 4 Andy Murray in Madrid in 2011, and No. 5 Kei Nishikori in Rio in 2017.

“The best spell of my career was between 2010 and 2011. I played better in the big tournaments,” Bellucci said.

His best result in the Grand Slams was a fourth-round appearance at Roland Garros in 2010. The lefty also was a semi-finalist at the ATP Masters 1000 event in Madrid in 2011. “At that time I was thinking less, I had fewer worries, I was playing freely and I didn’t have so much pressure. Afterwards I started to think a little more, to doubt myself,” Bellucci said.

However, giving up was never an option, and he never hesitated to ask for help at the most difficult times of his career.

Thomaz Bellucci at the 2011 Mutua Madrid Open, where he was a semi-finalist.
Thomaz Bellucci at the 2011 Mutua Madrid Open, where he was a semi-finalist. Credit: Julian Finney/Getty Images

“I was always accompanied by psychologists who helped me improve my decision making on and off the court,” Bellucci said. “It wasn’t easy to find the balance between personal and professional in a sport like tennis. That’s why you see so many players with problems with depression, they’re not well even though they have money and results. To me, the main thing was looking after myself, being mentally healthy and being happy.”

He didn’t always manage it, though. “I often felt depressed. It happens to a lot of players because there is a lot of pressure and expectation,” Bellucci said. However, he always found the strength to overcome adversity and to face any criticism that came his way. “With time you realise that the most important thing is not what people think of you. There are people who won’t value you. The most important thing is not the approval of others, it’s being happy on court.”

His determination coloured his career as a tennis player. He gave his all to continue playing, but multiple injuries have gradually pulled him away from competition over the last three years. Two new issues early in 2023 confirmed that it was time for him to hang up his racket. The end of the road came on Wednesday, in front of his home fans, when he lost to Sebastian Baez in the first round of one of his favourite tournaments.

“It’s the right time,” Bellucci said, not without a hint of nostalgia in his voice, but also with the peace of mind of someone who is ending a chapter of their life having given their all. “I feel happy and a little bit sad too. Tennis was in my life for many years, it’s not easy to stop playing. But I’ve enjoyed myself so much, and my body is now feeling the years and the sacrifices I’ve made. It’s time to do something else, experience new things.”

Bellucci has no doubt that he wants to stay in the world of tennis, perhaps as a coach. “I want to try and pass on my experience, develop players, have a place here in Brazil to teach. I think I have a lot of things to show the kids,” Bellucci said. “It’s a beautiful time of transition, of change in my life.”

[NEWSLETTER FORM]



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Andy Murray beats Alexander Zverev in Doha three-set thriller to reach quarter-finals



Andy Murray defeated Alexander Zverev in an entertaining clash at the Qatar ExxonMobil Open.

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Novak Djokovic shares why he's still at 'the highest level' after matching Steffi Graf



The Serbian shared an insight into the mindset of an elite athlete after equalling a long-standing tennis record this week.

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#NextGenATP Frenchman Fils Books Sinner Rematch In Marseille

Arthur Fils continued his red-hot form in France with another victory in his home nation Wednesday at the Open 13 Provence. After a run to the final of a Quimper ATP Challenger Tour event in January and the semis of the ATP 250 in Montpellier earlier this month, the 18-year-old wild card is off the mark this week in Marseille.

Fils opened his campaign with a power-packed 6-4, 6-3 win against Roman Safiullin, setting a rematch with Jannik Sinner less than two weeks after the Italian beat him in the Montpellier semis.

"I did a great match. I was really focused on every point, I served pretty good," said the Frenchman. "I just had one break point against me, but it was a good match and I'm happy about it."

Fils did not face a break point against Safiullin until he was serving at 4-3 in the second set. Facing ad-out, he won six points in a row to set up triple match point on return, ultimately sealing the win on his second chance.

Fils fired six aces in the one-hour, 25-minute match and won 82 per cent (27/33) of his first-serve points. His brutal ball-striking throughout kept Safiullin on the back foot and thrilled the centre court crowd, which joined him in his celebrations following the victory.

After starting the 2023 season outside the Top 250, Fils is now up to No. 116 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings, potentially two wins away from a spot in the Top 100. He will next face the second-seeded Sinner, looking for revenge after the Italian's 7-5, 6-2 win in Montpellier. Sinner went on to win that event, where he was also the second seed.

[ATP APP]

Benjamin Bonzi made it two French winners on Wednesday with a 6-7(5), 6-4, 6-3 victory against fifth seed Maxime Cressy. Bonzi advanced to the quarter-finals with that result, joining Alexander Bublik, a 6-4, 6-2 winner against France's Gregoire Barrere.

In first-round action, Michael Ymer downed Radu Albot 6-3, 7-6(5). He will next meet sixth seed David Goffin.



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Nick Kyrgios rejects McEnroe, Agassi and Sampras and labels Djokovic better than Federer



Nick Kyrgios gave a brutal verdict on some tennis legends while comparing Novak Djokovic to Roger Federer

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Tuesday 21 February 2023

Game-Changer Tiafoe’s ‘Scary’ Tennis Dreams

Frances Tiafoe was a natural fit for Netflix’s Break Point. Both the man and the docuseries share two major goals: entertain tennis fans and attract new fans to the sport.

Tiafoe is especially excited to see more diversity among tennis spectators.

“It’s cool to see more people of colour in the stands watching and becoming tennis fans,” he told the ATP Tour in a recent interview. “They don’t even know how to keep score but they're just so into it because I’m playing. 

“That’s cool... you're changing the game. That’s what I want, non-tennis fans to watch the game because Frances Tiafoe’s playing, to show young kids anything is possible.”

The 25-year-old hit his first tennis balls as a young kid, famously playing at the Maryland tennis club where his father — who helped build the facility — worked as a janitor.

“I was about three years old when I started playing tennis. Three, four years old,” he said. “Both my parents being very hard workers, very dedicated, very passionate… that kind of instilled a certain drive in me to pursue the game of tennis once that opportunity was given.

“From a young age I knew this is what I really wanted to do, and it’s scary... but you’ve got to dream big. My parents always told me your dreams have got to be so big you’re afraid of them.”

[BREAK POINT]

Tiafoe’s rise to his career-high No. 15 Pepperstone ATP Ranking has included a run to the 2022 US Open semi-finals and a title triumph with Team United States at the inaugural United Cup in January. Such heady moments are a reward for his drive to push through the difficult times.

In his toughest moments, Tiafoe centres himself with a very simple question: “What I always go back to is, 'Well, what would be the alternative?' 

“You’ve got to go through some type of adversity to do anything successful.”

[NEWSLETTER FORM]



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Haase/Middelkoop Bounce Back With Doha Win

Fourth seeds Robin Haase and Matwe Middelkoop made amends for an early exit last week in Rotterdam with a dominant win on Tuesday at the Qatar ExxonMobil Open in Doha. The Dutch duo defeated Malek Jaziri and Mubarak Shannan Zayid 6-4, 6-2 to advance to the quarter-finals at the ATP 250.

Haase/Middelkoop did not face a break point in the contest, winning more than 80 per cent of points on both first and second serve. They generated 12 break opportunities on return, converting on three of them. 

The five-time tour-level champions, whose most recent trophy came earlier this month in Montpellier, will face Constant Lestienne and Botic van de Zandschulp in Wednesday's quarter-finals. The French-Dutch duo defeated Raven Klaasen and Hunter Reese 6-3, 3-6, 10-7 on Tuesday.

Doha third seeds Matthew Ebden and Rohan Bopanna also advanced with a 5-7, 6-1, 10-3 win against Liam Broady and Alexander Zverev.

[ATP APP]

Third Seeds Upset In Marseille
The Indian team of N.Sriram Balaji and Jeevan Nedunchezhiyan knocked off third-seeded Belgians Sander Gille and Joran Vliegen 7-5, 5-7, 10-7 on Tuesday to advance to the quarter-finals at the Open 13 Provence.

They will next meet Dustin Brown and Aisam-Ul-Haq Qureshi, who edged Philipp Oswald and Szymon Walkow 4-6, 6-3, 10-8. Rounding out Tuesday's doubles action in Marseille, Frenchman Jonathan Eysseric and Ukrainian Denys Molchanov defeated the French team of Arthur Fils and Luca Van Assche 3-6, 7-5, 10-4.

Cabral/Zeballos Advance In Rainy Rio
Only one doubles match was completed on Tuesday at the Rio Open presented by Claro, as fourth seeds Francisco Cabral and Horacio Zeballos beat Pedro Martinez and Dominic Thiem 6-3, 6-4.

Brazilians Felipe Meligeni Alves and Felipe Meligeni Alves won a 6-1 opening set against Tomislav Brkic and Gonzalo Escobar before rain ended the day's play.



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Alcaraz Saves Ball Kid From Rain In Rio Again

When the Rio Open presented by Claro was hit with heavy rain on Tuesday evening, Carlos Alcaraz quickly saved a ball kid from a soaking.

With the top-seeded Spaniard leading Brazilian Mateus Alves 6-4, 5-3, play was suspended due to rain. After taking shelter under cover, Alcaraz called over a stranded ball kid, who quickly took the opportunity to join him.

It is not the first time Alcaraz has helped the ball kids stay dry at the ATP 500 event, having ushered them under cover during his match against Federico Delbonis last year. The 19-year-old will be hoping his rain heroics is a sign of history repeating itself in Rio, after he went on to win the title at the clay-court event in 2022.

Following the suspension of play, Alcaraz will return to court on Wednesday when he will aim to seal victory against Alves and book a second-round meeting against Fabio Fognini or Chilean qualifier Tomas Barrios Vera.



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Hot As Arizona! Phoenix Challenger Draws Star-Studded Field

Phoenix, Arizona is known to be scorching hot. And next month, the ATP Challenger Tour will bring the heat to the Arizona Tennis Classic, the first event of the newly created Challenger 175 category.

Six Top-50 players are set to play the Phoenix Challenger, which begins March 13. Main-draw action will kick off following the third round of the BNP Paribas Masters in Indian Wells. Several high-ranked players who lose early at the ATP Masters 1000 event are expected to play in Phoenix before continuing onto Miami to complete the ‘Sunshine Double’.

Players who will compete in Phoenix unless they are still alive in the Indian Wells draw, include Botic Van de Zandschulp, Sebastian Baez, Richard Gasquet, Jack Draper, Marc-Andrea Huesler, and Alexander Bublik.

ATP Challenger Tour 

Van de Zandschulp, World No. 34, is the highest-ranked player in the Phoenix field. In 2022, the Dutchman earned a career-best 38 tour-level wins, including victories over Cameron Norrie, Taylor Fritz, and Bublik to help his home country qualify for the Davis Cup Finals knock-out stage. 

Nobody finished 2022 with a better winning percentage on the Challenger Tour this past season than Great Britain’s Draper. The 21-year-old boasted a 24-4 Challenger match-winning record in and collected a season-leading four Challenger titles (tied w/ Pedro Cachin, who will also be in Phoenix): Forli-2, Forli-4, Forli-5, and Saint-Brieuc. The lefty, who has since reached the semi-finals of two ATP 250 events (Eastbourne & Adelaide-2), will return to the Challenger circuit in Arizona.

Jiri Lehecka, who was a quarter-finalist at the 2023 Australian Open, will also compete in Arizona. A three-time Challenger titlist, the Czech was a finalist at the 2022 Next Gen ATP Finals, which showcases the world’s best 21-and-under players.

Chinese star and World No. 61 Wu Yibing, who won the 2023 Dallas Open, will also be in action at the outdoor hard-court event. The 23-year-old won a trio of Challenger titles in 2022 before becoming the first tour-level titlist from China.

Did You Know?
Phoenix Challenger entrants Benjamin Bonzi and Sebastian Baez each claimed six Challenger titles in 2021. Only Tallon Griekspoor has collected more Challenger titles in a single season (eight, 2021).



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Fritz Set To Become First Top 5 American Since Roddick

Taylor Fritz is not competing this week on the ATP Tour after compiling a 6-1 record over the past two weeks on home soil. Fritz followed a Dallas semi-final run with a title triumph in Delray Beach last week, claiming his fifth tour-level trophy and his fourth in the past 12 months.

While he is not in action on the court, Fritz is winning big this week in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings. The American is up two places to No. 5 after Andrey Rublev and Rafael Nadal each dropped 500 points at the start of the week. The best part for Fritz: He is guaranteed to remain at No. 5 for next Monday's edition of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings, when he will officially join that elite group for the first time and achieve a new career high.

Fritz will become the first American to be ranked inside the Top 5 since Andy Roddick in September 2009.

[BREAK POINT]

Fritz spoke of keeping a "Top 10 mentality" after he reached that milestone last October behind his Tokyo title run. Now the 25-year-old has hit even greater heights.

The American's 2022 Indian Wells triumph in his native Southern California is the biggest factor in his year-long rise, with 1,000 Pepperstone ATP Rankings points added to his tally for his first ATP Masters 1000 title. Fritz's milestone moment was chronicled in Netflix's Break Point.

His Tokyo triumph earned him 500 of his 3,660 total points, while four United Cup singles wins added 350 additional points, his efforts helping lead Team United States to the title at the inaugural mixed-gender event.

Fritz is one of 11 Americans in the Top 50 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings, with World No. 15 and United Cup teammate Frances Tiafoe joining him in the Top 20. It is the first time since May 1995 that the United States has that many men inside the Top 50.

Australian Open semi-finalist Tommy Paul is the No. 3 American at World No. 21, while AO quarter-finalist Sebastian Korda stands at No. 26. All four of the Top 30 Americans are idle this week.

Fritz will next take the court in Acapulco, where he made the last 16 last year. Following that, he will return to Indian Wells as the reigning champion with 1,000 points to defend.



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Serena Williams causes social media stir as American tennis icon teases return



The American waved an emotional goodbye after losing in the third round of the US Open to Ajla Tomljanovic last year.

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Monday 20 February 2023

Carnivals & Helicopter Rides; Alcaraz, Musetti & Thiem Explore Rio

With Rio de Janeiro hosting an ATP 500 this week, some of the sport’s biggest stars have transcended on the Brazilian city. Carlos Alcaraz, Lorenzo Musetti and Dominic Thiem are all competing and they wasted little time taking in the sounds and the sights of Rio.

Top seed Alcaraz enjoyed a helicopter tour, snapping photos of Christ the Redeemer, an iconic statue that is a symbol of Christianity around the world. The Spaniard, who will begin his title defence at the Rio Open presented by Claro against Brazilian Mateus Alves on Tuesday, then went to Sugar Loaf where he took the cable car.

“The moment in the helicopter was spectacular,” said Alcaraz, who triumphed in Buenos Aires last week. “It was the first time that I had flown in a helicopter. I was a little bit scared at the beginning, but it passed really fast. To live everything from the top is incredible.

“To see the Redeemer from the helicopter was marvellous. In the past, I said it would be great to see that from the sky and it exceeded my expectations.”

The 2017 champion Dominic Thiem attended the Rio Carnival alongside Rafael Matos and David Vega Hernandez. The trio danced to music and watched those in costume parade through the streets.

“Everybody around the world knows the Rio Carnival. It's going to be a unique experience, and I'm looking forward to it,” Thiem said when arriving. “The stadium is full already, so let's see how it is going to be.”

“It's a unique experience,” Brazilian Matos said. “I used to watch it on TV, and to be able to live this is incredible. We will enjoy today and then we will focus on the tournament.”

Italian Lorenzo Musetti opted for a more relaxed day, spending time on the beach.



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The Cerundolo Family Dream

Francisco Cerundolo lives five blocks from the Buenos Aires Lawn Tennis Club. If he wanted to, he could walk there every day, and he often does in order to avoid the traffic. The same is true of his parents Alejandro and Maria Luz, whose roof he shares alongside his siblings Juan Manuel Cerundolo and Constanza.

It has always been that way for the Cerundolo family, which lives and breathes tennis. The eldest of the Cerundolo siblings has never known any different. Francisco is now the highest-ranked Argentine in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings at No. 33.

The Cerundolo family simply lives for tennis. For them, life without racquets and balls is unimaginable.

“Our house is a locker room,” Alejandro Cerundolo told ATPTour.com. “We talk about sport, tennis, all day. As parents, we never pushed them to be athletes, or forced them to be good. We brought them up with a sporting foundation and each of them went their own way. Today that makes us very proud.”

The 64-year-old Alejandro is a former pro who nearly cracked the world’s Top 300, and he has been a coach and mentor to many Argentines.

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The lady of the house, Maria Luz, plays a fundamental role. She is also a tennis player, a qualified psychologist with post-graduate studies in sports psychology, and she travels around the world with her children whenever she can. Two tennis players and an international hockey star, they each have their own personality, and Mother Cerundolo is charged with keeping their feet on the ground and bringing harmony to their home.

The Cerundolo parents always prevented their children from leaving school to spend more time practising.

“It wasn’t easy, Fran was the most resistant. But now they understand why — they are intelligent kids... Juanma was always the keenest on tennis, on training. And Fran, as well as now being in the Top [35], a few years ago he did a semester in the USA, at the University of South Carolina. Now he’s just a few [credits] short of a degree in Economics and Finance,” Alejandro explained of Francisco, who studies remotely at the University of Palermo, which has an agreement with the ATP Tour.

Francisco said: “I always went to school and trained many hours less than everyone... and that gave me an advantage over my opponents at 14, 15 years old. Nobody had picked me out as someone who could make it and be good.

“I was ‘bad’, but when I finished school at 18, I could start training. I grew taller and always maintained my approach to tennis: I wasn’t going to run and play in the air, that didn’t work for me, I played by hitting it hard and flat. But the most important thing was believing in myself.”

Francisco’s progression was more leisurely than his brother Juan Manuel’s. The younger Cerundolo always excelled from a very young age, winning the Junior Orange Bowl in the Under-12s, and even broke onto the Tour by winning the Cordoba Open at just 19.

“When we were little, I would go all over the club with Juanma, down the corridors, playing tennis all day, especially in the summer, in the pool, drinking milkshakes, but always spending a lot of time on the tennis courts,” Francisco said. “We always followed the same path, each in our own category, but he would win and I would lose, and I was always knocked out of the tournament first.

“As the years have gone by, tennis has changed in my life, and I learned to travel, to play tournaments, and going away and coming home to Argentina always gave me an energy boost.”

Was there any point where he believed he might be living the life he has now? “When you get to the ‘top’ and you’re rubbing elbows with the best, you always remember the things you went through, every stage. Now it’s a dream life, luxuries, fans, huge stadiums, but I’ve always had my feet on the ground and I haven’t changed. Luckily I always believed my moment would arrive and finally it did,” said Francisco, who last year won the Bastad title to join Juan Manuel as the first Argentine brothers to win ATP Tour singles titles.

“When he won the tournament in Cordoba in 2021, and I made the next final in Buenos Aires, both at the same time, it was amazing for both of us... That’s when I think we were convinced we were ready for the Tour,” Francisco said.

According to Francisco, his younger brother taught him to be “more professional”.

“He always wanted to do everything perfectly, ever since he was very small, and I learned a lot, from nutrition to how to train better,” Francisco said. “When I was young I found it difficult, I was pretty lazy and I learned to be disciplined from him. Now I see it in my daily work.

[BREAK POINT]

Juan Manuel added: “The best thing about Fran, as a person and a player, is how simple and relaxed he is... As much as he’s No. 33 in the world, he is still the same and he doesn’t have the airs or graces of a star, and that allows him to keep improving. It’s like a mirror for me: I was always more structured and he showed me how to enjoy myself and not stress in certain moments.

“The best moment together was at the ATP Masters 1000 in Miami, I am certain… He made the semi-finals and I got to the third round. At a tournament of that magnitude, it was incredible the matches we both won, and also that we were on the U.S. swing together. And it finished in amazing fashion.”

As if it were written in the stars, Francisco became Argentina’s No. 1 player on 13 February thanks to the fact that his brother Juan Manuel beat Diego Schwartzman in the second round of the Cordoba Open. “We’d spoken about it and I told him I’d help him,” Juan Manuel recalled with a smile. Schwartzman had nothing but praise for the brothers.

“I’m a few years older than them but it’s great that players are still coming through and, above all, that they’re two brothers,” Schwartzman said. “I would be lying if I told you I was glad he overtook me, as much as we have a great relationship. But because I’m competitive, now I’m going to want to overtake him again.

”I can show you thousands of conversations with Juanma. About racquets, strings, game patterns, anything you can think of... and in Cordoba he beat me and that meant Fran overtook me. But that’s tennis, and they are doing things right to get to where they are and to have a really bright future ahead.”

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Do the Cerundolos set joint goals?

“It’s what we always dream of, being together on Tour. We hope we can do that at the end of the year, because that would mean me being in the Top 100 and hopefully in the coming years we’ll both continue to climb,” Juan Manuel said.

Francisco said: “I think Juanma is doing great. Last year, he had lots of injuries. He loves sport, tennis, and he couldn’t play, but he did well. I think he was stronger, hitting it well, and since coming back he’s won four Challengers. Hopefully he will be back on Tour again soon.”

The Cerundolo Brothers continue to rise. They have their ups and downs, but they are always pushing one another, and their family are alongside them every step of the way.



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Kokkinakis Collects Manama Challenger Crown; Finalist Shelbayh Makes History

A memorable week on the ATP Challenger Tour week saw Thanasi Kokkinakis win his first Challenger title since May 2021 and fellow-Aussie Max Purcell rally to win the Chennai Challenger. Italian Giulio Zeppieri also triumphed at the Challenger 75 event in Cherbourg.

In the Manama Challenger 125 final, Kokkinakis ended the dream run of 19-year-old Abedallah Shelbayh, who was playing in just his third Challenger event. The Australian, who is a five-time Challenger champion, downed Shelbayh 6-1, 6-4 to capture the Bahrain Ministry of Interior Tennis Challenger. However, the teen still left Bahrain with a piece of history.

The Manama crown marks Kokkinakis’ first Challenger triumph since his title in Biella, Italy almost two years ago. The 26-year-old, who is featured in the Netflix series Break Point, returns to the Top 100 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings, which he briefly fell out of this past month when he was unable to defend his Adelaide International 2 crown.

ATP Challenger Tour 

Despite the final loss, Shelbayh became the first player from Jordan and the youngest Arab to reach a Challenger final. In the quarter-final, the Amman native upset top seed Jason Kubler. Shelbayh graduated from the Rafa Nadal Academy in 2021 before playing college tennis at the University of Florida. Following his freshman year, Shelbayh turned pro. The Manama finalist climbs to a career-high 276 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings.

At the Challenger Cherbourg La Manche, which was celebrating its 30th anniversary, Giulio Zeppieri earned his second Challenger title. The 21-year-old Italian, who is building upon his momentum from his career-best season, defeated Titouan Droguet 7-5, 7-6(4) in the championship match.

In 2022, Zeppieri earned his maiden tour-level victory in Umag, where he rallied from a set down to defeat Argentine Pedro Cachin. The Rome native also made his Grand Slam debut as a qualifier at Roland Garros, where he defeated Andreas Seppi in qualifying to snap his countryman’s streak of 66 consecutive Grand Slam main-draw appearances.

Giulio Zeppieri at the 2023 Cherbourg Challenger.
Giulio Zeppieri at the 2023 Cherbourg Challenger. Credit: Challenger Cherbourg La Manche

Droguet, 21, advanced through qualifying and was playing in his first Challenger final. The Frenchman rises to a career-high 247 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings.

At the Chennai Open, Max Purcell saved two match points to defeat Nicolas Moreno De Alboran 5-7, 7-6(2), 6-4. After three hours, seven minutes, the Australian became the second Challenger titlist to save a championship point this year (Raul Brancaccio, Noumea).

Max Purcell is crowned champion in Chennai, India.
Max Purcell is crowned champion in Chennai, India. Credit: Suman Chattopadhyay

Following the title in India, the Sydney native climbs to a career-high 155. In 2022, the 24-year-old teamed with countryman Matthew Ebden to win two tour-level doubles titles, including at Wimbledon. A three-time Challenger titlist, Purcell paired with Luke Saville in 2019 to win seven Challenger doubles titles.

Moreno de Alboran, who served for the match at 5-4 in the second set, is following up his career-best season. The American triumphed at the 2022 Braga Challenger, where he advanced through qualifying en route to his maiden Challenger title.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]



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