Friday, 31 March 2023

Sinner Storms Back To Beat Alcaraz In Miami SF, Ending Spaniard's No. 1 Reign

Jannik Sinner roared back in his budding rivalry with Carlos Alcaraz with a statement semi-final win on Friday night at the Miami Open presented by Itau. The Italian's 6-7(4), 6-4, 6-2 victory will end Alcaraz's reign atop the Pepperstone ATP Rankings, with Novak Djokovic set to take over as World No. 1 on Monday.

"It means a lot. We both played a very, very high level of tennis again. I just tried my best," Sinner said after advancing to his second ATP Masters 1000 final, both in Miami. "In the third set I saw him struggle a little bit for a couple of games so I tried to push there... We both tried to play very aggressive tennis and today it went my way so I'm very happy."

Despite leading early in all three sets, Sinner was on the brink of defeat as he stared down two break points at 3-4 in the second. But the 21-year-old won 19 of 21 points to snatch the set and open up a 2-0 lead in the deciding set, with Alcaraz struggling physically at the start of set three. The Spaniard regrouped to bring up a break point at 3-2, but Sinner fought it off and powered through the finish after three hours of show-stopping tennis of the highest quality.

By levelling their ATP Head2Head series at 3-3, Sinner snapped Alcaraz's 10-match and 21-set winning streaks, denying the Spaniard's bid to achieve the Sunshine Double by following his Indian Wells trophy with a successful Miami title defence.

Sinner will face Daniil Medvedev in Sunday's final, when the Italian will play for his first ATP Masters 1000 title. He previously reached the Miami title round in 2021, when he lost to Hubert Hurkacz. Sinner has yet to beat Medvedev in five tries, their most recent meeting coming in the Rotterdam final in February.

"Different conditions than in Rotterdam. I'm very happy that I can face him in a final again," Sinner said, looking ahead to the matchup. "The last one I lost obviously, but I'll try my best, I'll try to make some good changes like today against Carlos and let's see. I feel good on this court. I have very good memories and hopefully I can show some good tennis."

More to follow...



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Daniil Medvedev achieves 42-year feat Djokovic and Nadal haven't at Miami Open



Daniil Medvedev is through to his fifth successive final after progressing at the Miami Open.

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Gonzalez & Roger-Vasselin: The Breakout Partnership 20+ Years In The Making

The partnership between Santiago Gonzalez and Edouard Roger-Vasselin, who will compete in the Miami Open presented by Itau doubles final Saturday, was more than 20 years in the making.

The first time they met was in the second round of the 2001 Roland Garros boys’ singles second round. Gonzalez, who had defeated Marcos Baghdatis in the first round, earned a 6-4, 6-4 victory.

“It was okay. I didn’t have a lot of expectations at that time, so I was happy to play because I qualified, I didn’t have a wild card,” Roger-Vasselin said. “I remember I qualified and I passed one round, so for me it was already good.”

They would not meet again until the first round of 2008 US Open qualifying, where Roger-Vasselin triumphed 6-1, 6-2. In doubles, their earliest clashes were in Newport two years later and then in Rome in 2014.

They were colleagues on Tour, but not close friends. So how have Gonzalez and Roger-Vasselin, who are third in the Pepperstone ATP Live Doubles Teams Rankings, become one of the best teams in the world? In a way it came down to coincidence.

Ahead of last year’s BNP Paribas Open, neither player was going to make the cut for the year’s first ATP Masters 1000 event.

“You’re not going to get in, I’m not going to get in. So we might [as well] play together because we have no other option,” Roger-Vasselin recalled. “This is how we really started to know each other, to play together.”

[BREAK POINT]

They made the final at Indian Wells. The same thing happened later in the year in Cincinnati and they advanced to the semi-finals.

“He’s a great player so his type of playing on court and my type of playing are getting along very well on court. So after good results we [earned] in Indian Wells and Cincinnati, we beat so many good teams,” Gonzalez said. “So we knew we can beat anyone.

“After that, at the end of the year I was playing good also with [Andres] Molteni. But I was talking to Eddie, we played good together, [we said] maybe we can try next year. We started talking a little more and then we decided to give it a try this year. It’s working well so far. Hopefully it’s just the start and we can keep it going.”

The Mexican-French team is a combined 79 years old. Gonzalez is 40 and Roger-Vasselin is 39. They boast 43 tour-level men’s doubles titles between them. How are they still playing so well this deep into their careers?

“That’s a good question!” Gonzalez said. “If you asked me that three or four years ago, I’d be like oh by the time I’m 40, I was thinking I’d be done with tennis. But now the last two years for me, I was playing a very good level, probably my best level from the last 10 or 15 years.”

“We don’t know and we don’t want to know!” Roger-Vasselin joked. “Personally I like that someone is pretty relaxed on the court and off the court. I think it’s good also long term it suits me well to have someone pretty relaxed and that’s what I like. Also obviously we need good results, but it’s something that’s worked well so far.”

[ATP APP]

Two years ago, Roger-Vasselin underwent hip resurfacing surgery on his right hip, the same operation Bob Bryan and Andy Murray had. When he decided to go through with it, the Frenchman was struggling to play soccer with his son, who was seven at the time. Now, dad is able to return the favour.

“Yes, badly. Yeah, yeah, yeah. He’s pissed now. Now I’m competing with him, he’s getting better, but I’m giving him no chance for him to beat me,” Roger-Vasselin said, cracking a laugh. “[I am feeling] much better, much better. When I came back I was missing the matches, the rhythm, but still I improved also physically. I didn’t know it was going to take so long to improve, but I can say that I’m feeling much better now compared to last year.”

It also helps that the veterans get along well on and off the court. They enjoy playing golf together.

“Now we know why it works well!” Roger-Vasselin said. “I have to improve because he’s better than me. Usually with my other French guys I’m always better, so now I have to improve my game and this is why I push myself to beat him also on the golf course.”

Both also have two children, and are hoping to bring the Miami trophy home.

“Especially now with my [son], he’s into tennis now. When I told him, ‘Oh maybe I’ll retire in one or two years’ he said, ‘No, no, don’t retire’,” Gonzalez said. “He wants to still be around the tournaments, be around the players. I’m doing it for me and for him a little bit.”



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Fritz On Alcaraz: 'He Has All The Tools'

Taylor Fritz knew he would be in for a fierce battle Thursday when he met World No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz for the first time. But perhaps it was a more eye-opening experience than the American initially thought.

The Spaniard needed just one hour, 18 minutes to down Fritz 6-4, 6-2 in Thursday’s quarter-final at the Miami Open presented by Itau. Following the match, the 25-year-old was full of praise of the 2022 US Open champion’s repertoire.

“It's what I have seen for a while now. I said it a year ago when I watched him play, for how young he is, he just has all the tools,” Fritz said in his post-match press conference. “He can come to net, dropshot you, lob you, he's incredibly fast, he has all the power, his forehand is good, his backhand is good.

“It's very rare to see someone so young so developed in their game and not really have anything that they need to work on so much. He has tonnes of different ways to play, and he can incorporate tonnes of different game plans to play different players because he has so many tools to win a match.”

A five-time tour titlist, Fritz said there was never a ‘gimme’ moment from Alcaraz as the Spaniard used every inch of the court to display superb shotmaking.

“He doesn't give you much for free so you have to work a lot to win pretty much every point,” Fritz said. “I think all the important points of the match he won, so it made a big difference.

“I did feel the level of the first three games was absolutely unbearable. He was hitting clean winners off of 110-mile-an-hour second serves I was hitting into his body. I'm stepping up and crushing backhands cross, and he's going open-stance backhand line winners off of that.”

The American No. 1 has clashed against each of the Big Three: Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, and Novak Djokovic. When the California native was asked how he would compare his encounter against Alcaraz to his meetings against the Big Three, Fritz again commented on the 19-year-old’s lethal style of play.

“I definitely felt like I had more breathing room against those guys than in this match,” Fritz said. “It's different game styles. Novak will have these long rallies, but he'll kind of slowly get you out of position and overwhelm me. I still feel like I can hang in these rallies for a long time and get more chances to attack.

“[Alcaraz] just [hit] winners and shots that hurt me off of a lot of shots that people normally aren't hurting me off of.”



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Rafael Nadal given new comeback schedule after slamming Monte Carlo claims



Rafael Nadal was recently forced to deny reports that he would be returning at the Monte Carlo Masters.

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Medvedev Moves Into Maiden Miami Final

Daniil Medvedev reached his second consecutive ATP Masters 1000 final on Friday when he clawed past long-term friend Karen Khachanov 7-6(5), 3-6, 6-3 at the Miami Open presented by Itau.

Medvedev has passed Novak Djokovic and moved to top spot in the Pepperstone ATP Live Race To Turin. He will look to continue his strong season in Sunday's final as he aims to challenge Carlos Alcaraz and Djokovic for the No. 1 Pepperstone ATP Ranking this season.

Medvedev, who rose through the junior and professional ranks with Khachanov, now leads the 26-year-old 4-1 in their ATP Head2Head series. The fourth seed will meet Carlos Alcaraz or Jannik Sinner in the championship match on Sunday in his fifth consecutive final.

The 27-year-old is 28-3 on the season, having won 23 of his past 24 matches. Medvedev, who lifted trophies in Rotterdam, Doha and Dubai during that run, has now advanced to the final at all hard-court ATP Masters 1000 events. He lost to Alcaraz in the championship match in Indian Wells earlier this month.

"I think I made six finals [in a row] in 2019, so I have some margin," Medvedev said when reflecting on reaching five consecutive finals. "It is a pity it is clay season after, but I am going to try. I am really happy with my results so far but it is not over. Final on Sunday and I have to be at my best to try to win it.

"I have to believe in myself. I know I am capable of winning big titles. I know I can play well and beat anybody. Carlos is on fire right now but you can't win 100 matches in a row. At one moment someone is going to put the water on the fire. It might be Sinner today, it might be me on Sunday, it might be someone else next tournament. You have to believe in yourself. You have to try your best. I am going to enjoy their match and be prepared for the winner."

[ATP APP]

In a tight clash in South Florida, Medvedev recovered from a second-set dip and survived an attacking bombardment from Khachanov to earn his 28th win of the season. The fourth seed hit his flat groundstrokes with consistency to force Khachanov into errors in the third set, while he absorbed the 14th seed’s thunderous forehand to triumph after two hours and 17 minutes.

"In my opinion, it was a top match," Medvedev said. "In the first set when we lost our serves, it was just a good game from the returner. In the second set I had one bad game and he won the set. I had one break point, I could have done better. He had a break point in the first game of the third set, I managed to play well. He had one bad game in the third set, I managed to take it and I am really happy to be through. It was a very tough match."

Medvedev will rise to No. 4 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings if he wins his fifth ATP Masters 1000 title and fourth trophy of the season in South Florida.

Competing inside Hard Rock Stadium, Medvedev had the opportunity to close out the first set when he led 5-3, but failed to convert a set point on serve, with Khachanov breaking back. Medvedev quickly regrouped, though, and capitalised on a missed forehand from his opponent at 5/4 in the first-set tie-break to clinch the opener.

Medvedev left the court after the first set to change clothing and struggled to find the same intensity on return, with Khachanov soaring into a 3-0 lead. The 14th seed didn’t let up, striking 17 winners and committing four unforced errors in the second set to level.

With a third set left to decide the match, it was Medvedev who found a way, winning 82 per cent (14/17) of his first-serve points in the set to reach his eighth ATP Masters 1000 final.

Khachanov was aiming to advance to his first ATP Masters 1000 final since 2018, when he triumphed at the Rolex Paris Masters. The 26-year-old is up five spots to No. 11 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings following his run.



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Djokovic, Nadal and Federer successors could be determined after 12-year first in Miami



Three men have reached the semi-final of both Indian Wells and Miami for the first time since Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer achieved the feat in 2011.

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Thursday, 30 March 2023

Tennis umpire handed lifetime ban for using device to 'facilitate guaranteed betting wins'



A tennis chair umpire has been banned by the International Tennis Integrity Agency after it was found that he manipulated scores across eight matches.

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Jamie Foxx gives rain delay pep talk to Miami Open breakout star



Jamie Foxx came to the Miami Open to watch "close friend" Christopher Eubanks face Daniil Medvedev.

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Khachanov Dispatches Cerundolo, Sets Medvedev SF

Karen Khachanov advanced to the semi-finals at an ATP Masters 1000 event for the first time since 2019 Thursday when he moved past Argentine Francisco Cerundolo 6-3, 6-2 at the Miami Open presented by Itau.

After falling a break down in the first set, the 26-year-old quickly recovered to ensure it was one-way traffic from then. The big-hitting 14th seed crushed 18 winners and drove the ball through the quick court to force Cerundolo into errors, sealing his victory after 75 minutes.

Cerundolo entered the match holding an 8-1 record in Miami, having soared to the semi-finals on debut last year. The 24-year-old was unable to earn his first victory against Khachanov and reach the last four again, however, committing 22 unforced errors.

[ATP APP]

Khachanov won his only ATP Masters 1000 title in Paris in 2018, before he advanced to the semi-finals in Toronto in 2019. He will continue the quest for his fifth tour-level title and first since Paris five years ago when he plays Daniil Medvedev in the semi-finals.

Khachanov is up five spots to No. 11 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings and will jump back into the Top 10 if he wins the title. Earlier this season, he advanced to the semi-finals at the Australian Open.



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Medvedev Ends Eubanks' Miami Run

Daniil Medvedev reached the semi-finals at the Miami Open presented by Itau for the first time Thursday when he overcame qualifier Christopher Eubanks 6-3, 7-5 to end the American's dream run in South Florida.

In a rain-disrupted clash, the fourth seed absorbed Eubanks' powerful serve and hit through the middle of the court to cut off angles. He struck a number of winners past the onrushing Eubanks, who closed the net frequently, while he recovered from squandering a break advantage in the second set to advance after one hour and 30 minutes.

"I didn't play my best before [the rain delay]. The rain helped me go out and have more energy," Medvedev said on the rain delay which suspended play at 2-3 in the first set. "It helped me and I only played better and better, apart from one bad game on my serve, but it happens."

Medvedev, who fell at the quarter-final stage in Miami in 2021 and 2022, will aim to reach his fifth consecutive tour-level final when he faces Karen Khachanov or Francisco Cerundolo in the last four.

The 27-year-old is now 27-3 on the season, having won 22 of his past 23 matches. Medvedev has lifted trophies in Rotterdam, Doha and Dubai during that run and reached the final in Indian Wells, where World No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz ended his 19-match winning streak.

"I have never had such a good start to the season. A lot of matches won, tournaments won. I am really happy," Medvedev said. "I was disappointed at Indian Wells when my streak ended on the same number as last time. The only thing you can do is begin a new streak and I am happy to bring my form into Miami."

Eubanks has enjoyed a dream run in Miami. After coming through qualifying, the 26-year-old earned victories against Denis Kudla, Borna Coric, Gregoire Barrere and Adrian Mannarino, rising 34 spots to No. 85 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings.

Did You Know?
Medvedev will rise to No. 4 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings if he wins the title in Miami.



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Jamie Foxx Gives Eubanks Rain Delay Pep Talk In Miami

A dream week became even dreamier for Christopher Eubanks on Thursday at the Miami Open presented by Itau. The American received a rain delay pep talk from global superstar Jamie Foxx before returning to the court to resume his match against Daniil Medvedev.

“Chris Who-Banks? Chris Eubanks!” Foxx yelled across the turf field inside Hard Rock Stadium as Eubanks prepared to return to the court. “Come on baby, what we looking like?”

Foxx, who has become a good friend of Eubanks’ over the past few years, broke the fourth wall by speaking to the nearby camera about the former Georgia Tech star, who has enjoyed the best week of his career.

“Here we are with my man Chris, man. He’s got everybody by the heart, right in there,” Foxx said. “Everybody [is] rooting for him, we came out here to support him.

“Got off to a great start, and now we’re going to bring it on home.”

Foxx checked to see how Eubanks was doing before leaving the 26-year-old to focus on the task at hand.

“We gonna let you get into your headspace,” Foxx said. “Do your thing baby.”

Earlier in the week, after Eubanks defeated Gregoire Barrere to earn his spot in the Top 100 of the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings, Foxx celebrated his friend's accomplishment on social media.

"Blood sweat and tears and true hard work has paid off for my good friend @chris_eubanks96," Foxx wrote on Instagram. "Tennis is your passion, my friend continue to rise and congratulations on breaking into the top 100 players in the world! 🎾 💪🏾"



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Rafael Nadal makes French Open comment after shutting down comeback reports



Rafael Nadal has shared his wish to be at the French Open despite rubbishing reports that he would make his comeback in Monte Carlo.

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Wednesday, 29 March 2023

Sinner Overcomes Rain, Ruusuvuori To Reach Miami SFs

Not even a two-hour rain delay could stop Jannik Sinner from maintaining a pair of perfect records on Thursday at the Miami Open presented by Itau.

The Italian prevailed 6-3, 6-1in a weather-disrupted quarter-final inside Hard Rock Stadium and he has now won all eight sets he has played at this year’s edition of the hard-court ATP Masters 1000 event in Florida. The 10th seed was victorious in one hour and 15 minutes and improved his ATP Head2Head record against Ruusuvuori to 5-0.

"We both played well today but I won the important points," Sinner said. "It's never easy when you are up and you get interrupted, but I came back and played well."

Most Match Wins In 2023

Player  W-L
 Daniil Medvedev 26-3
 Cameron Norrie 21-5
 Jannik Sinner 20-4
 Taylor Fritz* 20-5
 Carlos Alcaraz*  17-1

* Playing Wednesday night in Miami

Although Sinner did not quite hit the heights of his sublime fourth-round performance against Andrey Rublev, the Italian stayed solid in all facets of his game and raised his level when needed to nullify Ruusuvuori’s power. After fending off the first break point of the match to hold in the fourth game, Sinner broke the Finn’s serve for 3-2 in the next. That sequence proved pivotal for the direction of the match.

The 21-year-old World No. 11, who has shown he is capable of striking winners from all corners of the court during his run on the fast-paced courts in Miami, arrowed a backhand return winner to break again in the ninth game and seal the opening set. That was the second of four games in a row for the Italian before rain forced the players off court with Sinner leading 6-3, 2-0.

After play resumed following a two-hour rain delay, Sinner quickly held to take a 3-0 lead in the second set. He never looked back, improving to 20-4 on the season. 

Sinner now holds a 12-2 record in Miami, where he reached his only previous ATP Masters 1000 championship match in 2021. He next prepares for a semi-final clash against Carlos Alcaraz or Taylor Fritz. 



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Does Fritz Eat Hot Pockets Before Practice?

Does Taylor Fritz eat Hot Pockets before practice when he is home?

“I don’t really want to answer that to be honest!” he said, cracking a laugh.

The American No. 1 answered that question and plenty more in this week’s edition of ATP Uncovered. Grigor Dimitrov, Hubert Hurkacz, John Isner, Tommy Paul and Andrey Rublev all put their reporter’s hat on to come up with a good question for the Top 10 star.

Other questions Fritz’s colleagues posed include:

- Why do people call you 'The Golden Key'?

- What is your hair routine, Taylor? It always looks very good on court.

- What’s the ultimate strategy to beat you?

[ATP APP]

Find out Fritz’s answers — and in some cases, non-answers — in the full video.

The 25-year-old will play World No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz in the quarter-finals of the Miami Open presented by Itau Wednesday evening.



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Holger Rune names tennis' next Big Three to follow legends Nadal, Djokovic and Federer



Teenager Holger Rune burst onto the tennis scene last year when he beat Novak Djokovic in the Paris Masters final and he is targeting a Grand Slam title next

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Carlos Alcaraz 'not influenced' by Novak Djokovic battle as teen eyes Big Three legacy



Carlos Alcaraz could forfeit his world No 1 ranking to Novak Djokovic if he doesn't win the Miami Open.

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Host Nations Announced For 2023 Davis Cup Finals Group Stage

The International Tennis Federation (ITF) has confirmed the host nations for the 2023 Davis Cup Finals Group Stage, while the draw for the Finals Group Stage took place in Malaga on Wednesday afternoon.

The Unipol Arena in Bologna, Italy and the Pabellón Municipal Fuente de San Luis in Valencia, Spain return as host venues for the Group Stage this season after hosting successful events in 2022. Italy, Canada, Sweden and Chile will contest Group A in Bologna, while Spain, Serbia, Czech Republic and Korea, Rep. will contest Group C in Valencia.

Great Britain remains a host nation for 2023, with this year’s event taking place at the AO Arena in Manchester – the first time that the city has hosted Davis Cup action since Great Britain played Romania at the Northern Lawn Tennis Club in July 1994. Great Britain, Australia, France and Switzerland will contest Group B in Manchester.

[ATP APP]

Two-time Davis Cup champion nation Croatia completes the list of 2023 Finals Group Stage host nations, with the host city and arena to be announced in due course. Croatia, Netherlands, USA and Finland will contest Group D.

The Finals Group Stage takes place on 12-17 September 2023. Group winners and runners-up will progress to the Final 8 knockout stage at the Palacio de Deportes José María Martín Carpena in Malaga, Spain on 21-26 November 2023. The draw for the Final 8 will take place following the Group Stage in September.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

2023 Davis Cup Finals Group Stage draw
Group A
Host: Bologna, Italy

Canada (1)
Italy (*)
Sweden
Chile

Group B
Host: Manchester, Great Britain

Australia (2)
Great Britain (*)
France
Switzerland

Group C
Host: Valencia, Spain

Spain (3) (*)
Serbia
Czech Republic
Korea, Rep.

Group D
Host: Croatia

Croatia (4) (*)
Netherlands
USA
Finland

(#) = seeded nation; (*) host nation



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Ukrainian tennis star claims players have been fighting to replicate Wimbledon Russia ban



Marta Kostyuk discussed the struggles of being a Ukrainian player on the tennis circuit during a call with athletes who want Russians and Belarusians banned from the Olympics.

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Tuesday, 28 March 2023

Eubanks' Dream Miami Run Continues: 'This Feels Great'

If Monday evening marked Christopher Eubanks’ breakthrough, Tuesday evening took it to the next level.

“Ain’t no crying,” Eubanks said as he walked into the media mixed zone inside Hard Rock Stadium with a big smile on his face.

The American had just battled past Frenchman Adrian Mannarino 7-6(2), 7-6(5) in a rain-delayed two hours and 11 minutes to reach the quarter-finals of the Miami Open presented by Itau.

“It feels good, it feels good. Just like yesterday felt good, this feels great,” Eubanks said. “Just something about all of the delays and the stopping, the starting, the warming up and cooling down and warming up, it makes a match like this even sweeter and to think it was for my first Masters 1000 quarter-final is really, really special. It feels great, it feels good right now.”

[BREAK POINT]

After clawing past Gregoire Barrere in the third round, Eubanks was overcome by a flood of emotions. Not only had he rallied from 2/6 down in the second-set tie-break, but the match put him in position to crack the Top 100 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings for the first time.

“I think last night was just so many different emotions just because of being down in the breaker, my mind kind of already floated to the idea of a third set, so to be able to come back and win it, it was a lot,” Eubanks said. “It was a lot, saving five set points and to be able to come back, it was more just kind of shock that I’d actually won the match and then to find out afterwards that match put me in the Top 100, that’s when the emotion came out.”

After the emotional night, Eubanks regrouped to oust veteran Frenchman Adrian Mannarino, one of the trickiest players on the ATP Tour. He is up to No. 85 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings.

“Today feels a little bit more like, ‘Hey, I’m here. Trust it,’” Eubanks said. “I’m playing well and let’s just see how long we can keep this thing going.”

Eubanks has received an outpouring of support from colleagues in the tennis world as well as plenty of people outside of it. Jamie Foxx congratulated him on social media Monday evening and NFL legend Chad Johnson was in the stands on Tuesday to support him.

“It’s amazing man. It’s really, really cool. I’ve known Foxx for two, three years now and he’s become a really, really close friend, someone I can call if I just want to kind of talk through life a little bit,” Eubanks said. “Chad and I actually connected for the first time two or three weeks ago. He posted a video playing tennis and I think we had DM’d in the past and when he posted the video I commented saying, ‘Hey man that looks pretty good.’ He commented back saying, ‘I would love to get on the court with you,’ so I immediately shot him a DM I said, ‘Hey I’m going to be down in Miami for the Miami Open if you want to come out I can see about getting you a credential.’

“We were able to do that and he’s such an avid sports fan. He loves following tennis. He was super excited to be able to meet Carlitos today, he got to meet Tommy the other day. So he’s an all-around sports junkie. It was really cool for him to be able to come out. He stuck through one or two rain delays… It’s been really cool to see the outpouring of support. DJ D-Nice is another person who reached out and I got to meet. It’s been really, really cool.”

Eubanks’ run is not over yet. The 26-year-old will play red-hot Daniil Medvedev for a spot in the semi-finals.



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Is Sinner The Best Ball-Striker On Tour? 'He Has This Extra Gear'

Jannik Sinner is playing some of the best tennis of his career in 2023. The 21-year-old is 19-4 on the year and three of his four losses have come against Carlos Alcaraz, Daniil Medvedev and Stefanos Tsitsipas.

According to Tennis Insights, the statistics back up his win-loss record. The Italian has not just been winning, but has been doing so with top-tier quality.

Across ATP Tour events in 2023, Sinner’s Shot Quality has ranked second for the forehand, backhand and return. Shot Quality is calculated in real time by analysing each shot's speed, spin, depth, width, and the impact it has on the opponent.

Only Novak Djokovic’s forehand, Borna Coric’s backhand and Daniil Medvedev’s return Shot Qualities have been better. Sinner is the only player in the Top 3 for all three strokes.

Forehand Shot Quality (2023)

 Novak Djokovic  9.14
 Jannik Sinner  8.6
 Andrey Rublev  8.57
 Tour Avg  7.2

Backhand Shot Quality (2023)

 Borna Coric  8.3
 Jannik Sinner  8.04
 Carlos Alcaraz  8
 Tour Avg  7

Return Shot Quality (2023)

 Daniil Medvedev  7.92
 Jannik Sinner  7.47
 Diego Schwartzman  7.42
 Tour Avg  6.5

Sinner earned his biggest breakthrough two years ago at the Miami Open presented by Itau, where he reached his first ATP Masters 1000 player. But he feels he is a better player now.

“When I made the final here, I felt like it was completely something new,” Sinner told the media Tuesday in Miami. “Now I feel like I take every match in the best possible way. I go on court with a gameplan and I try to stick with it. Back in the day I was just going for shots without even thinking so much.

“Now it’s a little bit easier to execute it. But for sure I [will] try to go as far as possible and then we’ll see.”

How big do Sinner’s shots feel for opponents? The next player he will face, Emil Ruusuvuori, did not hesitate with his answer.

“Very, very big. He has just this extra gear sometimes that he can put on and just pop it and it just is like a missile,” Ruusuvuori told ATPTour.com. “You can’t leave anything hanging on either side. It’s going to be difficult to get back from those situations so you try to attack first and then go from there.”

If Sinner brings the imperious form he showed Tuesday against Andrey Rublev, it will be tough for any opponent to keep up.

Sinner’s jaw-dropping Shot Quality for the forehand (8.6), backhand (8.04) and return (7.47) in 2023 have been as close to the top of the charts as possible. But his metrics against Rublev were significantly better.

The Italian’s forehand Shot Quality was a 9, his backhand was a 9.5 and his return was an 8.5. That led to a resounding 6-2, 6-4 win against the No. 7 player in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings.

The frequency of a player achieving a Shot Quality of at least 9 on a shot is 0.3 per cent. Sinner did it on two different strokes in the same match.

“We try our best every day and I’m very happy about the performance today,” Sinner said in his post-match interview. “Playing against Andrey is never easy. He serves very well and he plays very aggressive, so I had to change a little bit today. For sure, my level was great, I felt good on court, so hopefully I can keep it up in the next round.”

Follow @tennis_insights on Twitter to learn how Shot Quality and other Tennis Insights are created.



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QF Preview: Alcaraz & Fritz Clash, Sinner Faces Ruusuvuori

The first two semi-final spots at the Miami Open presented by Itau are up for grabs on Wednesday in South Florida.

Top seed Carlos Alcaraz will continue his quest for the ‘Sunshine Double’ against American Taylor Fritz, while Jannik Sinner aims to reach consecutive ATP Masters 1000 semi-finals when he takes on Emil Ruusuvuori.

ATPTour.com previews the quarter-final matchups from the top half of the draw in South Florida.

View Schedule | View Draw

[ATP APP]

[1] Carlos Alcaraz (ESP) vs. [9] Taylor Fritz (USA)

After winning his third ATP Masters 1000 crown in Indian Wells earlier this month, Alcaraz has quickly adjusted to the faster conditions in Miami, defeating Facundo Bagnis, Dusan Lajovic and Tommy Paul to reach the last eight.

Chasing his 10th consecutive win, the Spaniard will look to maintain his level and overcome Top 10 star Fritz. The American is no stranger to the big stage, having lifted the trophy in Indian Wells last year. Chasing his sixth tour-level title this week, he produced a ruthless performance against Holger Rune to advance to the quarter-finals in Miami for the first time.

Possessing a thunderous serve and a destructive forehand, the 25-year-old will need both to fire if he is to breach the Alcaraz defence in their first ATP Head2Head meeting.

“The serve is always the most important thing. If I'm not serving well, then I'm getting broke and under a lot of pressure on my serve, it's tough,” said Fritz, who has not dropped a set this fortnight. “Serving well, it just frees up the rest of my game, because I feel like it's okay if I take chances, miss shots, go for a little bit more because I know I'm going to be getting free points on my serve.”

Alcaraz demonstrated great agility during his fourth-round match against Paul, scampering down every ball to stay in points before using his explosive groundstrokes and deft drop shot to turn the tables. The Spaniard is hopeful he can hit the same heights against Fritz.

"I played a really great match [against Paul] and I hope to play the same level in the quarter-final," Alcaraz said. "I moved well and defended well and I counter-attacked and I think if I play at that same level, I will have a lot of chances to get through."

Fritz, who would rise to No. 6 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings if he lifts his second ATP Masters 1000 crown on Sunday, is relishing the challenge the 19-year-old possesses.

“I am really excited for it,” Fritz said. “I think that a lot of people, a lot of people are really excited for that too. We have never played each other. I think it's an interesting matchup. Obviously he's playing great lately, and he had some injuries but hasn't missed a beat. He's been just on fire.”

Defending champion Alcaraz is aiming to become the youngest player to win the ‘Sunshine Double’. If the Spaniard can defeat Fritz and then go all the way, he will also remain at No. 1 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings. Any slip up, however, and Novak Djokovic will return to the top.

[FOLLOW ACTION]

[10] Jannik Sinner (ITA) vs. Emil Ruusuvuori (FIN)

Sinner has produced his best level in Miami throughout his career. The 21-year-old soared to his first ATP Masters 1000 final on tournament debut in South Florida in 2021, before he advanced to the quarter-finals last season.

The Italian has once again looked comfortable at the hard-court event this year, dispatching Laslo Djere, Grigor Dimitrov and Andrey Rublev in straight sets. Next in the firing line is Ruusuvuori, who is an opponent Sinner has a stranglehold over.

The 10th seed leads the Finn 4-0 in their ATP Head2Head series, and will be aiming for a Miami hat-trick on Wednesday after defeating Ruusuvuori in South Florida in 2021 and 2022. Sinner overpowered the 23-year-old with his flat and aggressive groundstrokes in their previous meetings and will be confident he can do so once again as he chases his eighth win in nine matches.

Ruusuvuori enters his first ATP Masters 1000 quarter-final off the back of an epic three-set win against Dutchman Botic van de Zandschulp. The 23-year-old reached the third round in Indian Wells earlier this month and has built on that run in Miami, defeating Nuno Borges, Roberto Bautista Agut and Taro Daniel at the hard-court event.

Up 17 spots to No. 37 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings, the Finn will move to the brink of the Top 30 if he can continue his dream run on Wednesday.

In Doubles Action…

The doubles quarter-final action also starts on Wednesday, when top seeds Wesley Koolhof and Neal Skupski face Santiago Gonzalez and Edouard Roger-Vasselin. The Dutch-British pair reached the final in Miami last year and will be aiming to go one step further this week as they chase their first title of the season.

The other quarter-final pits fifth seeds Lloyd Glasspool and Harri Heliovaara against Americans Nathaniel Lammons and Jackson Withrow. Glasspool and Heliovaara, who won the title in Adelaide earlier this year, are making their team debut in Miami this week.



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Alcaraz Defeats Paul, Keeps 'Sunshine Double' Quest On Track

Carlos Alcaraz’s red-hot run shows no sign of cooling.

The defending champion produced another ruthless performance at the Miami Open presented by Itau Tuesday, when he dispatched American Tommy Paul 6-4, 6-4 to earn his ninth consecutive win.

Competing in front of a vocal crowd inside Hard Rock Stadium, the Spaniard brought fans to their feet with his electric shotmaking, producing drop shots, clean volleys and an array of bruising winners to triumph after one hour and 36 minutes.

"I feel at home here. It is easy to play here in Miami with all the energy I receive every day," Alcaraz said. "I am enjoying myself and I think that is the key to playing at such a high level every match. I hope to keep going."

Alcaraz is aiming to become the youngest player to win the ‘Sunshine Double’ this week after lifting his third ATP Masters 1000 crown in Indian Wells earlier this month. The 19-year-old, who needs to capture his third title of the season in Miami to remain at No. 1 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings, will continue his quest against World No. 10 Taylor Fritz in the quarter-finals.

"I played a really great match and I hope to play the same level in the quarter-final," Alcaraz said. "I moved well and defended well and I counter-attacked and I think if I play at that same level I will have a lot of chances to get through."

Paul defeated Alcaraz in their only previous ATP Head2Head meeting in Montreal last year and entered the clash high in confidence, having earned 16 tour-level wins this season. Competing in the fourth round in Miami for the first time, the Australian Open semi-finalist was unable to match Alcaraz’s intensity, however, with the Spaniard forcing the 16th seed into errors with his depth and weight of shot from the baseline.

Alcaraz struck the ball with full commitment, hitting 22 winners compared to nine from Paul and was sharp moving forward, winning 12 of 13 net points to improve to 17-1 on the season.



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Krajicek/Mahut Surge Into Miami SFs

Perseverance paid off for Austin Krajicek and Nicolas Mahut on Tuesday at the Miami Open presented by Itau.

Despite letting slip two match points in the second set of their quarter-final clash against Maximo Gonzalez and Andres Molteni, Krajicek and Mahut stuck to their task to seal a 6-3, 6-7(8), 10-7 win at the ATP Masters 1000 event.

[ATP APP]

The American-French pairing had trailed 5/7 in the decider but claimed the final five points of the match to extend their dream run in their first tour-level event as a team. Krajicek and Mahut’s first serves proved key to their triumph, with the unseeded duo sending down seven aces and winning 84 per cent (38/45) of points behind their first serves.

Krajicek and Mahut, who are competing together this week because Krajicek's usual partner, Ivan Dodig, is out with an injury, will take on Kevin Krawietz and Fabrice Martin or home favourites Tommy Paul and Ben Shelton in the semi-finals in Florida.



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Photo Gallery: Week 2 In Miami



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Monday, 27 March 2023

Cerundolo Conjures His Miami Magic To Stun Auger-Aliassime

A surprise semi-finalist in 2022, Francisco Cerundolo is once again bringing his best to the Miami Open presented by Itau.

The 25th-seeded Argentine powered to a 6-2, 7-5 third-round victory against Felix Auger-Aliassime on Monday at the ATP Masters 1000 event in Florida. Cerundolo took control early with some blistering baseline play against the World No. 6 and dug deep in the face of a late Auger-Aliassime resurgence to wrap a one-hour, 44-minute win on Grandstand.

“I’m very happy to be back again in the round of 16 here, in a Masters 1000, here in Miami,” said Cerundolo after his 10th tour-level win of the year. “I’m super happy that I’m playing as well as last year, super happy with my level, and [hope] to keep going.”

The pair had last clashed just two weeks ago in the third round at Indian Wells, where Auger-Aliassime ran out a straight-sets winner. On Monday, Cerundolo expertly used the faster Miami conditions to engineer his revenge, constantly pressuring the fifth seed with a barrage of fizzing forehands.

Even after Auger-Aliassme reclaimed a break to level at 4-4 in the second set, the 24-year-old continued to strike the ball confidently. Cerundolo ended with 12 winners to Auger-Aliassime’s seven and converted four of six break points he earned for his third Top 10 career victory. The Argentine now holds an 8-1 record in Miami, and he will look to improve that further on Tuesday when he takes on 12th seed Frances Tiafoe or Lorenzo Sonego in the fourth round.

“One key was that I read his serve better,” said Cerundolo, reflecting on how different Monday’s match had been to his losses against Auger-Aliassime at January’s Australian Open and in Indian Wells. “I think I played much better than the other two matches.

“I had more confidence today than the previous months, so probably that was another key. My level was super high today. I served well, only one game that I made two double-faults, and I only faced [one other] break point. So I’m super happy.”

As good as Cerundolo was, Auger-Aliassime will be disappointed with an error-strewn performance. The Canadian’s 19 unforced errors proved costly as he let slip the opportunity to play for a seventh straight Masters 1000 quarter-final.



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Princess of Wales could 'present Wimbledon trophy' to a Russian as ban decision looms



The Princess of Wales is expected to continue her duty of presenting the Wimbledon trophy even if a Russian or Belarusian athlete wins the tournament.

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Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina shuns Russia claims with £62k gesture



Elena Rybakins donated some of her Wimbledon prize money to 14 young Kazakh players after some claimed that she was a Russian champion.

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Heart-stopping Finals Aplenty In Week 12 Of ATP Challenger Tour

It was a weekend of comebacks and thrilling championship matches on the ATP Challenger Tour, three of four tournaments were decided in final-set tie-breaks.

Ricardas Berankis and Hugo Grenier survived three-set finals to claim Challenger titles while Alessandro Giannessi fended off a championship point in Zadar, Croatia to win his fourth Challenger crown. In Switzerland, Jurij Rodionov successfully defended his title at the Biel Challenger.

Berankis survived home hope Dan Added in the St. Brieuc Challenger final to win his 14th Challenger title. Despite having two match points in the second set, Berankis was pushed to a decider but ultimately prevailed 6-3, 6-7(3), 7-6(5) to win the Open Saint-Brieuc Armor Agglomeration.

ATP Challenger Tour 

En route to his first Challenger title since August 2019 (Vancouver), the 32-year-old Berankis ousted top seed Antoine Escoffier in the quarter-finals.

In Las Franquesas Del Valles, Spain, second seed Grenier rallied from a set down in each of his final three matches to claim his fourth Challenger title.

In the championship match, the Frenchman completed a comeback from 2-5 in the deciding set to defeat British qualifier Billy Harris 3-6, 6-1, 7-6(3) and win the Challenger Club Els Gorchs.

Hugo Grenier (left) and Billy Harris at the Las Franquesas del Valles Challenger trophy presentation.
Hugo Grenier (left) and Billy Harris at the Las Franquesas del Valles Challenger trophy presentation. Credit: Jordi Ramos

“This week was amazing for me because the beginning of the season hasn’t been easy for me,” Grenier said. “I won [the semi-final and final] in a third-set tie-break so for me it’s an amazing week. It’s always good to win those long matches.”

Harris was competing in his first Challenger final after upsetting top seed Max Purcell in the final four to end the Aussie’s 18-match win streak.

On the clay courts of Croatia, Giannessi saved a championship point at 5/6 in the third-set tie-break to escape Sebastian Ofner 6-4, 5-7, 7-6(6) and win the Falkensteiner Punta Skala Zadar Open.

Despite holding a 4-0, 40/0 lead in the deciding set against Ofner, the 32-year-old Italian was forced to a tie-break before scoring his fourth Challenger title and first since May 2019 (Vicenza).

At the FlowBank Challenger Biel in Switzerland, fans were treated to a final between the 2021 champion Liam Broady and the reigning titlist Rodionov, who dropped just one set en route to defending his title. The Austrian Rodionov led Broady 6-3 before the Brit retired with a wrist injury.

Jurij Rodionov in action Sunday at the Biel Challenger.
Jurij Rodionov in action Sunday at the Biel Challenger. Credit: Meierhans Fotografie

The 23-year-old Rodionov, who is No. 126 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings, earned his sixth Challenger title and first of this season.

“[Biel] is like home to me,” Rodionov said. “I haven’t lost a match on this soil, it just feels great. I hope I can continue my momentum into the next few weeks and gain a lot of points before Roland Garros and Wimbledon to hopefully get into the main draw.

“Unfortunately [Sunday’s] final didn’t end the way I wanted it to. I wish Liam a quick recovery.”

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

 



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Tsitsipas Claws Past Garin

Stefanos Tsitsipas is up and running at the Miami Open presented by Itau.

Competing for the first time this fortnight, the Greek overcame a tough opening test against Chilean qualifier Cristian Garin, prevailing 6-3, 4-6, 6-4 to reach the fourth round in Miami for the fourth consecutive year.

The Greek was playing for just the third time in the past month after he withdrew from Acapulco due to a shoulder injury and lost in the opening round in Indian Wells. He then received a first-round bye and a second-round walkover from Richard Gasquet in Miami.

"I was waiting for a very long time to get out and play," Tsitsipas said. "It has almost felt like a vacation this past week, staying in Miami. I glad I got started. It was a difficult match against an opponent who has played good tennis against good opponents in the past.

"I am happy with the way things turned around and my confidence towards the end. I had an eye-on-the-prize attitude and it was effective with how I played in the last game when he was serving."

[ATP APP]

Tsitsipas' lack of match sharpness showed at times inside Hard Rock Stadium, with the second seed committing 21 unforced errors as an inform Garin chased his sixth win in seven matches. However, the World No. 3 dug deep and found a way, looking the fresher of the pair at the end of the third set to earn his 14th win of the season after two hours and four minutes.

Tsitsipas, who fired 30 winners and earned the crucial break at 4-4 in the deciding set, will next meet Karen Khachanov. The Greek hopes his fitness continues to improve throughout the hard-court event.

"I am just going to enjoy this victory," Tsitsipas said when asked about his shoulder. "It has been a difficult road to healing in the past few weeks, but I am happy that things are getting better."

Tsitsipas now leads Garin 3-0 in their ATP Head2Head series. The World No. 3, who reached the quarter-finals in Miami in 2021, is chasing his third ATP Masters 1000 title this week.

Earlier, the 14th seed Khachanov dispatched Czech Jiri Lehecka 6-2, 6-4 to reach the fourth round in Miami for the first time.

Khachanov struck 21 winners during his first meeting against Lehecka and is up one spot to No. 15 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings. The 26-year-old’s best result this season came at the Australian Open, where he lost to Tsitsipas in the semi-finals.



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Martina Navratilova backs ban on trans women competing in female events



Martina Navratilova agrees with the ban on trans women competing in female athletics.

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Sunday, 26 March 2023

Jimmy Butler On Alcaraz: 'He's Not No. 1 For No Reason'

Carlos Alcaraz enjoyed a memorable day on and off the court Sunday at the Miami Open presented by Itau. After defeating Dusan Lajovic 6-0, 7-6(5), the World No. 1 enjoyed two meetings with celebrities.

Straight off the court inside Hard Rock Stadium, the 19-year-old caught up with NBA superstar Jimmy Butler of the Miami Heat. Butler, who also watched Alcaraz play in Buenos Aires earlier this year, had plenty of praise for the Spaniard.

“He’s always poised. He’s never rattled and more than anything, it looks like he’s having so much fun out there,” Butler told ATPTour.com. “I think whenever you have fun and you have that mentality that you know you’re the best, you go out there and you play as though you’re the best, results happen and he’s not No. 1 for no reason.”

Later on, Alcaraz posed for photographs with Dominican singer Natti Natasha. The defending champion in his press conference explained how “great” it feels to see celebrities enjoy watching him perform.

Natti Natasha and Carlos Alcaraz meet at the Miami Open presented by Itau.
Natti Natasha and Carlos Alcaraz. Photo: Andrew Eichenholz/ATP Tour
“I feel a little bit nervous when I see a person like Jimmy, celebrities, when I was playing, like in the US Open. For me it's unbelievable,” Alcaraz said. “In certain ways I can't believe that these people enjoy watching my matches for me. It's crazy.”

Alcaraz will play Tommy Paul for a place in the Miami quarter-finals.



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Preview: Tsitsipas Makes Miami Bow, Medvedev & Felix In Third-Round Action

The third round draws to a close Monday at the 2023 Miami Open presented by Itau, where a host of top names are in action as they try to extend their run at the second ATP Masters 1000 event of the year.

After a bye and a walkover, respectively, in the opening two rounds, second seed Stefanos Tsitsipas takes to court at Hard Rock Stadium for the first time this year against Cristian Garin. The in-form Daniil Medvedev plays Alex Molcan, while Felix Auger-Aliassime meets 2022 semi-finalist Francisco Cerundolo.

With 2021 champion Hubert Hurkacz and home favourite Frances Tiafoe also in third-round action, ATPTour.com previews an intriguing Day 6 in southern Florida.

View Singles Draw | View Doubles Draw | View Schedule

[ATP APP]

[2] Stefanos Tsitsipas (GRE) vs. [Q] Cristian Garin (CHI)

Consistency has been the name of the game for Tsitsipas in recent years at Hard Rock Stadium. The Greek has reached at least the fourth round in each of the past three tournament editions, including a career-best quarter-final showing in 2021.

With his run-in to this year’s event hampered by an ongoing shoulder issue, Tsitsipas will have been grateful for the extra two days preparation for his Miami bid after Richard Gasquet withdrew from the pair’s second-round clash. The Greek’s third-round meeting with Garin will open the day’s play inside the Stadium court, where he will seek to bounce back from his opening-round defeat in Indian Wells.

"Everything is getting better and I'm heading toward the right direction," said Tsitspas earlier this week. "[I hope] to play pain-free and just be able to step out there and show something different than Indian Wells because Indian Wells was a big struggle... I hope I get to play with more of an element of fun on the court and not think too much about my arm."

Tsitsipas’ match fitness will likely be put to a stern test by the in-form Garin. The former World No. 17 won through qualifying before reaching the fourth round in Indian Wells, and now has the opportunity to match that achievement in Miami by upsetting Tsitsipas.

The Chilean’s ability to make an impact against the second seed’s huge serve will be a key factor in fast conditions in Miami, where the Chilean had not won a main-draw match prior to this year. He will also hope for similarly raucous support to that he enjoyed from the stands during his second-round win against Sebastian Baez as he chases his first tour-level win against Tsitsipas in three attempts.

[4] Daniil Medvedev vs. Alex Molcan (SVK)

Daniil Medvedev may have had his 19-match winning streak snapped by Carlos Alcaraz in the Indian Wells final, but the 27-year-old rediscovered his rhythm in style on Saturday night in Miami. The fourth seed dropped just three games against Roberto Carballes Baena to set a first ATP Head2Head meeting against Molcan.

Medvedev’s recent red-hot run was heavily based on his world-class retrieval skills around the baseline. Against Carballes Baena, however, there were signs that the faster conditions in Miami will enable Medvedev to hit through opponents more regularly — he struck 18 winners past the Spaniard in his quickfire win, and he will hope to put Molcan’s defence to a similar test on Monday.

The World No. 56 Molcan is competing in Miami for the first time this year, and the 25-year-old dug deep to outlast Jordan Thompson and 28th seed Yoshihito Nishioka in his opening two matches. The Slovakian has now equalled his best Masters 1000 showing, which he set in Indian Wells just two weeks ago, but will have to notch his career-best win against the World No. 5 Medvedev if he wants to go one better in South Florida.

[5] Felix Auger-Aliassime (CAN) vs. [25] Francisco Cerundolo (ARG)

A rematch of their recent Indian Wells third-round match will see the fifth-seeded Auger-Aliassime take on 2022 semi-finalist Cerundolo. The Canadian prevailed 7-5, 6-4 in California two weeks ago, his second victory against the Argentine this year after a four-sets win at January’s Australian Open.

Both players enjoyed straight-sets victories in their opening matches at Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium, although Auger-Aliassime was forced to dial in on serve to down Thiago Monteiro in a pair of tie-breaks. The World No. 6 has reached the quarter-finals at the past six ATP Masters 1000 events, proving himself one of the most consistent performers on some of the ATP Tour’s biggest stages.

The 22-year-old will trust his precise serve and powerful forehand to do the damage as he tries to move past a player who now holds a 6-1 record in Miami. Cerundolo will hope that his opening win against Aleksandar Kovacevic, as well as memories of his run to a first Masters 1000 semi-final from a year ago, can inspire him to a third Top 10 career victory.

[BREAK POINT]

Also In Action…

Besides Alcaraz, Hubert Hurkacz is the only former champion left in the Miami draw. The 2021 titlist plays Adrian Mannarino, who took out #NextGenATP American Ben Shelton in the second round, on Grandstand.

Jiri Lehecka’s impressive form in Miami will be put to the test by 14th seed Karen Khachanov on Court Butch Buchholz. The 21-year-old Czech is yet to drop a set on event debut at Hard Rock Arena.

The other third-round clashes on Monday’s schedule all involve home favourites. The 12th-seeded Frances Tiafoe faces the hard-hitting Lorenzo Sonego, Mackenzie McDonald meets Quentin Halys, and qualifier Christopher Eubanks will try to extend his dream run against Gregoire Barrere.



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Alcaraz Soars On In Miami

Carlos Alcaraz continued his ‘Sunshine Double’ quest in style Sunday, overcoming Dusan Lajovic 6-0, 7-6(5) to reach the fourth round at the Miami Open presented by Itau.

Arriving off his title run in Indian Wells, the World No. 1 has quickly adapted to the faster conditions in Miami, where he is the defending champion. In a high-quality performance, the top seed overpowered Lajovic with his relentless aggression on return and he demonstrated incredible agility to cover the court and repel attacks from the Serbian.

The Spaniard, who hit 27 winners to Lajovic's eight, recovered from failing to serve out the match at 5-4 in the second set against Lajovic, recomposing himself to seal his eighth consecutive straight-sets win on his fourth match point in one hour and 31 minutes.

"I feel fast on court, I am moving well," said Alcaraz, who is now 16-1 on the season. "I am happy with the variety I am playing [with]. Lots of shots. I am enjoying every single second out there."

The 19-year-old needs to lift his fourth ATP Masters 1000 trophy in Miami to prevent Novak Djokovic from replacing him as No. 1 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings. He will continue his title defence against Tommy Paul.

Making his third appearance in South Florida, Alcaraz holds fond memories at the hard-court event. He defeated Casper Ruud in last year’s final, dropping just one set en route to the trophy.

Paul reached the fourth round in Miami for the first time with a 6-3, 7-5 victory against Spaniard Alejandro Davidovich Fokina. The American, currently No. 18 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings, has enjoyed an impressive season, highlighted by his run to the semi-finals at the Australian Open in January.

Did You Know?
The 19-year-old Alcaraz will become the youngest man to win the coveted ‘Sunshine Double’ with another title run in Miami. Roger Federer was the last man to win the ‘Sunshine Double’ in 2017.



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Rublev Dispatches Kecmanovic In Miami

Four sets played, four sets won for Andrey Rublev at this year’s Miami Open presented by Itau.

On Sunday, the sixth seed backed up his opening-round victory against J.J. Wolf by dispatching Serbian Miomir Kecmanovic 6-1, 6-2 to reach the fourth round at the hard-court ATP Masters 1000 event.

[ATP APP]

In a dominant display, Rublev timed his forehand cleanly throughout the 58-minute clash, striking the ball through 2022 quarter-finalist Kecmanovic on the fast courts to improve to 2-0 in their ATP Head2Head series.

Rublev’s fourth-round opponent will be Jannik Sinner or Grigor Dimitrov. Rublev is a 12-time tour-level titlist, a tally which includes five ATP 500 crowns, but is chasing his first Masters 1000 title in Florida.

The 25-year-old arrives in Miami off the back of a fourth-round exit in Indian Wells. His best result at the ATP Masters 1000 event in Miami came in 2021, when he reached the semi-finals.



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Fritz Sinks Shapovalov, Sets Rune Clash In Miami

Taylor Fritz reached the fourth round at the Miami Open presented by Itau for the third consecutive year Sunday, earning a 6-4, 6-4 win against Denis Shapovalov.

In the latest chapter of their rivalry, the American was locked in from ball one inside Hard Rock Stadium, outlasting Shapovalov in the heavy-hitting baseline exchanges. Fritz committed just eight unforced errors to the Canadian’s 17, and was strong on serve, not facing a break point during the 81-minute clash.

"I couldn't really find that attacking formula because he was hitting the ball so hard and he was hitting his second serve so big," Fritz said. "It turned more into making balls and being steady. Because when he was putting balls in the court, I couldn't attack much off that."

[ATP APP]

With his victory, Fritz improved to 4-5 in his ATP Head2Head series against Shapovalov, having also triumphed in Acapulco earlier this year. The 25-year-old, currently No. 9 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings, will next play seventh-seeded Dane Holger Rune in a blockbuster fourth-round meeting.

"In this next match against Holger I would be surprised if I didn't get more chances to attack," Fritz said. "Nothing to do with him, because against Emilio [Nava] and Denis, both these two matches, I have never seen a guy go after it so much and not allow me any options to attack. Hopefully in the next match I will get more chances to be aggressive."

Fritz, who defeated Emilio Nava in his opening match, is now 19-5 on the season. The American is chasing his second title of the year (Delray Beach) in South Florida and the second ATP Masters 1000 crown of his career, having triumphed in Indian Wells last year.

The 24th seed Shapovalov was aiming to earn his first Top 10 win since he defeated then-World No. 10 Fritz in Rome last year.



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Rune Sees Off Schwartzman To Reach Round Four In Miami

Holger Rune has had no trouble settling in to his main-draw debut at the Miami Open presented by Itau.

The seventh-seeded Dane notched his second consecutive straight-sets victory on Sunday by seeing off Diego Schwartzman 6-4, 6-2 to book his spot in the fourth round at the ATP Masters 1000 event. Up against the resilient Schwartzman for the first time, Rune converted all four break points he earned to seal a 92-minute victory and quieten the vociferous Argentine support on Court Butch Buchholz.

“It was very important [to get in front early],” said Rune after the match. “Diego is very strong… My focus was really to be strong every time I played to put him under pressure, and I did that very well. I’m super happy at how composed I stayed today.”

Prior to the tournament, Rune had spoken of his desire to create positive memories at Hard Rock Stadium after he was forced to retire injured during qualifying last year. The 19-year-old has certainly started well in chasing that goal in Florida, where he overcame Marton Fucsovics in his opening match.

Rune’s all-around game appeared in good working order against Schwartzman. His powerful forehand was instrumental in the Dane finishing with 25 winners to Schwartzman’s eight. Rune's break of the Argentine’s serve in the opening game of the match proved enough to ultimately clinch the first set and he then broke three more times in the second as the World No. 8’s razor-sharp returning proved too much for Schwartzman to handle.

“It’s 30 degrees… So it was going to be very tough physically [if I didn’t stay on the front foot],” said Rune. “My focus was really to step in every time I could and play my game. I think there were a few rallies where I didn’t, but 95 per cent of the match was played on my terms, which was what I wanted.

“I’m super happy that I was able to break him and I only got broken once, because he is super strong as a return player."

Rune, who lifted his maiden ATP Masters 1000 crown at the Rolex Paris Masters in November, will meet ninth seed Taylor Fritz or 24th seed Denis Shapovalov next in Florida. The teenager is now 14-6 for the season as he looks to back up his stellar 2022, when he lifted his first three ATP Tour trophies and cracked the Top 10 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings for the first time.



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Saturday, 25 March 2023

Fast Courts = Fast Start For Medvedev In Miami

Daniil Medvedev has wasted little time returning to his winning ways, breezing past Roberto Carballes Baena in the second round of the Miami Open presented by Itau Saturday night.

In his first match since his 19-match winning streak was snapped by Carlos Alcaraz in last Sunday's BNP Paribas Open final, the former World No. 1 enjoyed the faster conditions inside Hard Rock Stadium as he sprinted to a 6-1, 6-2 victory.

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The 2021 US Open champion hit 18 winners to his opponent's five. Medvedev also had success with the drop shot, perhaps taking a cue from his Indian Wells conqueror, Carlos Alcaraz.

"After my match with Carlos I thought I needed to use that shot more," Medvedev joked. "I've always liked drop shots but it's not a weapon in my game that I'm going to use 50 times a match. You need to have confidence in the shot and today it worked pretty well."

The World No. 5 next faces World No. 56 Slovakian Alex Molcan, who defeated Japan's Yoshihito Nishioka 7-6(5), 1-6, 6-2.

Medvedev won three consecutive titles in Rotterdam, Doha and Dubai and last week reached his first final in Indian Wells.



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Preview: Alcaraz, Ruud & Fritz Continue Miami Title Quests

The third-round action begins on Sunday at the Miami Open presented by Itau, where Carlos Alcaraz, Casper Ruud and Taylor Fritz continue their title quests at the second ATP Masters 1000 of the year.

Andrey Rublev, Holger Rune and Jannik Sinner are also in action on a day when seeded stars clash for the first time at this year’s event. ATPTour.com looks at some of the key third-round matchups on show in south Florida.

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[1] Carlos Alcaraz (ESP) vs. Dusan Lajovic (SRB)

Carlos Alcaraz got his Miami title defence up and running with a comfortable straight-sets victory against Facundo Bagnis, dropping just two games to improve to 15-1 on the season. Playing with fearless aggression and fresh off his title run in Indian Wells, the 19-year-old Spaniard will look to extend his winning run to eight matches when he meets Dusan Lajovic.

“I try not to think about [being] the defending champion,” said Alcaraz when asked if he feels the pressure of defending his title. “I'm trying not to think about [that] I won last year. I always say the same when I come into a tournament: for me it is a new tournament. It's day by day, round by round. I try to play my best every day, try to enjoy every match.”

The top seed, who will remain as No. 1 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings if he lifts his fourth ATP Masters 1000 trophy at Hard Rock Stadium, leads Lajovic 3-0 in their ATP Head2Head series. The Serbian enters the match in form, however, having defeated former World No. 1 Andy Murray and American Maxime Cressy in straight sets this week.

Alcaraz’s variety could be key in breaking down Lajovic’s baseline resistance. The Spaniard will look to deploy his drop shot, which was so effective in his victory against Daniil Medvedev in the Indian Wells championship match, to complement his baseline firepower against the Serbian.

[9] Taylor Fritz (USA) vs. [24] Denis Shapovalov (CAN)

Fritz’s Indian Wells title defence was ended by Jannik Sinner at the quarter-final stage, but the American has quickly put that behind him. He produced a dominant performance against Emilo Nava on Friday to reach the third round in Miami for the third consecutive year, improving to 18-4 on the season.

After dropping from No. 5 to No. 10 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings following Indian Wells, the 25-year-old is on a mission to climb again this week. Depending on results, a title run could lift him back to No. 6. For now, the focus will be on 24th seed Denis Shapovalov, who will prove a tough test.

The Canadian leads Fritz 5-3 in their ATP Head2Head series, but the American won their most recent clash in Acapulco in February. Fans should be treated to an explosive battle on court in Miami, with the pair possessing thunderous serves and destructive forehands. Shapovalov is looking to kick start his season in Miami, with his best result before this week a run to the quarter-finals in Adelaide.

[3] Casper Ruud (NOR) vs. [26] Botic van de Zandschulp (NED)

Having reached the final in Miami last year, Ruud will be hoping the hard-court ATP Masters 1000 event can provide the setting for an upturn in form. The Norwegian arrived in south Florida off the back of a disappointing third-round exit in Indian Wells, but breezed past Ilya Ivashka in his opening match in Miami to improve to 5-5 on the year.

“I want to believe one match will turn it around but there are still a lot of matches to be played with a lot of good players left in the tournament,” Ruud said. “It’s been almost two weeks since I’ve played a match after taking an early loss in Indian Wells. I worked hard and came into Miami with great memories from last year.”

The World No. 4 will face a sterner test in the form of Botic van de Zandschulp on Sunday. The 26th seed hit through Ruud to earn victory in two of their three previous meetings and looks to have adjusted to the conditions in Miami. The Dutchman, who is making his second appearance at the tournament, overcame Alexei Popyrin 4-6, 7-6(4), 6-2 to earn his maiden win at the ATP Masters 1000 event.

Ruud produced a clean performance against Ivashka, hitting 21 winners to 13 unforced errors, and he will need to find a similar level if he is to win two matches at the same event for the first time this season.

[BREAK POINT]

Also In Action…

In one of the popcorn third-round matches, Sinner and Grigor Dimitrov will face off for the second time. Sinner reached the semi-finals in Indian Wells last week and cruised past Laslo Djere in his opening match in Miami. The 10th-seeded Italian holds fond memories of Hard Rock Stadium, having reached the final there in 2021. Dimitrov, who won the pair's only previous meeting in Rome in 2020, is aiming to reach the fourth round in Miami for just the third time in 12 appearances.

Chasing his first title of the season and maiden ATP Masters 1000 crown, sixth seed Andrey Rublev continues his quest against last year’s quarter-finalist Miomir Kecmanovic. Seventh seed Holger Rune takes on 31st seed Diego Schwartzman, and the in-form Tommy Paul plays Spaniard Alejandro Davidovich Fokina.



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Felix Fends Off Monteiro In Miami Battle

Back at his career-high No. 6 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings, Felix Auger-Aliassime needed every ounce of his Top 10 experience to overcome the spirited Thiago Monteiro on Saturday at the Miami Open presented by Itau.

The Canadian prevailed 7-6(5), 7-6(8) to down the Brazilian World No. 81 in a match that featured no breaks of serve. Auger-Aliassime let slip four match points in a dramatic second-set tie-break, but Monteiro pushed a volley wide on his fifth as the 22-year-old wrapped a hard-earned two-hour, 41-minute triumph in front of a raucous Grandstand crowd.

“After the first set, I felt a little bit better," said Auger-Aliassime after his win. "I was giving myself chances… He came up with some good serves and great shots every time, so [I just had to] keep driving, keep trying, keep moving forward and keep staying positive. I think that was the key today, to just stay strong mentally.”

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Auger-Aliassime has reached at least the quarter-finals in the past six ATP Masters 1000 events. Whether he can turn that consistency into a first title win at that level will likely depend on his ability to raise his game at key moments, and he was certainly forced to show plenty of mettle to pull through against a fired-up Monteiro.

The Brazilian saved two set points at 4-5 in the opening set, but he could do nothing to stop Auger-Aliassime in the tie-break. The Canadian earned a crucial mini-break for 4/3 with a fizzing backhand winner to move ahead.

Despite that setback, Monteiro again refused to lie down in the second set. The 28-year-old lefty saved all three break points he faced to force another tie-break, which proved to be the highlight of an intriguing encounter. It was Auger-Aliassime’s power, and particularly his huge serve, which proved crucial for his win in blustery conditions.

“I was serving pretty good," said Auger-Aliassime. "Unfortunately I couldn’t close it out at 6/4 [in the second-set tie-break] with a double fault but honestly, throughout the match, I felt good. Considering the conditions too. It was super windy, so to serve like this, on the big points, that was key today."

The fifth seed won 86 per cent (37/43) of points behind his first delivery and sent down 12 aces to improve his ATP Head2Head record against Monteiro to 3-0. He will next take on another South American, Francisco Cerundolo, who downed American lucky loser Aleksandar Kovacevic 6-4, 6-4.

That will be a rematch of the pair’s Indian Wells third-round clash 12 days ago, when the Canadian defeated Cerundolo in straight sets. Auger-Aliassime will be particularly wary of the 25th seed in Miami, however — Cerundolo reached his maiden Masters 1000 semi-final there in 2022.



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Dog-Lover Alcaraz Visits With Humane Society Dogs Up For Adoption

Carlos Alcaraz was excited to participate in Miami Open Unites again this year to support the local community, but was unable to make it because he won the BNP Paribas Open Sunday evening. That did not stop the World No. 1, though.

The 19-year-old on Saturday afternoon met with two dogs from the Humane Society of Greater Miami, Brisket and Isabella, to help improve their chances of adoption and a better life.

“I have a little dog at home, so I love to spend time with her, she’s a girl,” Alcaraz said. “I love the company of dogs. I love animals. When I was a little kid, I had a big dog as well, so I love them.”

Carlos Alcaraz
Photo Credit: Andrew Eichenholz/ATP Tour
Brisket is a terrier mix and Isabella is a German Shepherd. They posed for photos on the grass field next to Stadium Court inside Hard Rock Stadium.

Alcaraz greatly enjoyed relaxing with the pair before playing his third-round match at the Miami Open presented by Itau on Sunday against Dusan Lajovic. Last year, the teen visited the Miami Rescue Mission with Pablo Carreno Busta, Paula Badosa and Ons Jabeur to feed those in need of meals.

“It was pretty amazing,” Alcaraz said during last year’s edition of Miami Open Unites. “I’m so happy to be able to help.”



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Rafael Nadal's uncle predicts two venues icon could retire at and makes Sampras comparison



Rafael Nadal's uncle and former coach Toni has been speculating about two venues where his legendary nephew could retire

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Lehecka Manages Musetti To Break New Ground In Miami

In the midst of a breakthrough season on the ATP Tour, Jiri Lehecka on Saturday added to his list of first-time achievements for 2023 by taking out 18th seed Lorenzo Musetti at the Miami Open presented by Itau.

The 21-year-old Czech triumphed 6-4, 6-4 inside Hard Rock Stadium to reach the third round of an ATP Masters 1000 event for the first time. Lehecka, who reached his first Grand Slam quarter-final at January’s Australian Open, broke Musetti’s serve once in each set for an 80-minute win.

In a meeting of 2022 Next Gen ATP Finals competitors, it was Lehecka who looked the more comfortable with the fast court conditions in Miami. He fired 25 winners and showcased some fine net skills to go with his rasping groundstrokes — Lehecka claimed 76 per cent (29/38) of points in which he moved forward.

Lehecka claimed his maiden win at Masters 1000 level against Arthur Rinderknech in Indian Wells two weeks ago before falling to Andrey Rublev. He climbed four spots to No. 40 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings, just three places short of his career high, after dispatching Federico Coria and Musetti in straight sets in Miami.

Lehecka will play 14th seed Karen Khachanov or Tomas Martin Etcheverry in the third round at the second Masters 1000 event of the year.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]



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