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Radwanska's Big Objective In 2016

Radwanska's Big Objective In 2016

  • Posted: Dec 28, 2015

Agnieszka Radwanska has never been shy about her biggest objective – winning a Grand Slam.

Since October, she’s been asked about her Grand Slam chances almost as many times as she’s been congratulated on her win at the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global. And with good reason, too: despite it being the biggest title of her career, Radwanska is one of only two WTA Finals winners to not have at least one Grand Slam title in her resume.

“The goal, of course, is winning a Grand Slam,” Radwanska said ahead of last year’s Australian Open. “I didn’t make it yet, so I’m trying everything to win those Slams.

“I was close few times, but I never won seven matches in a row.”

Starting off the new season, Radwanska seems primed to peak at the right time. Her slow start to the 2015 season – which months ago sent alarm bells ringing in the Polish camp – now puts her in an excellent position to make big gains early on. She has relatively few points to defend from now through the Australian Open, a Slam where she’s consistently made deep runs, previously reaching the semifinals once and the quarterfinals four times.

Though the objective stays the same, there will be no big overhaul to her team. This time around Radwanska, who for a short time last year had supercoach Martina Navratilova on her team, is sticking with longtime coach Tomasz Wiktorowski.

The World No.5 will start her hardcourt campaign in Shenzhen, and she’s hoping the wave of momentum and confidence from her Asian swing surge – winning Tokyo and Tianjin, reaching the semifinals in Beijing and, of course, clinching the WTA Finals in Singapore – will propel her to the last big accolade she’s missing.

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JANUARY 2016 TENNIS TOURNAMENTS SCHEDULE – MAP

  • Posted: Dec 28, 2015

tennis-map

4 JANUARY 2016 – 10 JANUARY 2016

 

11 JANUARY 2016 – 17 JANUARY 2016

 

18 JANUARY 2016 – 31 JANUARY 2016

Best Of 2015: Player Retirements, Part One

  • Posted: Dec 28, 2015

Best Of 2015: Player Retirements, Part One

ATPWorldTour.com recalls the career highlights of three Americans in part one of our look at the players who retired from professional tennis in 2015.

Mardy Fish (Retired: 2 September)
Mardy Fish returned to the court in 2015, and the sport was grateful. There was no fairytale end, but the American retired on his terms. From his diagnosis of severe cardiac arrhythmia in March 2012, to panic attacks that at its worst point left him feeling unable to be compete, travel or leave his house, Fish endured a private battle that affects millions worldwide.

A raw talent, Fish combined a big serve and smooth backhand to reach a career-high No. 7 in the Emirates ATP Rankings on 15 August 2011, when aged 29 he discovered the drive and discipline that was needed to be a consistent player. He made one appearance at the Barclays ATP World Tour Finals in 2011, the year he reached the Wimbledon quarter-finals – his third last eight appearance at a Grand Slam. But his late-career surge was derailed and he was forced to step away from the sport.

Fish won six titles from 20 finals, including four runner-up finishes at ATP World Tour Masters 1000 tournaments and ended with a 302-219 singles record. His memories of leading Nicolas Massu by two sets to love, with a break in the fourth set, only to lose the 2004 Athens Olympics gold medal match remain vivid. Aged 33, Fish left the Louis Armstrong Stadium in tears, to a standing ovation, after his final match against Feliciano Lopez in the US Open second round. “I’ve got a lot of great memories,” said Fish, after his final match. “I’ve got a lot of good wins out here. I have made a lot of really good friendships with almost everyone out here. I’ll miss that.”

Robby Ginepri (Retired: 27 August)
Robby Ginepri called it a career shortly before the US Open draw ceremony. Ten years earlier, ranked No. 45 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, Ginepri entered the hard-court major playing the best tennis of his career. Having won 14 of his past 17 matches, including three Top 10 scalps, he won three straight five-setters before an epic semi-final loss to Andre Agassi. It was to be the baseliner’s career highlight in a year when he won a career-best 37 matches, reached the semi-final at ATP World Tour Masters 1000 events in Madrid and Cincinnati, and also rose to a career-high No. 15 on 26 December 2005.

Injuries and a lack of consistency hindered Ginepri, who suffered a freak mountain bike accident in October 2010 – involving a squirrel – and he later underwent two elbow surgeries. He won three ATP World Tour titles at 2003 Newport, and 2005, ’09 Indianapolis. “Although every athlete knows this day will eventually come, it doesn’t make the decision to retire any easier,” said Ginepri. “To play tennis as a profession and compete on the biggest stages around the world is a privilege, and I will forever be grateful to have had the opportunity.”

Michael Russell (Retired: 8 September)
Throughout his 17-year pro career, Houston-based Michael Russell was a dedicated and diligent worker. An agile performer with bulging biceps, long before Ginepri became the first player to bare his pecks at Wimbledon in 2003, Russell earned the nickname “Iron Mike” for his durability and longevity, predicated on a dedicated fitness regimen. He underwent three knee surgeries, broke his arm and suffered rotator cuff tears in his shoulder during his career.

The 5’8″ Russell reached a career-high No. 60 in the Emirates ATP Rankings on 13 August 2007, compiled a 15-6 record in ATP Challenger Tour finals and finished runner-up with Xavier Malisse in the 2012 Atlanta doubles final. He was also the first player to qualify into each of the Grand Slam championships in succession (2000 Wimbledon and U.S. Open, 2001 Australian Open and Roland Garros). Arguably his finest performance came in defeat. As a No. 120-ranked qualifier at 2001 Roland Garros, he led then World No. 1 Gustavo Kuerten by two-sets-to-love and 5-3 in the third set, but could not convert a match point opportunity in their fourth-round clash. It proved to be the impetus for his whole career.

Coming tomorrow…ATPWorldTour.com looks back at the careers of Robin Soderling, Jarkko Nieminen, Ryan Sweeting and Michael Lammer.

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Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers: Nole Serves Notice

  • Posted: Dec 28, 2015

Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers: Nole Serves Notice

Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers shows that Novak Djokovic’s serve may just be among the most underrated shots in the game

Today’s elite power servers are all too familiar with Novak Djokovic’s return game; how the Serb can neutralize their weapon of choice and all but nullify the concept of the “free point.” But a closer look at his 2015 Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers stats reveal that his arsenal goes well beyond the return of serve.

A side-by-side comparison of Djokovic’s heads-above-the-rest campaigns of 2011 and 2015, when he won three of four majors and posted records of 70-6 and 82-6, respectively, illustrates that the World No. 1 is among the best servers on the ATP World Tour. And he’s only getting better. This year, he notched career-bests in second-serve points won, service games won and break points saved. That’s bad news for the competition. 

 Year  Second Serve Points
Service Games Won
 Break Points Saved
 2011  56%  86%  65%
 2015  60%  89%  68%

BOLD = career best

“My serve has gotten better — not in terms of speed, but in terms of precision and accuracy,” Djokovic explained.

So effective is Djokovic’s second serve that he has finished in the top five in second-serve points won in six of the past eight years, leading the ATP World Tour in both 2013 and 2015. All the more reason why the 28-year-old has been able to distance himself from his Top-10 foes. In 2015, Djokovic went a career-best 31-5 against Top-10 competition, a dominance that was seen on all surfaces, against both lefties and righties.

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