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Mayer Sends Argentina To Quarters, Djokovic Forces A Fifth

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2016

Mayer Sends Argentina To Quarters, Djokovic Forces A Fifth

ATPWorldTour.com reviews Sunday’s reverse singles action in Davis Cup World Group first-round ties

POLAND 2, ARGENTINA 3
Venue: Ergo Arena, Gdansk, POL (hard – indoor)

Leonardo Mayer handed Argentina an unassailable 3-1 advantage in their first-round tie against Poland, rallying past Michal Przysiezny 6-7(4), 7-6(4), 6-2, 6-3 in Sunday’s reverse singles. The World No. 41 extended his Davis Cup win streak to 11 straight matches.

Poland was bidding to become the first nation to reach the quarter-finals in their World Group debut since 2011, but Argentina had other ideas, as Mayer fired 26 aces and turned aside both break points faced for the win after two hours and 33 minutes. The Argentines will look to return to the semis for the second straight year when the South American nation travels to Italy for their quarter-final tie.

In the fifth “dead” rubber, Poland’s Hubert Hurkacz saved five match points to defeat Renzo Olivo 4-6, 7-6(6), 6-4.

SERBIA 2, KAZAKHSTAN 2
Venue: Pionir Hall, Belgrade, SRB (hard – indoor)

Novak Djokovic brought Serbia back from the brink, leveling the tie at 2-2 after rallying past Mikhail Kukushkin 6-7(6), 7-6(3), 4-6, 6-3, 6-2. Djokovic fought through apparent injury to prevail despite hitting 94 unforced errors.

The World No. 1 extended his win streak in completed Davis Cup singles matches to 17 straight, improving to 3-1 in five-setters in the competition. His lone five-set defeat came 11 years ago to Olivier Rochus of Belgium.

The match finished in just under five hours and featured 19 aces from Djokovic, who converted on seven of 16 break chances. He struck 19 backhand winners.

Serbia, champion in 2010, will look to return to the quarter-finals for the second straight year as Viktor Troicki battles Aleksandr Nedovyesov in a live fifth rubber. 

ITALY 5, SWITZERLAND 0
Venue: Adriatic Arena, Pesaro, ITA (clay – indoor)

Italy completed a whitewash of Switzerland behind reverse singles wins for Marco Cecchinato and Paolo Lorenzi on Sunday. Cecchinato defeated Adrien Bossel 6-3, 7-5 and Lorenzi downed Antoine Bellier 6-3, 6-2. Italy will host Argentina in the quarter-finals.

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Rublev Wins First Challenger Title – Quimper 2016

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2016

Rublev Wins First Challenger Title – Quimper 2016

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Rublev Wins First Challenger Title In Quimper 2016

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2016

Rublev Wins First Challenger Title In Quimper 2016

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Murray wins thriller to give GB victory

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2016

Andy Murray beat Japan’s Kei Nishikori in a gripping contest to secure victory for defending champions Great Britain in the Davis Cup first round.

The Scot won 7-5 7-6 (8-6) 3-6 4-6 6-3 after four hours and 54 minutes to give the hosts an unassailable 3-1 lead in the best-of-five tie in Birmingham.

Murray, 28, won three matches in three days in his first event back following the birth of his daughter Sophia.

Britain will play Kazakhstan at home or Serbia away in July’s quarter-finals.

The victory also ensures Britain’s place in the elite World Group in 2017.

“I am lost for words at this stage; he is a man of steel isn’t he?” captain Leon Smith said of Murray.

“What Andy managed to do was astonishing since he hasn’t played since the Australian Open final.”

Murray himself was keen to get back to his family, saying: “It’s Kim’s first Mother’s Day, so it will be nice to get to see her this evening.

“I’ll try to get back for bath time and to put her to sleep – the baby, not Kim.”

Murray finds Davis Cup inspiration again

“The crowd helped for sure,” Murray told BBC Sport. “Physically I struggled a little at the end of the third set and a little in fourth.

Murray’s fierce determination hauled him through bouts of fatigue and frustration to claim the biggest scalp, at least in terms of rankings, of his Davis Cup career.

The world number two smashed his racquet and berated the umpire at times – but eventually got the better of a high-class opponent with some magnificent tennis.

Nishikori, 26, is ranked sixth in the world and threatened to become only the second man to recover from two sets down against Murray.

The Japanese player hit back to lead by a break early in the fifth set before Murray dug deep to claim a remarkable win.

Double faults from Nishikori and some nerveless play at key times from Murray had seen the Scot edge the first two sets, before the effect of returning after a five-week break appeared to take hold.

Nishikori grew in confidence, playing superbly and firing a spectacular backhand winner to take the third set, and serving out the fourth at the second opportunity.

A break at the start of the fifth had the Japanese bench on their feet but Murray once again excelled under the pressure of the Davis Cup.

A fizzing forehand return winner won a spectacular game for 4-2, making it five breaks in six games, and Murray held on in two epic service games to seal the win.

Murray: “”I was a little bit calmer in the fifth set. I was panicking a little bit at the end of the third when I was struggling physically, I didn’t quite know what to do.

“Last year was incredible every time I played in the Davis Cup. This team did something special and I would like to do the same again this year.

“Obviously the next match will be extremely tough and if we stick together and fight we have a chance.”

Analysis – Russell Fuller, BBC tennis correspondent

“For the 14th time in a row in the Davis Cup, Murray struck the winning pose – this time at the end of a gruelling encounter which demanded every ounce of his reserves of stamina after almost five weeks away from tour.

“For all the magnificence of Nishikori’s performance, Murray’s exceptional willpower shone through when the chips were down. He saved set point to win the second set on a tiebreak and responded after losing his opening service game in the decider by breaking Nishikori three times in a row.

“A 29th singles win equals Tim Henman’s Davis Cup haul; Bunny Austin’s British record is now just seven wins away.”

Great Britain v Japan

Friday singles

Andy Murray beat Taro Daniel 6-1 6-3 6-1

Kei Nishikori beat Dan Evans 6-3 7-5 7-6 (7-3)

Saturday doubles

Andy Murray & Jamie Murray beat Yoshihito Nishioka & Yasutaka Uchiyama 6-3 6-2 6-4

Sunday reverse singles

Andy Murray beat Kei Nishikori 7-5 7-6 (8-6) 3-6 4-6 6-3

Listen to State of the British Game – a 5 live sport special

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Tomic and Kyrgios in 'faking' row

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2016

Australian number one Bernard Tomic has accused team-mate Nick Kyrgios of faking illness to avoid the Davis Cup defeat by the USA in Melbourne.

Kyrgios, who missed a match against Czech Republic last year with a back injury, was absent with a virus.

“Twice he has faked it,” Tomic was heard telling team captain Lleyton Hewitt during his game with John Isner.

But Hewitt said: “Nick gave everything he had to try to be available and there’s no doubt he was sick.”

Tomic made the comment, which was picked up by courtside microphones, during a changeover in his four-set defeat by Isner, which gave the USA an unassailable 3-1 lead.

“Nick’s sitting down in Canberra,” claimed the 23-year-old Germany-born world number 20, who later said he played with an injured wrist.

Kyrgios’ withdrawal left Sam Groth to open the tie against world number 11 Isner at Kooyong Lawn Tennis Club, and the 28-year-old was beaten 7-6 (7-2) 6-2 6-2.

Tomic levelled the match but the Bryan brothers beat Hewitt – who came out of retirement to play – and John Peers to re-establish the advantage.

Isner’s 6-4 6-4 5-7 7-6 (7-4) victory over Tomic put the Americans in the quarter-finals for the first time in three years.

Speaking after the match, Tomic said Kyrgios was on the entry list for the ATP event in Indian Wells, which begins on Thursday.

The 20-year-old played in the tournament last year, two weeks after sitting out Australia’s match against the Czech Republic.

Tomic said he would “lose respect” for his former doubles partner if he competed there this year.

Kyrgios later sent a tweet which mocked Tomic’s 28-minute loss to Finn Jarkko Nieminen at the 2014 Miami Open – the quickest match in ATP history.

“Let’s not forget who holds the quickest loss on the ATP tour lol #how many minutes again,” read the tweet, which Kyrgios later deleted.

He added: “Just don’t expect me to have your back anytime soon.”

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The Rankings That Changed Doubles

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2016

The Rankings That Changed Doubles

The Emirates ATP Doubles Rankings have become an indispensable part of tennis accepted universally by players, tournaments and fans.

This week marks the 40th anniversary of the Emirates ATP Doubles Rankings.

During the first decade of Open tennis, the sport experienced phenomenal growth with prize money increasing each year at a rate of between 20 and 50 per cent. But only those players who had competed in tournaments over the preceding 12 months, with prize money of $25,000 or more, were listed in the Emirates ATP Rankings, established on 23 August 1973.

“Prize money was weighted 80/20 in the favour of singles players,” former player Mike Estep, later an ATP Board member, told ATPWorldTour.com. “You’d go to play singles, then, once you lost, you’d focus on doubles. You simply couldn’t make a living as a doubles specialist.”

In March 1976 a little more than 300 players were world-ranked, with one ATP point or more. Each player competed in both singles and doubles competitions on a 95-tournament circuit.

Jimmy Connors ruled world tennis. But who was the best doubles player? It was a difficult question to answer.

With just four full-time staff, who had recently relocated from a corner of Jack Kramer‘s business office in Los Angeles to Dallas, the ATP, already one of the major forces behind the phenomenal growth of professional tennis, unveiled its latest innovation: the Emirates ATP Doubles Rankings in early March 1976. The system gained immediate credibility and legitimacy.

Raymond Moore, the first Chairman of the ATP Computer Rankings Committee, successfully lobbied the Men’s International Professional Tennis Council, which oversaw the sport until 1989, with the help of three ATP representatives, to officially select the Emirates ATP Doubles Rankings to determine entries and seeding in Grand Prix events. “It got through by a vote of 5-4,” Marshall Happer III, the future Commissioner of the MIPTC, told ATPWorldTour.com.

“The Emirates ATP Doubles Rankings recognised those players who performed better in the team format, rather than on the singles court and became the arbiter of a player’s ability to compete on the circuit,” Charlie Pasarell told ATPWorldTour.com.

Using the ATP’s existing sliding point scale, based on the Emirates ATP Rankings, total points were divided by tournaments played to determine a player’s average. If a player had played in less than 12 tournaments, his total points were still divided by 12.

“Dot Matrix prints outs would hang around locker rooms,” recalls Estep. “Players would often look for their ranking, but also their closest rivals. They’d also look to ensure the points were accurate. At the time, no one realised the importance of doing the rankings each week, only the year-end rankings mattered. Doubles points were initially based on the points awarded in singles competition, minus the second round because of the differences in the size of the draw.

“But as the 1970s drew to a close, $25,000 tournaments were now considered small events. The criteria needed to change as both sets of rankings were based on prize money. It was a challenge, particularly in doubles, to keep the rankings system accurate.”

In 1979, when the United States Tennis Association (USTA) had a competing computer ranking system, the ATP’s secretary Jim McManus and Happer III, the then organiser of the USTA’s Satellite and Challenger Series Tournaments, joined forces to grow the number of players listed in the Emirates ATP Rankings and Emirates ATP Doubles Rankings.

It proved to be a masterstroke. ATP points began to awarded to tournaments divided into three classes: star, qualifying (assigned or called by the MIPTC) and satellites. Star tournaments were classified according to its prize fund and the number of participants.

“The MIPTC worked with the ATP to give points to third and fourth tier satellite tournaments, under $25,000,” said Happer. “It ensured new sponsors were attracted to the sport and the change subsequently developed ATP Challenger Tour events.”

By the mid 1990s, players realised that it was possible to make a living by playing just doubles. “With better treatment and changes in racquet technology, players in their early 30s were able to switch from the singles court to doubles and prolong their careers,” said Pasarell.

Jim Pugh, a doubles No. 1 for 12 weeks in 1989, told ATPWorldTour.com, “When the tournaments started being required to pay for every main draw players’ hotel room as long as they were still in the tournament, there were many more ‘doubles specialists’ than before. And a new trend started: a few of the doubles teams started having a doubles coach, where I had only known the singles players to have coaches before.”

“Doubles changed dramatically when they increased the prize money and coaches started traveling more with the teams,” David Pate, who spent 25 weeks at No. 1 in the Emirates ATP Doubles Rankings, told ATPWorldTour.com. “The Jensen brothers [Luke and Murphy] promoted themselves and the sport tremendously, and I believe that the Bryan brothers [Bob and Mike] have carried the torch from then on.”

Since March 1976, the Emirates ATP Doubles Rankings have provided a fair analysis of a player’s performance as well as an objective means to determine entries into tournaments.

Forty seven players from 17 different countries have reached the summit of the Emirates ATP Doubles Rankings, with 24 different players finishing year-end No. 1. Only six doubles players have spent more than 100 weeks at No. 1 including, Mike Bryan (454 weeks), Bob Bryan (439), John McEnroe (269), Todd Woodbridge (204), Daniel Nestor (108) and Anders Jarryd (107).

Marcelo Melo, the current incumbent since 2 November 2015, has spent 18 consecutive weeks at No. 1.

Today, the Emirates ATP Doubles Rankings still bears some of the hallmarks of the original sliding point scale. With more than 1,830 listed players, it is now based on calculating a player’s total points from his best 18 results from all eligible tournaments, including the elite season-ending Barclays ATP World Tour Finals played in a 52-week ranking period. For entry purposes there are no mandatory events, however, once a player is accepted into the main draw of one of these 12 tournaments, his result counts towards his ranking, whether or not he participates.

Like the Emirates ATP Rankings, it has become an indispensable part of tennis, accepted universally by players, tournaments and fans.

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Isner Fires 49 Aces To Lead United States To Victory

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2016

Isner Fires 49 Aces To Lead United States To Victory

United States moves on to quarter-finals

John Isner produced a fearsome serving display against Australian Bernard Tomic in Melbourne Sunday to lead the United States into the quarter-finals of the Davis Cup. Isner fired 49 aces in four sets to beat Tomic 6-4, 6-4, 5-7, 7-6(4).

The U.S. will next host either Belgium or Croatia on American soil.

Isner’s serve on Kooyong’s grass court was largely unreturnable for the last two sets, when he fired 33 aces and forced Tomic to frequently guess which side he would serve. Isner, who fired 20 aces and was not broken in his straight-sets win over Sam Groth on Day 1, gave up just one break to Tomic Sunday, dropping serve in the final game of the third set.

“I wasn’t event close on his serve in the third and fourth sets but fortunately for me I was serving pretty well myself . It was a big win for me but more importantly it was a big win for our country and our team,” Isner told Tennis Channel.

“We’ve lost in the round of 16 the last two years so it was a very tough pill for us to swallow. But we’re in the quarter-finals now and we’ll be looking forward to having a home tie coming up.”

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Watson reaches Monterrey Open final

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2016

British number two Heather Watson beat France’s Caroline Garcia 6-1 6-2 to reach the final of the Monterrey Open.

The 23-year-old broke the world number 38’s serve five times in a dominant display in Mexico as she sealed victory in one hour and seven minutes.

Watson, whose ranking has dropped to 84, did not face a break point and lost only three points on her first serve.

She will meet Belgium’s Kirsten Flipkens in Sunday’s final as she aims to win her third WTA title.

Watson previously won the Japan Open in 2012 and Hobart International in January 2015.

World number 73 Flipkens knocked out British number one Johanna Konta 6-3 6-7 (2-7) 6-1 in the quarter-finals.

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Murray Bros. Put Brits On Brink, Italy Advances

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2016

Murray Bros. Put Brits On Brink, Italy Advances

ATPWorldTour.com reviews Saturday’s doubles action in Davis Cup World Group first-round ties

GREAT BRITAIN 2, JAPAN 1
Venue: Barclaycard Arena, Birmingham, GBR (hard – indoor)

Andy Murray and Jamie Murray are quickly becoming a doubles powerhouse. The brothers gave Great Britain a 2-1 lead with a dominant 6-3, 6-2, 6-4 victory over Japan’s Yoshihito Nishioka and Yasutaka Uchiyama in Saturday’s doubles rubber.

The Murrays improved to 6-0 together in Davis Cup doubles play, firing 12 aces and not facing a break point throughout the one-hour and 53-minute affair. Defending champion Great Britain is bidding to record its 150th tie win this weekend. They turn to Murray to achieve the milestone on Sunday, as the World No. 2 clashes with fellow Top 10 star Kei Nishikori in a blockbuster fourth rubber.

Murray did not drop a set in two meetings with Nishikori last year, prevailing on the clay of the Mutua Madrid Open and on the hard courts of the Rogers Cup in Montreal.

ITALY 3, SWITZERLAND 0
Venue: Adriatic Arena, Pesaro, ITA (clay – indoor)

Italy is the first nation to punch its ticket to the quarter-finals, following a ruthless 6-3, 6-1, 6-3 doubles victory by Simone Bolelli and Andreas Seppi over Marco Chiudinelli and Henri Laaksonen.

The Italian duo eliminated the Swiss side, who were without the services of Top 5 stalwarts Roger Federer and Stan Wawrinka, in just one hour and 45 minutes. Switzerland has dropped consecutive World Group first round ties since lifting the trophy in 2014.

Italy extended its home winning streak to six straight ties, successfully advancing to the quarter-finals for the third time in four years. The nation will either host Argentina or travel to Poland in July. Argentina currently leads 2-1 on the road in Gdansk.

SERBIA 1, KAZAKHSTAN 2
Venue: Pionir Hall, Belgrade, SRB (hard – indoor)

Novak Djokovic and Serbia finds themselves in an unfamiliar position following a comprehensive 6-3, 7-6(3), 7-5 doubles defeat to Kazakhstan’s Andrey Golubev and Aleksandr Nedovyesov on Saturday. The singles World No. 1 and former doubles No. 1 Nenad Zimonjic fell in two hours and 29 minutes, committing an uncharacteristic 56 unforced errors.

Serbia will look to claw back from 2-1 down when Djokovic faces Mikhail Kukushkin in Sunday’s reverse singles. The 28 year old is riding a 22-match win streak in best-of-five set matches and carries a 28-7 record in Davis Cup singles rubbers.

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