Tennis News

From around the world

'The Last Time' With Reilly Opelka

  • Posted: Aug 03, 2016

'The Last Time' With Reilly Opelka

The young American, who recorded his first ATP World Tour singles win in Atlanta, reveals his latest brush with celebrity and shares a story of mistaken identity

I missed a flight?

I’ve never missed a flight because I usually travel with other people. If I were on my own maybe it’d be a different story.

I lost something important?

I lose my wallet and everything in it every six weeks. I’m still trying to find the answer to why that is.

I paid money to rent a tennis court or buy tennis balls?

It’s been a while since I’ve paid for a court. Growing up in Florida, there are public courts everywhere. Balls I will buy once in a while. Maybe six months ago was the last time I paid for a can of balls.

Being famous helped me?

Not too many people know a guy ranked 800th in the world, so hopefully we can come back to that questions in a couple of years. People do call me John [Isner] a lot. One fan thought I was him in Boca Raton. She took a photo with me and was so excited that she never let me say anything. She said: “I took a photo with you in Cincinnati six years ago, and I’m curious to see what’s changed.”

I strung a tennis racquet?

I was never able to do it. I tried one time when I was 10 or 11 and it was a mess. I never had the patience for it.

I cooked for myself and others?

One time Tommy Paul and I made chicken alfredo pasta. It was on a holiday and everything was closed. We had some groceries at the house I was renting. We managed to not set the house on fire.

I met a childhood idol?

I met James Blake at the US Open last year. I’ve always looked up to him. In fact I have a poster of him at my house. He was the player I watched the most growing up.

I shared a hotel room with another player?

A couple of weeks ago, I roomed with Tommy Paul at a Futures tournament.

I asked someone famous for an autograph or a selfie?

I approached [recording artist] J. Cole at the Charlotte airport a couple of weeks ago on the way to Winston Salem. I got rejected. He didn’t want to be recognised but we shook hands so it was cool.

Moet and Chandon off-court news 

Source link

Isner Goes For Fourth Atlanta Title On A Full Stomach

  • Posted: Aug 03, 2016

Isner Goes For Fourth Atlanta Title On A Full Stomach

Top American will try to join elite ATP World Tour company this week

To hear John Isner say it, defending an ATP World Tour title only gets easier the more times you do it. The three-time defending BB&T Atlanta Open champion will test that theory again this week when he goes for his fourth consecutive crown at Atlantic Station in Atlanta.

Isner will be trying to join some elite ATP World Tour company. Among active players, only a quartet have won a tournament four straight times.

“I think defending a tournament win the first time is pretty hard. Now I’ve done it three times… in a way it sort of takes the pressure off,” Isner said. “If I can do it this year it’d be pretty special…. I do feel like I’m most likely the guy to beat here.”

Isner, No. 17 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, is the top seed at the ATP World Tour 250 event. The No.1 American opens his defence on Wednesday evening against Frenchman Adrian Mannarino. Isner is 5-1 against the left-hander, including a straight-sets win at the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells earlier this season.

“It doesn’t surprise me at all that he’s contending for a fourth straight title here,” said Nick Kyrgios, who’s playing in Atlanta for the first time and is the second seed.

You May Also Like: Kyrgios Has A Blast Visiting NBA TV Studio

The fast Atlanta hard courts combined with the humid August air have helped Isner’s big game. “The courts and the conditions suit him well,” Kyrgios said. “If he’s having a good serving day, it’s almost impossible to return it.”

The 31-year-old Isner also benefits from an abundance of fan support. He played collegiate tennis only an hour and 20 minutes away from Atlanta at the University of Georgia in Athens. His former Bulldog coaches and hundreds of Georgia fans always come out to encourage him.

“I certainly feel their support when I’m on the court here,” Isner said.

Isner will try to jump-start his 2016 season in the friendly territory. The top American is still looking to win an ATP World Tour title for the seventh consecutive season.

“I haven’t really come through in some close matches whereas in the past I have. It’s nothing to do with my game, it’s just a couple things mental here and there,” he said. 

At Wimbledon, Isner had a match point and led Jo-Wilfried Tsonga two sets to love before falling in the fifth set 19-17.

“The good thing is I feel like I’m playing well. I’m not stressing about it,” Isner said. “I’m just happy to be back in Atlanta.”

If nothing else, Isner will apparently eat well while in the southeastern U.S. In Wednesday’s BB&T Atlanta Open “Daily Draw” program, Wayne Bryan, father of Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan, shared what Isner typically devours at the Waffle House restaurant:

“Two full chicken breasts, triple hash browns, double grits, seven scrambled eggs with cheese, a couple of slices of French toast and a short stack of pancakes – topped off with a quart of orange juice and a pint of milk,” Wayne Bryan wrote. “John Isner… you have to watch him very carefully around food.”

Source link

Scenic Cortina Challenger In Spotlight 2016

  • Posted: Aug 03, 2016

Scenic Cortina Challenger In Spotlight 2016

Source link

Rio Olympics 2016: Andy Murray to be Team GB flag bearer

  • Posted: Aug 03, 2016
Olympic Games on the BBC
Hosts: Rio de Janeiro Dates: 5-21 August Rio time: BST -4
Coverage: Watch on BBC One, BBC Two, BBC Four, Red Button and up to 24 HD video streams on mobile, desktop, connected TVs and app, plus follow on Radio 5 live and via live text commentary.

Olympic and Wimbledon champion Andy Murray has been chosen to carry the flag for Team GB at Friday’s Rio 2016 opening ceremony.

The 29-year-old was picked ahead of the likes of boxer Nicola Adams and rower Katherine Grainger.

Murray, who inspired Great Britain to the Davis Cup in November, is the first tennis player to fill the role.

“To lead out Team GB will be an incredible honour, the biggest in sport,” he said.

As well as individual gold, the Scot also won doubles silver alongside Laura Robson at the London 2012 Games.

“I obviously have great memories of London and I am 100% focused on winning here in Rio,” Murray added.

“The privilege of being the flag bearer is a moment I will remember for the rest of my life and will certainly be one of the highlights of my career.”

Murray is seeded second in both the men’s singles and doubles tournament in which he is teaming up with brother Jamie.

Team-mate and fellow British number one Johanna Konta is seeded 10th in the women’s draw.

A British Olympic Association panel selected Murray to be flag bearer after each sport put forward athletes to a shortlist.

Cyclist Sir Chris Hoy led Team GB into London’s Olympic Stadium four years ago, while speed skater Jon Eley was selected for the Winter Olympics in Sochi in 2014.

The United States have nominated swimmer Michael Phelps, while hosts Brazil have chosen modern pentathlete Yana Marques.

The Russian team have selected volleyball player Sergey Tetyukhin after pole vaulter Yelena Isinbayeva and the rest of the Russian athletics team was banned in the wake of the country’s doping scandal.

Marco Balich, the executive producer of Rio 2016’s opening ceremony, has said that his plans are “not an opulent show compared to London or compared to Beijing” but “full of heart and very graceful.”

The ceremony begins at midnight BST on Friday night.

  • Day-by-day guide to what’s on
Recent Team GB flag bearers
2014 Jon Eley Short track speed skating
2012 Chris Hoy Cycling
2010 Shelley Rudman Skeleton
2008 Mark Foster Swimming
2006 Rhona Martin Curling
2004 Kate Howey Judo

Subscribe to the BBC Sport newsletter to get our pick of news, features and video sent to your inbox.

Source link

Anderson Looks To Return To Top 10 Form In Atlanta

  • Posted: Aug 03, 2016

Anderson Looks To Return To Top 10 Form In Atlanta

South African hopes to put injury-filled start to the season behind him

Before this season started, Kevin Anderson had set himself up for his best year yet on the ATP World Tour. In October, The 10-year veteran had reached a career high No. 10 in the Emirates ATP Rankings. The achievement came weeks after he had notched two of his three Top 10 wins of 2015 (d. Murray, d. Nishikori).

At 29 years old, the Johannesburg native was proving he belonged among the best on the ATP World Tour. But then there was the left knee injury. And then the right shoulder bothered him. He also underwent ankle surgery.

All in all, Anderson missed 10 weeks, retired from two matches and withdrew from seven tournaments.

But last week in Toronto, the Florida resident started regaining the level that helped him reach the Top 10. This week, he returns to the Atlanta for the sixth time with aspirations to maintain that strong form and achieve a career best result at the BB&T Atlanta Open.

“I feel like the last few weeks I’ve taken some good steps forward,” he said. “It’s just about staying patient. My body is healthy. I’m hitting the ball well. You’ve just got to trust the process.”

The timing of Anderson’s injuries especially frustrated the 6’8” right-hander. After a typical off-season of training in November and December, he usually feels eager to get back to competition on the court. But instead of focusing on returning to matches, Anderson was worried about just feeling healthy.

“It was always trying to get ready for the next week,” he said.

You May Also Like: $name

He took a few days off leading into the early events in Auckland and Melbourne to get his body ready, but the time away also affected his mindset. “You lose all your momentum, you don’t have that same confidence,” he said.

After playing two matches in Auckland, Anderson retired from his next two at the Australian Open and at Delray Beach. He sat out 10 weeks to try to feel better. But when he attempted to play at the Mutua Madrid Open, it was like the start of the season all over again.

“I got over there, I wasn’t healthy. I was taking time off. I was having a lot of stuff done just to try and play,” he said. “It just interrupted my rhythm a lot.”

The lack of match time also messed with Anderson’s mental game. He saw peers winning matches and climbing in the Emirates ATP Rankings as he was still on the sidelines.

“You’ve been out. Your ranking has slipped down. You haven’t been able to perform. You start asking questions about yourself,” he said.

On paper, Anderson started his season in Auckland. But, health-wise, the three-time ATP World Tour titlist feels like he started his season in June when the grass-court season began. At the Aegon Championships, Anderson said, he finally felt healthy. The last time he felt that way, he said, was in November 2015.

He won two qualifying matches in London, including a straight-sets victory against Jiri Vesely, who later would reach the Wimbledon fourth round. In Nottingham, Anderson won two consecutive main-draw matches for the first time all season (d. Dodig, d. Verdasco).

Last week in Toronto, he put together his best stretch yet. Anderson prevailed against World No. 35 Viktor Troicki and moved past Dominic Thiem because of a retirement. In the third round of the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 tournament, Anderson beat World No. 22 Bernard Tomic, whom the South African had lost to at the Aegon Championships.

“It was definitely a good week,” he said. “I think there were some things I was doing much better on the match court. I feel like on the practice court I’ve been hitting the ball well. I haven’t been really able to find that form on the match court yet but I turned it around a little bit last week.”

Atlanta could be the place for him to further regain his Top 10 form. He’s played at the event five times and has reached the semi-finals and the final.

“I’m looking to do the sort of things I was doing the in my first few matches [in Toronto],” he said. “I feel like if I’m going to do that I’m going to give myself a very good shot of going far this week.”

Source link

Kyrgios Stops By NBA Studios Atlanta 2016

  • Posted: Aug 03, 2016

Kyrgios Stops By NBA Studios Atlanta 2016

Source link

Davis Cup: Great Britain & Argentina to play semi-final in Glasgow

  • Posted: Aug 03, 2016

The Davis Cup semi-final between defending champions Great Britain and Argentina will be played at the Emirates Arena in Glasgow.

Britain beat the USA and Australia at the venue last year, on their way to winning the title for the first time in 79 years.

Victories over Japan and Serbia have earned Leon Smith’s team a place in the semi-finals.

Their tie with Argentina will be played on 16-18 September.

The winner will play either France or Croatia in the final in November.

Inspired to play tennis?

Find out how to get into tennis in our special guide.

You can now add tennis alerts in the BBC Sport app – simply head to the menu and My Alerts section

Source link

Dan Evans loses in Atlanta Open first round against Yoshihito Nishioka

  • Posted: Aug 03, 2016

Britain’s Dan Evans lost 6-2 6-7 (2-7) 7-6 (7-4) to Yoshihito Nishioka of Japan in the first round at the Atlanta Open.

The 26-year-old British number four fell 6-2 5-2 behind against the world number 97.

Evans then won three games in succession, forced a tie break and won the second set to level.

After a rain delay, Nishioka saw out the match in a third-set tie-break, winning in two hours 43 minutes.

Nishioka will face Ukraine’s Alexandr Dolgopolov, the competition’s fourth seed, in the next round.

You can now add tennis alerts in the BBC Sport app – simply head to the menu and My Alerts section

Source link

Kyrgios Has A Blast Visiting NBA TV Studio

  • Posted: Aug 03, 2016

Kyrgios Has A Blast Visiting NBA TV Studio

Aussie star also receives a challenge from former NBA player Steve Smith

Nick Kyrgios is having so much fun in Atlanta he might want to make the BB&T Atlanta Open an annual stop on his ATP World Tour calendar.

On Tuesday, the Aussie star visited the NBA TV studio for a segment on the network’s flagship program “GameTime” with hosts Vince Cellini and former NBA player Steve Smith.

The trio talked about the BB&T Atlanta Open, where Kyrgios will make his singles debut later this week. “This is a massive tournament for me,” he said.

The No. 18 player in the Emirates ATP Rankings also discussed his love of the Celtics, his own basketball talent and if he could score a basket on Smith, who played in the NBA for 14 years and won an NBA title.

But all of that came after Kyrgios pulled his eyes away from the glossy NBA team logos on the studio walls. “This is unbelievable right now. This is the coolest thing I’ve ever seen,” he said as he walked into the studio.

“Where my boys at?” he said. Then he spotted the logo of his favourite team, the Boston Celtics, and snapped a photo of it with his phone.

Kyrgios became a Celtics fan as a kid because he played an NBA video game and he thought the Celtics logo – a leprechaun balancing a basketball – looked cool. The 21 year old played basketball seriously until he was 14 but still plays the sport when he can, including in between tennis matches.

On Sunday evening, he played at Georgia Tech in Atlanta with fellow ATP World Tour players Taylor Fritz, Christopher Eubanks and Reilly Opelka. Kyrgios and Eubanks made a repeat visit to McCamish Pavilion on Tuesday for some more hoops.

“I’m enjoying my time in Atlanta. There’s obviously plenty of basketball hoops around where I’m getting some shots up,” Kyrgios told the NBA TV crew.

Watch the NBA TV segment

“This guy’s a hoopster.” Cellini said.

The three of them also watched footage of the two-on-two games at Georgia Tech.

“You’re not getting a lot of resistance,” Cellini said of one play when Kyrgios shot a three-pointer against the 6’11” Opelka.

Smith offered a kinder critique. “Now you’re on the block, nice pump fake. Oh, OK, OK,” he said.

Kyrgios said he’s an all-around basketball player. “I like to shoot the three but I love defense as well,” he said.

Cellini closed the six-minute taping by scheduling an intriguing return visit. He said Smith and Kyrgios would face each other in basketball and then on the tennis court.

“You won’t score in basketball but I might score in tennis,” Smith said.

Kyrgios eventually disagreed. “I feel like I’ll score,” he said.

“No, you won’t score,” Smith said. “Not in my sport. Not so much.”

Source link

Young Enjoying Home Court Advantage In Atlanta

  • Posted: Aug 03, 2016

Young Enjoying Home Court Advantage In Atlanta

The American resides just steps from the courts of the BB&T Atlanta Open

Players often take about having a home court advantage, but Donald Young literally has one this week at the BB&T Atlanta Open.

The seventh seed took ATPWorldTour.com behind the scenes of his swanky Atlantic Station apartment, located just a few blocks from the tournament courts. Complete with a pool table, gym area and picturesque views of downtown Atlanta, Young is enjoying all the creature comforts of home when he’s not playing and practising in front of local supporters.

“It’s like a two-minute walk. It’s the best lodging to site all year for me. So I enjoy it,” he said. “I’m sleeping great. My bed. My pillows. It feels good.”

Being so close to home is also providing Young with extra incentive to stick around in the tournament. Having lost in the opening round of his four previous visits to the BB&T Atlanta Open, he fought off two match points on Monday to win his first-round match over fellow American Austin Krajicek.

“Me and my friends joke – I love playing [here] but I don’t play well,” he said. “I didn’t want to go out like that. I didn’t want Monday to be my last day at the tournament and have to watch it from my window.”

Next up for Young is a second-round clash against another American in Tim Smyczek.

Source link