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Angelique Kerber loses to Karolina Pliskova in Cincinnati Open final

  • Posted: Aug 21, 2016

Angelique Kerber failed to end Serena Williams’ 183-week run as world number one – losing to Karolina Pliskova in the Cincinnati Open final.

Germany’s Kerber, 28, was beaten 6-3 6-1 by her 24-year-old Czech opponent, who gained her sixth WTA title.

American Williams, 34, has been world number one since February 2013, and is closing on Steffi Graf’s record of 186 consecutive weeks at the top.

Williams withdrew from the tournament with a shoulder injury on Monday.

It was Pliskova’s first victory in a final against Kerber at the third attempt.

Kerber, the Australian Open champion, was broken five times in the match and only managed one of her own as she fell to her third defeat to Pliskova.

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Tiafoe Enjoys Kids Day At 2016 Winston-Salem Open

  • Posted: Aug 21, 2016

Tiafoe Enjoys Kids Day At 2016 Winston-Salem Open

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Cilic, Murray Square Off For Cincy Title

  • Posted: Aug 21, 2016

Cilic, Murray Square Off For Cincy Title

ATPWorldTour.com previews the Cincinnati final

World No. 2 Andy Murray plays his 14th match in 15 days – with a globe-trotting trip from Rio de Janeiro to Cincinnati in between — when he meets Marin Cilic for the Western & Southern Open title on Sunday. Should he win his 13th ATP Masters 1000 title, Murray will inch within 815 points of Novak Djokovic in the Emirates ATP Race to London, which determines the year-end World No. 1.

Murray has enjoyed milestone after milestone since beginning his Rio campaign on August 7. The Scot played nine matches in eight days at the Olympics, including men’s doubles with older brother Jamie Murray and mixed doubles with Heather Watson. He edged Juan Martin del Potro in four hours and two minutes on August 14 to become the first two-time singles gold medalist in history.

After beating Juan Monaco in his opener this week, Murray defeated Kevin Anderson on Thursday for his 600th career win, Bernard Tomic on Friday for his 200th ATP Masters 1000 victory and Milos Raonic on Saturday for his 50th win of the season. Murray’s third Western & Southern Open title would be his 40th singles championship overall and the 19th consecutive ATP Masters 1000 crown won by himself, Djokovic, Roger Federer or Rafael Nadal (The Big Four).

The 29-year-old Djokovic is the youngest player to win an ATP Masters 1000 title — born a week after Murray in May 1987. Cilic, 27, could change all that to cap the greatest showing of his career at this level. Entering Cincinnati, Cilic had never reached an ATP Masters 1000 semi-final in 70 appearances. He was 0-8 lifetime in ATP Masters 1000 quarter-final matches. And his only two titles since reigning at the 2014 US Open came at the ATP World Tour 250 event in Moscow.

In the doubles final, ATP Masters 1000 Toronto champions Ivan Dodig and Marcelo Melo meet ATP Masters 1000 Madrid champions Jean-Julien Rojer and Horia Tecau. The teams split two meetings in 2015 – Dodig and Melo winning en route to the Roland Garros championship before Rojer and Tecau avenged themselves during their title run at the Barclays ATP World Tour Finals.

FEDEX ATP HEAD 2 HEAD – Singles Final
[1] Andy Murray (GBR) vs [12] Marin Cilic (CRO) – Murray Leads 11-2 Murray 2016 FastFacts
• Tournament Note: Owns a 22-0 record since Roland Garros and 33-1 since ATP Masters 1000 Madrid
• Captured 3rd Grand Slam title at Wimbledon (d. Tsonga in 5 sets, No. 9 Berdych and No. 7 Raonic)
• Became 1st British finalist at Roland Garros and 10th man to reach all 4 major finals in Open Era (l. to Djokovic)
• Fell to 0-5 in Australian Open finals with 4th championship match loss to No. 1 Djokovic
• With J. Murray, became 1st brothers in Open Era to reach singles and doubles finals at same major (Aus. Open)
• Made history at Rio Olympics as 1st player to win a 2nd singles gold medal (d. del Potro 75 in 4th after 4h2m)
• Celebrated 29th birthday by beating No. 1 Djokovic for 12th ATP Masters 1000 title at Rome
• Defeated No. 8 Berdych and No. 5 Nadal en route to ATP Masters 1000 Madrid final (l. to No. 1 Djokovic)
• Rallied from 76 30 down to beat No. 9 Raonic and become 1st 5-time London/Queen’s Club champion (est. 1890)
• Extended Davis Cup win streak to 14 matches with 3 victories to lead Great Britain past Japan 3-1 in 1R

Cilic 2016 FastFacts
• Tournament Note: Rallied for 46 63 75 win over Dimitrov in rain-delayed SF match that ended Sunday at 1:35 am
• Advanced to 3rd straight Wimbledon QF, falling to No. 3 Federer after leading by 2 sets and holding 3 MPs
• Reached finals at Marseille (l. to Kyrgios) and Geneva (d. Ferrer, l. to No. 4 Wawrinka)
• Also reached London/Queen’s Club SF (l. to No. 2 Murray in 3 sets) and Rio Olympics 3R (l. to Monfils in 3 sets)
• Fell to 0-8 lifetime in ATP Masters 1000 QFs at Indian Wells (l. to Goffin) – now 1-8 after beating Coric on Friday
• Snapped 11-match losing streak vs. Top 10 opponents with win over No. 10 Gasquet in Indian Wells 4R
• Helped Croatia reach Davis Cup SF with 3-2 wins over Belgium (d. Coppejans, l. to Goffin) and USA (l. to Sock after
leading by 2 sets, w/Dodig d. Bryan/Bryan, d. Isner)
• Withdrew from ATP Masters 1000 events at Monte-Carlo, Madrid and Rome due to knee injury

 

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Cincinnati SF Highlights 2016 Saturday

  • Posted: Aug 21, 2016

Cincinnati SF Highlights 2016 Saturday

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Cilic Battles Past Dimitrov Into First Masters 1000 Final

  • Posted: Aug 21, 2016

Cilic Battles Past Dimitrov Into First Masters 1000 Final

Late finish in Cincinnati as Cilic claims milestone win

Marin Cilic laid it all on the line in a 1:35am finish at the Western & Southern Open as he battled into his first ATP World Tour Masters 1000 final with a 4-6, 6-3, 7-5 victory over Grigor Dimitrov.

“It’s a big win for me, first time in a Masters 1000 final,” said Cilic, who will face World No. 2 Andy Murray. “I’m looking forward to it. I’m feeling good on the court. I played great this week. I’m excited to be in the final playing against Andy. He is in great form, playing great tennis. I hope tomorrow I’ll play a good match and I know I’ll have a good chance if I play well.”

At 27, Cilic is looking to become the youngest winner of an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 crown. The right-hander, who this week announced that Jonas Bjorkman will start as his new coach in New York, had previously fallen in all eight quarter-final showings at this level.

You May Also Like: Cilic Announces New Coach

After Wimbledon champion Murray had notched his 22nd straight tour win over Milos Raonic in the first Cincinnati semi-final, rain pushed Cilic’s contest with Dimitrov into the early hours of Saturday morning.

Both players were searching for milestone moments in their careers, but it was Cilic who seized the opportunity, rallying from 2-4 down in the final set. The Croat reeled off four straight points from 0/30 to break Dimitrov at 5-5 and served out victory after two hours and 24 minutes.

“It was a Kings Island of a match,” said Cilic, referring to the iconic rollercoasters across the road from the Lindner Family Tennis Center. “It was definitely a tough match in grueling, heavy conditions. We obviously waited a long time, starting at 11:28pm. Mentally it was not easy. I was not playing too well today. I didn’t find the rhythm on my serve and I was just trying to stay in there in the third set and manage physically.

“[At 2-4] I was trying to give myself some positive thoughts to bounce back. I felt that I was close to playing better. I was just missing by small margins, so I focused on putting the ball in play a bit more and waiting for the right opportunity. I returned well on those occasions and it paid off.”

The 2014 US Open champion Cilic will attempt to overturn a 2-11 FedEx ATP Head2Head record against Murray as he searches for his first victory over the Scot since Rotterdam 2014.

Cilic is chasing his 15th tour-level title, having only lifted two trophies since his US Open triumph, both in Moscow (2014-15). This year, Cilic has finished runner-up in Marseille (l. to Kyrgios) and Geneva (l. to Wawrinka). He has a 32-17 match record in 2016.

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Cilic Reacts To Cincinnati SF Win 2016

  • Posted: Aug 21, 2016

Cilic Reacts To Cincinnati SF Win 2016

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Dimitrov Goes Down The Line In Cincinnati 2016

  • Posted: Aug 21, 2016

Dimitrov Goes Down The Line In Cincinnati 2016

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Cilic Hits Through Dimitrov In Cincinnati 2016

  • Posted: Aug 21, 2016

Cilic Hits Through Dimitrov In Cincinnati 2016

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Murray Fires Into Cincy Final With Aplomb

  • Posted: Aug 21, 2016

Murray Fires Into Cincy Final With Aplomb

Top seed blasts past Milos Raonic

Andy Murray overcame a wet start to semi-final Saturday at the Western & Southern Open to book his spot in the championship match for a third time.

The two-time Cincinnati champion (2008, ’11) prevailed 6-3, 6-3 over fourth seed Milos Raonic, extending his career-long unbeaten run to 22 straight matches. It marks the 33rd straight ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event that has featured a member of the Big Four in the final.

“I didn’t get broken the last couple of matches and when I was in difficult situations I made good choices,” Murray said. “That’s helped keep the matches shorter. If you’re a bit lower on confidence, regardless of how fresh you are, if you haven’t played loads of matches you make bad decisions in those moments. And because I’ve won a lot the last few months, that’s something that has been good, especially this week for sure. I’ve needed it to be because I haven’t been feeling perfect. I’ve managed to get through the matches pretty well.”

As it has all week, rain steadily coated the Lindner Family Tennis Center Murray on Saturday. Murray and Raonic only played four points before the skies opened once again, halting the action for 12 minutes with the Scot holding two break points at 15/40. He would waste no time in snatching the lead upon resumption, breaking immediately with a dipping cross-court forehand that caught Raonic out of position.

Murray would overcome deficits in each of his first three service games, surviving a pair of break points in the process. His second serve defense was on song in claiming 67 per cent of such points in the 52-minute opener. The top seed continued to apply pressure on the Raonic serve in the latter stages, breaking to secure the first set and converting another break in the eighth game of the second. After letting a pair of match points slip while serving for it at 5-3, he would regroup to seal the victory after 90 minutes. A sublime drop volley clinched his spot in the final.

“I think he was trying to be aggressive,” Murray reflected on Raonic’s performance. “I think he made maybe more mistakes than usual because of that. Maybe it appeared that he was being more aggressive, but I felt like he made more mistakes because he was trying to be more aggressive than usual. That’s how it felt to me.” 

Murray, who fired 18 winners and saved all three break points faced, notched his fifth FedEx ATP Head2Head victory over Raonic this year, extending his overall lead to 8-3. Raonic, who struck 31 unforced errors, was bidding to leap to a career-high World No. 3 in the Emirates ATP Rankings with a win. Murray played the role of spoiler for a third time this year, after stopping the Canadian in his quest to reach a first Grand Slam final at the Australian Open and win his maiden major title at Wimbledon.

The Dunblane native, who joined the ‘600 Wins Club’ earlier in the week, will play for a third Cincinnati title and 13th at the Masters 1000 level against either Grigor Dimitrov or Marin Cilic. He previously defeated Novak Djokovic in the final in both 2008 and ’11.

“I think it’s going to come down to certain things,” said Raonic. “I got to obviously serve much better than I did today. Today I also did a better job of creating opportunities on his serve that I didn’t make count. I had three break chances and three second serves; I put the ball in twice. No, I put the ball in once on second serves.

“That is not a formula of success by any means. It’s going to come down to a few important points, playing them better, and obviously executing better than I did on my end of things when it comes to my service games than I did today.” 

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Dodig/Melo Into Cincinnati Doubles Final

  • Posted: Aug 21, 2016

Dodig/Melo Into Cincinnati Doubles Final

No. 4 seeds down Canadian duo

Ivan Dodig and Marcelo Melo beat Daniel Nestor and Vasek Pospisil 6-4, 6-1 to move into the final of the Western & Southern Open on Saturday. Rogers Cup champions Dodig/Melo are looking for their second consecutive ATP World Tour Masters 1000 doubles title and secured the win in 58 minutes, just before rain hit the tournament grounds.

The Croatian-Brazilian duo overcame an early push from Nester/Pospisil, saving all four break points faced in the opening set. The 2014 Barclays ATP World Tour Finals runners-up took the Canadians’ serve in the first game of the second set, then swept the last four games to move into their first final in Cincinnati. No. 5 in the Emirates ATP Doubles Race To London, Dodig/Melo are well-positioned to advance to the prestigious year-end event for the fourth consecutive year.

Nestor is the defending doubles champion in Cincinnati, having won the title last year alongside Edouard Roger-Vasselin.

Dodig/Melo will aim for their fourth ATP World Tour Masters 1000 title against either five-time Cincinnati champions Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan or Jean-Julien Rojer and Horia Tecau.

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