Zverev Talks About Reaching Top 20
Zverev Talks About Reaching Top 20
Nick Kyrgios has pulled out of the Rotterdam Open to play in basketball’s NBA All-Star Celebrity Game.
Tournament director Richard Krajicek has released the Australian, 21, from his contract so he can play in the game in New Orleans in February.
Kyrgios is suspended from the ATP Tour for not producing his “best effort” at last week’s Shanghai Masters.
However, he could return by 7 November, having agreed to an ATP plan that he consults a sports psychologist.
Kyrgios was suspended initially for eight tournament weeks, which would have kept him off the tour until 15 January, and fined $25,000 (£20,560).
The world number 14, who had won the Japan Open the previous week, patted the ball over the net several times when serving in his 6-3 6-1 second-round defeat by Mischa Zverev in China.
He also began walking back to his chair before a Zverev serve had landed.
Kyrgios subsequently said he was “truly sorry” and would use this time during his suspension “to improve on and off the court”.
The Australian represented his country at youth level as a basketball player, and said in an interview in June 2015 that he preferred the sport to tennis.
Asked then if he might have had a career in basketball, Kyrgios said: “I thought I was going to.
“I was trying to get there when I was 14 and every time when I’m playing now, I still think I can for some odd reason, even though I’m playing a completely different sport.
“That’s just the way it is and unfortunately I think my basketball career has come to an end.”
The NBA celebrity match is part of the organisation’s All-Star weekend. It features three matches, culminating in the prestigious All-Star Game on 19 February, involving the NBA’s top players.
This year’s weekend was originally to have been held in Charlotte, North Carolina, but was moved after state legislators introduced laws that limited anti-discrimination protections for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people.
Johanna Konta can only be overtaken by Svetlana Kuznetsova in the race to qualify for the WTA Finals, after Carla Suarez Navarro’s hopes ended in Moscow.
Suarez Navarro could have overtaken Konta by winning the Kremlin Cup but she retired in the second round.
Konta remains in line to take the last place at the eight-player season-ending event, but the Briton is not competing this week as she recovers from injury.
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Kuznetsova, who also needs to win the title, beat Alize Cornet 6-4 7-5.
The Russian, who is the defending champion, will play Kristina Mladenovic or Timea Babos in the quarter-finals on Thursday.
Konta, 25, is eighth in the Singapore standings following the withdrawal of world number two Serena Williams, but it is not clear whether the Briton would be fit to play should she qualify.
Road to Singapore (*470 points awarded for Moscow title) |
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1. Angelique Kerber (Germany) – Qualified |
2. Agnieszka Radwanska (Poland) – Qualified |
3. Simona Halep (Romania) – Qualified |
4. Karolina Pliskova (Czech Republic) – Qualified |
5. Garbine Muguruza (Spain) – Qualified |
6. Madison Keys (USA) – Qualified |
7. Dominika Cibulkova (Slovakia) – Qualified |
8. Johanna Konta (Great Britain) – 3455 points |
9. Carla Suarez Navarro (Spain) – 3170 points |
10. Svetlana Kuznetsova (Russia) – 3080 points* |
Teenager will meet Karlovic next
He’s played only two ATP World Tour matches but 18-year-old Mikael Ymer has already swept a former Top 10 player. The Swedish wild card dismissed Spaniard Fernando Verdasco 6-2, 6-1 on Tuesday, needing only 70 minutes to eliminate the left-hander from the If Stockholm Open.
Ymer impressed the Swedish crowd with poise of a more experienced, higher-ranked player, not what they might have expected from the World No. 549 who made his ATP World Tour debut a year ago in Stockholm (l. to A. Zverev). The right-hander saved all three break points faced and broke Verdasco for the fifth time to clinch the match, his first ATP World Tour victory. Ymer will have a tall task in round two. He faces 6’11” Ivo Karlovic, the third seed.
Ymer’s older brother, 20-year-old Elias Ymer, a member of the ATP Next Generation, was less fortunate. He fell to German qualifier Tobias Kamke 6-4, 6-0 after 65 minutes.
Spaniard Nicolas Almagro, another former Top 10 player, delivered 17 aces in a 3-6, 7-6(1), 6-3 comeback victory against Japanese Yuichi Sugita. Almagro saved seven of eight break points in the two-hour, 18-minute match and will next face John Isner or Juan Martin del Potro.
German Dustin Brown also came back to win, advancing past Gilles Muller 4-6, 6-3, 6-3. Brown will next meet Malek Jaziri of Tunisia or American Jack Sock, the sixth seed.
Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers reveals why you should strive to play more points returning than serving
More than a million points of research. Every Top 100 player. It turns out that player development evolves from playing more points on serve to playing more points returning the further up the Emirates ATP Rankings you climb.
An Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers analysis reveals a hidden element of our sport we have never fully grasped. The majority of the points you want to play are not on your own serve. You want your opponents to go deeper into their service games, where your chances of breaking serve steadily increase. You want to keep your own service games short and sweet.
The Infosys Information Platform uncovered that every single player in the Top 10 has played more return points than serve points since the beginning of the 2015 season. This massive data set is from the past 20 months and contains 1,143,932 points.
See the ATP Stats LEADERBOARDS powered by the Infosys Information Platform
Roger Federer led the pack, playing 52.6 per cent of his points returning. Second was World No. 1 Novak Djokovic at 52 per cent. They were the only two players in the Top 100 who reached the 52 per cent mark. The entire data set of 100 players scored in a four percentage point range, from around 48 per cent to 52 per cent.
Top 10 Breakdown: Percentage of Return vs. Serve Points
Ranking | Player | Per Cent Returning |
1 | Novak Djokovic | 52% |
2 | Andy Murray | 51.4% |
3 | Stan Wawrinka | 50.1% |
4 | Rafael Nadal | 51.2% |
5 | Kei Nishikori | 50.8% |
6 | Milos Raonic | 50.7% |
7 | Roger Federer | 52.6% |
8 | Gael Monfils | 50.3% |
9 | Tomas Berdych | 50.7% |
10 | Dominic Thiem | 51.6% |
Dominic Thiem was the third ranked player in the Top 10 in this specific category. The 23-year-old Austrian moved from outside the Top 50 in the Emirates ATP Rankings in early 2015 into the Top 10 in June of this year.
Interestingly, World No. 3 Stan Wawrinka had the lowest rating of any player in the Top 10, playing just 50.1 per cent of points returning serve.
The further down the Top 100 list you move, the more you uncover players who play more points on their own serve, battling harder to hold serve, and not pressuring as much on their opponent’s service games.
Top 100 Breakdown: Percentage of Return vs. Serve Points
Ranking | More Return Than Serve Points Played |
Top 20 | 90% |
Top 50 | 72% |
51-100 | 44% |
Top 100 | 58% |
Overall, 58 per cent of the Top 100 play more points returning than serving. But there is a clear disparity between the Top 50 and the bottom 50. Seventy two percent of the top half play more return points than serve points, and that elevates to 90 per cent within Top 20. But the metrics are clearly different in the bottom half of the Top 100, with only 44 per cent of players playing more points on return.
Playing more points returning is something that higher ranked players achieve, but it’s also something that more experienced players seem to understand as well. When you look at the youth in the Top 100, there is an overwhelming majority of them who still play more points on serve.
Age | Player | Return Percentage |
21 | Nick Kyrgios | 49.6% |
22 | Lucas Pouille | 49.1% |
23 | Bernard Tomic | 48.5% |
19 | Alexander Zverev | 49.2% |
21 | Kyle Edmund | 49.3% |
18 | Taylor Fritz | 47.9% |
19 | Jared Donaldson | 49.8% |
For example, the only two players in the Top 20 who play more points serving than returning are the two youngest, 21 year old Nick Kyrgios and 22 year old Lucas Pouille. Bernard Tomic, Alexander Zverev, Kyle Edmund, Taylor Fritz and Jared Donaldson are young players in the Top 100 who are in the transition zone of trying to play more points on return than on their own serve.
Becoming more efficient on your own serve and making your opponent work harder on his serve makes perfect sense, and now we have the data to tie it to player development and your position in the Top 100 on tour.
Italians will face off for the fourth time
Italian Paolo Lorenzi swept his countryman and lucky loser Federico Gaio 6-4, 6-4 on Tuesday to move into the second round at the VTB Kremlin Cup in Moscow. The seventh-seeded Lorenzi will next face another Italian in Fabio Fognini, who improved to 2-0 in his FedEx ATP Head2Head series against Ricardas Berankis by winning 6-1, 6-2 in 58 minutes.
Fognini leads his FedEx ATP Head2Head series against Lorenzi 2-1, but Lorenzi won the last time they played, on clay at the Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters earlier this season.
Sixth seed Pablo Carreno Busta prevailed against Austrian qualifier Jurgen Melzer 3-6, 6-3, 7-6(2) after two hours and 16 minutes. The Spaniard won 70 per cent of his first-serve points.
In a battle of Serbians, Dusan Lajovic earned two crucial service breaks to outlast Janko Tipsarevic 7-6(4), 6-4. “We are very good friends,” Lajovic said. “On court, we had to fight… I’m happy that I won. It’s always tough to play against a good friend.”
The 26-year-old Lajovic faces third seed Philipp Kohlschreiber in the second round. Russian qualifier Daniil Medvedev also advanced when Mikhail Kukushkin retired down 6-4, 4-0. Medvedev faces fourth seed Viktor Troicki next.