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Best Grand Slam Matches: Part 2

  • Posted: Dec 08, 2016

Best Grand Slam Matches: Part 2

Continuing our Season In Review Series, ATPWorldTour.com revisits the best Grand Slam matches of 2016. In today’s countdown we feature Nos. 2-1:

2. Roger Federer d. Marin Cilic 6-7(4), 4-6, 6-3, 7-6(9), 6-3/QF/Wimbledon

Every year lately, when a certain Swiss player heads to a certain grass tennis club in England, his millions of fans ask a four-word question: Is this the year? As in, is this the year Roger Federer will win his record eighth Wimbledon title?

This June, it had been four years since the right-hander had captured his seventh Wimbledon crown. He had come close in 2014 and 2015, losing in the final to Novak Djokovic, and that’s exactly why Federer fans were so excited before his quarter-final match against Marin Cilic.

Djokovic, the two-time defending Wimbledon champion, had lost to Sam Querrey in the third round, leaving second seed Andy Murray, third seed Federer and sixth seed Milos Raonic as the remaining top contenders. And Federer led his FedEx ATP Head2Head rivalries against both Murray and Raonic.

But before any fan dreamt of another title, Federer had to face Cilic in a rematch of their 2014 US Open semi-final, which Cilic had won en route to his first Grand Slam title. “He blew me off the court at the US Open. I know what I’m getting into,” Federer said.

Read Match Report: Federer Escapes, Moves Into SFs

The match began almost like a continuation of that semi-final. Cilic was blasting his serve-forehand combination. The 6’6” right-hander was controlling the match, winning almost 90 per cent of the points that started with his first serve during the first two sets.

Midway through the third set, though, Federer crawled through an opening. The Swiss was down three break points at 3-3, 0/40, but he somehow won five straight points to hold and hear screams from the Centre Court crowd. He’d soon take the third set.

Cilic refused to hang his head in the fourth set, though, and earned three match points, including two on Federer’s second serve. But Cilic put neither of those serves in play, and Federer erased all three match points en route to winning the fourth set after a 20-point tie-break.

“If we would go back to play again, I would try to be more aggressive on the chances when I had them in the fourth. Maybe there was a slight hesitation [during] some of them,” Cilic said.

Federer carried that momentum for the entire fifth set, breaking Cilic at 4-3 and ending the match with two of his seven aces. To the delight of the Centre Court crowd, Federer had come back from two-sets down for the 10th time in his career and kept his title hopes alive.

“Today was epic. Probably going to look back at this as being a great, great match that I played in my career, on Centre Court here at Wimbledon,” Federer said. “This is huge for me, my season, my career. I’m very, very happy.”

1. Lucas Pouille d. Rafael Nadal 6-1, 2-6, 6-4, 3-6, 7-6(6)/4R/US Open

All season long, Lucas Pouille had shown he was one of the best players on the ATP World Tour during the biggest moments. Coming into the US Open, the Frenchman was ranked No. 25 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, but he had played like Top 5 player when under pressure, according to the Under Pressure Leaders category of the ATP Stats LEADERBOARDS, powered by the Infosys Information Platform.

The 22 year old, however, had never faced a pressurised moment quite like this one: Fifth-set tie-break. Fourth round of a Grand Slam. Facing Big Four member and two-time US Open champion Rafael Nadal.

Past history pointed to a Nadal rout. The Spaniard had dismissed Pouille 6-2, 6-1, at the 2015 Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters, and before the 2016 US Open, Pouille had never won a match at Flushing Meadows. “I was not confident before the match,” Pouille would say later.

Read Match Report: Pouille Conquers Nadal In New York

Then again, 2016 had already been a breakthrough season for Pouille. He had hiked 62 spots in the Emirates ATP Rankings, played in his first ATP World Tour final (Bucharest, l. to Verdasco) and reached his first Grand Slam quarter-final at Wimbledon (l. to Berdych). So why not add one more career-best achievement to the list?

The Frenchman rolled through the opening set, but Nadal answered in the second set, and back-and-forth they went, each player finding ways to answer the other’s momentum. In the fifth set, Nadal led 4-2 and appeared headed towards his seventh US Open quarter-final. It would have marked his first Grand Slam quarter-final of 2016 as well.

But Pouille found a way to turn things around against the 2010 and 2013 US Open champion. All match long, the 6’1” right-hander had brought the action to Nadal, charging the net and stepping around his backhand to pelt winners. For the match, Pouille would win 60 per cent of his net points (38/63) and hit 59 winners.

You May Also Like: Pouille Named Most Improved Player Of 2016

Most importantly, he didn’t let nerves change his game plan in the fifth-set tie-break. The Frenchman led 6/3 in the tie-break before Nadal won three straight points for 6/6. The Spaniard then had a chance to earn a match point but he missed a short forehand putaway.

“A big mistake, yeah. But you are six-all in the tie-break. I played the right point. I put [myself] in a position to have the winner and I had the mistake,” Nadal said. “You cannot go crazy thinking about these kind of things.”

Pouille seized the opportunity the very next point. At 7/6, the Frenchman slid to his left once more and unleashed a forehand that sailed over the high part of the net and landed just inside the sideline. “It’s the best win of my career so far,” he’d say later.

For the second Grand Slam tournament in a row, Pouille had reached the last eight. No one could say he hadn’t earned it. The 22 year old had won three consecutive five-set matches. Pressure? Lucas Pouille lives for it!

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Australian Open: Andy Murray & Johanna Konta among six Britons in singles draw

  • Posted: Dec 08, 2016

Andy Murray and Johanna Konta will lead a contingent of six British players with direct entry into the singles main draw at the Australian Open next month.

Kyle Edmund, Dan Evans, Heather Watson and Naomi Broady will join British number one players Murray and Konta in the singles draws in Melbourne.

Murray, 29, will be the top seed as he tries to win his first Australian Open, having finished runner-up five times.

Konta, 25, reached her first Grand Slam semi-final in Melbourne 12 months ago.

Jamie Murray and Brazil’s Bruno Soares will defend the doubles title they won in 2016.

The tournament, which takes place from 16-29 January, will also see former world number ones Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Serena Williams return.

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Federer has been out since Wimbledon recovering from a knee injury, Nadal ended his season in October with a wrist jury, while Williams missed the end of the 2016 season with a shoulder injury.

Williams, 35, will be trying to win a 23rd Grand Slam singles title, which would see her pass Steffi Graf at the top of the Open era standings, while Novak Djokovic hopes to win the event for a record seventh time..

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Taylor Fritz's Path To Another Banner Season In 2017

  • Posted: Dec 08, 2016

Taylor Fritz's Path To Another Banner Season In 2017

Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers shows where Fritz can improve next season

In August 2015, the spotlight had not yet discovered 17-year-old American Taylor Fritz.

He was No. 685 in the Emirates ATP Rankings and had lost in the first round of US Open qualifying to No. 123 Luca Vanni 6-3, 6-3. Fritz won only three points against the Italian’s first serve, four against his second serve, and was not able to generate a single break point.

And then everything changed. The American won 11 straight matches and strung together four impressive results in four months:

  • Oct. 2015: Won $100K Challenger, Sacramento, California

  • Oct. 2015: Won $50K Challenger, Fairfield, California

  • Nov. 2015: Finalist $50K Challenger, Champaign, Illinois

  • Jan. 2016: Won $75K Challenger, Onkaparinga, Australia

Fritz’s ranking jumped from No. 685 to No. 155 during that run, and the spotlight is now well and truly shining in his direction as he finished the season ranked No. 76, slightly down from a career high of No. 53 in August.

An Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers analysis of the Californian’s meteoric rise highlights the strengths that got him this far this quickly, and also what improvements Fritz needs to make in 2017 to keep feeding the steep growth curve.

You May Also Like: Fritz Named ATP Star Of Tomorrow Presented By Emirates

First-Serve Prowess

For 2016, Fritz finished 52nd in the Serve Leaders category of the ATP Stats LEADERBOARDS, powered by the Infosys Information Platform, including 30th in first-serve points won, 73.2%, and 17th in average aces per match, 8.4. His first serve is a bomb.

View The ATP Stats LEADERBOARDS

When he lost to then-World No. 5 Stan Wawrinka in four sets in the opening round of Wimbledon this year, the American’s fastest serve was 135 mph. Wawrinka topped out at 129 mph.

Focus On Returning

This is where Fritz will find his growth in 2017, as most maturing players do. In the 2016 season, Fritz fared 66th best in the Return Leaders category of the ATP Stats LEADERBOARDS. He didn’t break the Top 50 in any of the four return statistics that comprise the Return Leaders category.

The below chart shows six point scores and the percentage chance of breaking at each scoreline for Fritz and fellow #NextGen players Kyle Edmund, World No. 45, and Alexander Zverev, No. 24 in the Emirates ATP Rankings.

2016 Season: Percentage Chance Of Breaking Serve By Point Score

 Point Score (When Returning)   Taylor Fritz  Kyle Edmund  Alexander Zverev
 15/0  12%  15%  15%
 0/15   32%  31%  41%
 15/15   24%  24%  28%
 30/30   26%  32%  33%
 30/40   47%  50%  63%
 40/30   11%  13%  12%

Break Points Saved

Fritz was 21st on the ATP World Tour in 2016 in break points saved at 64 per cent. Behind his first serve, that percentage elevated to an extremely high 77 per cent (125/163), which is even higher than World No. 1 Andy Murray and World No. 2 Novak Djokovic, who were both at 74 per cent.

But behind second serves, both Murray (56 per cent) and Djokovic (57 per cent) were well above Fritz’s 47 per cent, identifying another snapshot of current vulnerability.

Fritz turned 19 just over a month ago (Oct. 28), and is still very much putting the pieces of the puzzle together in his developmental pathway. Look out world when this rough draft starts looking like a masterpiece.

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