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Scouting Report: 46 Of Top 50 Compete In Indian Wells

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2017

Scouting Report: 46 Of Top 50 Compete In Indian Wells

An executive summary of what every fan should know about the coming week on the ATP World Tour

•    All-Star Line-up in the Desert: The first of nine ATP World Tour Masters 1000 tournaments of the season, the BNP Paribas Open, gets underway at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden on Thursday, headlined by a star-studded field which includes every member of the Top 20 in the Emirates ATP Rankings (46 of the Top 50) overall as of 6 March 2017. This is the 42nd edition of the tournament, which was first held at nearby Mission Hills in Palm Springs in 1976.

•    BNP Paribas Open (Indian Wells): Three of the Big Four (except Murray) have accounted for 12 of the past 13 titles going back to 2004 when Roger Federer captured the first of his four titles (2004-06, 2012). Overall a Top 5 player in the Emirates ATP Rankings has lifted the champion’s trophy in 15 of the past 16 years, except 2010 when No. 26 Ivan Ljubicic won the title.  World No. 2 and five-time champion Novak Djokovic (2008, 2011, 2014-15-16) and three-time winner Rafael Nadal (2007, ’09, ’13) are the other title holders in the field.

•    Big Four Masters 1000 Dominance: The ‘Big Four’ of Murray, Djokovic, Nadal and Federer have won 56 of the last 61 ATP World Tour Masters 1000 tournaments, which dates back to Nadal’s triumph at Monte-Carlo in 2010.  The only other players to emerge with an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 title during that time are: Robin Soderling (2010 Paris), David Ferrer (2012 Paris), Stan Wawrinka (2014 Monte-Carlo), Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (2014 Toronto) and Marin Cilic (2016 Cincinnati). Here is a breakdown of the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 titles won by the Big Four during that span: Djokovic (25), Nadal (13), Murray (10) and Federer (8):

•    Big Four ATP Masters 1000 Titles: Here are the year-by-year ATP Masters 1000 titles of the Big Four since 2010:

Player 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Murray 2 2 0 1 0 2 3
Djokovic 0 5 3 3 4 6 4
Nadal 3 1 2 5 1 0 1
Federer 1 1 3 0 2 1 0

You May Also Like: Masters Of The Masters: 'Big Four' Riding Wave Of Dominance

 

•    ATP Masters 1000 Titles: Here are the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 title leaders (since 1990):

Player No.
1) Novak Djokovic 30
2) Rafael Nadal 28
3) Roger Federer 24
4) Andre Agassi 17
5) Andy Murray 14

•    ATP Masters 1000 Match Wins Leaders: Djokovic is closing in on 300 career ATP World Tour Masters 1000 match wins. Here are leaders (since 1990):

Player W-L Record
1) Roger Federer 330-98
2) Rafael Nadal 317-70
3) Novak Djokovic 298-62
4) Andy Murray 210-76
5) Andre Agassi 209-73

•    Murray Top Seed:  Murray is the top seed in Indian Wells for the first time in his career. The World No. 1 is making his 12th straight appearance (25-11 record) and he’s looking for his first title. His best result was a runner-up in 2009 (l. to Nadal). He also reached the semi-finals in 2007 and 2015 (l. to Djokovic in both). Last year he lost in the 3R (l. to Delbonis in 3rd set TB). The 29-year-old British superstar comes in with a 12-2 match record on the season after capturing his 45th career title in Dubai (d. Verdasco). He also lost in the 4R at the Australian Open (l. to M. Zverev) and opened the season by reaching the final in Doha (l. to Djokovic). This will be the 18th consecutive week he’s held No. 1 in the Emirates ATP Rankings since first taking over the top spot on Nov. 7.

•    Djokovic Reigning Champion: Djokovic enters as the three-time reigning champion and tournament record five-time title holder. He has a 17-match winning streak in Indian Wells since his last loss to Juan Martin del Potro in the 2013 semi-finals. Djokovic has a 47-6 career record and he has advanced to the semi-finals or better in eight of his previous 11 appearances. The 29-year-old Serb is 9-2 on the season. He opened with a title in Doha (d. Murray), lost in the 2R at the Australian Open (l. to Istomin), won a Davis Cup match vs. Russia (d. Medvedev) and reached the quarter-finals in Acapulco (l. to Kyrgios). He has 760 career match wins and he is two wins away from tying Pete Sampras for 10th place on the Open Era list.

•    Roger Returns: After missing last year’s tournament due to a knee injury, Federer returns to Indian Wells for the 16th time. The 35-year-old Swiss superstar has a 52-11 match record, winning titles in 2004-06 and 2012. He also was runner-up in his last two visits in 2014-15 (l. to Djokovic both times). Federer is playing in his second tournament (8-1 record) since capturing his 18th career Grand Slam crown at the Australian Open on Jan. 29 (d. Nadal in five sets). He became the second player to win a Grand Slam crown defeating four Top 10 opponents along the way (Mats Wilander in 1982 Roland Garros). Last week in Dubai he lost in the 2R (l. to Donskoy in third set TB after holding 3 MPs). Last year he played his last match at the Wimbledon semi-finals on July 8, 2016 when he lost in five sets to Raonic. He missed the rest of last season with a knee injury.

•    Nadal Eyes 70th Title: Three-time BNP Paribas Open champion Nadal is making his 13th appearance in Indian Wells (48-9 record). The 30-year-old Spaniard has won his three titles in odd years (2007, 2009, 2013) while reaching the final in 2011. Nadal is coming off a runner-up in Acapulco where he lost to Sam Querrey 63 76, suffering his first loss in Mexico (14-1). It was also his 30th tournament played on hard courts without a title, the longest of his career. Nadal is not only trying to capture his 70th career title, he is also aiming to earn his first hard court title since Doha in January 2014 (d. Monfils). Nadal has a 12-3 record on the season and he opened the year by reaching the quarter-finals in Brisbane (l. to Raonic) and following with a runner-up at the Australian Open.

•    Tsonga on a Roll: No. 7 seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga is off to his best career start since 2009 when he began with a 21-3 record. The 31-year-old Frenchman is 17-3 this season with back-to-back titles in Rotterdam (d. Goffin) and Marseille (d. Pouille). He enters Indian Wells on a nine-match winning streak. The top Frenchman has a 13-8 match record in Indian Wells with his best results the quarter-finals in 2013 and last year (l. to Djokovic in both).

•    Success to No. 1: In six of the last seven years (and eight of the last 11), the year-end No. 1 player in the Emirates ATP Rankings has won the most ATP World Tour Masters 1000 matches during that season. Last year No. 2 Djokovic won 31 matches followed by Murray with 27. Here’s a look at the year-end No. 1 players back to 2010:

Year Year-End No. 1 Win-Loss Titles
2016 Andy Murray 27-5 3
2015 Novak Djokovic 39-2 6
2014 Novak Djokovic *28-4 4
2013 Rafael Nadal 35-3 5
2012 Novak Djokovic 34-6 3
2011 Novak Djokovic 33-1 5
2010 Rafael Nadal 29-5 3

Note: Then No. 2-ranked Federer also won 28 ATP Masters 1000 matches in 2014

•    #NextGenATP Stars: There are eight #NextGenATP players in the main draw, including five teenagers (not including possible qualifiers). Here’s a look at the talented 21 & under group listed in ranking order: 

Main Draw Rank Age
Alexander Zverev No. 20 19
Karen Khachanov No. 52 20
Daniil Medvedev No. 58 21
Borna Coric No. 59 20
Frances Tiafoe (WC) No. 86 (C-H) 19
Stefan Kozlov (WC) No. 116 19
Taylor Fritz (WC) No. 136 19
Reilly Opelka (WC) No. 174 19

•    400 Match Wins Milestone: There are three players who could reach the 400 career match wins milestone in Indian Wells:                                   

Philipp Kohlschreiber 399                                  
Gael Monfils 397                             
Marin Cilic 396

•    Americans Off to Quick Start: For the first time since 2003, there have been four American ATP World Tour winners going into Indian Wells. Top American Jack Sock has won two titles (Auckland, Delray Beach) along with Ryan Harrison (Memphis) and Sam Querrey (Acapulco). Three of the titles have come in three consecutive weeks and the last time that occurred was in 2012 with John Isner (Newport), Andy Roddick (Atlanta) and Querrey (Los Angeles). The four American titles are the most in a season since 2013 with five.

•    Infosys ATP World Tour Wins Leaders: Tsonga has compiled a 17-3 match record this season and his 17 wins is the most on the ATP World Tour. Here are this year’s match wins leaders:

Player W-L Titles
1) Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 17-3 2
2) Grigor Dimitrov 16-2 2
3) Dominic Thiem 14-6 1
4) David Goffin 13-5 0
5) Andy Murray 12-2 1
Rafael Nadal 12-3 0
Roberto Bautista Agut 12-4 1
Pablo Carreno Busta 12-6 0

•    Strong Doubles Field: The top six teams in the Emirates ATP Doubles Team Rankings are entered in the draw, led by Australian Open champions Henri Kontinen and John Peers. The top seeds are reigning champions Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut. Here is a look at the Top 6 teams entered: 

1) Henri Kontinen & John Peers
2) Bob Bryan & Mike Bryan
3) Jean-Julien Rojer & Horia Tecau
4) Jamie Murray & Bruno Soares
5) Ivan Dodig & Marcel Granollers
6) Juan Sebastian Cabal & Robert Farah

•    Former Champions in Draw: There are two teams expected to be in the draw: reigning champions Herbert & Mahut along with 2013-14 winners Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan. There are five other players who have won the title with different partners:

— Vasek Pospisil (2015)
— Jack Sock (2015)
— Marc Lopez (2010 & 2012)
— Rafael Nadal (2010 & 2012)
— Daniel Nestor (1997, 2002, ’05-06): making 22nd tournament appearance

•    Top 10 Playing Doubles: There are four of the Top 10 singles players in the Emirates ATP Rankings on the advance entry list:

No. 4 Milos Raonic (w/ZImonjic)
No. 6 Rafael Nadal (w/Tomic)
No. 7 Marin Cilic (w/Mektic)
No. 9 Dominic Thiem (w/Kohlschreiber)

In Case You Missed It

World No. 1 Andy Murray captured the 45th tour-level singles trophy of his career, beating Fernando Verdasco 6-3, 6-2 in the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships final. Read & Watch

Sam Querrey beat four Top 20 players en route to clinching the Abierto Mexicano Telcel trophy, beating Rafael Nadal 6-3, 7-6(3) in the Acapulco final. Read & Watch

Catch up on off-court activities in Dubai, Acapulco and Sao Paulo. Read & Watch Best of ATP Stars

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Querrey Back Into Top 30, Mover Of The Week

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2017

Querrey Back Into Top 30, Mover Of The Week

ATPWorldTour.com looks at the top Movers of the Week in the Top 100 of the Emirates ATP Rankings, as of Monday, 6 March 2017.

Sam Querrey has returned to his highest position in the Emirates ATP Rankings for three-and-a-half years as a result of beating four Top 20 players en route to the Abierto Mexicano Telcel trophy. The American beat No. 11 David Goffin, No. 9 Dominic Thiem, No. 17 Nick Kyrgios and No. 6 Rafael Nadal 6-3, 7-6(3) in the Acapulco final for his ninth ATP World Tour title. He has risen 14 places to No. 26 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, a position he last held on 5 August 2013. Read Acapulco Final Report

World No. 1 Andy Murray lifted the 45th trophy of his career at the 25th edition of the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships, beating former World No. 7 Fernando Verdasco who moved up six spots to No. 29. The 33-year-old Spaniard was last in the Top 30 of the Emirates ATP Rankings at No. 30 on 6 April 2014. Dubai semi-finalist Robin Haase soared 19 positions to No. 47 and is back in the Top 50 for the first time since 7 July 2014 (when he was No. 49). Damir Dzumhur, who beat No. 3-ranked Stan Wawrinka en route to the Dubai quarter-finals (l. to Haase), also rose 10 places to a career-high No. 67. Read Dubai Final Report

View Latest Emirates ATP Rankings

#NextGenATP Japanese Yoshihito Nishioka, who qualified for Acapulco and reached the quarter-finals (l. to Nadal), improved by 16 spots to move to a career-high No. 70 the Emirates ATP Rankings. Former World No. 65 Evgeny Donskoy broke back into the Top 100 for the first time since 10 October 2016 (at No. 97) by qualifying in Dubai and progressing to the last eight (l. to Pouille). The Russian moved up 17 positions to No. 99.

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Masters Of The Masters: 'Big Four' Riding Wave Of Dominance

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2017

Masters Of The Masters: 'Big Four' Riding Wave Of Dominance

ATPWorldTour.com reviews the Big Four’s ruthless run in ATP World Tour Masters 1000 events

Nine tournaments, nine opportunities to test your talents at the highest level. There is no stronger barometer for success than the nine ATP World Tour Masters 1000 events. Tournaments that span the globe in the most scenic, world-class locales, they provide the ultimate challenge with significant Emirates ATP Rankings points at stake. This week, the first of the year is set to get underway at the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells.

To be the best, you have to perform at the most elite events. For more than a decade, the quartet of Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Andy Murray have done exactly that. The Big Four have tossed aside any notion of parity at the Masters 1000 level in recent years, maintaining a stunning stranglehold.

“A lot of the top guys have been in the latter stages of the Masters 1000s and often to win them, you have to defeat a couple of them which is not easy,” Murray said in Cincinnati last year. “It just goes to show the consistency of the top players over the last 10 years or so has been phenomenal.”

The Masters monopoly Murray spoke of has been nothing short of astounding. Since March 2008, the quartet has claimed 88 per cent (71 of 81) of titles, including 54 of the past 59 crowns. Their prolific run of sustained dominance at the highest level is jaw-dropping. Only Marin Cilic (Cincinnati 2016), Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (Toronto 2014), Stan Wawrinka (Monte-Carlo 2014), David Ferrer (Paris 2012) and Robin Soderling (Paris 2010) have crashed the party since April 2010. In fact, on clay, the Big Four have won 29 of 30 Masters 1000 events dating back more than a decade, with Wawrinka’s victory at the Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters the lone exception.

With the majority held over the course of just one week, Masters 1000 tournaments are grueling sprints that often feature multiple battles between Top 10 players. And with a best-of-three set format, anyone can catch fire on any given day and spring an upset, which further adds to the intrigue of the Big Four’s dominance.

Big Four’s Masters 1000 Dominance

Player Titles Most Successful Event
Missing Trophies
Novak Djokovic 30 Miami (6 titles) Cincinnati
Rafael Nadal 28 Monte-Carlo (9) Miami, Shanghai, Paris
Roger Federer 24 Cincinnati (7) Monte-Carlo, Rome
Andy Murray 14 Canada, Shanghai (3) Indian Wells, Monte-Carlo

Djokovic has been at his very best here, amassing a record 30 titles since lifting his first trophy in Miami in 2007. Nadal sits in second place with 28 victories, while Federer resides in third with 24. Murray, meanwhile, is just three behind Andre Agassi with 14 crowns. To put this into further perspective, Agassi (17) and Pete Sampras (11) are the only players aside from the Big Four to win double-digit Masters 1000 titles.

“You value Grand Slams, but on the other hand, I’ve loved playing in Masters tournaments throughout my career,” said Djokovic after winning in Toronto last year. “I have had plenty of success in this particular category of events and I’m very grateful for that because I always value them as much as I value Grand Slams.”

Djokovic, Federer and Nadal own the longest win streaks in Masters 1000 history, with the Serbian having won 31 straight matches in 2011 and again accruing a streak of 30 in a row in 2014-15. Federer won 29 successive matches from 2005-06, with Nadal stringing together 23 straight in 2013. Moreover, Nadal is the only player to win a title in 10 straight seasons, having seized trophies in each campaign from 2005-14.

The world’s best will descend on Indian Wells for the BNP Paribas Open, with qualifying set to get underway on Tuesday and main draw action commencing on Thursday and running through the final on 19 March. World No. 1 Murray is seeking his first title in the California desert, while No. 2 Djokovic is eyeing a record sixth. Murray is bidding to extend his win streak at the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 level, having prevailed in Shanghai and Paris towards the end of the 2016 season. Including his title at the ATP Finals, the Scot is riding an impressive run of form in elite ATP World Tour events. In addition to Djokovic, other former champions in the field are Roger Federer (2004-06, ’12) and Rafael Nadal (2007, ’09, ’13).

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Sao Paulo Final To Finish Monday

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2017

Sao Paulo Final To Finish Monday

Cuevas and Ramos-Vinolas will return to battle for title

Second seed Albert Ramos-Vinolas and third seed Pablo Cuevas will complete their rain-delayed Brasil Open final on Monday, with play scheduled to resume at 12:00pm local time in Sao Paulo. The heavens opened as Ramos-Vinolas led the two-time defending champion 7-6(3), 3-3.

Both players traded service holds throughout the opening set, but the Spaniard ran away with the tie-break as Cuevas’ steady baseline game betrayed him. The Uruguayan hit four consecutive errors to give Ramos-Vinolas a 6/2 lead and a forehand error from Cuevas on set point gave the Spaniard a commanding advantage.

Perhaps aided by a brief rain delay just one point into the second set, the defending champion regrouped by racing to a 3-1 lead, but Ramos-Vinolas fought hard to get the break back. With Ramos-Vinolas serving at 3-3, a more substantial shower began and the players were brought off the court.

Cuevas has once again produced his top form in Sao Paulo and extended his win streak here to 12 matches. Having entered the tournament with a 3-9 record since the US Open, he came alive this week with wins over sixth seed Diego Schwartzman in the quarter-finals and top seed Pablo Carreno Busta in the semi-finals.

Ramos-Vinolas looks to put the perfect end to his run in the Golden Swing of clay-court events in South America. The Spaniard recorded semi-final showings at the Ecuador Open and Rio Open presented by Claro, as well as a quarter-final finish at the Argentina Open.

 Watch Full Match Replays

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Melzer Continues Red-Hot Form With Wroclaw Title

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2017

Melzer Continues Red-Hot Form With Wroclaw Title

Revisit the week that was on the ATP Challenger Tour as we applaud the achievements of those on the rise and look ahead to who’s in action in the week to come

A LOOK BACK 

Wroclaw Open (Wroclaw Open): Former Top 10 player and eighth seed Jurgen Melzer continued his recent run of form by taking the title in Wroclaw with a 6-4, 6-3 win over local wild card Michal Przysiezny. The Austrian, who returned to the tour last June after sitting out for nine months due to injury, also won last month’s ATP Challenger Tour event in Budapest. Having started the year outside the Top 300 of the Emirates ATP Rankings, he is projected to move back inside the Top 160 on Monday.

Przysiezny was seeking to become the first Polish winner in the tournament’s 14-year history. He reached his first Challenger final since winning the title in Kyoto in March 2015.

Keio Challenger (Yokohama, Japan): Top seed and local favourite Yuichi Sugita saved two match points, rallying from 2-5 down in the final set to defeat Korean teenager Soon Woo Kwon 6-4, 2-6, 7-6. The 28 year old picked up his seventh Challenger title, all of which have come in Asia. Kwon becomes the third Korean player to reach a Challenger final, joining Hyeon Chung (won Kaohsiung, Kobe and Maui, l. Nanchang) and Duckhee Lee (l. Kaohsiung)

WHAT THE PLAYERS SAID

Kwon: “Reaching the final here will help me play with more confidence in the games to come. I like that the staff here created a good atmosphere. I think that was part of why I was able to do well.”

A LOOK AHEAD

There are two $50,000 Challengers on the schedule this week. The tournament in Santiago, Chile, returns for the 12th year. Last year’s runner-up, Rogerio Dutra Silva of Brazil, is the top seed and Nicolas Kicker of Argentina is the second seed. #NextGenATP player Christian Ruud of Norway, a semi-finalist earlier this month at the ATP World Tour 500 event in Rio de Janeiro, is also in the draw.

The event in Zhuhai, China, is back for the second straight year. Evgeny Donskoy of Russia, who shocked Roger Federer last week at the ATP World Tour 500 event in Dubai, is the top seed. Sugita looks for another big week as the second seed and #NextGenATP player Duckhee Lee of Korea is the third seed. Last year’s runner-up and local favourite Ze Zhang will also compete this week.

View Draws & Watch Free Live Streams

ATP CHALLENGER TOUR ON TWITTER: The ATP Challenger Tour has launched a dedicated Twitter account for the latest news and information about players and events. Follow @ATPChallengerTour at twitter.com/ATPChallengerTour.

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Brazilian Duo Triumph On Home Soil

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2017

Brazilian Duo Triumph On Home Soil

Dutra Silva and Sa notch first team title

For the first time in six years, an all-Brazilian team has claimed the doubles title at the Brasil Open. Rogerio Dutra Silva and Andre Sa lifted the trophy on home soil in Sao Paulo, defeating Marcus Daniell and Marcelo Demoliner 7-6(5), 5-7, 10-7.

“Every title is special, but to do it on home soil is another level,” said Sa. “It was a great atmosphere this week. I had my friends and family here, so it was really special. Rogerio is from Sao Paulo, so it was very special for him as well. We’re just really happy.”

Teaming for the first time this week, Dutra Silva and became the first all-Brazilian tandem to prevail at the tournament since Marcelo Melo and Bruno Soares in 2011. Previously, Sa had triumphed alongside Melo for the 2008 crown, when the event was held in nearby Costa do Sauipe.

Individually, it was 39-year-old Sa’s 11th ATP World Tour doubles title and first since 2015. For the 33-year-old Dutra Silva, it was his maiden title in just his second final. They split $24,680 in prize money and 250 Emirates ATP Doubles Rankings points.

“I feel amazing. To play at home with the crowd, everything was perfect,” said Dutra Silva. “It was my first time playing with Andre, a legend of tennis, so I’m very happy.”

 Watch Full Match Replay

The Brazilian-Kiwi pair of Demoliner and Daniell had their chances on a sun-kissed Sunday afternoon at the Pinheiros Sports Club, earning five break points in the first set. But Sa and Dutra Silva denied all of them and overcame a 2/0 deficit in the ensuing tie-break. Dutra Silva pumped his fists after firing a cross-court forehand winner for a mini-break at 4/4 and a Daniell double fault secured the opener after 58 minutes.

The first break of the match came in the 11th game of the second set, as Daniell hit a stunning reflex volley winner to edge ahead 6-5. The championship would proceed to a Match Tie-break, where Dutra Silva struck a lob that landed on the baseline for the decisive mini-break at 8/6. He and Sa would lift their arms in victory after two hours and three minutes.

Demoliner remains in search of his first ATP World Tour doubles title, falling to 0-3 in finals. He previously finished runner-up with Daniell in Bastad last year, as well as in Quito with Thomaz Bellucci. Daniell, meanwhile, falls to 3-2 in finals. They earn $12,970 in prize money and 150 Emirates ATP Doubles Rankings points.

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