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Marin Cilic might feel like he’s playing himself again and again and again this week at the Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships 2017 in Tokyo. The top seed is slated to meet a number of players whom, like Cilic, prefer to serve big and dictate play immediately after the first ball.
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The 6’6” Croatian, who will be going for his second title of the season (Istanbul), opens against a qualifier but could face 6’8” Kevin Anderson in the quarter-finals. The South African is coming off his maiden Grand Slam final at the US Open earlier this month (l. to Nadal).
Anderson, like Cilic, will also be looking to strengthen his spot in the Emirates ATP Race To London, which determines the Top 8 who play at the Nitto ATP Finals, to be held 12-19 November at The O2 in London.
The 31-year-old Anderson is currently in 11th place; Cilic is in seventh place. Fifth-placed Stan Wawrinka and ninth-placed Novak Djokovic have ruled themselves out of the season-ending tournament.
In the semi-finals, if the seeds hold, Cilic could meet 6’5” Milos Raonic, who’s seeded third and is returning after a seven-week absence because of a left wrist injury. The Canadian last played at the Coupe Rogers in Montreal in mid-August. Raonic withdrew from the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 in Cincinnati and the US Open.
Six-foot-six Sam Querrey rounds out the big servers populating the Tokyo draw. The sixth seed opens against French veteran Richard Gasquet. Fourth seed David Goffin, eighth seed Diego Schwartzman and second seed Dominic Thiem are the other seeds in the bottom half.
Goffin is playing Alexandr Dolgopolov in the Shenzhen Open final on Sunday. Thiem faces Steve Johnson of the U.S. in the first round and will look to rebound after losing his Chengdu opener to Argentina’s Guido Pella earlier this week.
World No. 1 Rafael Nadal could face No. 4 Alexander Zverev in what would be a can’t-miss China Open final in Beijing next weekend. The top-seeded Spaniard is returning to tour-level action this week for the first time since winning his third US Open earlier this month.
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He and Zverev have faced off three times in their FedEx ATP Head2Head series, with Nadal taking their trio of tangles, including a five-setter at the Australian Open earlier this year in which Zverev led two sets to one.
But that’s not to say Nadal or Zverev has an easy path to the ATP World Tour 500 title match. The 31-year-old Nadal opens against Frenchman Lucas Pouille, who outlasted the Spaniard the last time they played, during the fourth round of the 2016 US Open. From there, Nadal could face #NextGenATP Russian Karen Khachanov, No. 32 in the Emirates ATP Rankings. Sixth seed John Isner of the U.S. could await in the quarter-finals.
Third seed Grigor Dimitrov, wild card Juan Martin del Potro and fifth seed Roberto Bautista Agut are the favourites to face Nadal in the semi-finals. The Spaniard is going for his second China Open title, his first since 2005 when he beat Argentine Guillermo Coria.
Dimitrov opens against the red-hot Damir Dzumhur, who won his maiden ATP World Tour title in St. Petersburg and reached the semi-finals in Chengdu (l. to Dolgopolov) earlier this month. Del Potro faces Pablo Cuevas of Uruguay, and Bautista Agut will meet Chinese wild card Ze Zhang, who reached his first ATP World Tour quarter-final at the Shenzhen Open.
On the bottom half of the draw, Zverev will try to bounce back from his quarter-final loss against Dzhumur in Shenzhen. The #NextGenATP German is going for his sixth title of the season. He opens against Brit Kyle Edmund and could face seventh seed Tomas Berdych in the quarter-finals, with a semi-final match-up against eighth seed Nick Kyrgios or fourth seed Pablo Carreno Busta looming.
Russia’s Maria Sharapova put her recent US Open defeat by Anastasija Sevastova behind her with a gripping three-hour win over the Latvian at the China Open.
Sharapova, playing for the first time since that defeat in New York 26 days ago, saved a match point as she won 7-6 (7-3) 5-7 7-6 (9-7) in Beijing.
The 30-year-old wildcard, ranked 104th, will face compatriot Ekaterina Makarova or Jennifer Brady of the US next.
Second seed Simona Halep and 10th seed Angelique Kerber also progressed.
Romania’s Halep beat American Alison Riske 6-3 3-6 6-2, German Kerber saw off Japan’s Naomi Osaka 6-2 7-5, and 12th seed Petra Kvitova beat fellow Czech Kristyna Pliskova 6-3 7-5.
Sevastova, the world number 18, ended Sharapova’s return to Grand Slam tennis following a doping ban in the fourth round of the US Open, but the Russian prevailed in a remarkable rematch in Beijing.
The five-time Grand Slam champion led by a set and a break, and by a double break in the final set, but in the end had to fend off a match point as she finally converted her fourth after three hours and five minutes.
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France’s Caroline Garcia fought back to beat Australian Ashleigh Barty and win the biggest title of her career at the Wuhan Open in China.
Garcia, ranked 20th in the world, won the final – between two unseeded players – 6-7 (3-7) 7-6 (7-4) 6-2 to claim her fourth title.
World number 37 Barty served for the match twice but could not seal a fifth win of the week over a top-20 player.
“It was a such a fight all the week and especially today,” said Garcia, 23.
“A title is the best thing you can have in tennis, that’s why you fight all year long. I’m over the moon.”
Barty, 21, could not cap a remarkable week with the trophy, having seen off players such as Karolina Pliskova, Johanna Konta and Agnieszka Radwanska in the earlier rounds.
The Australian only chose to return to tennis last year after an 18-month break, during which she played for Brisbane Heat in cricket’s Big Bash League.
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David Goffin advanced to his third final of the season by defeating Henri Laaksonen 7-6(7), 5-7, 6-3 at the Shenzhen Open on Saturday.
After cruising to a straight-sets victory over eighth-seeded Donald Young in the quarter-finals, Goffin was forced to dig deep against the No. 107 Laaksonen.
Goffin clinched the first set in a tie-break, then dropped the second after sailing a forehand wide at 6-5. The second-seeded Belgian immediately broke to open the third and broke again at 5-3 to earn the victory in two hours and 16 minutes.
“I’m feeling a little tired; I’ve never played him before but he’s a tough fighter,” Goffin said. “It was a tough battle, especially in the second set. I’m happy with the way I started the third set but it was a fight until the end.
“I’ve won three matches already in Shenzhen; I’m going to rest tonight to be ready for tomorrow.”
Goffin moves a step closer to his first title of the season. The World No. 12 failed to lift a tournament trophy in his two previous attempts this season. In February, Goffin fell to Grigor Dimitrov at Sofia and to Jo-Wilfried Tsonga at Rotterdam.
Laaksonen, the Swiss No. 3 behind Roger Federer and Stan Wawrinka, was playing in his third straight three-set match and his first ATP World Tour semi-final.
In the previous round, Laaksonen outlasted Chinese qualifier Zhizhen Zhang 6-4, 3-6, 6-2 in two hours and five minutes. In the Round of 16, the 25 year old battled from a set down to rally past Marius Copil 4-6, 6-4, 6-3.
Marcos Baghdatis had to win two matches in one day on Saturday at the Chengdu Open but the Cypriot pulled it off and now, he’ll earn his reward: a chance to win his first ATP World Tour title since Sydney 2010.
The 32-year-old Baghdatis won the final game of his Chengdu quarter-final, beating Chinese Taipei’s Yen-Hsun Lu 6-3, 6-2 to reach his third semi-final of the season.
Later in the day, Baghdatis returned to take on Argentina’s Guido Pella, who had not dropped a set all tournament and had upset top seed Dominic Thiem in the second round. But Baghdatis hit 12 aces and lost his serve only once in the final two sets to advance past Pella 5-7, 6-4, 6-2 in just over two hours.
“I feel great because I think I kept a very good level throughout the match,” Baghdatis said. “I’m pretty happy I am improving and finding my movement back and my energy on court and keeping it for two hours.”
The veteran Baghdatis will be playing in his 14th tour-level final and his first since February 2016 (Dubai, l. to Wawrinka). He will face Uzbekistan’s Denis Istomin, who reached his fourth tour-level final by knocking out fifth seed Yuichi Sugita 6-2, 6-7(4), 6-0.
Istomin won almost 80 per cent of his first-serve points to beat Sugita, the lone remaining seed in the draw. “I’m really happy with my serve this tournament. I was working a lot on my serve,” said Istomin, who finished with 11 aces on Saturday.
“I’m just trying to bring my best tennis,” Istomin said. “It’s going to be tricky. I just go on court and try to do my best.”