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Gombos Finds Winning Formula In Orleans

  • Posted: Oct 01, 2017

Gombos Finds Winning Formula In Orleans

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
Open d’Orleans (Orleans, France): Last year, Norbert Gombos finished runner-up to Pierre-Hugues Herbert in the Orleans final. On Sunday, the fourth seed went one step further, claiming the title at the prestigious $150,000 event with a 6-3, 5-7, 6-2 win over another Frenchman – Julien Benneteau. Gombos will rise to a career-high No. 80 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, having notched his fifth ATP Challenger Tour title and first in nearly one year.

You May Also Like: French Legends, Renowned Chefs Add To Orleans' Prestige

BFD Challenger (Rome, Italy): The 2017 season has become the year of the Serbian on the ATP Challenger Tour. Filip Krajinovic secured a tour-leading 10th title for the European nation with a 6-4, 6-3 win over Daniel Gimeno-Traver in Rome. Krajinovic, who did not drop a set all week, claimed his fourth title of the year, joining only countryman Janko Tipsarevic as players with at least four crowns in 2017. Also the winner on the German clay of Heilbronn and Marburg and in Italian mountain town of Biella, he is up 10 spots to No. 95 in the Emirates ATP Rankings.

Tiburon Challenger presented by Wells Fargo (Tiburon, California, USA): Cameron Norrie entered the final week of July at No. 275 in the Emirates ATP Rankings. What the Brit has done since is nothing short of remarkable. Norrie clinched his second ATP Challenger Tour crown on Sunday in Tiburon, soaring to a career-high No. 136. He has now won 21 of his last 25 matches, including a 6-2, 6-3 win over Tennys Sandgren for the title. The former Texas Christian University standout had won his maiden title in Binghamton two months ago.

A LOOK AHEAD
There are five tournaments on the calendar, including 2015 Tournament of the Year in Monterrey, Mexico. Victor Estrella Burgos, finalist in 2015, and defending champion Ernesto Escobedo lead the field. Also in North America, the event in Stockton, California, features #NextGenATP stars Michael Mmoh, Stefan Kozlov, Elias Ymer, Felix Auger-Aliassime and Noah Rubin.

In Asia, Jordan Thompson is the top seed in Kaohsiun, Taiwan, while Laslo Djere leads the pack at the inaugural Almaty Challenger, in Kazakhstan. The ATP Challenger Tour also returns to Brazil, where Federico Delbonis is the lone Top 100 player in Campinas. Chile’s Gonzalo Lama is the defending champion.

ATP Challenger Tour 

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Tiburon Challenger Stars Set Sail On San Francisco Bay

  • Posted: Oct 01, 2017

Tiburon Challenger Stars Set Sail On San Francisco Bay

The Tiburon Challenger treated players to a special evening on the California coast

With the competition as fierce as ever, the ATP Challenger Tour demands countless hours on the court and in the gym, week in and week out. Any small reprieve is a welcome one for players looking to end their season on a high note.

For those competing at the Tiburon Challenger presented by Wells Fargo in California, that reprieve wasn’t so small – in fact, it was quite large… and came in the form of a 98-foot yacht. Several players from the picturesque ATP Challenger Tour event were treated to a luxurious cruise on the San Francisco Bay, courtesy of a generous patron of the tournament’s Tiburon Peninsula Club.

With views of the Tiburon and San Francisco shorelines, the Golden Gate Bridge, Angel Island and Alcatraz, a group of players including Cameron Norrie, Sam Groth, Alejandro Gonzalez, Luke Bambridge, Brydan Klein and David O’Hare were treated to something a little extra at the Tiburon Challenger.

“On Monday, one of the ladies here at the club took us out on what was something like a $15 million boat,” said Norrie, who will compete in Sunday’s title match versus Tennys Sandgren.

“We went under the Golden Gate Bridge and it was a nice opportunity to see the area. We had free food and dinner and it was a great experience. You don’t see that too often on the Challenger level.”

The $100,000 Challenger in Tiburon has always been a marquee destination for players on the ATP Challenger Tour. Located on hills replete with a stunning vista of one of America’s most vibrant coastal municipalities, the tournament is currently in its 11th edition, having first hosted the event in 2003. 

Past champions include current and former Top 20 players Sam Querrey (2014), Jack Sock (2012) and Ivo Karlovic (2011).

“This tournament has been unbelievable,” remarked Norrie. “They’ve been great to me. It’s probably one of the best Challengers I’ve played in. The community is great and the atmosphere at each match too.”

ATP Challenger Tour 

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20 Things To Watch In Beijing & Tokyo

  • Posted: Oct 01, 2017

20 Things To Watch In Beijing & Tokyo

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

The ATP World Tour’s Asian swing continues with a pair of 500-level events: the China Open and the Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships 2017. Six of the Top 10 in the Emirates ATP Rankings are competing this week, with World No. 1 Rafael Nadal leading the way in Beijing and Wimbledon finalist Marin Cilic the top seed in Tokyo.

View Draws: Beijing | Tokyo

10 THINGS TO WATCH IN BEIJING

(1) Race is On: With 500 points on the line at the China Open, the Emirates ATP Race To London is heating up. World No. 1 and Nitto ATP Finals qualifier Rafael Nadal leads a field full of contenders. Pablo Carreno Busta is near the London cut at No. 8 in the Race, but six other players in the Beijing draw are within 1,000 points of the Spaniard, including countryman Roberto Bautista Agut.

(2) Top of the World: Nadal returns to the China Open for the fifth straight season and 12 years after winning the title as a teenager. In the first round, the reigning Roland Garros and US Open champion meets Lucas Pouille, who defeated him in a fifth-set tie-break at the 2016 US Open.

(3) Race To Milan: Alexander Zverev is next in line to qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals and the only player who has already qualified for the Next Gen ATP Finals. Zverev is joined in Beijing by fellow #NextGenATP players Andrey Rublev, Karen Khachanov and Jared Donaldson. After becoming the youngest US Open quarter-finalist since 2001, Rublev has risen to No. 2 in the Emirates ATP Race To Milan.

(4) Best of the Next: Zverev, the No. 2 seed, is tied with Nadal and Roger Federer for the ATP lead with five titles in 2017. On 11 September, Zverev became the youngest player in the Top 5 since Novak Djokovic on 8 October 2007. The 20-year-old German is just 2-3 in his last five matches.

(5) History Makers: On 20 August in Cincinnati, Grigor Dimitrov beat Nick Kyrgios in the first ATP World Tour Masters 1000, Nitto ATP Finals or Grand Slam final between players born in the 1990s. Kyrgios is making his Beijing debut, while Dimitrov returns after advancing to the 2016 China Open final.

(6) Spain’s New Star: Carreno Busta reached his first Grand Slam quarter-final at Roland Garros and semi-final at US Open. The 26 year old has achieved a new career-high in the Emirates ATP Rankings 18 times since the start of the 2016 season, breaking into the Top 10 on 11 September.

(7) What a Run: Damir Dzumhur, a special exempt in Beijing, is 18-4 on tour since 31 July with a third-round run at the US Open, semi-finals at Los Cabos and Shenzhen, his first final at Winston-Salem and his first title at St. Petersburg. Dzumhur defeated Zverev in the Shenzhen quarter-finals.

(8) Chinese Duo: Di Wu, 26, and Ze Zhang, 27, received wild cards. Wu is 0-6 in main draw and qualifying matches at the China Open, including a loss to Zhang in 2012. Zhang then beat Richard Gasquet in the second round and remains the only Chinese quarter-finalist in tournament history.

(9) Wildest Card: Juan Martin del Potro will make his Beijing debut as a wild card. The Argentine advanced to the semi-finals at the US Open, where he rallied from two sets down against Dominic Thiem and upset Federer at night on Arthur Ashe Stadium before falling in four sets to Nadal.

(10) Top 2 Teams in Beijing: Wimbledon champions Lukasz Kubot and Marcelo Melo lead Australian Open champions Henri Kontinen and John Peers by 1,260 points in the battle for year-end No. 1 doubles team. Kubot/Melo and Kontinen/Peers are the Top 2 doubles seeds at the China Open.

You May Also Like: Zverev Enjoys Warm Welcome In Beijing

10 THINGS TO WATCH IN TOKYO

(1) The Race is On: With 500 points on the line at this week’s Rakuten Japan Open, the Emirates ATP Race To London is heating up. Top 2 seeds Marin Cilic and Dominic Thiem are on pace to qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals, while No. 5 seed Kevin Anderson and No. 6 seed Sam Querrey are battling near the cut. With Stan Wawrinka and Novak Djokovic out for the season, Querrey would be the last London qualifier if the season ended today. Anderson trails Querrey by 100 points.

(2) Cilic’s Challenge: Cilic reached his second Grand Slam final at Wimbledon and broke into the Top 5 of the Emirates ATP Rankings on 11 September. But the Croat is 7-8 on hard courts this season and 9-12 since defeating then-No. 1 Djokovic at the Masters 1000 in Paris on 4 November 2016.

(3) Early Exits: Only two men have reached the second week at all four Grand Slam events in 2017: Thiem and World No. 1 Rafael Nadal. However, Thiem has suffered losses in his first or second match at 10 ATP World Tour events this season. He fell to Guido Pella in his opener at Chengdu last week.

(4) Raonic’s Return: No. 3 seed Milos Raonic is back on the ATP World Tour after undergoing left wrist surgery and missing seven weeks. The Canadian has not played in Tokyo since finishing as the runner-up in 2012, 2013 and 2014. Raonic lost a first-set tie-break 7/5 in all three finals.

(5) Back in the Race: David Goffin was No. 6 in the Emirates ATP Race To London when he injured his right ankle at Roland Garros on 2 June. The Belgian missed six weeks and fell to No. 13, but he won his first title in three years on Sunday in Shenzhen. He trails Querrey by only 150 Race points.

(6) Comeback Kev: Since the start of 2016, Anderson has endured injuries to his ankle, elbow, groin, hip, knee and shoulder. He fell to No. 80 on 16 January 2017 and was No. 32 when he became the lowest-ranked US Open finalist in history. Anderson returned to the Top 15 on 11 September.

(7) Big Rivalry: The 6’8” Anderson and 6’6” Querrey have had one of the greatest rivalries of the season. Anderson avenged his five-set loss to Querrey at Wimbledon with wins at the Masters 1000 event in Montreal and the US Open. Their battle for a berth at the Nitto ATP Finals continues in Tokyo.

(8) Size of the Heart: Before Anderson made history as the tallest Grand Slam finalist in the Open Era, 5’7” Diego Schwartzman became the shortest Grand Slam quarter-finalist in 23 years. The No. 8 seed has posted a career-high 29 wins this season, including an upset of Cilic at the US Open.

(9) Career Year: With Kei Nishikori injured, all eyes in Tokyo are on No. 2 Asian Yuichi Sugita. The 29-year-old Japanese player is enjoying a breakthrough season with his first Masters 1000 quarter-final at Cincinnati and his maiden ATP World Tour semi-final, final and title at Antalya.

(10) US Open Final Rematch: No. 1 doubles seeds Jean-Julien Rojer and Horia Tecau will play a US Open final rematch against Feliciano Lopez and Marc Lopez in the Tokyo first round. Rojer and Tecau earned their second Grand Slam title on 8 September with a 6-4, 6-3 win over the Spaniards.

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Zverev Enjoys Warm Welcome In Beijing

  • Posted: Oct 01, 2017

Zverev Enjoys Warm Welcome In Beijing

World No. 4 readies for intense close to season in Race To London

It’s a warm welcome in Beijing for the youngest player in the Top 5 of the Emirates ATP Rankings.

Alexander Zverev, who has risen from No. 24 to No. 4 in 2017, arrives in China’s capital with all the momentum of a standout second season on the ATP World Tour. 2017 season has seen the 6’6″ German win five titles – the same amount as Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal – including two ATP World Tour Masters 1000 crowns in Rome (d. Novak Djokovic) and Montreal (d. Federer).

But as the season comes to an intense finish and the Emirates ATP Race To London heats up, Zverev looks to keep building upon the consistency that he established throughout the season, starting this week at the China Open.

“I’m pretty consistent all over the year so far. [I have] always played pretty good tournaments. I didn’t lose a lot of bad matches,” said Zverev. “Of course, everyone loses bad matches, but I didn’t have a lot of them this year. That’s a part where I’m happy, the way I improved, the way I got better.

“There [are] so many things that everybody’s trying to improve. I think Roger and Rafa, they are the two best players of all time, but they still improve each year they play. You can never stop. That’s something that I’m still going to be working on to get to the top of the game.”

Following a quarter-final appearance at the Shenzhen Open, where he lost to an in-form Damir Dzumhur, Zverev arrives in Beijing as the tournament’s No.2 seed. The draw also features World No. 1 Rafael Nadal, 2011 champion Tomas Berdych and last year’s runner-up Grigor Dimitrov, who claimed his maiden Masters 1000 title at the Western & Southern Open in August.                  

At just 20 years old, Zverev’s rapid transition from a successful stint in the juniors to a flourishing professional career has in part been because of his professional mindset, which he credits older brother Mischa Zverev for instilling in him.

“I think my brother helped me with it because he was on the pro tour already. He could always talk, he could always teach me a lot of stuff,” said Zverev. “But then also it depends on game styles as well a little bit.”

The younger Zverev says that his style of play in the juniors helped carry his success over to the ATP World Tour.

“A lot of juniors, they play so-called ‘junior tennis’ where they put the ball in play, try to wait for their opponents to miss, stuff like this. I was always somebody, even when I was losing, who was trying to be aggressive, always trying to hit the ball.

“I think from a young age, you have to try to learn to play an adult game,” he added. “Even though it doesn’t always work out, at the end that’s the only way of making the pros. That’s the only way of being successful on the pro tour afterwards.” 

In Beijing this week, Zverev and his aggressive “adult” game open against Kyle Edmund, against whom Zverev owns a 1-0 record in their FedEx ATP Head2Head series. The German wunderkind is popular with China’s sport-loving fans – and it’s a popularity he happily embraces. 

“They’re always very supportive here in China. That’s why I think all the players love coming back. They’re trying to be very personal with players; trying to interact … A lot of my fans love my dog, for example. I get a lot of gifts for him, as well, which I find very amazing.”

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Johanna Konta goes out in first round of China Open

  • Posted: Oct 01, 2017

Britain’s Johanna Konta lost her fifth straight match as she went down 6-1 6-2 to world number 65 Monica Niculescu at the China Open in Beijing.

The 26-year-old, who is ranked 58 places higher than her Romanian opponent, succumbed in just 64 minutes.

Konta has endured a miserable run since making the Wimbledon semi-finals, winning only twice across six events.

She is currently in the eighth and final qualification spot for the season-ending WTA Finals in Singapore.

Garbine Muguruza, Simona Halep, Karolina Pliskova, Elina Svitolina, Venus Williams and Caroline Wozniacki have already secured their places, with French Open champion Jelena Ostapenko a place ahead of Konta.

If Konta does make the season finale, she will need a drastic improvement to make any impression against the elite of the women’s game.

She lost her serve to love at the first two times of asking in the opening set, before Niculescu held to love for a 5-0 lead.

Two more breaks followed in the second set as Konta ended with 38 unforced errors across 15 games.

Analysis

BBC Sport tennis correspondent Russell Fuller

There were no positives to take from Konta’s performance in Beijing.

She appears to be suffering a chronic crisis of confidence, and a match against Niculescu was one of the worst draws she could have faced.

The Romanian may be 65 in the rankings, but is spectacularly unorthodox. Her signature shot is a sliced forehand, which denies an opponent any pace or rhythm: she is not someone Konta would relish playing even when on top of her game.

As far as qualification for the WTA Finals in Singapore is concerned, Konta is still well placed in the eighth and final position.

The players in ninth and 10th also lost their opening matches, and will no longer be able to overhaul Konta in the last three weeks of the season.

Sloane Stephens, CoCo Vandeweghe and Caroline Garcia are now the players to watch in Beijing. They could all knock Konta out of eighth place – but only by winning the title.

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Istomin Claims Second ATP World Tour Title In Chengdu

  • Posted: Oct 01, 2017

Istomin Claims Second ATP World Tour Title In Chengdu

31 year old adds first crown since 2015

In 2015, Denis Istomin became the first player from Uzbekistan to lift an ATP World Tour trophy, when he prevailed in Nottingham. On Sunday, he added a second crown.

Istomin kicked off the Asian swing in strong fashion, emerging as the champion of the Chengdu Open. The final concluded in unfortunate circumstances, as opponent Marcos Baghdatis was forced to retire with a back injury during the first set. Istomin was leading 3-2 when Baghdatis fell to the court and was unable to continue.

“I know his situation, because I’ve had a lot of injuries,” said Istomin. “I know the feeling and we are good friends, so my first thought was to help Marcos when I saw him go down. Of course I want to win the title, but not this way. I hope he gets better and will be okay for the rest of the season.

“I feel great and especially today I was feeling better than the other matches. I think I’m in the same condition as I was in Australia at the beginning of the season. My next tournament will be a Challenger in my hometown of Tashkent and then the ATP events in Stockholm, Basel and Paris. I’m feeling fine now and will try to finish the year as best as I can.”

The 31-year-old Uzbek capped an impressive week in Chengdu, having defeated #NextGenATP stars Karen Khachanov and Jared Donaldson, before toppling an in-form fifth seed Yuichi Sugita in Saturday’s semi-finals. He is projected to rise to No. 53 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, earning 250 points and $183,435 in prize money.

Istomin, who entered the week at World No. 78, is the 10th player outside the Top 50 to win an ATP World Tour title this year. He is picking up momentum as the 2017 season nears its conclusion, also registering a quarter-final finish at the Moselle Open (l. to Basilashvili) last week.

Baghdatis, meanwhile, was appearing in his 14th tour-level final. Despite the retirement, the Cypriot will return to the Top 100 of the Emirates ATP Rankings, rising to a projected No. 84. Baghdatis was a warrior all week in Chengdu, rallying from a set down in three of his four victories. He takes home $55,730 in prize money.

“I was feeling a bit of pain in my back during the week, but late after my match last night I felt some spasms,” admitted Baghdatis. “This morning I woke up a bit the same. After my warmup, it got worse. The ATP physio worked on me for an hour and a half. I was okay for three or four games and the spasms came back. I’ve had back issues before, but not like this.

“It’s a bit disappointing to finish this way, but it’s true that it’s always positive to be in the final of a tournament. I have to thank all the people that made this event possible. They do a great job here. I love this place and I’ll hope to come next year too.”

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