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Cuevas Prevails Over Mayer In Three Sets

  • Posted: Mar 02, 2018

Cuevas Prevails Over Mayer In Three Sets

Uruguayan earns 15th straight win in Sao Paolo; seeking fourth consecutive Brasil Open title

If Pablo Cuevas is to lift his fourth successive Brasil Open crown, he’ll have to work for it. 

Cuevas became the first player to advance to the semi-finals in Sao Paolo with a 6-2, 6-7(13), 7-6(5) win over Leonardo Mayer on Friday. The tournament’s third seed needed five match points before downing the Argentine in two hours and 55 minutes. 

The total points won summarised the close contest: 111 for Mayer, 112 for Cuevas. After the match, the 32-year-old Uruguayan admitted he was proud of his 15-match winning streak at the Brasil Open and happy to have support from the fans in attendance. 

“It was a very tough, long match,” Cuevas said. “I had a lot of chances in that second set [four match points]. Then in the third, my return wasn’t so good, plus Leo was serving so well.”

“The [15-match win streak] feels incredible. I felt the support from the Brazilian fans and today a lot of Uruguayans showed up, even the ex-captain of the Uruguayan soccer team showed up. I’m happy to once again be in the semi-finals. I’m going to enjoy this win, play doubles later and focus on tomorrow’s match.”

With the win, Cuevas moves to 2-1 in his FedEx ATP Head2Head series against Mayer. Cuevas will play the winner between Guillermo Garcia-Lopez and second seed Fabio Fognini for a spot in the final. 

Did You Know?
In all, Cuevas has played 11 tie-breaks at the Brasil Open. In his previous match, the Uruguayan needed a tie-break to decide his second set against Sebastian Ofner before prevailing 6-4, 7-6(4). 

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Rafael Nadal out of Indian Wells Masters & Miami Open with hip injury

  • Posted: Mar 02, 2018

Rafael Nadal has pulled out of the ATP Masters events in Indian Wells and Miami because of his ongoing hip injury.

The 31-year-old Spaniard withdrew from this week’s Acapulco Open in Mexico after a recurrence of the problem.

Nadal also retired hurt from his Australian Open quarter-final against Marin Cilic with the same injury.

“I won’t be able to play in Miami or Indian Wells as I need to recover,” said the world number two.

“It was very painful to retire from Acapulco and it’s very hard as well to not play in the USA.

“Unfortunately, the injury I suffered in Acapulco before starting the tournament is in the same area as the one suffered in Melbourne.”

Nadal, who lost his number one ranking to Roger Federer last month, has pulled out of or retired from eight tournaments in a row.

The 16-time Grand Slam champion would have been well placed to return to the top of the rankings in either Indian Wells or Miami had he secured victory in Acapulco.

The tournament in Indian Wells starts on Monday, followed by the Miami event from 19 March.

Both hard-court tournaments are Masters 1000 events – the highest-tiered tournaments on the ATP Tour after the Grand Slams and ATP Finals.

Three-time Slam champion Stan Wawrinka will not play in Indian Wells and Miami either as he continues to recover from knee surgery.

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Dan Evans: Lawn Tennis Association warns British player over drugs ban

  • Posted: Mar 02, 2018

Britain’s Dan Evans has been warned by the Lawn Tennis Association that any support is “entirely dependent” on his level of professionalism as he returns to training after being banned for failing a drugs test.

He will be eligible to compete from 24 April after serving a one-year ban.

Evans, 27, tested positive for cocaine during last April’s Barcelona Open.

He has shown “genuine commitment to getting his tennis career back on track”, said the LTA.

Under the terms of his suspension, the former world number 41 was allowed to access LTA facilities and support again from last Saturday.

On Wednesday, he met the LTA’s performance director Simon Timson and Britain’s Davis Cup captain Leon Smith.

“The LTA condemns any form of doping, which has no place in our sport,” added the governing body of British tennis.

“Dan has reflected on his experience over the last 10 months, and would like to support the LTA’s anti-doping education programme to help emerging young players avoid similar mistakes.

“We have offered a structured programme of sports science and medicine support to help Dan on his journey back into the sport he loves.

“Our support will be entirely dependent on a non-negotiable commitment to ongoing monitoring.”

Evans is expected to spend much of the next few weeks close to home at the Edgbaston Priory Club, which hosts the WTA event two weeks before Wimbledon.

His initial task is to regain full fitness, but he may in future train at the National Tennis Centre in Roehampton, where a higher calibre of opponent is more readily available.

When Evans does return, he will do so without a ranking. This means he is very likely to have to go through qualifying just to get into a Futures event, which is the lowest level of competition on the circuit.

His best-case scenario is a return in the week beginning 30 April. The Futures tournaments that week are in Nigeria, Brazil, China, Egypt, France, Poland, Tunisia, Turkey, Uganda and Vietnam.

Analysis

Dan Evans is going to have to do this the hard way, and fight his way back up the rankings by playing in some very minor tournaments with no personal support team.

He has no immediate plans to appoint a coach. This is the financial reality of a year’s unemployment and the legal bills he clocked up following his positive test. Always a spender rather than a saver, Evans has also had to pay back approximately £90,000 in prize money he earned in the period between his positive test and the announcement of the violation.

According to sources, the 27-year-old was not in the best shape either physically or mentally at the end of last year. I understand he could have had the opportunity to train with Andy Murray for part of December, had he shown greater interest.

But assuming he now fulfils his side of the bargain, and passes a series of physical tests overseen by the LTA, then Evans has much to gain from the governing body. The performance team can draw up a fitness programme, and then help with a tournament schedule when he is ready to return.

Psychological support and advice on injury prevention (all too common when players have been out for a significant period) could also be of huge benefit as Evans embarks on the long road back.

Dan Evans factfile
Born 23 May 1990, Birmingham
Turned pro 2006
Best Grand Slam performances Australian Open: 4R (2017)
French Open: 1R (2017)
Wimbledon: 3R (2016)
US Open: 3R (2013) and (2016)
ATP Tour titles 0
ATP Tour finals 1 (Sydney 2017)
Career prize money £1,053,266
2017 prize money £319,132
Highest world ranking 41 – March 2017

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Tecau/Rojer Edge Closer To Retaining Dubai Crown

  • Posted: Mar 02, 2018

Tecau/Rojer Edge Closer To Retaining Dubai Crown

Paes aims to reach 96th tour-level final today

Second seeds Jean-Julien Rojer and Horia Tecau are within one victory of retaining the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships title after they defeated third seeds Ivan Dodig and Rajeev Ram 7-5, 6-3 in a rain-interrupted one hour and 46 minutes on Friday.

The Dutch-Romanian team has a 16-4 record in finals, including a 5-1 mark in ATP World Tour 500 title matches, and will next face Leander Paes and Jamie Cerretani or Damir Dzumhur and Filip Krajinovic in Saturday’s final. Paes is just two match wins away from 750 victories.

Did You Know?
If India’s Leander Paes wins the Dubai title this week, he will own 55 tour-level trophies with 15 different partners.

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Mexico Open: Sloane Stephens beaten by Stefanie Voegele

  • Posted: Mar 02, 2018

US Open champion Sloane Stephens suffered her ninth defeat in 11 matches as she was beaten by world number 183 Stefanie Vogele in the Mexican Open.

World number 13 Stephens, 24, began the tournament without a win since her maiden Grand Slam triumph in September.

After victories in the first two rounds, the American top seed slipped to a 6-4 5-7 6-2 quarter-final defeat.

Swiss Vogele’s win was her first over a top-20 player since she beat Stephens in 2013.

The 27-year-old faces Sweden’s Rebecca Peterson, who beat fourth seed Zhang Shuai of China 6-2 6-1, in the semi-finals.

Defending champion Lesia Tsurenko of Ukraine will play Australian third seed Daria Gavrilova in the other semi.

In the men’s draw, Argentine Juan Martin del Potro beat Austria’s Dominic Thiem 6-2 7-6 (9-7) to set up a semi-final against German second seed Alexander Zverev, who overcame American Ryan Harrison 6-4 6-1.

South African Kevin Anderson, the fifth seed, faces American Jared Donaldson for a place in Saturday’s final.

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Anderson Stays Hot In Acapulco

  • Posted: Mar 02, 2018

Anderson Stays Hot In Acapulco

South African will next meet first-time semi-finalist Donaldson

Kevin Anderson and Hyeon Chung looked destined for a tie-break. Chung, one of the best returners in tennis, had broken Anderson to get back on serve and even the second set at 4-4.

But Anderson stayed focused. The fifth seed pumped himself up with a “Come on,” and on break point, he grabbed control right back from Chung, smashing a forehand up the line for the break. A game later, Anderson served out the match to reach his third semi-final of the season 7-6(5), 6-4.

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“I felt the first set was really touch and go. I had to save quite a few break points. I felt I played some of my best tennis down on those break points. I think that first-set tie-break was really key,” Anderson said. “[In the second set] I did very well to reset, break him straight back at 4-all to go 5-4, and then played a good serve game to serve it out.”

Anderson saved six of seven break points against Chung, the reigning Next Gen ATP Finals champion. The South African will try to reach his third final (Pune, New York) of the year when he meets 21-year-old Jared Donaldson of the U.S., who will be playing in his first ATP World Tour semi-final.

Donaldson dismissed Spain’s Feliciano Lopez 6-3, 6-1 in only 54 minutes. To say Donaldson was dominant on serve would be an understatement. The American won 100 per cent of his first-serve points (20/20) and 86 per cent of his second-serve offerings (12/14). In his three matches in Acapulco, Donaldson has dropped only 12 games.

“It’s a great start to the tournament so far. I feel like I’ve played really well throughout the week, and I think it has showed a great maturity to my game and how much I’ve improved,” Donaldson said.

DID YOU KNOW?
Anderson has the fourth-highest Infosys Serve Rating at 301.4, according to the ATP Stats Serve LEADERBOARD, powered by Infosys NIA Data.

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