Victoria Azarenka: I wouldn't wish custody battle on anyone
Two-time Grand Slam champion Victoria Azarenka says the ongoing custody battle over her son was been ‘Hollywood-worthy’.
Two-time Grand Slam champion Victoria Azarenka says the ongoing custody battle over her son was been ‘Hollywood-worthy’.
Former world number one Serena Williams won her first singles match back on the WTA Tour following the birth of her child.
ATPWorldTour.com breaks down some of the matches to watch on day two
Former World No. 6 Gael Monfils headlines action at the BNP Paribas Open on Friday, which also includes the start of doubles play. Three players in the Top 10 of the ATP Rankings – No. 4-ranked Grigor Dimitrov, No. 6 Dominic Thiem and No. 8 Juan Martin del Potro – also feature in the doubles competition.
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Monfils v Ebden | Tiafoe v Escobedo | Mayer v Estrella Burgos
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Monfils, who is competing after four straight weeks on the clay of the Latin American swing, plays as a non-seed at the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 tournament for the first time since 2008. The Frenchman, winner of this year’s Qatar ExxonMobil Open crown (d. Rublev) and a 2016 quarter-finalist, takes on Australia’s Matthew Ebden – playing in Indian Wells for the first time since 2014 – in the first match on Stadium 1.
In other first-round ties, former World No. 8 Gilles Simon – a two-time ATP World Tour Masters 1000 finalist at the 2008 and 2014 Rolex Shanghai Masters, meets fellow Frenchman Pierre-Hugues Herbert. Another former World No. 8 and 2006 quarter-finalist Marcos Baghdatis faces Yoshihito Nishioka, while former No. 12 Viktor Troicki challenges Marton Fucsovics.
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Three #NextGenATP players, American Frances Tiafoe – the Delray Beach Open title – Canadian qualifier Felix Auger-Aliassime and Australian wild card Alex de Minaur – are all worth watching on day two.
Ernesto Escobedo has beaten his fellow American Tiafoe in third set tie-breaks in their two 2016 meetings on the ATP Challenger Tour, and recently recorded his first Top 10 win over No. 10-ranked Jack Sock at the Abierto Mexicano Telcel presentado por HSBC. But Tiafoe, 20, is riding on the crest of a wave after lifting his first ATP World Tour trophy in Delray Beach on 25 February.
In the fourth match on Stadium 2, Canadian qualifier and former World No. 25 Vasek Pospisil plays the youngest player in the 96-player field, 17-year-old countryman Augur-Aliassime, who is looking to secure his first main draw match win. The winner will play No. 32 seed and 2016 runner-up Milos Raonic in the second round.
De Minaur, 18, who started the year with a semi-final run at the Brisbane International presented by Suncorp (l. to Harrison) and reached his first ATP World Tour final the following week at the Sydney International (l. to Medvedev), takes on German Jan-Lennard Struff on Stadium 4.
There are a number of stellar first-round doubles matches. Second seeds Henri Kontinen and John Peers, who reached last year’s quarter-finals open their campaigns, while Del Potro and Dimitrov, John Isner and Jack Sock, and Thiem and Philipp Petzschner compete on the outside courts.
Long-time coach explains how he balances coaching two players
Craig Boynton has worked with a plethora of top players including former World No. 1 Jim Courier, Mardy Fish and John Isner. In 2016, the American began a new phase of his career, setting out on the ATP World Tour with two American stars — Sam Querrey and Steve Johnson — at the same time.
Both Querrey and Johnson have achieved career-high spots in the ATP Rankings under the tutelage of Boynton, with recent New York Open finalist Querrey climbing to No. 11 and Johnson reaching No. 21 in July 2016.
ATPWorldTour.com catches up with the American coach to learn what wrenches working with two players throws into his daily routine, why he enjoys it and more.
What is it like for you to balance coaching two elite players on the ATP World Tour?
It starts with organisation, making sure that the day is organised, making sure that I am 100 per cent able to be with Sam and Stevie when they’re practising and hitting. So I’ve got to be very organised. I also don’t like them practising together, so I have to make sure they each have the hits required for that next day and managing their needs so that they both are taken care of regardless if it’s match day or practice day.
How different is your approach to coaching both Sam and Steve?
It’s different. You look at Sam and Stevie and there are a lot of similarities, and you think that they’re a lot alike, but there are a lot of differences with the two. Being able to effectively communicate with each of them in a way that’s best for them. That just comes from getting to know them, and I know them for a long period of time and pushing the right buttons, if you will.
How did you start working with both of them? Was that your idea or their idea?
At the time I was coming off a private situation and Stevie and I had talked about getting back together because we originally had a year and a half working together when I was with USTA Player Development. Stevie was one of my players that I had my whole time there, so we had a history. So at that point, Sam was looking for someone and Sam went and talked to Stevie to make sure that it was in good graces with Stevie. They presented it to me, I thought it was a great idea and I thought I would have no problem being able to manage the two, because when I was with the USTA I always had two players (and at one tournament I had five). So I knew how to manage that situation. It was something that wasn’t new to me, and having the luxury of knowing Sam for probably 10 years — not working with him, but I knew him very well — we were both comfortable with each other. I had obviously worked with Stevie for a year and a half, and so it really wasn’t an adjustment at the beginning.
What is a day like for you? How hectic does it get?
The ATP has been really good, excellent about making sure they don’t play singles at the same time. So at that point it’s whoever plays first, making sure that they’re ready, the details, and it depends how much time I have in between. For instance if one plays first on and the other plays second on, then the pre-match speech for whoever plays second will generally happen before the first person goes on. But if there’s a match in between then I know there’s time in between and so then we’ll get our tactics and our speech done after the first match. So again, it’s just about seeing what the schedule has and organising accordingly.
When they have their morning hit, do you like them hitting together?
No, I like to keep them separate. Sometimes it happens where I’ll miss a warm-up. But Christian, the physio, is here. Christian will take them to the court. He can fill in that way. But the guys have been around long enough that they know what to do. They don’t necessarily need their hand held for warm-ups. But it’s always good to be able to go over tactics and the pre-match speech during warm-ups, so we do the best we can. But like I said, the ATP has been really, really good about making sure that they’re not playing at the same time and that there’s no overlap.
If one of the guys is having a great week but the other goes out early, how do you balance dealing with both situations?
Whoever is still in the tournament, the other works around their schedule. So the matches and the tournament are priority for whoever is still in it. They know that, so it’s just working around that. Often times for both, the one who’s out will probably go early and go to the next event to get ready and I can organise practices remotely, or the USTA will have coaches there and I’ll talk to them and they’ll keep an eye on them. I’ll stay with the one who’s still competing in the tournament.
What’s the most fun part of this all for you?
First of all, I love the guys. I absolutely love Sam and Stevie, they are tremendous guys, tremendous to work with. I just love these guys. I enjoy helping them. Aside from them, the most fun for me is watching what we work on and what we try to develop with them come good on match day. Have it help them win an important point, which is pivotal, and then winning a big match. That to me is so much fun.
Do they help each other with that? Does one of them see the other doing well and get motivated by that?
I think so. They’re very big supporters of each other. They both understand what it takes to be successful. The boys have had highs and lows and they both have been there for both highs and lows. They’re really good friends. Like I said, they’re great people, a lot of fun to work with, just because they’re wonderful people. These are two guys you want as neighbours, aside from tennis.
Former world number one Serena Williams won her first singles match on the WTA Tour for nearly 14 months as she returned after the birth of her child.
The American, 36, reached the second round at Indian Wells with a 7-5 6-3 victory over Kazakhstan’s Zarina Diyas.
It was her first singles match on the Tour since she won the 2017 Australian Open while pregnant.
“I’m a little rusty but it doesn’t matter,” said the 23-time Grand Slam singles champion.
“It definitely wasn’t easy but it was good.”
Williams was given a standing ovation as she walked onto court.
Her husband Alexis Ohanian was in the crowd as she set up a second-round match with 29th-seeded Dutch player Kiki Bertens.
Williams gave birth to daughter Alexis Olympia on 1 September.
She says post-childbirth health complications – including blood clots in her lungs – were almost fatal.
Williams missed this year’s Australian Open because she did not consider herself ready for the tournament.
Speaking after her win over Diyas, she said: “It was incredible. It’s been over a year and a kid later.
“I’m just out here on this journey doing the best I can.”
BBC tennis correspondent Russell Fuller
Williams did not fluff too many lines on her latest opening night. Given she had not played a competitive singles match for 404 days, this was an impressive return.
Diyas showed plenty of resilience, saving five break points – but crucially not a sixth – in the first set, and twice breaking back when Williams hit the front in the second.
Williams’ serve proved a strong foundation, especially in the first set, and there were some powerful and sweetly struck winners amid some inevitable rust.
The best part of 10,000 people were in Stadium Court 1 to watch Williams’ return. One was her sister Venus, a potential third-round opponent.
Dominic Thiem’s clay-court credentials are well proven but that only makes the gifted Austrian hungrier for greater success on other surfaces. The 24-year-old is no one-surface specialist and has high hopes of making a statement at this year’s BNP Paribas Open where he returns as the No. 5 seed.
Last year Thiem fell in a gripping quarter-final to Stan Wawrinka, an opponent who holds two hard court Grand Slam titles to his name. Only last week, he went down to eventual champion Juan Martin del Potro in the quarter-finals at Acapulco.
It was there in Mexico he won his lone prior hard-court trophy to date, in 2016. Could Indian Wells deliver his next hard-court breakthrough?
“I’m always trying to make some changes to play better on hard courts,” Thiem said. “I’ve played three tournaments on hard courts [this year]. Doha was fine, Australia was also fine. Acapulco I lost to del Potro who won the tournament so I think I’m [heading] in the right direction.”
Despite a handful of big names missing from this year’s BNP Paribas Open draw Thiem does not see a vacuum waiting to be filled. Not does he see it as an easier path to success.
“More and more there are some big names coming up also, some young good players,” Thiem said. “Del Potro is back too. He’s a big name again which he maybe wasn’t last year. Even though many big players are out there are some new ones taking their spots so I don’t think it’s much easier to go deep than it was [in previous] years.”
One such young player coming up is #NextGen ATP Greek player Stefanos Tsitsipas, Thiem’s second round opponent.
“I played him in Doha and was quite impressed actually,” Thiem said. “I’d never seen him before or practised with him before. I think he definitely has potential for Top 20, for sure. I think it’s also nice to have someone from Greece, I think the first real top player from that country. I think he’s going to be good.”