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Monfils Edges Isner In Another Rivlary Classic

  • Posted: Mar 11, 2018

Monfils Edges Isner In Another Rivlary Classic

Herbert upsets Muller to reach third round

Once again, a John Isner and Gael Monfils match lived up to its billing. The Frenchman saved match point to prevail over his towering American rival 6-7(5), 7-6(3), 7-5 in front of a packed Stadium 2 crowd at the BNP Paribas Open on Sunday afternoon. 

The two have a noted history of high-quality matches – only two of their previous nine matches had been decided in straight sets, both of which were won by Monfils. In what was the 10th meeting in their FedEx ATP Head2Head rivalry, Monfils was able to raise his level in the biggest moments, producing highlight-reel shots and saving all seven break points he faced, including a match point at 4-5 in the third set, in the two-hour, 35-minute blockbuster. 

In an interesting quirk of the rivalry, the player winning the opening set in a tie-break has never gone on to win the match – and that pattern held true on a sweltering Sunday afternoon at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden in Palm Springs, California.

The match’s proceedings were unsurprisingly dominated by the serve. Isner, who struck 15 aces, faced only one break point in the first two sets, which came in just the third game of the match. Monfils was able to fend off all three break points faced in the first set, but was unable make inroads in the first-set tie-break against his big-serving opponent. Playing with slightly more intensity and serving better in the pressure moments, Isner was able to claim the first set in just under an hour. 

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The second set followed a similar script. With zero break points on offer for either player, the set – and potentially the match – came down to another tie-break. Isner, who had won just two of eight tie-breaks contested in 2018 coming into the match with Monfils, went down a mini-break early. The Frenchman extended his lead with a miracle passing shot to move ahead 5/2 with a second mini-break. The American would later hit a final forehand into the net, sending the battle into a decider. 

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Isner appeared to have the match in his sights at 4-3 in the third set, when he was able to push the Monfils serve to a 0/40 deficit. However, the 31-year-old was able to find his most resilient tennis, defending from all corners of the court to erase each of the three break points. Isner’s chance would come again in Monfils’ next service game, this time generating a match point on the Frenchman’s serve. Once again, the American was unsuccessful, and it proved to be his undoing – Monfils raised his level to break Isner immediately after with more unbelievable shotmaking, earning a standing ovation and the only break of the match. 

“I felt that [the third set] was a little bit tight, that’s why I fired up straight away,” said Monfils. “When I saved those last two break points I fired up the crowd because I think when you can see your opponent is tight, it’s good.

 “But then [in] the end I was very lucky, I had good aspiration I think at that game because honestly I hit a ridiculous return and passing shot, and then I just held.”

The win marks Monfils’ 12th victory of the season, having previously claimed the title in Doha to start the year and reaching the quarter-finals or better at three of his next four tournaments. Monfils owns seven ATP World Tour titles but has yet to claim a trophy at the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 events, reaching finals twice in Paris and once in Monte Carlo.

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Up next for Monfils is compatriot Pierre-Hugues Herbert, who claimed an upset victory over No. 24 seed Gilles Muller earlier in the day. Herbert, who owns 12 doubles titles at the tour level including two Grand Slam trophies, made full use of his doubles skills to serve-and-volley his way past Muller, who was last year’s champion in both Sydney and ‘s-Hertogenbosch.

Last season, Herbert reached a career-high of No. 63 in the ATP Rankings, and will look to edge closer to that benchmark when he faces Monfils in what will be the first match in their FedEx ATP Head2Head.

Philipp Kohlschreiber extended his FedEx ATP Head2Head with Tim Smyczek to a perfect 4-0, as he recovered from a set down to move past the American 1-6, 6-4, 6-4. The win marks just his third of the season as the German looks to round back into the form that has won him eight ATP World Tour titles in his 17-year career.

“For sure it was not the best start. I think [Smyczek] played a really good first set. It was a good fight from both of us,” said Kohlschreiber after the match. “Maybe I’m not playing my best tennis right now, so it’s a double struggle a little bit with the conditions and with myself, but I kept the right moments for me, winning the big points. I’m happy that I really brought the match through.”

Up next for Kohlschreiber is either No. 2 seed Marin Cilic or Marton Fucsovics.

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Indian Wells: Great Britain number one Kyle Edmund beaten by Israel's Dudi Sela

  • Posted: Mar 11, 2018

British number one Kyle Edmund has been knocked out of the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells after a straight sets 6-4 6-4 defeat to Israel’s Dudi Sela.

Edmund, 23, looked rusty in his first match since reaching the semi-final of the Australian Open in January as he struggled to find his rhythm.

Sela, 32, is ranked 97 in the world and used all his experience as Edmund’s serve let him down in California.

Edmund will now turn his attention to the Miami Open later this month.

Edmund, who recently replaced Andy Murray as British number one, was an early break up in the first set but failed to capitalise.

Sela broke back in the sixth game and then Edmund failed to hold serve as the Israeli closed out the set.

Both players exchanged early breaks in the second set but Edmund, on his return after six weeks out, tired in the sun as the match wore on.

With the score at 5-4 Sela seized his opportunity to break and knocked the 21st seed out of the tournament with a forehand winner.

He will face either Cypriot Marcos Baghdatis or Argentina’s Diego Schwartzman in the last 16.

Analysis by Jeff Tarango, BBC 5 live extra at Indian Wells

Edmund’s first serve accuracy was way off and he tried to go for too many big shots.

Sela was able to keep him on the back foot and didn’t make as many unforced errors. He played with no pressure and it looked like it had got to Edmund.

In this kind of court you have to dig deep and maybe Edmund did not have that resolve he showed in the Australian Open.

Sela is a wily veteran, very adaptable and you could tell he has been here playing for a week and a half in qualifying.

It was an advantage for him that Edmund was only playing his first match.

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Rain Halts Federer Opener In Indian Wells

  • Posted: Mar 11, 2018

Rain Halts Federer Opener In Indian Wells

World No. 1 to complete opening match on Sunday

Roger Federer’s bid for a sixth BNP Paribas Open title got off to a soggy start on Saturday. Play was suspended due to persistent rain showers at 10:30pm local time, with the Swiss leading Federico Delbonis 6-3, 2-2. 

Federer burst out of the gates on Stadium 1 in Indian Wells, blasting a backhand winner to take the lone break of the first set and he would deny a pair of break chances when serving for the opener at 5-3. But the skies closed as the second set got underway, with a two-hour delay halting proceedings before play was eventually suspended.

Competing in his first tournament since returning to the top spot of the ATP Rankings, Federer will look to pick up where he left off when the match resumes on Sunday afternoon. It will be third on Stadium 1.

Federer is making his 17th appearance in the California desert and is assured of remaining at the pinnacle of the ATP Rankings should he reach the semi-finals in Indian Wells. The Basel native carries an 11-match win streak into the fortnight and has only dropped three sets from 33 played this year.

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Federer or Delbonis will face 25th-seed Filip Krajinovic in the third round, after the Serbian routed American qualifier Mitchell Krueger 6-2, 6-2 earlier on Saturday. He needed just 74 minutes to secure the victory, firing three aces and saving all three break points faced. 

Krajinovic is on a roll at the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 level, having battled to his first final in Paris to conclude 2017 (l. to Sock). Outside the Top 200 just one year ago, he is seeking to rise to a career-high inside the Top 30 in Indian Wells.

In other action, Adrian Mannarino and Jeremy Chardy set an all-French match-up in the third round. Mannarino earned a straightforward 6-1, 6-4 victory over qualifier Peter Polansky, while Chardy mounted a stunning comeback to defeat 16th-seed Fabio Fognini.

In what could go down as one of the biggest comebacks on the ATP World Tour in 2018, Chardy rallied from a set and two breaks down to edge Fognini 4-6, 7-6(2), 6-4 in a marathon two hours and 41 minutes. He converted four of 13 break points to reach the third round for the first time since 2009.

Fognini sprinted to a 6-4, 4-1 lead, breaking twice early in the second set, but a determined Chardy would discover his rhythm with his back pressed firmly against the wall. He claimed six of the next eight games to force a decider and captured the decisive break midway through the third set.

Chardy owns a 3-0 advantage in his FedEx ATP Head2Head series against countryman Mannarino. He has not dropped a set.

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Bryans Take Sibling Battle Over Zverevs

  • Posted: Mar 11, 2018

Bryans Take Sibling Battle Over Zverevs

Americans will next meet Spanish team of Carreno Busta/Marrero

It was a family affair on Stadium 2 at the BNP Paribas Open, as Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan defeated Alexander Zverev and Mischa Zverev in a battle of brothers on Saturday.

The seventh-seeded Bryans advanced 6-3, 4-6, 10/1, setting a second-round clash against Spaniards Pablo Carreno Busta and David Marrero. Bob and Mike are two-time champions in Indian Wells, having prevailed in both 2013 and 2014. They are seeking an unprecedented 37th title at the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 level.

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Joining the twins in Saturday’s winners’ circle are two other former champions in the California desert. Raven Klaasen and Rajeev Ram captured the doubles title last year and both were victorious to kick off their 2018 campaigns. Klaasen advanced alongside Michael Venus, defeating Juan Sebastian Cabal and Robert Farah 4-6, 6-0, 10/5, while Ram joined forces with Ivan Dodig to rally past Ben McLachlan and Julio Peralta 4-6, 6-3, 10/5.

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Meanwhile, 2012 runner-up Sam Querrey (w/Isner) teamed with Gilles Muller to edge Rohan Bopanna and Edouard Roger-Vasselin 5-7, 6-2, 10/4. Third seeds Oliver Marach and Mate Pavic continued their winning ways with a 7-6(4), 6-3 win over Steve Johnson and Daniel Nestor. Champions in Doha, Auckland and the Australian Open to kick off the year, the Austrian-Croatian duo improved to 19-2 together in 2018.

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Verdasco Turns Back The Clock vs. Dimitrov

  • Posted: Mar 11, 2018

Verdasco Turns Back The Clock vs. Dimitrov

Spaniard will next face #NextGenATP Fritz

In California, they’ll move their clocks ahead on Sunday morning for daylight savings time. But Spanish veteran Fernando Verdasco did the opposite on Saturday evening, rolling back time to upset third seed Grigor Dimitrov at the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells.

The former World No. 7 fought past the reigning Nitto ATP Finals champion 7-6(4), 4-6, 6-3 to pick up only his second Top 10 win in Indian Wells (2-8; also 2014, d. Gasquet). Verdasco’s serve and fearless swinging carried him to the upset.

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The 34-year-old left-hander struck 12 aces and was routinely blasting first serves at more than 130 mph. Double faults had snuck in during the first two sets, but Verdasco eliminated them and lifted his level overall in the decider, hitting six aces and winning 95 per cent of his first-serve points (18/19).

Verdasco will next meet American Taylor Fritz, who beat 20-year-old Russian Andrey Rublev in a #NextGenATP showdown 6-4, 7-6(4). Verdasco leads their FedEx ATP Head2Head series 1-0, a three-set win at the 2016 Winston-Salem Open. Fritz will be attempting to reach the fourth round of a Masters 1000 for the first time.

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For Dimitrov, it’s another third-set loss in Indian Wells. The Bulgarian has been knocked out of the Masters 1000 tournament the past four years in three-set matches: 2014, 7-5 vs. Ernests Gulbis; 2015, 7-5 vs. Tommy Robredo; 2016, 7-5 vs. Alexander Zverev; and last year, 7-6(7) vs. Jack Sock.

In other action, seventh seed Kevin Anderson of South Africa hit 17 aces to beat Russian Evgeny Donskoy 7-5, 6-4. Anderson improved to 4-0 against Donskoy in their FedEx ATP Head2Head series and will play Argentine Nicolas Kicker, who beat Damir Dzumhur of Bosnia and Herzegovina 4-6, 6-2, 6-1.

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Djokovic Returns In Bid For Sixth Indian Wells Title Sunday

  • Posted: Mar 11, 2018

Djokovic Returns In Bid For Sixth Indian Wells Title Sunday

Serbian former No. 1 to contest first match since Australian Open fourth round

There are few instances Novak Djokovic’s opening match at a tournament will garner such attention as his return to Indian Wells this season. Taking on Japanese qualifier Taro Daniel – a player at No. 109 in the ATP Rankings – on paper, it should be relatively straight forward for the five-time BNP Paribas Open champion.

But after a stop-start return from an elbow injury at the Australian Open, where he exited to Hyeon Chung in the fourth round, the Serbian opted to undergo a “small medical intervention” on his troublesome elbow.

While having put his body to the test on the practice courts, this will be just his second tournament since Wimbledon last July. The 30-year-old made it known his intention at Indian Wells in 2018 was to start rebuilding his confidence and rhythm on court. 

View FedEx ATP Head2Head for the 2018 BNP Paribas Open second round & vote for who you think will win! 
Djokovic vs Daniel | Isner vs Monfils | Del Potro vs de Minaur

 

An unprecedented sixth BNP Paribas Open title would pull him one clear of Roger Federer’s tally and one clear of Rafael Nadal for a record 31st ATP World Tour Masters 1000 trophy. For now, however, the “one match at a time” mantra has never been more apt.

Japan’s Daniel won through two rounds of qualifying and then held off fellow qualifier Cameron Norrie to book the Djokovic clash. The pair has never met.

A pair of teenager #NextGenATP players will get their chance to back up their maiden respective ATP World Tour Masters 1000 match wins when they meet more fancied seeded players on Sunday. In a pair of David and Goliath clashes, fleet-footed Australian wild card Alex de Minaur takes on No. 6 seed Juan Martin del Potro and qualifier Felix Auger-Aliassime meets his Canadian countryman, 2016 runner-up Milos Raonic, for a place in the third round.

De Minaur impressed on home turf to open the season with a semi-final run in Brisbane (l. Harrison) and his first ATP World Tour final in Sydney (l. Medvedev). The 19-year-old ground down German Jan-Lennard Struff in a battle that lasted more than two and a half hours in the opening round in Indian Wells. Argentine del Potro, meanwhile, is in red-hot form having picked up his biggest title in five years in Acapulco, where he downed three Top 10 players in succession (Thiem, A. Zverev and Anderson).

After his victory over fellow Canadian qualifier Vasek Pospisil in just his third ATP World Tour event, 17-year-old Auger-Aliassime has the chance to send his highest-ranked compatriot packing when he takes on No. 32 seed Raonic. The 27-year-old Raonic is looking to improve on a 1-3 start to 2018.

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Fourth seed Alexander Zverev will open his campaign on Sunday against Portugal’s Joao Sousa. The #NextGenATP German is coming off a semi-final defeat in Acapulco (l. del Potro) and went down to Nick Kyrgios in the third round in Indian Wells last year. Sousa, No. 85 in the ATP Rankings, edged past Russian veteran Mikhail Youzhny in a third-set tie-break to reach the second round. Zverev beat Sousa in three sets in their lone prior FedEx ATP Head2Head encounter in Nice, 2016.

After a self-imposed post-Australian Open off-season to recoup mentally and regain full fitness, American No. 1 Jack Sock returns to Indian Wells with semi-final points to defend after his breakout run last season. With a 1-4 record, the eighth seed is keen to resurrect his slow start to the season when he faces Italian Thomas Fabbiano for the first time.

Two players who enjoyed stellar runs at this year’s Australian Open – No. 2 seed Marin Cilic and Martin Fucsovics – will square off for a place in the third round. Croatian Cilic finished runner-up in five sets to Roger Federer at Melbourne Park, while Hungary’s Fucsovics also fell to the Swiss in what was his maiden fourth round appearance at a Grand Slam. Cilic narrowly claimed the duo’s only previous encounter in Basel last season.

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Serena Wiliams to play Venus in Indian Wells third round

  • Posted: Mar 11, 2018

Serena Williams will play her sister Venus in the third round at Indian Wells as she continues her comeback after the birth of her child.

The 36-year-old American, who was out for 14 months, beat Kiki Bertens of the Netherlands 7-6 (7-5) 7-5 in round two.

“Everything is a bonus,” said Serena after winning in one hour, 52 minutes on her second match point.

The sisters last met in the 2017 Australian Open final, when Serena won her 23rd Grand Slam singles title.

Serena was already pregnant with daughter Alexis Olympia, who was born on 1 September, when she beat Venus 6-4 6-4 in Melbourne.

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Venus beat Sorona Cirstea of Romania in her second-round match 6-3 6-4.

They will play their 29th competitive match on Monday, with Serena having won 17 of the previous 28.

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Indian Wells Honoured For Fourth Straight Year

  • Posted: Mar 11, 2018

Indian Wells Honoured For Fourth Straight Year

Popular ATP World Tour event receives recognition

Year after year, the BNP Paribas Open continues to set the benchmark for tennis excellence on the ATP World Tour. The prestigious tournament in Indian Wells is consistently at the forefront of sporting innovation and is highly regarded by players and fans as one of the best events on the calendar.

On Saturday, the tournament in the California desert was honoured once again, receiving its trophy as the top Masters 1000 event in the 2017 ATP World Tour Awards presented by Moët & Chandon. It marked the fourth consecutive year in which it has celebrated the achievement. 

Linda Clark, ATP Vice President – Tournament Relations, Americas, presented tournament director Tommy Haas with the trophy in an on-court ceremony following Dominic Thiem’s victory over Stefanos Tsitsipas.

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“As both a player and now as Tournament Director, I can understand why this event has been named Tournament of the Year for the fourth straight year,” said Haas. “I have an incredible amount of respect for the countless hours of planning and dedication that the entire staff contributes to make the BNP Paribas Open one of the best sporting events in the world, and this award re-affirms that our actions are being appreciated by the players. We remain focused on improving the event every year and hope to make the 2018 edition even more memorable for fans, players, media and sponsors.”

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Prior to the 2017 tournament, the Indian Wells Tennis Garden underwent extensive renovations designed to enhance the overall fan experience, including substantial upgrades to Stadium 1 – ranging from a massive expansion of the Stadium Plaza to renovating all the suites and hospitality spaces to adding 21 new restaurants and concessions. Leading up to this year’s edition, the tournament underwent a full-scale beautification project, including the addition of 62 palm trees, as part of a sweeping ‘green’ initiative.

The Tournament of the Year awards, voted annually by ATP World Tour players, recognise the leading standards set across the three tournament categories on the Tour. The Abierto Mexicano Telcel presentado por HSBC and the Qatar ExxonMobil Open won the remaining two awards, in the ATP World Tour 500 and 250 tournament categories respectively.

Visit the official ATP World Tour Awards section on ATPWorldTour.com.

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