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Watson out of Miami Open with sixth straight defeat

  • Posted: Mar 20, 2018

Britain’s Heather Watson was knocked out of the Miami Open in the first round with a straight-set defeat by Brazilian Beatriz Haddad Maia.

Haddad Maia, ranked 64th in the world, won 7-6 (7-3) 6-2 and will play Zhang Shuai in the second round.

It is Watson’s sixth consecutive loss since reaching the semi-finals of the Hobart International in January.

The 25-year-old lost to Victoria Azarenka in the first round at Indian Wells earlier this month.

Watson, ranked 72nd, served for the opening set at 5-4 but fell a set down after Haddad Maia raced through the tie-break.

Following an early break, the South American controlled proceedings in the second set to seal victory.

Defending champion and British number one Johanna Konta has a bye to the second round.

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Djokovic: 'Children Are Our Everything'

  • Posted: Mar 20, 2018

Djokovic: ‘Children Are Our Everything’

Former World No. 1 reflects on visit to children’s museum

Novak Djokovic has captivated audiences throughout the world for years, including in Miami, where the Serbian has won a record-tying six titles and claimed 30 of his past 31 matches. But the 30-year-old earned the attention of a much different audience on Monday in Florida.

Djokovic, a father of two, visited the Miami Children’s Museum on Monday ahead of the Miami Open presented by Itau to read a book titled Pete the Cat to about 50 children of different age groups in a packed auditorium. He even brought his three-year-old son Stefan along for the session.

Djokovic
Photo Credit: Peter Staples/Miami Open presented by Itau
“They were kind enough to invite me… and it was a wonderful experience. They were all great listeners, but they also participated. They interacted,” said Djokovic, the ATP World Tour’s 2012 Arthur Ashe Humanitarian of the Year. “I also invited one little girl to join me and read the rest of the story with me. It was phenomenal. It has brought a lot of really beautiful memories to me from the time when I was part of the pre-school educational institutions and programs back in my country when I was growing up.”

It was an important trip for Djokovic, who founded the Novak Djokovic Foundation in November 2007 to focus on providing young underprivileged children the opportunity to receive a quality pre-school education. The foundation received a €10,000 grant from ATP ACES For Charity in 2013.

“We are giving them a chance to flourish, to know the joy of success,” the foundation’s website reads. “To believe that they are worthy of their dreams. Early childhood education is the foundation upon which they will stand for the rest of their lives, and the foundation for the future of our world.”

View Djokovic’s Charity Profile

While the former World No. 1’s focus will now shift to the second ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event of the season, he does not take these special visits for granted.

“Obviously, being a child is something that every adult should always remind themselves of or think of, to keep that inner child, so to say, active and joyful throughout your life because we all shouldn’t take life too seriously and children remind us of that and remind us of what it is to be curious and to be happy to live in the present moment,” Djokovic said. “It was just overall a great experience that I’ll remember.”

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Williams return 'should not prompt rule change'

  • Posted: Mar 20, 2018

Serena Williams’ comeback should not result in a change to the seeding rules after maternity leave, says Mandy Minella, who returned to tennis last month after having her first child.

James Blake, the Miami Open tournament director, said female players are being “punished” after pregnancy.

Williams, who is unseeded, faces Indian Wells winner Naomi Osaka in the opening round of this week’s event.

“The rule should stay as it is,” said former world number 66 Minella.

Minella returned to professional tennis in February, 99 days after giving birth to daughter Emma having played at Wimbledon while four and a half months pregnant.

  • Read more: Minella on the journey from childbirth to court

“I don’t think we would be talking about this if it wasn’t Serena,” said the 32-year-old. “There are many players who have been out because of pregnancy and there will be many more.

“It’s not that we are punished for being pregnant.”

Williams, 36, made her return to the WTA Tour at Indian Wells earlier this month, losing to sister Venus in the third round.

A 23-time Grand Slam singles winner, she has no official ranking, which means she cannot be seeded for WTA events.

However, she can gain entry to eight tournaments in 12 months – including two Grand Slams – with her protected world number one ranking.

“For entertainment reasons, it’s very important to have Serena Williams in the draw, but I don’t think it’s important to have her in the seeding positions at the moment,” Minella said.

“She’s so good that she will get back to the top, so the rule should stay as it is.

“If seeded now, she would take away the spot of another girl who had fought all year to have a seeding, so it’s a tricky situation.”

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British trio make progress in Miami Open qualifying

  • Posted: Mar 20, 2018

Britain’s Cameron Norrie, Liam Broady and Katie Boulter are through the first round of qualifying at the Miami Open.

World number 105 Norrie was 6-1 2-0 up when his American opponent Stefan Kozlov, ranked 167th, had to retire.

Broady, the British number four, moved easily past Henri Laaksonen of Switzerland, winning 6-2 6-4 against the world number 132.

Katie Boulter, the British number four, beat American world number 100 Taylor Townsend 7-6 (7-1) 6-2.

Elsewhere in the women’s draw, Naomi Broady, the sister of Liam, was frustrated by France’s Oceane Dodin, losing 4-6 7-5 6-3.

British number two Heather Watson plays her first-round match at 18:00 GMT on Tuesday against Brazilian Beatriz Haddad Maia, who is ranked 64th in the world.

Defending champion and British number one Johanna Konta has a bye to the second round.

Men’s British number one Kyle Edmund also has a bye to the second round as he goes in search of his first win since the Australian Open.

Meanwhile, Canadian former Wimbledon finalist Eugenie Bouchard beat American wildcard and world number 357 Allie Kiick 6-2 6-2 in first-round qualifying.

Bouchard, now ranked 114th, was playing her first match since a first-round loss at Indian Wells two weeks ago.

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Five Must-See First Rounds In Miami

  • Posted: Mar 20, 2018

Five Must-See First Rounds In Miami

Seeds await in the second round at the Miami Open presented by Itau

With the Top 32 seeds receiving a bye, the focus is on a host of first-round clashes at the Miami Open presented by Itau.

Taylor Fritz vs. Pierre-Hugues Herbert
A string of recent deep runs on U.S. hard courts has #NextGenATP American Taylor Fritz primed for his third appearance at the Miami Open presented by Itau. The 20-year-old, back up to No. 71 in the ATP Rankings, fell in a nail-biting three-setter last week to Borna Coric in the fourth round in Indian Wells, having saved match point against good friend Reilly Opelka before registering wins over #NextGenATP Russian Andrey Rublev and Fernando Verdasco. He reached the quarter-finals in Delray Beach (l. to Shapovalov) and has compiled a 14-3 record on the ATP Challenger Tour this season. This will be his first FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting with World No. 81 Pierre-Hugues Herbert. The 27-year-old Frenchman opened his season with a quarter-final appearance at the Tata Open Maharashtra in India and like Fritz, he also reached the fourth round in Indian Wells last week (l. to. Kohlschreiber). Second seed Marin Cilic will face the winner in round two.

VIEW DRAW 

Stefanos Tsitsipas vs. Daniil Medvedev 
Dominic Thiem needed three sets to win the battle of the single-handed backhands when he met #NextGenATP Greek Stefanos Tsitsipas in the second round in Indian Wells leading in. Now Tsitsipas, No. 70 in the ATP Rankings, takes on 2017 Next Gen ATP Finals qualifier Daniil Medvedev for the first time in the pair’s Miami debut. The 19-year-old Greek reached the quarter-finals in Doha to open his season (l. to Thiem). Earlier this month, he beat No. 6 seed Philipp Kohlschreiber en route to the quarter-finals in Dubai. Medvedev, the World No. 52, started the season emphatically, as he won seven matches in a row to land his first ATP World Tour title in Sydney (d. De Minaur) as a 21-year-old qualifier. He also won through qualifying before reaching the quarter-finals in Rotterdam. The winner will face No. 4 seed Alexander Zverev. 

Denis Shapovalov vs. Viktor Troicki
Another #NextGenATP player making his Miami debut will be 18-year-old Canadian Denis Shapovalov. The World No. 46 has a 9-7 start to the season with his best result being a semi-final run at the Delray Beach Open (l. to eventual champion Tiafoe). Three of his defeats this season have come against Top 15 opponents. Troicki, No. 68 in the ATP Rankings, won the pair’s only prior FedEx ATP Head2Head encounter in Shanghai last year in three sets. The Serbian won his sixth straight victory in a five-set match at the Australian Open to start his year (d. Bolt, l. to Kyrgios in 2R). He subsequently reached the quarter-finals in Sofia. The winner will face No. 24 seed Damir Dzumhur of Bosnia in the second round.

You May Also Like: Championship Rematch In Miami? Federer & Delpo Drawn Into Opposite Halves

 

Jared Donaldson vs. Marcos Baghdatis
After his maiden ATP World Tour semi-final appearance on hard court in Acapulco earlier this month, 2017 Next Gen ATP Finals qualifier Jared Donaldson arrived in Indian Wells at a career high of No. 48 in the ATP Rankings (l. to Bautista Agut in 2R). The 21-year-old American won through qualifying in each of the past two years to reach the Miami main draw. Last year he went on to reach the fourth round before he fell to countryman Jack Sock. He has never faced experienced Cypriot Marcos Baghdatis, a former No. 8 in the ATP Rankings. The 32-year-old Baghdatis has surged back into the Top 100 (No. 82) after winning five straight matches as a qualifier before handing Milos Raonic a walkover in the fourth round in Indian Wells. Last month he reached the quarter-finals in Sofia (l. to Kovalik). No. 25 seed Feliciano Lopez awaits the winner.

Ivo Karlovic vs. Vasek Pospisil
One thing is for certain when 39-year-old Ivo Karlovic and 27-year-old Vasek Pospisil square off in the opening round in Miami – aces will be plentiful from both. Canadian World No. 77 Pospisil leads the pair’s FedEx ATP Head2Head ledger 3-1, winning their past three encounters on hard courts in straight sets. Karlovic, the veteran Croatian, won his 350th ATP World Tour main draw match (d. Donaldson) at the New York Open where he reached his first quarter-final of the season (l. to Querrey). In the second round of this year’s Australian Open, he hit 53 aces to beat Yuichi Sugita 12-10 in the fifth before going on to hit another 52 aces in a five-set third-round defeat to Andreas Seppi. Both Karlovic (l. to Marterer) and Pospisil (qualified, l. to Auger Aliassime) fell in the opening round in Indian Wells. A victory will book a second-round meeting with #NextGenATP Russian 27th seed Rublev.

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De Minaur Settles Score With 'Old' Rival

  • Posted: Mar 20, 2018

De Minaur Settles Score With ‘Old’ Rival

Australian moves on in Miami qualifying with win over past foe Geller

Alex de Minaur and Axel Geller have a lot in common: They share a similar first name, a birth year (1999) and the potential for success on the ATP World Tour. They were on opposite ends of Court 6 in Crandon Park on Monday, where both teenagers battled in a first-round qualifying match at the Miami Open presented by Itau. De Minaur emerged victorious, 6-4, 6-0 after one hour and 27 minutes. 

This was their second meeting in South Florida; in 2013, de Minaur and Geller met in the final of the Orange Bowl. Both were 14 years old at the time; on that occasion it was Geller who walked away the winner, 6-7(2), 7-5, 6-2, to lift the Orange Bowl trophy.

For de Minaur, the win on Monday over an “old” rival was sweet revenge. 

“This is the second time I’ve played against him; we played before five years ago and it’s fun to cross paths with a childhood rival,” de Minaur told ATPWorldTour.com. “I’ve grown up since then; I’m stronger, I’m faster and I have more confidence. I’m happy with the win today; it’s tough to play in this kind of heat and humidity.”

The Australian #NextGenATP hopeful made his BNP Paribas Open debut last week by navigating his way through the qualifiers at Indian Wells. He earned his first ATP World Tour Masters 1000 win (d. Struff) before falling to eventual champion Juan Martin Del Potro in the second round. Now, he’s one win away from qualifying for the main draw at Key Biscayne. On Tuesday, the 19-year-old plays Belgian Ruben Bemelmans, who defeated Brazilian Joao Souza 7-5, 6-3 to advance to the second round of qualifying.

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