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Fans Can Have Their Say In Deciding The Hall Of Fame's Class of 2019

  • Posted: Sep 20, 2018

Fans Can Have Their Say In Deciding The Hall Of Fame’s Class of 2019

Five former ATP World Tour stars are on the ballot

The stars of the ATP World Tour thrill fans around the world. And now, those fans have an opportunity to pay back the players. For the first time, the International Tennis Hall of Fame is utilising fan voting as part of its process to decide who gains entry in the Class of 2019.

This year, five former ATP World Tour standouts were nominated: former World No. 1s in the ATP Rankings, Yevgeny Kafelnikov and Thomas Muster, former No. 1 in the ATP Doubles Rankings Jonas Bjorkman, 22-time tour-level champion Goran Ivanisevic and 1993-94 Roland Garros titlist Sergi Bruguera. Conchita Martinez, Li Na and Mary Pierce are also on the ballot. Fans can have their say until voting closes on 7 October at 11:59 pm ET.

“There is a real opportunity for fans to actually get someone over the hump and get someone in. And it’s something that should happen. Our memories are only as great as we remember them because of fan participation, whether it’s in a match or at practices or watching us on TV, so there’s no reason that should stop when it comes to the Hall of Fame,” former World No. 1 and Class of 2017 inductee Andy Roddick said in an interview with Tennis.com. “I think it’s a great idea, I think it’s a progressive idea, and I applaud the Hall of Fame for taking this step and I think it’s absolutely the right thing to do.”

Entry into the Hall of Fame requires a 75 per cent affirmative vote. In the past, only Hall of Famers, historians and journalists were allowed to vote. But now, the fans can make an impact. The Top 3 recipients in the Fan Vote will receive bonus points. The top vote-getter will add three percentage points to their total, the second-placed player will be awarded two extra points and the third-placed athlete will get one point.

As an example, if a player receives affirmative votes from 72 per cent of the Voting Group, but they win the fan vote, the three bonus percentage points they earn will bring them to 75 per cent, earning them entry into the Hall of Fame.

“We’re thrilled to add this new Fan Voting component to the Hall of Fame voting process,” said International Tennis Hall of Fame CEO Todd Martin. “Creating an authentic connection between tennis fans and the greatest champions of our sport will be an engaging execution of our mission to promote and celebrate tennis history. Tennis is such a global sport and the fans of our inductees come from every corner of the globe. We know they might not all be able to get to Newport to see an induction, but hopefully this voting program will offer an opportunity for them to enjoy being part of the process.”

More than 25,000 fans from more than 120 countries have voted thus far. As of 20 September, Ivanisevic leads the field, followed by Li Na and Mary Pierce. 

Click here to vote

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Nadal, Djokovic Would Be Hall of Fame Baseball Players

  • Posted: Sep 20, 2018

Nadal, Djokovic Would Be Hall of Fame Baseball Players

Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers shows that the two all-time greats are returning well above “.300”

If you can get on base three times out of 10 in baseball, which is referred to as batting .300, then you are one of the elite in the sport.

Statistics in tennis usually focus on much higher winning percentages, but an equivalent stat does exist with an almost identical win percentage – points won returning first serves.

In baseball, you must stare down a 100 mph fastball, and in tennis the speed of a first serve can regularly reach 130-mph plus. Both very difficult propositions to begin the contest.

An Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers analysis of the current Top 20 from the 2015 season to present identifies that, on average, they win 29.5 per cent against first serves, or .295 in baseball vernacular.

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The batter and the returner both face serious heat to begin the point, and both are defined as “successful” if they conquer the pitcher or server just one out of every three times.

Since 2015, Rafael Nadal leads the current Top 20 with points won returning first serves at 34.5 per cent. The other seven players that successfully batted above .300 are Novak Djokovic (34.2%), Diego Schwartzman (33%), Roger Federer (32.3%), Fabio Fognini (31.5%), David Goffin (31.4%), Kei Nishikori (30.6%) and Dominic Thiem (30.4%).

Current Top 20: Points Won Returning First Serves 2015 to present

ATP Ranking

Player

First-Serve Return Points Won

Total First-Serve Return Points

Win Percentage

1

R. Nadal

4209

12207

34.5%

3

N. Djokovic

4215

12309

34.2%

14

D. Schwartzman

2788

8446

33%

2

R. Federer

3346

10359

32.3%

13

F. Fognini

3077

9781

31.5%

11

D. Goffin

3763

11971

31.4%

12

K. Nishikori

3416

11172

30.6%

8

D. Thiem

4191

13774

30.4%

7

G. Dimitrov

3470

11655

29.8%

5

A. Zverev

3344

11296

29.6%

6

M. Cilic

3601

12179

29.6%

4

J.M. Del Potro

2092

7197

29.1%

17

J. Sock

2575

9292

27.7%

16

K. Edmund

1944

7114

27.3%

18

B. Coric

2319

8519

27.2%

19

L. Pouille

2320

8611

26.9%

20

M. Raonic

2762

10299

26.8%

15

S. Tsitsipas

871

3282

26.5%

9

K. Anderson

2924

11274

25.9%

10

J. Isner

2651

12158

21.8%

AVERAGE

59878

202895

29.5%

What’s interesting is how much the court surface factors into points won against first serves.

Of the seven ATP World Tour Masters 1000 tournaments completed so far in 2018, Nadal has the largest total of first-serve return points won by a champion, and also the least. At the clay-court Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters, he won a staggering 43.6 per cent of first-serve return points, but won just 29.1 per cent while winning the Rogers Cup, the hard-court Masters 1000 tournament in Toronto.

2018 Completed Masters 1000 Events: First-Serve Return Points Won By Champion

#

Masters 1000

Winner

First-Serve Return Points Won / Total

Win %

1

Monte-Carlo

R. Nadal

58/133

43.6%

2

Rome

R. Nadal

91/217

41.9%

3

Madrid

A. Zverev

80/219

36.5%

4

Cincinnati

N. Djokovic

107/327

32.7%

5

Indian Wells

J. M. Del Potro

97/299

32.4%

6

Miami

J. Isner

83/271

30.6%

7

Toronto

R. Nadal

60/206

29.1%

 

AVERAGE

576/1672

34.4%

The clay-court tournament winners at Monte-Carlo, Rome and Madrid averaged winning 40.2 per cent of first-serve return points, while the hard-court champions at Cincinnati, Indian Wells, Miami and Toronto were way off that pace, winning 31.5 per cent of first-serve return points.

Baseball has a pitcher and a hitter. Tennis has a server and a receiver. The similarities, particularly defined by the winning percentages, are striking.

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Thiem Tames Struff; Shapo Shines In Decider

  • Posted: Sep 20, 2018

Thiem Tames Struff; Shapo Shines In Decider

Bautista Agut defeats Youzhny in the Russian’s final match

Dominic Thiem arrived in Russia fresh off his first hard-court quarter-final appearance at a Grand Slam, having reached the last eight at the US Open. And the Austrian maintained that form at the St. Petersburg Open on Thursday, defeating Jan-Lennard Struff 7-6(4), 6-4 to advance to the quarter-finals.

The top seed has now made it to this stage or further at 12 of 18 tour-level events this year. Thiem owns 45 wins in 2018 (45-14), tying World No. 1 Rafael Nadal (45-4) and No. 5 Alexander Zverev (45-14) for the most victories on the ATP World Tour. It is the third straight year that the Austrian has reached the 45-win plateau. 

The 25-year-old did well to protect his first serve against the German, winning 80 per cent of those points. He saved all three break points he faced in the second set en route to closing out the match after one hour, 35 minutes. Thiem will next face eighth seed Daniil Medvedev, who saved four of five break points to beat Kazakh Mikhail Kukushkin 6-3, 6-4 in one hour, 23 minutes. The home favourite captured his first two titles earlier this year in Sydney and Winston-Salem.

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It wasn’t easy, but #NextGenATP Canadian Denis Shapovalov continued his pursuit of a maiden ATP World Tour title with a 7-6(6), 4-6, 6-0 victory against Italian Matteo Berrettini. Shapovalov now owns 30 wins on the season, as he continues his ascent up the ATP Rankings. This June, the 19-year-old left-hander peaked at World No. 23, becoming the youngest player to crack the Top 25 since 2005.

While the Bahamas resident did not quite back up his fourth-round US Open run from 2017, he showed good form in Flushing Meadows by pushing last year’s finalist, Kevin Anderson, to five sets in the third round. And he has carried that level to Russia, where he will face 2012 titlist Martin Klizan for a spot in the last four. It will be the pair’s first FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting.

Against Berrettini, Shapovalov had to find some of his best tennis after facing a set point at 5/6 in the first-set tie-break and then dropping the second set. The seventh seed won all 12 of his service points in the decider and captured an impressive 83 per cent of second-serve return points in the third set to finish strong, earning the victory after one hour, 58 minutes.

Fifth seed Roberto Bautista Agut defeated home favourite Mikhail Youzhny 7-6(6), 3-6, 6-3 in the final match of the Russian’s career, leaving ‘The Colonel’ with 499 tour-level match wins. Youzhny completes a career that spanned nearly two decades with 10 ATP World Tour titles and more than $14 million in prize money.

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“I don’t have so much emotions, because now nothing changes for me. Yeah I understand, from one part of my mind, I finished my tennis career and now it’s going to be a new life for me. But if you say right now after the match, nothing changed,” Youzhny said. “From the beginning until the end, I was professional. The level of my game in last match shows that I’m retiring actually at a very good level.”

As you’d expect from one of the ATP World Tour’s toughest competitors, Youzhny did not go down without a fight against the World No. 26. Despite faliing to convert on two set points in the first set, he forced a decider and took a 15/40 advantage on the Spaniard’s serve at 3-3. But the 36-year-old missed backhands in the net on the next four points, and then double faulted on break point in the next game.

Sixth seed Damir Dzumhur, who lifted his first tour-level trophy in St. Petersburg one year ago, ousted Argentine Guido Pella 6-4, 6-4 in 77 minutes to move closer to retaining his crown. The 26-year-old has won two more titles since his breakthrough in Russia. But if he’s to add a fourth to his trophy case, it will not be easy.

In the quarter-finals, Dzumhur will face former World No 3 Stan Wawrinka, who summoned some of his best tennis on Wednesday to defeat home favourite and fourth seed Karen Khachanov in two tie-breaks. Dzumhur won their only previous FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting last season in Dubai. 

Did You Know?
Shapovalov has now reached the quarter-finals or better at four ATP World Tour events this season. He had only made the last eight once at this level entering the 2018 campaign.

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Pan Pacific Open: Johanna Konta knocked out by Donna Vekic

  • Posted: Sep 20, 2018

British number one Johanna Konta was knocked out in the Pan Pacific Open last-16 in a straight-set defeat by Croatia’s Donna Vekic.

World number 43 Konta lost 6-3 7-5 in one hour 22 minutes in Tokyo.

Having lost the opening set, Konta, 27, was 4-1 up and had a chance to serve for the second before the 22-year-old fought back.

Vekic, who beat Sloane Stephens in the opening round, faces French second seed Caroline Garcia in the quarter-finals.

Garcia, the world number four, beat Russia’s Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 6-4 2-6 7-5 to reach the last eight.

Vekic earned an early break and held on to edge a tight first set from Konta, but the Briton looked to be in control of the second.

Konta was two breaks up at one point and holding a 4-1 lead, and then had the chance to serve for the set before Vekic recovered to take a 6-5 advantage.

The Briton, who racked up 38 unforced errors in the match, then lost a second successive service game to love as world number 45 Vekic progressed.

“I played really well towards the end of the match and I am really happy to win this in two sets,” said Vekic.

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