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In The Land Of The Rising Sun, Nishioka Earns His Share Of The Spotlight

  • Posted: Sep 27, 2019

In The Land Of The Rising Sun, Nishioka Earns His Share Of The Spotlight

With a fan base of 127 million Japanese, ‘Yoshi’ believes there is plenty of support to go around

As a teenager, Yoshihito Nishioka used to marvel at the forehands of Rafael Nadal and Fernando Verdasco, the muscular Spaniards who rip the ball like few others. Like many who came before him, he dreamed of one day striking fear into opponents with a combination of vicious spin and brute force.

But bearing a frame that upon maturity today is just 170cm and 64 kg, the laws of physics had other ideas, as did Nick Bollettieri. Instead of looking to Spain for inspiration, Nishioka should look half a world away to Chile, the legendary coach advised.

“Mr. Nick told me: ‘You’re not very tall and you’re not very strong, so you need to use your speed and technique and learn to play like a small player,”https://www.atptour.com/” Nishioka says. “He said I should base my game on Marcelo Rios, who was the same height, same build and a lefty like me.”

So Nishioka did what any industrious Millennial would do. “I started watching his matches on YouTube and I learned a lot about how to [construct] points. Coming to the net, hitting drop shots; he can do whatever he wants. After I started watching Rios, I wanted to play like him.

“There are many good small players today like Kei [Nishikori], Goffin, di Minaur, Schwartzman who can compete with the bigger, stronger players. We don’t have their power and we can’t serve 20 aces a match. So we have to use our speed and technique, fight and be mentally tough, and also figure out where the weakness is in our opponents.”

Ahead of his return to home soil next week for the Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships in Tokyo, Nishioka had moved to within two places of his career-high ATP Ranking after a determined recovery from serious injury.

Just four days after reaching his best ranking of No. 58 in March 2017, ‘Yoshi’ tore his left ACL during a second-round match against Jack Sock at the Miami Open. He underwent surgery in April and missed the remainder of the year.

His long road back included 11 ATP Challenger Tour appearances in 2018 but, more significantly, his first ATP Tour title one year ago in Shenzhen, when he came through qualifying to take the title. The run included three-set wins over his idol Verdasco in the semis and Frenchman Pierre-Hugues Herbert in the final.

“That is a big memory for me and at the time I couldn’t believe I won the tournament because I played the qualifying and I hadn’t made any deep runs at ATP events that year. The comeback had been very tough, so the victory was very emotional.”

You May Also Like: Nishioka Ready For Spotlight

Growing up in Japan, Nishioka was one of many young players who benefitted from the generosity of former Sony Chairman Masaaki Morita, who underwrote the cost of sending players to IMG Academy in Bradenton, Florida.

“Mr. Morita wanted to support Japanese tennis juniors and at that time in Japan not many players went outside the country. But Mr. Morita thought we had to go outside. Each year he sent a junior to IMG Academy and there we were given our goal for the year, such as winning a Futures event or a big junior tournament. If I meet the goal, I get to stay for another year. If I don’t meet it, I have to go back home.”

Spending four years in Florida not only improved his tennis, it broadened his horizons and life skills.

“When I went to IMG I had zero English,” Nishioka says. “Many Japanese are shy when they cannot speak. They thought I was crazy because I wanted to speak, to have conversations with people. Even though I couldn’t speak I still wanted to try.

“I wanted to talk to players who were the same age as me at IMG, to make friends. I want to know about their culture and to tell them about Japanese culture. I also knew that English was the language of tennis, among the players and in the interview room. So I knew I had to learn it.”

Nishioka’s best results this year have come on hard courts. In January he came through qualifying to reach the Sydney quarter-finals. At Indian Wells he beat current Top 10 player Roberto Bautista Agut and Felix Auger-Aliassime before retiring with a back injury against Miomir Kecmanovic in the fourth round.

His best result of the year – a run through qualifying to the Cincinnati quarter-finals – was extra special as it included his first win over his hero Nishikori.

“I want to check the morning news tomorrow to see what they’re going to say,” Nishioka told media after the win. “Hopefully many spotlight on me. In Japanese tennis, the only famous players are Kei and Naomi [Osaka]. I want to change that. Hopefully [fans] are going to maybe watch me after the match today.”

With Nishikori unfortunately sidelined with an arm injury, Nishioka is sure to be the fan favourite next week in Tokyo.

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Djokovic To Make Tokyo Debut; When Is The Draw & More

  • Posted: Sep 27, 2019

Djokovic To Make Tokyo Debut; When Is The Draw & More

All about the ATP 500 tennis tournament in Tokyo, Japan

World No. 1 Novak Djokovic is set to make his debut at the Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships, the longest-running ATP Tour event in Asia. After conquering the China Open in Beijing with a record six titles, he will aim to continue his success at the ATP 500 tournament in Tokyo. Djokovic will be looking to join the rest of the Big Four — Roger Federer (2006), Rafael Nadal (2010) and Andy Murray (2011) — as Tokyo champions.

Two years ago, David Goffin moved up five places into a Nitto ATP Finals qualification spot by winning his biggest career title here. The Belgian has a similar opportunity this coming week. Goffin enters at No. 12 in the ATP Race To London and could climb as high as No. 7 with another strong run in Tokyo. Meanwhile, #NextGenATP stars Alex de Minaur, Denis Shapovalov and Miomir Kecmanovic will be looking to solidify their standings in the top seven in the ATP Race To Milan.

You May Also Like: In-Form Goffin Captures Tokyo Crown

The Tokyo field also features World No. 14 Borna Coric, two-time semi-finalist Marin Cilic and Frenchmen Benoit Paire and Lucas Pouille.

Here’s all you need to know about the Tokyo tennis tournament: what is the schedule, where to watch, who has won and more. 

Established: 1972

Tournament Dates: 30 September – 6 October 2019

Tournament Director: Nao Kawatei

Draw Ceremony: Saturday, 28 September, not before 12pm on site

Are You In? Subscribe To Get Tournament Updates In Your Inbox

Schedule (View On Official Website)
* Qualifying: starts Saturday at 11am
* Main draw: Monday to Friday from 11am, Saturday from 1pm
* Doubles final: Sunday, 6 October at 1pm
* Singles final: Sunday, 6 October not before 3:30pm

How To Watch
Watch Live On Tennis TV 
TV Schedule

Venue: Ariake Tennis Forest Park
Main Court Seating: 10,000
Surface: Hard

Prize Money: US $1,895,290 (Total Financial Commitment: US $2,046,340)  

Tickets On Sale: Buy Now

View Who Is Playing, Past Champions, Seeds, Points & Prize Money Breakdown

Honour Roll (Open Era)
Most Titles, Singles: Stefan Edberg (4)
Most Titles, Doubles: Ken Flach, Rick Leach (3)
Oldest Champion: Ken Rosewall, 38, in 1973
Youngest Champion: Jimmy Arias, 18, in 1982
Lowest-Ranked Champion (since 1978): No. 121 Kenneth Carlsen in 2002 
Most Match Wins: Stefan Edberg (27)

2018 Finals
Singles: [Q] Daniil Medvedev (RUS) d [3] Kei Nishikori (JPN) 62 64   Read & Watch
Doubles: [4] Ben McLachlan (JPN) / Jan-Lennard Struff (GER) d [3] Raven Klaasen (RSA) / Michael Venus (NZL) 64 75  Read More

Social
Hashtag: #rakutenopen
Facebook: @rakutenjapanopen
Twitter: @rakutenopen
Instagram: @rakutenopen

Did You Know… The ATP 500 tournament is played at the Ariake Colosseum, an expansive tennis centre comprising 48 courts and a stadium with one of the first retractable roofs in tennis. In preparation for the 2020 Olympic Games, the 2018 event was held indoors at the Musushino Forest Sport Plaza. Read More

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Erlich/Martin Upset Top Seeds In Chengdu

  • Posted: Sep 27, 2019

Erlich/Martin Upset Top Seeds In Chengdu

Gille/Vliegen advance to Zhuhai doubles final

Jonathan Erlich/Fabrice Martin produced a statement win on Friday at the Chengdu Open by defeating top seeds Ivan Dodig/Filip Polasek 6-2, 5-7, 10-8 to reach the doubles final.

The Israeli-French pairing won 82 per cent of their first-serve points (31/38) to advance in one hour and 35 minutes. Erlich prevailed this year in Antalya with Artem Sitak (d. Dodig/Polasek), while Martin teamed with Jeremy Chardy for titles this season in Marseille (d. McLachlan/Middelkoop) and Estoril (d. Bambridge/O’Mara), in addition to a runner-up finish at Roland Garros (l. to Krawietz/Mies).

Awaiting Erlich/Martin in the final are Serbians Nikola Cacic/Dusan Lajovic or Americans Taylor Fritz/Nicholas Monroe. Cacic/Lajovic defeated Xin Gao/Zhe Li 7-6(5), 6-3 and Fritz/Monroe prevailed over second seeds Dominic Inglot/Austin Krajicek 7-6(5), 6-2.

At the Huajin Securities Zhuhai Championships, fourth seeds Sander Gille/Jordan Vliegen moved into the doubles final with a 6-4, 6-3 win over Dominik Koepfer/Soon Woo Kwon. The Belgian pair went on an 11-match winning streak in July, taking titles in Bastad (d. Delbonis/Zeballos) and Gstaad (d. Oswald/Polasek), and finishing runner-up in Kitzbühel (l. to Oswald/Polasek).

Gille/Vliegen will face Marcel Demoliner/Matwe Middelkoop or Goncalo Oliviera/Andrei Vasilevski in the championship match.

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Shapovalov Steps Up Milan Bid, Plays Carreno Busta In Chengdu Semi-finals

  • Posted: Sep 27, 2019

Shapovalov Steps Up Milan Bid, Plays Carreno Busta In Chengdu Semi-finals

Carreno Busta overcomes Garin in quarter-finals

Denis Shapovalov booked a place in his third ATP Tour semi-final of the year on Friday to further improve his chances of securing a place at the Next Gen ATP Finals in November.

The eighth-seeded Canadian wore down in-form Egor Gerasimov of Belarus in a 6-4, 3-6, 6-3 victory over one hour and 38 minutes at the Chengdu Open. Gerasimov had beaten top seed John Isner in the quarter-finals on Thursday.

“It feels great, I’m in good form and I feel that I’m getting over the jet lag now,” said Shapovalov. “Egor is a good player, with a tough serve to read, so I’m happy to get into another semi-final. I tried to pick up my serve in the third set.”

You May Also Like: Bublik Saves 2 M.P. In Chengdu To Deny Dimitrov Milestone Win

Big serving from Shapovalov — nine aces and 85 per cent of first-service points won — helped him record his 25th match win of the season, which also includes semi-final runs at the Miami Open presented by Itau (l. to Federer) in March and the Winston-Salem Open (l. to Hurkacz) in August. He is currently in fourth position in the 2019 ATP Race To Milan.

The 20-year-old Shapovalov will now face Spaniard Pablo Carreno Busta, who knocked out Cristian Garin of Chile 7-5, 6-2 in 83 minutes. Shapovalov beat Carreno Busta 6-3, 7-6(5) in May during the Internazionali BNL d’Italia in Rome, which represented their second FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting (also 2017 US Open).

“It was a very good win as I was focused all of the match,” said Carreno Busta. “I felt really comfortable on the court today. I played the match at 100 per cent. I played against Denis in Rome, which was probably not my best match, but I have a chance for revenge tomorrow and I hope to continue to enjoy this tournament.”

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Thiem, Tsitsipas, Zverev Lead London Hopefuls; When Is The Beijing Draw & More

  • Posted: Sep 27, 2019

Thiem, Tsitsipas, Zverev Lead London Hopefuls; When Is The Beijing Draw & More

All about the ATP 500 tennis tournament in Beijing, China

Dominic Thiem and Stefanos Tsitsipas lead a number of Nitto ATP Finals hopefuls at the 2019 China Open. Thiem is looking for his first win in his third appearance at this ATP 500 tournament, while Tsitsipas will be making his Beijing debut. The Austrian and Greek are next in line to qualify for London, respectively at No. 5 and No. 6 in the ATP Race To London.

Roberto Bautista Agut and Matteo Berrettini, who currently hold down the seventh and eighth spots in the Race, join the pair in Beijing, along with Gael Monfils (No. 10), reigning Nitto ATP Finals champion Alexander Zverev (No. 11), Fabio Fognini (No. 13) and Diego Schwartzman (No. 14).

The Beijing field also features World No. 9 Karen Khachanov, 2016 winner Andy Murray, defending champion Nikoloz Basilashvili and 19-year-old Felix Auger-Aliassime, who is looking to qualifying for the Next Gen ATP Finals.

Here’s all you need to know about the Beijing tennis tournament: what is the schedule, where to watch, who has won and more. 

You May Also Like: Murray Joins ’40 Titles Club’ With Beijing Crown

Established: 2004

Tournament Dates: 30 September – 6 October 2019

Tournament Director: Alfred Zhang

Draw Ceremony: Saturday, 28 September, at 2:30pm on site

Are You In? Subscribe To Get Tournament Updates In Your Inbox

Schedule (View On Official Website)
* Qualifying: starts Saturday at 11am
* Main draw: Monday to Saturday at 12:30pm (except for Tuesday which begins at 1pm); night sessions Wednesday to Saturday at 7:30pm
* Doubles final: Sunday, 6 October follows WTA doubles final at 12pm
* Singles final: Sunday, 6 October not before 7:30pm

How To Watch
Watch Live On Tennis TV 
TV Schedule

Venue: National Tennis Center
Main Court Seating: 15,000
Surface: Hard

Prize Money: US $3,515,225 (Total Financial Commitment: US $3,666,275)  

Tickets On Sale: Buy Now

Tickets for the <a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/tournaments/beijing/747/overview'>China Open</a>, an ATP 500 tennis tournament in Beijing

View Who Is Playing, Past Champions, Seeds, Points & Prize Money Breakdown

Honour Roll (Open Era)
Most Titles, Singles: Novak Djokovic (6)
Most Titles, Doubles: Bob Bryan, Mike Bryan (3)
Oldest Champion: Rafael Nadal, 31, in 2017
Youngest Champion: Rafael Nadal, 19, in 2005
Lowest-Ranked Champion: No. 34 Nikoloz Basilashvili in 2018
Most Match Wins: Novak Djokovic (29)

2018 Finals
Singles: Nikoloz Basilashvili (GEO) d [1] Juan Martin del Potro (ARG) 64 64   Read & Watch
Doubles: [2] Lukasz Kubot (POL) / Marcelo Melo (BRA) d [1] Oliver Marach (AUT) / Mate Pavic (CRO) 61 64  Read More

Social
Hashtag: #ChinaOpen
Facebook: @ChinaOpen
Twitter: @ChinaOpen
Instagram: @chinaopen

Did You Know… The Beijing Olympic Green Tennis Center, built for the 2008 Olympic Games, is the venue for the China Open. The venue boasts a 15,000-seat stadium with a retractable roof, named the Diamond Court due to its likeness.

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Bautista Agut Still Perfect Against Seppi, Reaches Zhuhai Semi-finals

  • Posted: Sep 27, 2019

Bautista Agut Still Perfect Against Seppi, Reaches Zhuhai Semi-finals

De Minaur defeats Coric on Friday

Nitto ATP Finals contender Roberto Bautista Agut strengthened his hold on seventh position in the 2019 ATP Race To London on Friday by reaching the Huajin Securities Zhuhai Championships semi-finals. The Spaniard improved to 4-0 lifetime against Italian Andreas Seppi with a 6-2, 6-2 win in 79 minutes.

With four singles spots left up for grabs, Bautista Agut is now 210 points ahead of eighth-placed Italian Matteo Berrettini (2,185 points) in the battle to qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals, to be held at The O2 in London from 10-17 November.

When asked about his 2019 season, which includes a run to the Wimbledon semi-finals, Bautista Agut said, “It means that I’ve been doing a lot of good things during the past year and it means that I’m improving my tennis. My game is getting better and that’s why I’m climbing in the ATP Rankings.”

Two breaks in each set against Seppi helped Bautista Agut improve to a 37-16 match record on the season, which includes his ninth ATP Tour title at the QatarExxon Mobil Open in Doha (d. Berdych).

You May Also Like: Ramos-Vinolas Beats Monfils, Moves Into Zhuhai Semi-finals

“It’s a very nice center court and the conditions here are very slow, every ball, every point is played by long rallies,” said Bautista Agut. “I like the way I played today and I felt really good on the court.”

Awaiting Bautista Agut in the semi-finals is seventh seed Alex de Minaur. The #NextGenATP Aussie continued to make his case for a second appearance at the Next Gen ATP Finals in November by prevailing in an entertaining 6-2, 4-6, 6-4 clash against fourth-seeded Croatian Borna Coric. Their Centre Court battle was the second Top 15 win of De Minaur’s career.

“Obviously I’ve got to do everything I can to recover. Every time I step out on court, I’m going to give one hundred percent,” De Minaur said. “Roberto is a very good friend of mine and one of the toughest guys out there, so it’s going to be a hell of a fight and I love it. I’m looking forward to it.”

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After racing through the opening set, it appeared that the Aussie would cruise to victory after pouncing on Coric’s serve to break at 3-3 in the second set. Coric had other ideas, though, and completed a remarkable turnaround by winning 12 of the next 14 points to force a decider. De Minaur scored the lone break of the final set at 1-1 and held on to his slight advantage with a flawless serving display, winning 20 of 23 service points to advance in two hours and 19 minutes.

The 20-year-old, who defeated Andy Murray on Thursday, has continued to excel on hard courts this season. He captured his maiden ATP Tour crown on home soil in January at the Sydney International (d. Seppi) and prevailed in July at the BB&T Atlanta Open. De Minaur also defeated Kei Nishikori last month at the US Open to reach the second week at a Grand Slam for the first time.

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Ramos-Vinolas Beats Monfils, Moves Into Zhuhai Semi-finals

  • Posted: Sep 27, 2019

Ramos-Vinolas Beats Monfils, Moves Into Zhuhai Semi-finals

Spaniard awaits winner of Mannarino or Dzumhur

Albert Ramos-Vinolas got the better of a familiar foe on Friday for a place in his fourth ATP Tour semi-final of the season. The eighth-seeded Spaniard knocked out third seed Gael Monfils of France 7-5, 6-4 over one hour and 40 minutes at the Huajin Securities Zhuhai Championships, in their fourth FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting of the year (Monfils 3-1).

Ramos-Vinolas, who’d beaten Monfils in May at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia in Rome, recovered from a slow start in a first set that featured five breaks of serve. The 31-year-old took a 3-1 advantage in the second set, before Monfils recovered to 3-3, only to be broken in the seventh game.

World No. 46 Ramos-Vinolas, who will next meet Frenchman Adrian Mannarino or Bosnia and Herzegovina qualifier Damir Dzumhur, is now 29-20 on the season. He captured his second ATP Tour title in July at the J. Safra Sarasin Swiss Open Gstaad (d. Stebe) and also finished runner-up at the Generali Open in Kitzbhuel (l. to Thiem).

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Bublik Saves 2 M.P. In Chengdu To Deny Dimitrov Milestone Win

  • Posted: Sep 27, 2019

Bublik Saves 2 M.P. In Chengdu To Deny Dimitrov Milestone Win

Kazakhstani to play Sousa or Lloyd in semi-finals

Alexander Bublik saved two match points at the Chengdu Open on Friday to advance to the second ATP Tour semi-final of his career.

The 22-year-old Kazakhstani hit 35 aces to beat fourth-seeded Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov 5-7, 7-6(9), 7-6(3) in two hours and 32 minutes at the ATP 250 tournament. It denied Dimitrov his 300th match win.

“It’s been a good week for me, and beating Grigor is a great achievement for me,” said Bublik. “The second set tie-break was tough, I never thought about being match points down, but just playing my own game and serving well.”

Bublik saved two match points at 6/7 and 8/9 in the second set tie-break, which he clinched on his third set point. He then won the first three games of the deciding set and held a 4-1 advantage, before Dimitrov battled back to 4-4 and saved one match point at 4-5, 30/40. Bublik won the first five points of the deciding set tie-break.

World No. 71 Bublik has now hit 73 aces in three matches at the ATP 250 tournament – including 25 aces against Taylor Fritz in the first round, 13 aces against Jordan Thompson in the second round. He will next face South African lucky loser Lloyd Harris or Joao Sousa of Portugal.

Bublik advanced to his first ATP Tour final in July at the Hall of Fame Open in Newport (l. to Isner) and is now 13-10 on the season. Dimitrov reached his third Grand Slam championship semi-final earlier this month at the US Open (l. to Medvedev).

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