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Korda Topples Fognini For Biggest Career Win

  • Posted: Mar 27, 2021

#NextGenATP American Sebastian Korda scored his first Top 20 victory with a hard-fought 1-6, 6-4, 6-2 turnaround against 10th seed Fabio Fognini at the Miami Open presented by Itau on Saturday.

The 20-year-old struggled to get on the scoreboard in the opening set against Fognini. But he never panicked, and raised his level in the second and third sets to claim his biggest career win over the No. 17-ranked Italian.

Korda was not able to hold serve set as Fognini flew out of the gates firing winners off both wings in the first set. The American struggled to read the variety in Fognini’s game, and the Italian had all the answers to break his serve four times.

[WATCH LIVE 1]

But he stayed patient, and was ready to captalise when the inevitable drop in form came in the second set. Korda played more aggressively, and only dropped four points on serve throughout the set to keep Fognini contained. 

After taking an early lead in the third set, Korda was tested again as the Italian powered to four break points at 3-2. But the American responded emphatically, saving all four and sealing the hold with an ace. He broke to love in the next game to make it 5-2, and closed out the victory after an hour and 48 minutes.

Into the third round, Korda will next face fellow Miami debutant Aslan Karatsev, the No. 17 seed. Karatsev defeated Mikhail Kukushkin 6-4, 6-3 earlier in the day to advance.

Contesting his first main draw match at an ATP Masters 1000 event, Karatsev broke serve four times and turned around an early deficit to win in an hour and 20 minutes.

“It was a really tough, tight match. To play your first match against Kukushkin is not easy, he’s a tough opponent,” Karatsev said in an on-court interview. “The courts are more slow here compared to last week in Dubai, so you have to adjust. The first match is always tough, but I found a way to beat him.”

Karatsev ended last season at No. 112 in the FedEx ATP Rankings, but he’s burst into the Top 30 after a stunning first three months of 2021. The Russian turned heads when he reached the semi-finals at the Australian Open as a qualifier, and backed it up by winning his first ATP Tour title at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships.

“Of course it gives me confidence to win my first title, but you arrive here and it’s a different surface and new tournament,” Karatsev said. “So you try [to think of it] as a new tournament and new place, but of course it gives me a lot of confidence.”

Karatsev owns a 13-2 record on the season, with his only two losses so far coming at the hands of  Top 4 opponents Novak Djokovic and Dominic Thiem.

Elsewhere in the Korda and Karatsev section, fifth seed Diego Schwartzman converted his fifth match point to put away Japan’s Yasutaka Uchiyama 6-3, 6-3. The Argentina Open champion needed an hour and 22 minutes to book a third-round clash with No. 25 seed Adrian Mannarino, who defeated Miomir Kecmanovic 6-3, 6-4 to advance.

The World No. 9 saved three of the four break points he faced against Uchiyama. He will take a 1-0 ATP Head2Head series lead into his clash against Mannarino. That win came on clay at the 2018 Mutua Madrid Open.

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The Broady Bunch: Siblings Liam & Naomi Team Up In Miami

  • Posted: Mar 27, 2021

Tennis is a sport that has a long history of iconic sibling duos, from the Bryan brothers and the Williams sisters, to the Zverevs, the Pliskovas and, most recently, the Cerundolos.

Liam Broady and older sister Naomi Broady have long stood out as one of the few brother-sister pairs to have achieved success at the ATP and WTA Tour level. And though they are used to treading separate paths as they compete on their respective tours, the Broadys are revelling in the chance to catch up together at the Miami Open presented by Itau – a tournament that neither player was originally scheduled to compete in.

Liam, who currently sits at No. 158 in the FedEx ATP Rankings, hadn’t planned on a trip to the ATP Masters 1000 event, but he was able to make the qualifying draw following some withdrawals. That’s when he got a text from older sister Naomi, No. 155 in the WTA Rankings.

“Naomi messaged me whilst I was in Italy [for the Biella Challenger] asking if she could come and spend some time with me over here, because she’s going to Colombia [for the WTA 250 event in Bogota],” Liam told ATPTour.com. “She’s kind of been like my unofficial coach for the week.”

Liam Broady, Naomi Broady

The arrangement has been a win-win for both siblings, as Liam arrived in Miami without regular coach David Sammel. And Naomi, who is not competing at the WTA 1000, will get to spend two weeks outside of the UK before heading down for tournaments in South America, adhering to COVID-19 protocols for international travel.

“It works really well… Obviously, through the time I’ve spent on Tour, I know as a player what kind of help you need around your matches,” said Naomi, who has previously achieved a career-high ranking of No. 54. “Just little things I can do to help him so he can just focus on his matches.

“Like in the morning, to save him some time, filling out his COVID form before he gets on the bus. Or grabbing him some coffee, or handing his racquets in, or picking up food for him.” 

While the siblings now compete independently and criss-cross the globe on the ATP and WTA Tours, tennis has always been the thing that has brought them together. Naomi and Liam are the middle pair out of four siblings, and they took to tennis when their father introduced them to the sport when they were seven and four, respectively.

“I think Dad made a lot of mistakes with me that he then corrected with Liam. They often say the Olympians are the younger siblings,” Naomi joked. “So I maybe walked the path a bit before him, learning from mistakes as he was slightly younger.”

One of the highlights of having a sibling in professional tennis is getting to share the big on-court moments with someone who understands the experience. For Liam and Naomi, that moment came in 2017, when the Stockport-born siblings made their mixed doubles debut at Wimbledon.

“It was definitely fun, especially the match we won,” Liam said of their run to the second round. “We played on Court 18, which is a pretty big court. It was a lot of fun.”

“I remember Liam telling me at the net with hand signals where he wanted me to serve, and I remember saying, ‘I don’t know what that means.’ That got the crowd laughing,” Naomi added. “Everyone had a few Pimms by then, so it was a really fun atmosphere.”

Liam Broady, Naomi Broady

The Broady siblings teamed up again this week in Miami, where qualifier Liam reached the main draw of an ATP Masters 1000 for the second time in his career. Coached by Naomi, the 27-year-old took down Shang Juncheng and Federico Gaio before falling in the first round to Miomir Kecmanovic, 7-5, 6-7(5), 6-1. It continues the momentum he built up from a run to the final at the ATP Challenger Tour event in Biella earlier this month.

“You have an inside knowledge about what’s going on,” Liam said of working with Naomi. “I think it’s a very particular profession to be in, and not many people really understand the sort of things that we go through.

“When times are tough, you can speak to each other about what’s going wrong and what’s going right and give each other advice on that.” 

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Tsitsipas, Nishikori Set Third-Round Clash

  • Posted: Mar 27, 2021

Stefanos Tsitsipas continued his strong run of form on Saturday to beat Damir Dzumhur 6-1, 6-4 at the Miami Open presented by Itau.

The World No. 5 entered the match with one win from four ATP Head2Head clashes against Dzumhur, but he landed 18 winners and served with confidence to advance after 68 minutes. Tsitsipas was making his first appearance since his runner-up finish at last week’s Abierto Mexicano Telcel presentado por HSBC.

“It was a great match, especially against a guy that I probably don’t have a good record playing against in the past,” said Tsitsipas. “I started the match very strong, breaking him twice and taking a big lead in the score, and I think the things worked out by themselves after that.”

[WATCH LIVE 1]

Tsitsipas is the third player to reach 15 wins this season (15-4). The Greek joins Russian duo Andrey Rublev (16-3) and Daniil Medvedev (15-2) in the exclusive club.

Tsitsipas showcased his court coverage skills and dictated rallies with his forehand throughout the second-round match. The second seed, who hit 10 of his 18 winners on his forehand side, rushed his opponent and committed just nine unforced errors.

The 2019 Nitto ATP Finals champion will face Kei Nishikori in the third round. Nishikori needed two hours and 50 minutes to overcome Aljaz Bedene 7-6(6), 5-7, 6-4.

This is Nishikori’s second win in as many weeks against Bedene. The Japanese also beat the Slovenian 6-4, 6-4 at last week’s Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships.

Tsitsipas will attempt to claim his first win against the Nishikori. The former World No. 4 won the pair’s only previous ATP Head2Head encounter on home soil at the 2018 Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships in Tokyo.

“[Kei is] a player that has played very well in the past, and even now he can raise his level really high,” said Tsitsipas. “I’ll try and be ready for the battle. It’s important for me to have matches against strong opponents like him.

“I am very pumped for the match and I’m going to try and put my best performance out there. I’m going to try and take it game by game… It’s a strong third round, I won’t hide it. It’s important for me to be ready for that match and be physically prepared.”

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#NextGenATP Musetti's Hot Streak Continues In Miami

  • Posted: Mar 27, 2021

Lorenzo Musetti is competing at the Miami Open presented by Itau for the first time, and this is his first appearance in a hard-court ATP Masters 1000 event. But the 19-year-old looked like an experienced veteran in dismissing 23rd seed Benoit Paire 6-3, 6-3 on Saturday to reach the third round in Florida.

“I had to focus on myself, and not Benoit. I think I did a great match,” Musetti said. “I managed the tough points really good. I’m really happy.”

Musetti stayed composed throughout his victory, setting a showdown against former World No. 3 Marin Cilic. Including all of his qualifying and main draw matches last week in Acapulco, the teen has now won eight of his past nine matches.

It would have been understandable if Musetti struggled to find his footing in Miami following his dream week at the Abierto Mexicano Telcel presentado por HSBC, where he reached his maiden ATP 500 semi-final. But the Italian has looked sharp in triumphs against Michael Mmoh and Paire.

“I was really focussed from the first point, because I knew it was a tough match from the beginning. Benoit is a fantastic player,” Musetti said. “He’s a really nice guy. Even last week in Acapulco, he said to me a lot of congratulations and a lot of nice words. Even today when he lost, he was really nice to me.”

[WATCH LIVE 1]

The World No. 94, who is the youngest player in the Top 100 of the FedEx ATP Rankings, never got too high or low against the streaky Frenchman. Musetti played a solid match and forced Paire to maintain a high level throughout the match, which the three-time ATP Tour titlist was unable to do in the 61-minute encounter. 

Musetti continues to show that his one-handed backhand is one of the biggest strengths in his game, hitting a few crafty passing shots against his net-rushing seeded opponent. 

His next opponent, Cilic, battled past 13th seed Cristian Garin 3-6, 7-5, 7-6(5) after two hours and 44 minutes.

The Croatian, who blasted a backhand winner to seal his victory, hit 15 aces and saved 11 of the 15 break points he faced. Cilic now leads his ATP Head2Head series with Garin 2-0.

Did You Know?
Musetti is now 4-1 in main draw matches at Masters 1000 events. The Italian reached the third round at last year’s Internazionali BNL d’Italia as a qualifier, beating Stan Wawrinka and Kei Nishikori.

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ATP & WTA Stars Share #StopAsianHate Message

  • Posted: Mar 27, 2021

The ATP and WTA have come together to speak out against intolerance and hate affecting Asian communities.

In a series of video messages, players from both Tours called for greater tolerance and support, and shared personal reflections on the tragic attacks earlier this month in Atlanta, Georgia, which sent waves of grief through the AAPI community.

The united message also comes at a difficult time for Asian communities around the world, which have suffered from a rise in violence and xenophobia since the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic.

“I hope that people start to respect and love Asian culture, Asian people,” Naomi Osaka said.

“I’m against all forms of discrimination, and please stop Asian hate,” Kei Nishikori added. 

To find out more and learn how you can support, please visit: Stop AAPI Hate

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Lugano Calling: How The Challenger Tour Returned To Switzerland

  • Posted: Mar 27, 2021

This week, the ATP Challenger Tour is back in Switzerland after seven years. The inaugural Challenger Citta di Lugano has arrived, marking the return of the circuit to the European nation for the first time since 2014.

Then, it was the city of Geneva that hosted an indoor hard-court event for nearly three decades. Now, the picturesque mountain town of Lugano is targeting an extended stay of their own on the ATP Challenger Tour.

Switzerland is no stranger to high-level tennis, hosting both the Swiss Open Gstaad and the Swiss Indoors Basel for more than 50 years on the ATP Tour. But on the Challenger circuit, tennis has been absent from the country in recent years. As younger players, like surging Swiss teens Dominic Stricker and Leandro Riedi, seek to develop and grow their games, the tour provides the ideal training ground.

This is exactly why Riccardo Margaroli and his son – doubles No. 142 and the top Swiss doubles player in the world – Luca Margaroli, decided to embark on this endeavor of bringing Challenger tennis back to their country. Riccardo is the tournament director this week in Lugano.

“It all started from my idea,” said Luca. “I then involved my father, the city of Lugano and the Swiss federation, because I think it’s important in this moment to give the younger generation the chances to compete at the higher level. They have the talent and they proved it this week in Lugano. For me to play at home with my family involved in the event was really good. Unfortunately with the COVID restrictions we didn’t have spectators, otherwise the atmosphere at home would have been fantastic.”

As Riccardo and Luca outlined, the goal of bringing Challenger tennis back to Switzerland is to provide more competitive opportunities to the next generation of Swiss players. This week, Stricker and Riedi have taken full advantage.

Lugano
Stricker (left) and Riedi in Lugano

Last year, Stricker defeated his countryman in a historic all-Swiss final at Roland Garros juniors, and now the pair are embarking on their professional journeys in 2021. Making just his second appearance on the ATP Challenger Tour, the 18-year-old Stricker has made a big splash in reaching the semi-finals. And in his Challenger debut, 19-year-old Riedi also impressed, upsetting Adrian Menendez-Maceiras for his first victory at the level.

“I think it’s amazing to have a Challenger here in Switzerland,” said Stricker. “We are all enjoying playing here in Lugano. It’s a good opportunity for me, for all of us, including the juniors and all the Swiss players. I think it’s great to have a tournament and I’m already looking forward to come back next year. It’s been hard with all the COVID restrictions, because there were not so many spectators, but it’s actually been a pretty good atmosphere. There were some people watching the third set and it helped me. It is a pretty good and I hope to keep going and get as far as I can.”

“It’s great to have a Challenger here in Switzerland after so many years,” added Riedi. “It’s such a good chance for us young players to compete against strong competition. It’s really nice. I won my first Challenger match this week. It was a long match, but really good for me. I was realizing that at this level the players never let go and they always fight point after point. It was just a cool experience.”

Riedi
Riedi

Embedded in the Swiss-Italian Alps, Lugano is one of the more idyllic cities in all of Switzerland. The stunning location provides an incredible setting for world-class tennis, with players competing all week at the Padiglione Conza. Located just one hour north of Milan, the city is nestled in southern Switzerland’s Italian-speaking Ticino region. A culturally diverse melting pot, Lugano’s Swiss-Italian mix is reflected in its cuisine and architecture.

From 1999-2010, the city hosted a tournament on the ATP Challenger Tour, with future Top 10 talents Guillermo Coria and Stan Wawrinka among its champions. At the time, the tournament was held on outdoor clay. Now, the balls are flying on the lightning-fast indoor hard courts at the Padiglione Conza, a convention center in the heart of Lugano.  

“The idea of organising a Challenger tournament was born after we established a Swiss master event at our tennis school in Cadro, Lugano,” said Riccardo Margaroli. “The tournament, organised during the lockdown, had the aim of making up for the lack of competitions due to the arrival of the coronavirus.

“We have to thank the ATP, who was very close to us in the construction of this Challenger tournament, as well as the sponsors who had already supported us during the Swiss master and in particular the Swiss Federation, Banca Stato, the city of Lugano and Lugano Region. Our main partners immediately understood the importance of this event in such a critical moment. I also want to thank the Marchesini sisters from MEF Tennis Events for having contributed to the organization of our first tournament here in Lugano.”

The Margaroli family includes Riccardo, a former basketball player, mother Isabella and their three children, all tennis players: Camilla (30), Silvia (26) and Luca (29). Together, they manage the Scuolo Tennis by Margaroli, a local club in Lugano, which is the largest facility in the Ticino region.



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Can Sandgren Slow Down The Rublev Onslaught In Miami?

  • Posted: Mar 27, 2021

Beating Andrey Rublev has been one of the toughest challenges in tennis since the start of 2020. Tennys Sandgren, his opponent in the second round of the Miami Open presented by Itau, has proven himself a big-match player in the past. But can the two-time Australian Open quarter-finalist find good enough tennis on Saturday to send the roaring Rublev train off its tracks?

“I have to play my best if I want a shot to compete with him out there,” Sandgren said. “The last match we played wasn’t particularly competitive on my end. I watched him hit a lot of the winners. I felt like I was watching a lot of the match and wasn’t playing it.“

[WATCH LIVE 1]

Rublev defeated Sandgren 6-3, 6-3 in Hamburg last year in their first ATP Head2Head meeting. Although that was a clay-court match, the Russian was able to play his aggressive game, triumphing without facing a break point.

“I’m going to have to try to dictate some points and serve well and maybe hope he’s not totally on,” Sandgren said. “But he’s a great player, obviously playing fantastic tennis, good guy. Just hoping to have a good match out there.”

Sandgren has made life difficult for the sport’s stars in the past. At last year’s Australian Open, he held seven match points against Roger Federer in the quarter-finals before ultimately falling in five sets. The American, who enjoys watching defensive players like Andy Murray and Gael Monfils, knows he won’t be able to sit back against the ball-blasting Rublev.

“I’m not a good enough defender to defend against him, so I might have to be more aggressive, honestly. It’s not good enough out there to play too defensive against him,” Sandgren admitted. “I think any time I play somebody who is one of those guys who is one of the best players in the world right now, when I’ve gone out and played like that, I have to play more aggressive.”

Second seed Stefanos Tsitsipas will begin his Miami run against lucky loser Damir Dzumhur, who ousted former World No. 5 Kevin Anderson in the first round.

On paper, you’d expect 2019 Nitto ATP Finals champion Stefanos Tsitsipas to overwhelm the World No. 126 with his aggressive all-court game. But Dzumhur leads their ATP Head2Head series 3-1, with their most recent clash coming in Rotterdam in 2019.

“He’s getting the ball very early… he’s very aggressive and he doesn’t give you a lot of time ,” Dzumhur said. “I can take all the best and all the positives from those matches to try to keep doing that way. Of course it’s going to be another tough match.”

Other players who are in action Saturday are fifth seed Diego Schwartzman and sixth seed Denis Shapovalov, who will play Yasutaka Uchiyama and Ilya Ivashka, respectively.

But perhaps the match of the day will be between 10th seed Fabio Fognini and #NextGenATP American Sebastian Korda. Fognini is one of the cleanest ball-strikers on the ATP Tour, but he will face an inspired opponent in Korda, who never shies away from a big-hitting clash.

The 20-year-old looked sharp in dispatching Radu Albot 6-3, 6-0 in the first round. Korda broke through at Roland Garros last year by reaching the fourth round, but he quickly climbed into the Top 100 at the start of this season thanks to his run to the Delray Beach final and his subsequent ATP Challenger Tour title in Quimper, France.

Another #NextGenATP player, Lorenzo Musetti, will try to continue his torrid stretch against 23rd seed Benoit Paire, who scouted the Italian’s win against Michael Mmoh on Thursday evening. Both players are crafty, but Musetti brings to the court the edge in current form following his run to the Acapulco semi-finals.

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Aslan Karatsev: Clothes Do Not Maketh This Man

  • Posted: Mar 27, 2021

“Who told you that?” Aslan Karatsev says with a sheepish grin.

Sitting near the End Zone on the field of Hard Rock Stadium, home of the Miami Dolphins and this week’s Miami Open, the amiable, low-key Russian is about to detail how he came to accept some match shirts from Mischa Zverev at the Australian Open.

“I was in the locker room packing my bag after the match and Mischa just asked me if I needed some t-shirts and I said ‘okay’. I also play with adidas so I took it. I had a contract with adidas five years ago so I still had plenty of clothes, but they were not the latest model. Maybe he saw that I played with the old ones.”

This is not a literal rags-to-riches story – Karatsev’s old kit was still holding up – but his career, like his shirts, has definitely taken a turn for the better in the past couple of months. “I don’t really mind which model shirts I play with. But I also think Mischa probably had too much.”

Despite his rapid rise to being one of the hottest players on the planet right now, expect to see Karatsev unpaid and in adidas for the immediate future. Because apparel manufacturers typically finalise budgets and lock in endorsement deals in the fourth quarter, the Russian’s breakout in Q1 of 2021 hasn’t yet been fully rewarded.

“Since the ATP Cup and the Australian Open, we’ve had plenty of offers, but we’re waiting for a bigger offer,” says his newly signed agent Pierre Christen. “A few clothes brands have been in touch. He’ll be worth more if he finishes the year in the Top 20 or 30.

“It has been very busy over the past five weeks, but more so since he won the Dubai title last week. I think a number of people were waiting to see if he could back up his Australian Open run.”

Karatsev had a contract with Head racquets prior to the Australian Open. But the only sponsor pick-up during his dramatic run at Melbourne Park was a patch deal for French cosmetics giant Guinot and its brand Mary Cohr, ahead of his semi-final match with Novak Djokovic.

His stunning rise from World No. 253 at the beginning of the five-month Tour suspension last March to his place inside the Top 30 is the culmination of 10 years of hard work, an improved mental outlook thanks to his coach Yahor Yatsyk, time spent with his Top 10 countrymen at the ATP Cup and a slice of good luck.

Karatsev was down a break of serve in his first-round Australian Open qualifying match in Doha against Brandon Nakashima. He rallied to win that and two more qualifying matches and then had a stroke of fortune on the journey to the year’s first major.

He was originally booked on a charter flight from Doha to Melbourne on which passengers tested positive. Had he been on the original flight, he would have faced a two-week hard lockdown in his hotel room instead of being able to get two weeks of practice with India’s Sumit Nagal.

“I got the ‘healthy’ flight,” Karatsev said. “I was supposed to be on the covid [affected] flight but they made a mistake. There were a few players who were put onto the 5am flight and that was the one without covid. I was lucky. Everything started from there.”

Aslan Karatsev

The mainstream tennis world first got to know Karatsev during Russia’s run to the ATP Cup title. Top 10 teammates Daniil Medvedev and Andrey Rublev understandably commanded most attention for their unbeaten singles runs, but Karatsev played three doubles matches and was dubbed the team’s ‘secret weapon’ by Medvedev.

Karatsev partially credits his ATP Cup experience to his semi-final run at the Australian Open, which included a comeback from two sets down against Felix Auger-Aliassime in the fourth round.

“Being part of ATP Cup gave me confidence to play on a big stage. When the Australian Open started I was nervous in the first round, but after that it became smoother. I felt the game, I felt the shots. Against Felix I was two sets down. That was a tough moment. They asked me in press if I gave myself some talk when I went to the toilet. The answer was ‘I just went to the toilet’. They had fun with that on social media.”

Karatsev also accounted for former World No. 3 Grigor Dimitrov in the quarter-finals, before being stopped by eventual champion Djokovic.

That run earned him wild cards into Doha, where he pushed World No. 4 Dominic Thiem to three sets in the second round, and Dubai, where he charged to victory at the ATP 500. Three-set victories over Jannik Sinner in the quarter-finals and Rublev in the semi-finals stood out, especially the latter win over his countryman.

Rublev, who says he plays tennis the way he plays chess, aggressively and by dictating play, was himself outmuscled by Karatsev. One of the cleanest ballstrikers on Tour who can stun opponents with effortless winners even from seemingly neutral court positions, Karatsev left Rublev bemused, clubbing 41 winners and ending the World No. 8’s 23-match win streak at the 500 level.

“My game is to stay close to the baseline and dictate, be aggressive. If I hit winners, that’s good, but it’s not my focus,” said Karatsev, who crushed 27 winners in two sets to beat South African Lloyd Harris in the final.

“Rublev is a special kind of player. Once you stand back against him, it’s done. It’s tough to get from deep behind the baseline back into the court. The plan was to stay close to the line and not give him the position that he likes when he starts to move you. I thought I managed it pretty well.”

Karatsev’s next milestone could be the Top 20, alongside countrymen Medvedev, and Rublev. (Karen Khachanov is No. 22 and knocking on the door.) Medvedev, for one, can see it happening, but is at a loss to explain how we got here. “I think nobody can understand. I’m honest. I think only he can try to explain at least what’s going on,” the two-time major finalist said this week in Miami.

“In Dubai, I watched his matches. He was playing definitely I would say Top 10, Top five level. He beat some amazing guys in amazing ways there. Hopefully, he can keep the momentum going throughout his career. Four Russians almost in the Top 20 is unbelievable.”

While many players have struggled to recover their best form since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, Karatsev said that he benefitted from the stoppage.

Karatsev had begun to build momentum at the Challenger level before the Tour was suspended in March, 2020. He then laid down his racquet for the next three months, focusing exclusively on physical fitness (have you seen those calves!) and spending time with friends and family. In June, he went to Minsk for a two-week training block before heading to the United States to play a series of exhibitions.

When the Tour did return, Karatsev won 19 of his first 20 matches at ATP Challenger Tour level, taking titles in Prague and Ostrava.

“I was playing matches every day and that gave me a lot of confidence,” he said. “When the Tour started back up so many players weren’t into it because they didn’t have the matches. Stepping onto the court I already had confidence.”

Born in 1993 in Vladikavkaz, near Russia’s border with Georgia, Karatsev moved with his parents and sister to Israel when he was three. Mother Svetlana is a doctor and father Kazbek played football before focusing on his son’s career. Walking home from the beach one day, the family noticed a tennis centre and took his sister, Zarina, to play. “By the time I was four, I was trying to take the racquet away from her and start to play on the wall,” he said.

“My sister quit after two years, and then I started. All the attention went from my father to me. I started to practise seriously when I was six or seven. I already had a morning session, fitness session and I became No. 1 in Israel. That’s how it started. [Zarina now works in finance in Israel.]

“My father put all his energy into my tennis. He would go with me every morning. But it was tough to travel from Israel and the flights were really expensive. The federation would help with two or three tickets a year, but it wasn’t enough.”

Eventually, a lack of opportunities in Israel forced the family to make a tough decision: Aslan and his father would move back to Russia to further his career.

“It was a difficult to move away from your mother and sister when you are only 12. I flew back to Israel a couple of times in the first few months to visit them. But I took the chance because I found a sponsor in Russia.”

Despite the big move, Karatsev said that he would practise only once a day from the age of 12-15. “It wasn’t like professional.”

At 15 he settled in Taganrog, close to Rostov-on-Don in south-west Russia, and began working with Aleksander Kuprin and Ivan Potapov.

At 21, former Russian pro Dimitry Tursunov started to help Karatsev, taking him to Halle, Germany, providing financial support and showing him “the right way to practise”. Karatsev also spent time in Barcelona and a few months in Croatia before deciding “to stop with Europe”.

Karatsev met his current coach at an ITF event in France three years ago and credits the turnaround in his mental approach to Yatsyk, who is not in Miami this week after failing to secure a visa into the United States.

“I had many situations when the match wouldn’t go the way I wanted and I’d be breaking racquets, talking to my coach, talking to the chair umpire, blaming the court. I should have been looking into myself to look for a way to deal with the situation. You can’t play good every day, so you have to deal with those situations.”

Heading into Miami, the FedEx ATP Race To Turin is taking shape, with little surprise in the order of the Top four: Djokovic, Medvedev, Rublev and Stefanos Tsisiptas. Who’s in fifth? Why, Aslan Karatsev, of course, with a 770-point buffer over eighth-placed Grigor Dimitrov and Matteo Berrettini. What seemed inconceivable at the beginning of the year – a place in the Nitto ATP Finals in Turin – is now very much a possibility for Karatsev.

“Had you told me this I would not have believed it,” he said. “You are just [kidding[ yourself. With success, you never know when it’s coming, but I always believed I could make it. Yahor kept telling me: ‘You have to be strong mentally, you have to build your body stronger’. He was pushing me every day, saying I was better than the Challenger level.

“But [this success] didn’t come in one moment. We worked at it for 10 years, going back to the juniors. There have been a lot of ups and downs in the last three years. We have put in a lot of hard work.”

Karatsev makes his debut at the Miami Open presented by Itau Saturday against Kazakhstan’s Mikhail Kukushkin, third match on Court 4.

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Medvedev's Moustache: Should It Stay Or Should It Go?

  • Posted: Mar 27, 2021

Daniil Medvedev’s win against Yen-Hsun Lu was straightforward on Friday. But it wasn’t his strokes that attracted attention; it was his moustache.

The World No. 2 very rarely walks around with much if any facial hair. But in Florida, he is sporting a moustache.

“I’m going to leave it for this tournament, but probably after the tournament, even if I win it, no superstitions, [I’m] going to shave it off. Just did it for fun,” Medvedev said. “Why not, you know? Just experimenting, maybe going to do something else next time.”

If Medvedev isn’t superstitious, what made the top seed let nature take its course? There’s actually a story behind the Russian’s new look.

“Last year in the beginning of the year, I was doing a photo shoot and they were shaving me for the photo shoot, and they just left the moustache for a few minutes. I was, like, ‘It’s not too bad,’” Medvedev recalled. “It was a little bit different because they had special shavers and stuff, so I think it was looking better.

“Since that time I always thought, ‘Okay, one moment I’m just going to do it for fun for one tournament or something like this.’ So probably after Miami, I’m going to shave them off, but for this tournament it’s going to be like this and let’s see what people say.”

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Some players can grow a lengthy beard in just a week, if not shorter. But for Medvedev, his moustache has taken a bit longer.

“I don’t shave a lot, like I like to keep the burn,” Medvedev said. “I shave usually before the tournaments, so I think this one was like probably one month, I would say. I don’t really remember. My beard doesn’t really grow very fast.”

Medvedev will continue his pursuit of a fourth ATP Masters 1000 title on Sunday against Alexei Popyrin.

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Korda/Mmoh Claim Team Debut Win

  • Posted: Mar 27, 2021

Sebastian Korda and Michael Mmoh claimed a hard-fought victory on their team debut on Friday at the Miami Open presented by Itau.

The American wild cards saved six of the eight break points they faced to beat Fabio Fognini and Maximo Gonzalez 6-3, 2-6, 10-7. Korda and Mmoh won four straight points from 6/7 in the Match Tie-break to reach the second round.

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Korda and Mmoh will meet Tim Puetz and Alexander Zverev for a place in the quarter-finals. The Germans defeated third seeds Marcel Granollers and Horacio Zeballos 6-2, 6-4 on Thursday.

Miomir Kecmanovic and Aisam-Ul-Haq Qureshi also needed a Match Tie-break to get through their Miami opener. Kecmanovic and Qureshi overcame Marcelo Melo and Jean-Julien Rojer 6-7(5), 6-3, 10-4 to book a second-round spot.

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