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When will Djokovic & Nadal play at the Paris Olympics?

  • Posted: Jul 28, 2024

Novak Djokovic will play Rafael Nadal in the most highly anticipated match of the Paris Olympics on Monday afternoon.

The record-extending 60th Lexus ATP Head2Head clash between Djokovic and Nadal will take place second on Court Philippe-Chatrier not before 1:30 p.m. local time, following the women’s singles match between top seed Iga Swiatek and Diane Parry.

This will be Djokovic and Nadal’s first meeting since the 2022 Roland Garros quarter-finals on the same court, where Nadal emerged victorious in four sets. Djokovic leads their legendary rivalry 30-29.

The pair faced off in the semi-finals of the Beijing Olympics, where Nadal triumphed in three sets and ultimately claimed the gold medal. Djokovic won the bronze medal.

In other action Monday, second seed Carlos Alcaraz of Spain will face Dutchman Tallon Griekspoor on Court Philippe-Chatrier starting at 7 p.m. local time. Alcaraz leads their Lexus ATP Head2Head series 2-0.

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Sixth seed Casper Ruud of Norway will play Italian Andrea Vavassori, eighth seed Stefanos Tsitsipas of Greece will take on Briton Daniel Evans and 10th seed Ugo Humbert of home country France will face Argentine Francisco Cerundolo.

The men’s doubles action will continue and mixed doubles will begin. Laura Siegemund and Alexander Zverev, who clinched the United Cup title for Germany this year, will play Czechs Tomas Machac and Katerina Siniakova in a first-round match. Mirra Andreeva and Daniil Medvedev will take on Sara Errani and Andrea Vavassori.

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Retirement can wait: Murray, Evans save 5 M.P.s to advance at Olympics

  • Posted: Jul 28, 2024

Andy Murray’s career was as close to being over as possible Sunday evening, but then came one of the early moments of magic of the Paris Olympics.

The former No. 1 player in the PIF ATP Rankings and Daniel Evans of Great Britain saved five consecutive match points from 4/9 in the Match Tie-break before defeating Japan’s Taro Daniel and Kei Nishikori 2-6, 7-6(5), 11-9. 

“We just tried to play every point at the end. I thought we were done,” Murray said. “Evo came out with some good returns. I had a couple good serves at 6/9 to get us to 8/9. Just unbelievable. I’ve never played a doubles match like that where I’ve saved that many consecutive match points. A special place to do it obviously.”

Daniel and Nishikori were in control for most of the match, leading 6-2, 4-2. But Evans and Murray continued to battle on and ultimately overcame a seemingly insurmountable deficit in the momentum-filled Match Tie-break.

“It’s amazing. I guess at 4/9 I just didn’t want to miss the shot to end his career,” Evans said with a laugh. “It sums him up. It’s amazing. Honestly the best feeling for me to be a part of that. To hit a forehand down-the-line, which he was probably not that happy that he’d gone cross on the last one. Just couldn’t believe it when I saw it.”

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Evans and Murray, who lost in the first round at Roland Garros earlier this year, will next play eighth seeds Arthur Fils/Ugo Humbert or Belgians Sander Gille/Joran Vliegen. Evans had won a three-set singles match earlier in the day.

The Britons also competed together last year in Washington (l. in the quarter-finals) and in the 2017 BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells (l. in the Round of 16).

“I think both of us have loved competing for our country over the years. We’ve been a part of the same Davis Cup team for many years. Dan has a huge passion when he’s competing as part of a team. Both of us wanted to do this together for my last tournament,” Murray said. “I’ve loved being part of the Olympics, it’s an amazing event. It’s meant a lot to me over the years and to get to finish playing here one last time in the Olympics is extra special.

”Just glad we live to fight another day because it would’ve been obviously disappointing to lose today. But we keep going, let’s see where we get to.”

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My Olympics: Alexander Zverev

  • Posted: Jul 28, 2024

Reigning gold medallist Alexander Zverev has a chance to add his name to the record books of the Olympic Tennis Event as seeks to successfully defend his Tokyo title. Only Andy Murray has achieved this feat (2012, 2016).

Ahead of his quest for history, ATPTour.com caught up with the 27-year-old to learn where he keeps his prized Tokyo medal, who his favourite Olympic athlete is and how that ties in with his earliest memory from the event.

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What other Olympic sport do you think you would be good at?
We had this discussion [with my team], a funny question, ‘Which Olympic sport do you think you can compete in and not get last?’ I think I would get last in every single sport, I honestly do. I think if it’s a team competition like hockey or field hockey or basketball or something, I could hide behind some players. Maybe I could sit on the bench doing quite well. I think there’s no chance at all. I mean, I enjoy basketball. I enjoy field hockey. I enjoy a lot of sports, but I would be atrocious in all of them I think.

I’m actually quite okay at middle distances like 400m running. So I think I will be okay at it, but I will still be dead last. But I guess I’m okay for a tennis player, let’s put it that way.

For which Olympic sports would you be not well suited?
The obvious ones are maybe skateboarding. I think swimming, I’m not a great swimmer, something like that. Skateboarding would not be great.

Who are your favourite Olympic athletes?
Usain Bolt comes to mind. Fastest man alive, right? So you love watching that. Matthias Steiner for me as a German and also a diabetic, so that has something close to my heart.

Which Olympic sport is Germany best at?
Equestrian. I think we win 85 gold medals every year there, so I think that one.

What is your earliest Olympic memory?
For me the earliest one is Bolt in 2008 in Beijing, setting the new world record.

What did it mean to you to win gold in 2021?
For me, the Olympics are still the biggest sporting event in the world. So there’s nothing bigger than winning a gold medal I think for your country, for yourself and for everybody back at home. I think it’s an experience that you can’t feel anywhere else.

How much fun was the Olympic village?
It was awesome. It was great fun just being out with your athletes, just seeing other athletes that you watch on TV just walking around having food at the same restaurant as you and just mingling, just being around everybody.

Where do you keep the gold medal?
In my apartment in Monaco. It’s in the living room area.

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My Olympics: Cameron Norrie

  • Posted: Jul 28, 2024

British No. 1 Cameron Norrie is making his Olympics debut in Paris. The 28-year-old, who grew up in New Zealand and began representing Great Britain in 2013, has won five ATP Tour titles and been as high as No. 8 in the PIF ATP Rankings..

Ahead of the 2024 Paris Olympics, Norrie sat down with ATPTour.com to discuss his earliest memories of the prestigious event, the athletes he considers his favourites and much more.

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What other sport do you think you would be good at?
I think there could be a few, but I would like to play rugby sevens. I love rugby and I love watching the sevens. It’s recent, but I always enjoy watching track and field. I’m a pretty good runner, so I think I could enter the 5k or 10k, but I’d get smoked.

What sport do you think you would not be well suited?
It’s probably a lot of them. I think javelin or one of those ones like that could be all right, but it’s difficult. Fencing or something like that.

Who are your favourite Olympic athletes?
I like Michael Phelps and Usain Bolt.

What sport is Great Britain best known for?
Tennis, with Andy. They’re good at everything. Swimming, athletics, they always have good athletes throughout. But I remember actually as a kid growing up in New Zealand watching a lot of rowing, because New Zealand is always really good at rowing. I also enjoy watching the swimming. I know the Aussies are good at swimming.

What are your earliest memories of the Olympics?
It was in New Zealand. I can’t remember watching which one specifically, but every time, I was watching all day, everything. I love sports in general. I don’t know where or what it was, but I was watching everything.

What do you think will be the best part about the Olympic Village?
I’ve never been so it’s going to be my first one. I’m looking forward to just seeing the other athletes, how they do things given the chance to ask some of the other British team members some questions about some of their routines and and just getting to know some of the other athletes and getting to see how nervous they are for the for the Olympic sports because for tennis we have a lot of other big tournaments and I think for a lot of other sports, it’s the biggest thing and they’re going to be so nervous for it.

So I think it’s good insight and good to support some of the other sports. I’m looking forward to it and I think Paris should do a good job.

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Andy Murray: Epic rivalries with Federer, Djokovic, Nadal & more

  • Posted: Jul 28, 2024

Across his iconic career, Andy Murray grew from a boisterous, rising Scottish star to an ever-present, grizzled veteran and legend of the ATP Tour. In that time, the 37-year-old developed all manner of Lexus ATP Head2Head rivalries — some with older competitors, some with younger foes, and many with his contemporaries.

Murray’s biggest rivals were no doubt his fellow members of the Big 4: Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal. Murray has met each of those superstars at least 24 times, including 36 meetings with Djokovic.

ATPTour.com looks back at the history of those matchups and another pivotal series, against Stan Wawrinka, that shaped the story of Murray’s competitive career.

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Murray vs. Djokovic (Lexus ATP Head2Head: 11-25)
Murray and Djokovic are contemporaries in the most literal sense, with Murray just one week older than the Serbian. Their long-running rivalry was sparked at the ATP Masters 1000 level, where nine of their first 10 Lexus ATP Head2Head meetings took place (including the first seven from 2006-09).

Murray lost their first four matchups but then won the first two of what would ultimately become 19 final meetings between the pair, triumphing in Cincinnati and Miami before Djokovic won their maiden Grand Slam showdown in the 2011 Australian Open final.

While Djokovic enjoyed the lion’s share of success in this rivalry, Murray claimed three straight matches from 2008-09 (including those Cincinnati and Miami finals) and two straight matches in 2012: their Olympic semi-final en route to the gold medal in London, followed by a five-set US Open final that earned him his first major crown. Those are the only two stretches during which the Briton won consecutive matches against Djokovic.

<img src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/07/17/19/21/murray-djokovic-wimbledon-retire-2024.jpg?w=100%25&hash=B72692616DA4E667C0D97887DCCBE8FC” style=”width:100%;” alt=”Andy Murray, Novak Djokovic” />
Murray defeated Djokovic to win his first Wimbledon title in 2013. Photo by Clive Brunskill/Getty Images.

Two of the most significant match wins of Murray’s career came against Djokovic, whom he beat to claim his maiden Wimbledon crown in 2013 and in the championship match at the 2016 Nitto ATP Finals (then known as the ATP World Tour Finals). The latter, played in London, was a straight shootout for year-end No. 1 in the PIF ATP Rankings.

“It’s a very special day,” Murray said after a 6-3, 6-4 win at the 2016 season finale saw him end the year on a 24-match winning streak. “It’s been a tough rivalry [with Djokovic]. I’ve lost many of them but obviously I’m happy I’ve got the win today. To finish the year No. 1 is very special. It’s something I never expected.”

The pair met five times in 2016, all in finals, with Murray also winning in Rome but Djokovic taking the titles at the Australian Open, Roland Garros and in Madrid.

Murray and Djokovic are one of only two pairs of ATP Tour players to have contested the final at each of the four majors (also Djokovic and Nadal). The Serbian owns an 8-2 record against Murray at the Slams, including a 5-2 mark in major finals.

Djokovic also owns an 11-8 edge in tour-level finals and a 14-6 advantage at the ATP Masters 1000s. But he never beat Murray on grass, where the Briton is a perfect 2-0.

Their rivalry was always one built on mutual respect, as evidenced by their teaming up in men’s doubles for the 2006 Australian Open when both were 19.

Murray vs. Federer (Lexus ATP Head2Head: 11-14)
Murray led Federer for much of their rivalry, until the Swiss won their final five meetings to finish with the upper hand. Murray owns a 6-3 edge at the ATP Masters 1000s, including consecutive 2010 final victories in Toronto and Shanghai, while Federer dominated with a 5-1 record at the majors.

<img src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/07/17/19/15/murray-federer-retire-2024.jpg” style=”width:100%;” alt=”Roger Federer, Andy Murray” />
Murray beat Federer in the 2010 Rolex Shanghai Masters final. Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images.

Murray’s Grand Slam frustration against the Swiss came to a head in the 2012 Wimbledon final, when he lost in four sets despite a brilliant start on home soil. “I’m getting closer,” he said through tears during the trophy ceremony, a remark which could have applied to his bid to beat Federer at a major as much as the Briton’s personal quest to win his home Grand Slam. To that point, Murray was 0-3 against the Swiss at the Slams, with each meeting coming in the title round.

But one month later, back on Centre Court, Murray dominated Federer in a straight-sets win to claim the gold medal at the 2012 London Olympics.

“It’s number one for me, the biggest win of my life,” Murray said. “I have had a lot of tough losses in my career and this is the best way to come back from the Wimbledon final.”

The confidence from that victory helped the Briton get over the line at the All England Club the next year, when he beat Djokovic to become the first British man to win the Wimbledon singles title since Fred Perry in 1936.

Murray and Federer also played five times at the Nitto ATP Finals, with Murray earning a comeback three-set win in 2008 before Federer swept their meetings in 2009, 2010, 2012 and 2014. All but one of those year-end meetings came in the round-robin stage, with their 2012 semi-final in London the lone exception.

Beginning with the 2009 season finale, seven of their last 16 matches were played in London.

Murray vs. Nadal (Lexus ATP Head2Head: 7-17)
Murray lost his first five meetings with Nadal but broke his duck in the 2008 US Open semi-finals to reach his first Grand Slam final. Despite trailing in the Lexus ATP Head2Head, Murray owned a 3-1 edge in tour-level finals against Nadal, claiming wins in Rotterdam (2009), Tokyo (2011) and Madrid (2015).

<img src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/07/17/19/17/nadal-murray-retire-2024.jpg” style=”width:100%;” alt=”Andy Murray, Rafael Nadal” />
Murray and Nadal after their 2009 Rotterdam title match. Photo by Hamish Blair/Getty Images.

The rivalry peaked in 2011 with five meetings on some of the ATP Tour’s biggest stages. Nadal won the first four — semi-finals at Monte-Carlo, Roland Garros, Wimbledon and the US Open — before Murray flipped the script in the Tokyo final.

Nadal owned an 8-3 edge at the ATP Masters 1000s and a  7-2 advantage at the majors. The pair played just one five-set match: their very first meeting at the 2007 Australian Open, where Nadal grinded out a win from two-sets-to-one down. The Spaniard was also 2-0 against Murray at the Nitto ATP Finals, with a semi-final win in 2010 and a round-robin victory in 2015.

Their 2010 meeting at the year-end event was one of the most dramatic of their 24 encounters, a 7-6(5), 3-6, 7-6(6) win for Nadal. After three hours, 11 minutes of incredible quality in London, Nadal clawed back a 1/4 deficit in the decisive tie-break to advance to the title match.

“It was a great match,” Murray said, his head held high in defeat. “Today is why I play tennis. I probably played one bad game the whole match, or maybe just a couple of bad points. Whether it’s the best match I played and lost, I don’t know.”

Murray vs. Wawrinka (Lexus ATP Head2Head: 13-10)
Both three-time Grand Slam champions, Murray and Wawrinka are separated by just two years in age, with the Swiss 26 months older. The pair’s rivalry spanned 20 years on the ATP Tour, from 2005-24.

Their clashes often showcased contrasting styles, pitting Wawrinka’s aggressive shotmaking and sheer power against Murray’s tactical precision and defensive prowess. These different approaches added an intriguing dynamic to their encounters, a compelling narrative across the game’s biggest stages.

<img src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/07/17/19/14/murray-wawrinka-retire-2024.jpg” style=”width:100%;” alt=”Stan Wawrinka, Andy Murray” />
Murray and Wawrinka met for the final time at Roland Garros in 2024. Photo by Clive Brunskill/Getty Images.

Murray won the only two finals he contested against Wawrinka, one at the start of their rivalry (Doha 2008) and one nearer the end (Antwerp 2019). The Antwerp title was the Briton’s last on the ATP Tour, coming after his hip resurfacing surgery.

“It means a lot,” an emotional Murray said. “The last few years have been extremely difficult. Me and Stan have had a lot of injury problems in the last couple of years. Amazing to be back playing against him in a final like that.”

The contemporaries met at every Grand Slam but the Australian Open, with Wawrinka owning a 5-3 edge at the Slams. They split two of their highest-stakes matches in consecutive Roland Garros semi-finals in 2016 and 2017. It was an even 3-3 split at the ATP Masters 1000s, with four of those matchups going three sets.

In 2023, their rivalry even extended to the ATP Challenger Tour, with Wawrinka beating Murray in the first meeting between former Grand Slam champions in more than 40 years.

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