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Tennis, gaming & fashion collide as Medvedev, Lacoste unveil Medvedev Court

  • Posted: Dec 09, 2024

Daniil Medvedev and Lacoste recently announced the unveiling of the all-new Daniil Medvedev Court in Grasse, France.

The project is a part of the ‘We are Etendart’ movement, which promotes the development of young people through an educational approach based on sport, creative arts and the power of inspiration. Novak Djokovic and Venus Williams are among other superstars who have previously joined the ‘We are Etendart’ movement.

The Medvedev court, located roughly 40 kilometres west of Nice, France, was inspired by the 28-year-old’s love for gaming. Featuring vibrant blue and green colours, the Medvedev court will offer a new gateway for young players to easily embrace tennis.

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Sinner meets Verstappen, waves chequered flag at F1 race in Abu Dhabi

  • Posted: Dec 09, 2024

Jannik Sinner ended the 2024 ATP Tour season by lifting the Nitto ATP Finals trophy and on Sunday, the Italian helped bring the Formula 1 year to a close. Sinner waved the chequered flag at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, the final race of the F1 season.

It was an action-packed weekend for the World No. 1 in the PIF ATP Rankings, who also spent time with renowned driver Max Verstappen and attended the F2/F3 Prize-Giving event.

<img alt=”Jannik Sinner attends the F2/F3 Prize-Giving event.” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/12/09/15/32/sinner-abu-dhabi-2024.jpg” />
Jannik Sinner attends the F2/F3 Prize-Giving event. Credit: Formula Motorsport Limited

Sinner was not the only tennis star in attendance. Grigor Dimitrov, Arthur Cazaux, Aryna Sabalenka, Paula Badosa, Elena Rybakina and Sorana Cirstea also enjoyed their time in Abu Dhabi. Dimitrov shared on his Instagram story a picture of him with actress Eva Longoria.

<img alt=”Arthur Cazaux at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/12/09/15/38/cazaux-abu-dhabi-2024-grand-prix.jpg” />
Arthur Cazaux at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix. Credit: Arthur Cazaux

Earlier this season, Sinner met driver Carlos Sainz in Monte-Carlo, where the Spaniard sat courtside to watch the 23-year-old. Drivers George Russell and Lando Norris also attended the clay-court ATP Masters 1000 event this past April.

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Joan Solsona honoured with 2024 Ron Bookman Media Excellence Award

  • Posted: Dec 09, 2024

The media credentials pile up in a hurry when you’ve covered more than two decades’ worth of Grand Slams, ATP Masters 1000s, Nitto ATP Finals and Davis Cup ties. Now Joan Solsona, a longtime journalist with Spain’s daily sports tabloid MARCA, can add the Ron Bookman Media Excellence Award to his collection.

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“It’s a big honour to receive this recognition, and I have to say thanks to everyone involved in tennis that makes our work easier as journalists,” said Solsona, who began his tenure with MARCA in 2000. “I’ve been very lucky to be around tennis at the same time as the Big Four, and I’m very excited now for the new generation coming.”

“This year, I had the opportunity to interview Jannik Sinner, Carlos Alcaraz and Holger Rune,” he continued. “They represent the present and future of tennis.”

Solsona has also covered football, basketball, handball, swimming and water polo, and was on assignment for the 2008 Beijing Olympics. But it’s in the tennis world that he truly found his voice as a sportswriter.

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Fonseca, Fearnley among five Challenger player storylines from 2024

  • Posted: Dec 09, 2024

To mark the end of the 2024 season, ATPTour.com highlights five player storylines from the ATP Challenger Tour season.

Fonseca’s Fast Rise Flourishes In Lexington
Joao Fonseca, 2023 US Open boys’ singles champion, lifted his maiden ATP Challenger Tour title in Lexington, Kentucky at age 17. Fittingly, the #NextGenATP star’s triumph came on the five-year anniversary of Jannik Sinner’s title run at the same event. Fonseca was just one day younger than Sinner was when the Italian won the hard-court tournament.

Fonseca did not drop a set all week en route to becoming the youngest Brazilian Challenger champion. The former junior No. 1 is the seventh-youngest player from South America to claim a Challenger title and second youngest from the continent to win a hard-court tournament at that level.

“In the ceremony, they gave me the trophy and announced, ‘Lexington is the first Challenger to have three 17-year-old champions.’ He said, ‘Shang Juncheng, Jannik Sinner,’” Fonseca said. “That’s really nice.”

Fearnley Flies Through Challenger Tour
The Briton Jacob Fearnley secured one of the greatest campaigns in Challenger history this season. Coming into the year, Fearnley had played just one Challenger match in his career. The 23-year-old graduated from Texas Christian University as a four-time ITA All-American and made rapid progress starting in June, when he was No. 525 in the PIF ATP Rankings.

Fearnley advanced through qualifying at the Nottingham Challenger and went all the way to the title. He rarely looked back, tallying a 27-3 season record at that level. Fearnley won four titles and became just the third player to finish a season with a win percentage of 90 per cent or greater (min. 25 matches played). Guillermo Canas and Carlos Berlocq both registered 28-3 (90.3 per cent) campaigns in 2006 and 2011, respectively.

“It’s been an amazing last year. I won my first couple Futures titles, I won a national championship with TCU with my teammates. Since then I’ve played on Centre Court at Wimbledon against Novak Djokovic, won four Challenger titles,” said Fearnley, who went on a 17-match winning streak at the Challenger level from August through October. “It’s been a pretty successful 12 months for me and a 12 months that I’ve thoroughly enjoyed. I’m super grateful to have the opportunity to play at this level and get to the ranking I’m at now.”

Nagal Notches His Place In Indian Tennis History
Just two seasons ago, Sumit Nagal was returning to pro tennis following hip surgery. Outside the Top 500 of the PIF ATP Rankings, even falling to No. 638 in October 2022, Nagal was admittedly far from where he is today, at World No. 98.

The 27-year-old lifted two Challenger trophies this year, highlighted by his dream run on home soil in Chennai, where he secured his place in the Top 100, becoming the 10th Indian to achieve that feat. Nagal, who ascended to a career-high No. 68 in July, is the first Indian to crack the Top 100 since Prajnesh Gunneswaran in 2019.

“As a kid, everyone wants to be a Top 100 player. Everyone dreams of having that double-digit ranking,” Nagal said. “To be able to do this in front of the Indian crowd, I don’t think I could’ve asked for a better place. It was the most emotional day for me.”

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‘Fede’ Gomez Goes From Club Coach To Challenger Champ
After coaching in Miami from 2019-21, Federico Agustin Gomez gave up feeding balls to chase his professional tennis dream. The Argentine was not training regularly and any time with a racquet in hand was spent in a continental grip, feeding and coaching for 11 hours a day.

But in September 2021, Gomez’s friend, Pedro Caniza, approached him and offered financial help to kickstart his career. Gomez’s hard work reaped rewards this season, when he claimed three Challenger trophies: Milan, Trieste and Guayaquil. Now at No. 137 in the PIF ATP Rankings, Gomez has taken a non-traditional path to where he is today.

“I was just teaching and trying to make a living out of [coaching],” Gomez said when reflecting on his two years coaching, which he did after graduating from the University of Louisville. “I was trying to stay healthy just doing fitness. I don’t think I hit a two-handed backhand in two years. I was just doing fitness in the morning or late afternoon. I didn’t really have the time and also I was kind of disconnected from the entire Tour mentality.”

Naw, Syrian War Refugee, Makes Headlines In Koblenz
The 24-year-old Hazem Naw became the first Syrian to win a Challenger main-draw match in Koblenz, Germany, where he went on to reach the semi-finals. Naw shared that week his gripping refugee story.

“It’s a bad experience, but what I experienced is what makes me really tough mentally on court,” Naw said. “It doesn’t matter if I lose or win, I’m just happy to be able to play in these tournaments. It’s like a dream come true for me.

“Of course when you’re on court, you have this pressure and you forget about these things. But when I have tough times, it’s not worth it to be angry or go crazy on court. Just be thankful that you’re able to hold a racquet, play tennis, the spectators are watching and clapping for you. Enjoy that you are experiencing these kinds of things.”

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Arevalo/Pavic star in Best of 2024 doubles review

  • Posted: Dec 09, 2024

To mark the end of another thrilling season, ATPTour.com is unveiling our annual ‘Best Of’ series, which will reflect on the most intriguing rivalries, matches, comebacks, upsets and more. Today we highlight five standout doubles teams from this season.

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Marcelo Arevalo & Mate Pavic
It was a dream-fulfilling season for Arevalo and Pavic, who earned Year-End ATP Doubles No. 1 presented by PIF honours — not a bad feat in their first season together.

“Everybody plays at the start of the year dreaming about this, so to be here, to lift this trophy, obviously that’s why we play the whole year,” Pavic said when presented with the team’s new hardware in Turin.

The Salvadoran-Croatian pair’s opening week foreshadowed how its season would unfold. Arevalo and Pavic were crowned champions in Hong Kong and rarely looked back, compiling a 47-20 season record. The duo’s year was highlighted by title runs at Roland Garros and the Cincinnati Open.

Nikola Mektic & Wesley Koolhof
Reuniting as partners for the first time since their 2020 Nitto ATP Finals title, Koolhof and Mektic won a season-leading five tour-level trophies en route to sealing a Turin return. The Dutch-Croatian duo enjoyed a triple ATP Masters 1000 success spanning three continents by winning Indian Wells, Shanghai and Paris.

“It’s very special. To win three Masters in a year is an unbelievable achievement from both of us,” said Koolhof.

Koolhof and Mektic also made the final in ’s-Hertogenbosch and Basel. It was the perfect sendoff season for retiree Koolhof, who played his final ATP Tour match at the Nitto ATP Finals before ending his career by competing for the Netherlands at the Davis Cup Final 8.

Kevin Krawietz & Tim Puetz
Krawietz and Puetz signed off their memorable season in style, becoming the first German team to clinch the Nitto ATP Finals trophy in the tournament’s 55-year history. Additionally, the eighth seeds in Turin became the lowest-ranked team to triumph at the season finale.

It was a surprise run considering that three weeks prior, Puetz suffered a calf injury in Antwerp that seemed to jeopardise their chances of qualifying for Turin. “Two weeks ago I couldn’t even walk, now we are here having won the tournament,” Puetz said after winning the Nitto ATP Finals. “It’s amazing.”

Krawietz and Puetz also won their home tournament in Hamburg and reached the US Open final.

Harri Heliovaara & Henry Patten
Despite not beginning their partnership until the fourth month of the year, Heliovaara and Patten qualified for the Nitto ATP Finals and reached the semi-finals in Turin. Their success did not take long to launch. Straightaway, they won two ATP Challenger Tour titles and made the Bucharest ATP 250 final.

The Finnish-British team lifted trophies on all three surfaces, including saving three championship points against Max Purcell and Jordan Thompson to triumph at Wimbledon. Heliovaara and Patten also lifted tour-level trophies in Marrakech, Lyon and Stockholm.

“I think the season we’ve had, especially given that we started the year, has been amazing, highlighted by the Grand Slam win at Wimbledon,” said Patten. “[That is] everyone’s dream as a tennis player. It’s been a surreal season.”

Max Purcell & Jordan Thompson
Max Purcell and Jordan Thompson quadrupled their team trophy count this year with a standout season in which they won the US Open title and made the Wimbledon final. “Being a Grand Slam champion has a great ring to it,” said Thompson, No. 3 in the PIF ATP Doubles Rankings. “Especially after the heartbreak at Wimbledon.”

Entering the year having won just one tour-level title together — last year’s ATP 250 in Houston — the Aussies played a more consistent schedule and were equally as steady in their form. The Sydneysiders completed the Texas two-step by winning in Dallas and successfully defending their Houston title. Sandwiched in between those title runs was their triumph in Los Cabos, where Thompson swept the Mexican ATP 250 by also winning the singles crown.

<img alt=”Max Purcell/Jordan Thompson” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/09/07/18/28/purcell-thompson-us-open-2024-trophy-shot.jpg” />
Max Purcell and Jordan Thompson win the US Open. Credit: Al Bello/Getty Images

Thompson and Purcell dropped just one set across six matches to win their maiden major title at Flushing Meadows and finished the year with a semi-final run at the Nitto ATP Finals.

“It’s the best feeling ever when I get to win with Jordan,” Purcell said. “Teaming up with anyone else and winning big tournaments — I just don’t think it would feel the same. I think it’s about who you play with and the relationship you have.”

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Italians Bolelli/Vavassori voted Fans’ Favourite doubles duo in 2024 ATP Awards

  • Posted: Dec 09, 2024

Fresh off a season in which they claimed three tour-level crowns, made their maiden team appearance at the Nitto ATP Finals, and helped guide Italy to a successful Davis Cup title defence, Simone Bolelli and Andrea Vavassori have been voted as the Fans’ Favourite doubles team in the 2024 ATP Awards.

“Me and Andrea are really happy to win the Fans’ Favourite award for 2024,” said Bolelli, 39. “We’re already back on court and are practising really hard for the new season.”

It didn’t take long for this first-time pairing to gel in 2024. The countrymen played their way into the final of their debut event, the Australian Open, ultimately falling to Rohan Bopanna and Matthew Ebden, 7-6(0), 7-5. A second Grand Slam final followed at Roland Garros, where they avenged their loss to Bopanna/Ebden in the semi-finals, 7-5, 2-6, 6-2, to again reach the title match. 

“With Boli, we shared an amazing year,” said the 29-year-old Vavassori, who reached a career-high No. 6 in the PIF ATP Doubles Rankings in October. “Thank you very much for voting us as ATP [Fans’] Favourite doubles team of the year. It’s been a fantastic season and we’re already preparing for the next one. See you soon. Ciao!”

Together the popular tandem would claim three titles on the year (Buenos Aires, Halle, Beijing) and qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals in Turin. Bolelli and Vavassori also accounted for the clincher in a 2-1 edging of Belgium (def. Sander Gille/Joran Vliegen, 7-6(2), 7-5) during Italy’s run to a second straight Davis Cup title.

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Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF 2024: Draws, Dates, History & All You Need To Know

  • Posted: Dec 09, 2024

The world’s best 20-and-under players will compete at the Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF in Jeddah, with Arthur Fils, Alex Michelsen, and Jakub Mensik leading the eight-man playing field.

Here is what you need to know ahead of the event in Saudi Arabia.

When is the 2024 Next Gen ATP Finals?
The 2024 Next Gen ATP Finals will be held from 18 December-22 December. The indoor hard-court event, established in 2017, will take place at the King Abdullah Sports City in Jeddah. The tournament director is Ross Hutchins.

What is the format & who is playing at the 2024 Next Gen ATP Finals?
The event in Jeddah will see eight 20-and-under players divided into two groups of four, with the top two from each group advancing to the semi-finals. Matches are played best of five sets and first-to-four games. Fils, Michelsen, Mensik, Shang Juncheng, Learner Tien, Luca Van Assche, Nishesh Basavareddy, and Joao Fonseca are playing.

When is the draw for the Next Gen ATP Finals?
The Jeddah draw will be made on 15 December at time 8 p.m.

What is the schedule for the Next Gen ATP Finals?
* Main Draw Round-Robin Matches: Wednesday 18 December – Friday 20 December at 2:00 p.m., second match NB 3:00 p.m.. Evening sessions at 7:00 p.m., followed by the second match.
* Semi-final One: Saturday 21 at 7:00 p.m.
* Semi-final Two: Saturday 21 NB 9:00 p.m.
* Final: Saturday 22 December at 8:00 p.m.

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What is the prize money for the Next Gen ATP Finals Presented by PIF IN $US?
The prize money for the Next Gen ATP Finals Presented by PIF is $2,050,000.
Undefeated Champion: $526,480
Final Win: $153,000
Semi-Final Win: $113,500
Each Round-Robin Match Win: $36,660
Participation Fee: $150,000
Alternate: $15,000

How can I watch the Next Gen ATP Finals?
View TV Schedule

How can I follow the Next Gen ATP Finals Presented by PIF?
Hashtag: #NextGenATPFinals
Instagram: @nextgenfinals
Twitter: @nextgenfinals
Facebook: Next Gen ATP Finals
Youtube: ATP Tour

 

Who won the last edition of the Next Gen ATP Finals Presented by PIF in 2023?
Hamad Medjedovic won the 2023 singles title in Jeddah with a 3-4(6), 4-1, 4-2, 3-4(9), 4-1 victory against Arthur Fils in the championship match (Read & Watch)

Who holds the Next Gen ATP Finals record for most titles, oldest champion, youngest champion, and more?
Most Titles, Singles: Hyeon Chung (1), Stefanos Tsitsipas (1), Jannik Sinner (1), Carlos Alcaraz (1), Brandon Nakashima (1), Hamad Medjedovic (1)
Oldest Champion: Hyeon Chung, 21, in 2017
Youngest Champion: Jannik Sinner, 18, in 2019
Highest-Ranked Champion: No. 15 Stefanos Tsitsipas in 2018
Lowest-Ranked Champion: No. 110 Hamad Medjedovic in 2023
Last Home Champion: Jannik Sinner in 2019
Most Match Wins: Alex de Minaur (8)

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