Biggest Grand Slam Upsets Of 2016

  • Posted: Dec 11, 2016

Biggest Grand Slam Upsets Of 2016

ATP World Tour Season In Review: Biggest Grand Slam Upsets

Continuing our Season In Review Series, ATPWorldTour.com revisits the biggest Grand Slam upsets of 2016:

(5) Jared Donaldson d. David Goffin 4-6, 7-5, 6-4, 6-0 – US Open first round
The summer hard-court swing provided the springboard to the Top 100 for American #NextGen star Jared Donaldson. The 20 year old entered the Emirates Airline US Open Series at World No. 153 and he would reel off main draw wins in Washington, Toronto, Atlanta and Cincinnati, before qualifying at his home Grand Slam without dropping a set. A date with 12th-seed David Goffin awaited in the first round and Donaldson would ride the surge of momentum to his first victory at a major, rallying from a set and a break down to prevail in four.

Two weeks after nearly upsetting World No. 4 Stan Wawrinka at the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event in Cincinnati, Donaldson scored his first Top 20 win in toppling Goffin after two hours and 39 minutes. The Rhode Island native went on to reach the third round, rising 25 spots to crack the Top 100 of the Emirates ATP Rankings at No. 97.

“I did a good job of controlling what I could out there,” said Donaldson. “I let the match come to me. I was down a set and a break and things weren’t looking so good, but I stayed calm and played my game.”

(4) Noah Rubin d. Benoit Paire 7-6(4), 7-6(6), 7-6(5) – Australian Open first round
Donaldson wasn’t the only American #NextGen star to spring a first-round stunner at a Grand Slam. Long Island native Noah Rubin made the most of his main draw wild card at the Australian Open, defeating 17th seed Benoit Paire in three tight tie-breaks. Appearing in just his second major, Rubin notched his first tour-level match win behind a flurry of fearless forehands. The 20 year old’s was relentless from the baseline and his youthful exuberance was on full display in tracking down everything Paire sent his way.

At World No. 328, it was a significant upset for Rubin over the 2015 Comeback Player Of The Year in the ATP World Tour Awards Presented by Moët & Chandon. Rubin would fall to another Frenchman, Pierre-Hugues Herbert, in the second round, but his result put him firmly inside the Top 300 and he would later reach a career-high World No. 166 in the Emirates ATP Rankings.

“I put in a lot of effort in the offseason and it’s starting to pay off now,” said Rubin. “I saw the finish line in the third, but I was ready to go five sets if I had to. Anything is possible now.”

(3) Albert Ramos-Vinolas d. Milos Raonic 6-2, 6-4, 6-4 – Roland Garros fourth round
Albert Ramos-Vinolas quietly constructed one of the more successful campaigns of the 2016 season, rising 28 spots to a career-high No. 26 in the Emirates ATP Rankings. Early-season wins over #NextGen stars Nick Kyrgios, Borna Coric, Hyeon Chung and Karen Khachanov set the tone and he would enter Roland Garros in late May surging with confidence.

After defeating Argentines Horacio Zeballos and Marco Trungelliti, Ramos-Vinolas scored a signature five-set win over 23rd seed Jack Sock to set a Round of 16 clash against ninth seed Milos Raonic. It marked the first time the Spaniard had progressed into the second week of a Grand Slam in 19 tries. But he wasn’t satisfied with just one milestone. Ramos-Vinolas went on to stun the eventual year-end No. 3, routing Raonic in straight sets in two hours and 21 minutes. Entering the match with a 1-22 record against the Top 10, the left-hander held his nerve throughout the encounter, saving six of seven break points.

“I’m very happy,” said Ramos-Vinolas, who would notch his first ATP World Tour title the following month in Bastad. “I didn’t expect this. After losing last week 6-1, 6-1 against [Stan] Wawrinka, I was a little bit down because I was expecting a little more in Geneva last week. I don’t know why things seem to be falling into place this week. Although this is not Raonic’s favourite surface, I feel quite humbled to have won against him.”

(2) Sam Querrey d. Novak Djokovic 7-6(6), 6-1, 3-6, 7-6(5) – Wimbledon third round
Novak Djokovic’s dream of completing the calendar year Grand Slam ended in dramatic fashion on Centre Court at Wimbledon. American Sam Querrey, seeded 28th, dethroned the three-time champion in the third round, marking the biggest upset of his 11-year career. Querrey has shown strong form in his career, winning eight ATP World Tour titles, including at Delray Beach earlier in the season, but he had never advanced past the fourth round of a Grand Slam and had been 0-8 in all prior meetings with a World No. 1.

Querrey survived four rain delays to win in four sets, en route to reaching his first major quarter-final (l. to Raonic). The loss snapped Djokovic’s streak of 30 consecutive Grand Slam match wins, the best of the Open Era. The Serbian, who had won six of the previous eight Grand Slam championships, hadn’t lost this early since 2009 when he fell in the Roland Garros third round to Philipp Kohlschreiber.

“It’s definitely the biggest win I’ve ever had,” Querrey said. “I’m not going to lie and say going into it I thought I was going to win. But I think as the match progressed, I was serving well and holding in the first set, we were kind of going back and forth, I gained a little more confidence with every game. We got to that tie-break and I played a great tie-break. Once I won that, I was like in my head, ‘All right, I can beat this guy, I can hang with him and turn this into a match.’”

(1) Marcus Willis d. Ricardas Berankis 6-3, 6-3, 6-4 – Wimbledon first round
Where there’s a Willis there’s a way! The Cinderella story of 2016 was undoubtedly Marcus Willis at Wimbledon. Leading up to The Championships, the Brit had spent much of the year working as a teaching pro at a local club and after emerging through qualifying, he would play the match of his life to defeat World No. 54 Ricardas Berankis in straight sets. The last direct entrant into the pre-qualifying tournament, the World No. 772 defied his Emirates ATP Ranking, hitting 14 aces and 43 winners while saving 19 of 20 break points.

Willis raised his arms in triumph after hitting a service winner on match point and rushed to celebrate with friends and family. Having only played in an ITF Futures event in Tunisia in January, it was just his second pro tournament of the year. It was also his first tour-level main draw appearance, following significant wins over #NextGen stars Andrey Rublev and Daniil Medvedev in qualifying.

“It’s quite a nice life, isn’t it,” said Willis. “I haven’t experienced this. Goran Ivanisevic just came around and shook my hand. He’s my hero. I lost a lot of confidence, made some bad decisions and went out too much. My lifestyle wasn’t good. I didn’t have the drive. I found it three years ago and it’s worth it now.”

Willis would face seven-time champion Roger Federer in the second round, as his surreal experience extended. The Brit fell in straight sets, but his place in Wimbledon lore was already cemented.

Biggest Grand Slam Upsets Of 2016 By Emirates ATP Ranking

Player

Opponent Tournament Ranking Difference
No. 772 Marcus Willis No. 54 Ricardas Berankis Wimbledon 718 spots
No. 547 Julien Benneteau No. 84 Illya Marchenko Wimbledon 463 spots
No. 328 Noah Rubin No. 18 Benoit Paire Australian Open 310 spots
No. 310 Omar Jasika No. 76 Illya Marchenko Australian Open 234 spots
No. 250 Janko Tipsarevic No. 30 Sam Querrey US Open 220 spots

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