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Draper, Michelsen & Borges could be smart Winston-Salem Predictor Picks

  • Posted: Aug 17, 2024

After back-to-back ATP Masters 1000 events in Montreal and Cincinnati, the ATP Tour moves to Winston-Salem next week for an ATP 250 event.

Plenty of stars will try to secure important PIF ATP Rankings points, including defending champion Sebastian Baez, second seed Jack Draper and third-seeded wild card Francisco Cerundolo.

Make Your Picks Now!

Jack Draper — replacing 20 points
The 22-year-old has enjoyed the best season of his career, earning his first ATP Tour title in Stuttgart. If the British lefty lifts another trophy in Winston-Salem, he will claim plenty of net points given he will be replacing a 20-point entry in his rankings breakdown.

Draper is in form after upsetting Stefanos Tsitsipas in Cincinnati and has long been a dangerous foe on hard courts. His big serve and aggressive game have proven tough for many players to overcome. He is the second seed in Winston-Salem, where his brother, Ben Draper, played a season of college tennis.

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Alex Michelsen — replacing 25 points
The Cincinnati draw shows that the #NextGenATP American lost in the second round of the main draw. But Michelsen put up a tough fight against Jannik Sinner and also battled through qualifying, proving his form is in good shape.

The two-time Newport finalist continues to climb the PIF ATP Rankings and has another chance to make a move during Winston-Salem, where he will chase his first title. The 19-year-old will also be confident on the back of his run to the Washington quarter-finals, where he pushed eventual finalist Flavio Cobolli to a final-set tie-break.

Nuno Borges replacing 20 points
The Portuguese standout won his first tour-level title earlier this year in Bastad on clay. However, he is plenty comfortable on hard courts. A fourth-round finisher at this year’s Australian Open, Borges played college tennis — on hard courts — at Mississippi State University.

Borges is the eighth seed in Winston-Salem and will play James Duckworth or Thiago Seyboth Wild in his opening match.

Bonus Ball — Alex Michelsen
Michelsen is the 11th seed and has never claimed an ATP Tour title. But why not back the teen now for a big run? The American has proven he enjoys quicker surfaces, where he is able to maximise his serve and use his all-court game to work his way into his opponent’s service games.

With plenty of room to add net points in Winston-Salem, doubling up that number could mean a big week for your PIF ATP Rankings Predictor team.

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Dodig & Murray advance in Cincy, McDonald & Michelsen save 2 MPs

  • Posted: Aug 17, 2024

Playing under pressure was Friday’s doubles theme at the Cincinnati Open, where Jamie Murray and Ivan Dodig dispatched fifth-seeded Italians Simone Bolelli and Andrea Vavassori in a tight 7-5, 7-6(4) contest while three other matches went to a Match Tie-break.

Murray and Dodig are into the last eight and will next face Arthur Fils and Nicolas Jarry.

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American wild cards Mackenzie McDonald and Alex Michelsen became the first team to reach the semi-finals after they saved two match points to upset the 2022 titlists Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury 6-3, 5-7, 11-9. The third seeds held two consecutive match points on serve at 9/7 in the Match Tie-break before McDonald and Michelsen tallied four consecutive points.

Top seeds Marcel Granollers and Horacio Zeballos, who won Montreal last week, defeated Hugo Nys and Jan Zielinski 6-7(3), 6-4, 10-6. Seventh seeds Harri Heliovaara and Henry Patten, fifth in the PIF ATP Live Doubles Race To Turin, survived Wesley Koolhof and Mate Pavic 6-7(3), 7-6(5), 10-5.

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Rune denies Monfils' double duty attempt, Draper survives Felix

  • Posted: Aug 17, 2024

Holger Rune held his nerve in a topsy-turvy third set Friday to pull away from Gael Monfils 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 and advance to the Cincinnati Open quarter-finals. The 15th seed is the first Danish man to reach the last eight in the tournament’s Open Era history.

“It took some patience for sure,” said Rune. “I wasn’t totally on top of the first set. He was serving big, had to get used to the conditions a little bit. He came from an incredible win earlier, so obviously he was very confident. I had to find my rhythm.”

Monfils came flying out of the blocks, building upon his momentum from upsetting second seed Carlos Alcaraz in their rain-hindered match earlier in the day. Rune then gained an advantage by looking for early opportunities to move forward, converting 25 of his 33 net points across the two-hour, 14-minute match.

“I changed a little bit of tactics from the beginning of the second set and I tried to stay on that throughout the whole match, and it seemed to work,” said Rune.

In the 21-year-old’s opening service game of the final set, he trailed 0/40, but eventually held after nearly nine minutes, deflating the Frenchman’s hopes of becoming the tournament’s oldest quarter-finalist. He then broke Monfils to love and rarely looked back.

Rune, aiming for his second ATP Masters 1000 trophy, saved seven of the eight break points he faced, according to Infosys ATP Stats, to win his first Lexus ATP Head2Head meeting with Monfils.

As the match wore on, the 37-year-old Monfils appeared to fade physically, but not without flashes of his shotmaking ability to the roars of a packed Center Court crowd.

Watch Rune, Monfils’ Point Of The Year Contender:

Into his third ATP Masters 1000 quarter-final of the season (Indian Wells, Monte-Carlo), Rune will next meet Jack Draper. Rune, No. 16 in the PIF ATP Rankings, boasts a 32-16 season record.

Draper advanced to his second ATP Masters 1000 quarter-final and first in two years (2022 Montreal) with a hard-fought 5-7, 6-4, 6-4 victory against Felix Auger-Aliassime. The lefty, who upset Stefanos Tsitsipas in the second round after the Greek served for the match, won his third consecutive three-setter.

Draper applied constant pressure on the Canadian’s serve throughout the two-hour, 37-minute battle. The 22-year-old played 33 less points on his serve and fended off the lone break point he faced.

The match ended in unusual circumstances on a disputed Draper low volley, which was ruled good but replays showed the ball caught the bottom of Draper’s frame and ricocheted off the court before falling over the net.

Fifth seed Hubert Hurkacz also advanced in three sets. The Pole marched past the in-form Italian Flavio Cobolli 6-3, 3-6, 6-1 after converting three of his 10 break chances. Hurkacz will face Frances Tiafoe ATP Masters 1000 quarter-final. The American survived Jiri Lehecka 6-4, 6-7(10), 7-6(5).

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Alcaraz: 'Impossible to get any good from this match'

  • Posted: Aug 17, 2024

Carlos Alcaraz has no shortage of memorable accolades this season, from winning two majors, an ATP Masters 1000 title in Indian Wells and a silver medal at the Paris Olympics. But the Spaniard wants to have no memory of any kind of his second-round loss against Gael Monfils at the Cincinnati Open.

“It’s kind of really difficult to find some good stuff from this match. So I want to forget it, and try to move on to New York,” Alcaraz said in his post-match press conference. “I’ll go to New York and I’ll try to practise well, to get used to those courts. And I will forget this match, because I think it is impossible to get any good things about this match.”

The 21-year-old, who was competing in his first hard-court tournament since Miami in March, held championship point last year in Cincinnati before Novak Djokovic roared back to claim the title in what is largely considered one of the greatest ATP Masters 1000 finals.

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Playing his first match in Cincinnati since that near-four hour epic, with hopes of going one step further than last year’s runner-up finish, Alcaraz was instead stunned by the 37-year-old Monfils 4-6, 7-6(5), 6-4. The 15-time tour-level titlist spoke candidly in assessing his level.

“I felt like it was the worst match that I ever played in my career,” Alcaraz said. “[I] couldn’t play. Honestly, I’ve been practising really well here in this tournament. The previous days, I was feeling great, hitting the ball clear, moving well. I don’t know what happened. I don’t know how I felt like this, but I couldn’t control myself. I couldn’t be better. So this match, it was impossible to win.”

Alcaraz grew atypically frustrated when Monfils consolidated his break lead early in the deciding set. The second seed smashed his racquet on the hard court four times, breaking it in several places.

“I felt sometimes that I wanted to break the racquet. It never happened before, because I could control myself in those situations, in those feelings,” Alcaraz said. “Most of the time I could control myself and it could go better in the matches or in the situation that I’ve been feeling before.

“Today, I couldn’t control myself, because, as I said, I was feeling that I was not playing any kind of tennis. I think some players, a lot of players, during their careers and during some certain moments, they can’t control themselves. And it was one of the moments for me.”

Alcaraz and Monfils began their match Thursday evening, but were forced off court due to rain with the World No. 3 in the PIF ATP Rankings leading 6-3, 6-6(1/3). Trailing by a mini-break in the second-set tie-break when the match resumed Friday, Alcaraz was hopeful to find a better level.

“I just [tried] not to think about the match last night. I just want to recover as best as I can, to have a good rest and be ready for today’s match,” Alcaraz said. “Yesterday, I didn’t play well as well. I think yesterday the longest rally was five balls. So I couldn’t get feelings yesterday. So I just thought that, ‘Well, have some rest, and tomorrow it’s gonna be another day. I’m probably going to feel better.’ But it didn’t happen.”

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Shifting to Shelton: How a kind word and a headband won over young Gabe

  • Posted: Aug 16, 2024

Has Ben Shelton found his newest and biggest fan?

When the 21-year-old American walked onto court to face Tomas Martin Etcheverry on Thursday at the Cincinnati Open, he received the majority of support at his home event.

However, there was one young boy, Gabriel Green, who was cheering loudly for Etcheverry and could not hide his disappointment at the Argentine’s three-set defeat. After the match, Shelton found Gabriel in the crowd at the Lindner Family Tennis Center, where he chatted with the youngster before giving him his headband.

A day later and Gabriel was courtside again, but this time wearing Shelton’s headband and loudly supporting the 12th seed, who defeated Fabian Marozsan to reach the quarter-finals on Friday.

“He was going at me yesterday,” Shelton said when asked about Gabriel, who was born in Mexico and is coached by an Argentine. “I was playing his guy Etcheverry. I heard him the whole match and after the match he looked pretty upset and I went up to him and said, ‘I have a lot of respect for your cheering because when I was a little kid and watching my dad’s teams college matches, that was me’.

“I think that is where the love from the game starts. So it is really cool to see things like that from kids at such a young age. I went over and gave him a headband and I gained a fan yesterday, so maybe we will see him out here one day.”

Shelton will play third seed Alexander Zverev in the quarter-finals and will hope to see Gabriel courtside once again.

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Shelton reverses 'really rough’ start, surges into Cincy QFs

  • Posted: Aug 16, 2024

Ben Shelton earned his career-best 30th match win of the season and advanced to his second ATP Masters 1000 quarter-final Friday at the Cincinnati Open.

The 12th-seeded American made a rocky start, but leaned on his hefty first serve to dig him out of trouble and defeat Hungarian Fabian Marozsan 6-4, 6-3 amidst windy conditions. Shelton is set to face third seed Alexander Zverev in a blockbuster quarter-final.

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“It was a really rough start of the match, pretty windy,” said Shelton, who committed 18 unforced errors to Marozsan’s 29. “It felt like every ball off his racquet was coming really, really fast. He was hitting some nukes and it took me a little while to speed up and adjust, but once I got rolling in the second set, I started to feel really confident.”

After the opening set featured three breaks of serve, Shelton lifted his aggression and drew on his home support. He dropped just two points behind his first delivery in the second set to advance after one hour, nine minutes and sealed the match with a net-cord winner, for which he apologised when embracing Marozsan at net.

The 21-year-old lefty, No. 14 in the PIF ATP Rankings, is the youngest American man to reach the Cincinnati quarters since 20-year-old Jared Donaldson in 2017. Shelton and Tiafoe are the lone Americans left in the draw as they aim to become the first American male to win Cincinnati since Andy Roddick in 2006.

Shelton’s quarter-final clash with Zverev will mark their first Lexus ATP Head2Head meeting.

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Monfils stuns Alcaraz in Cincinnati

  • Posted: Aug 16, 2024

Gael Monfils earned his biggest win in more than two years on Friday at the Cincinnati Open, where he stunned World No. 3 Carlos Alcaraz 4-6, 7-6(5), 6-4 to capture the ninth Top 3 victory of his career.

Play was cancelled on Thursday night due to rain, with Alcaraz leading Monfils 6-4, 6-6(1/3). However, the Frenchman came out firing upon the resumption, remaining composed to build on his early lead in the tie-break and seal the set on his third set point.

In windy conditions, Monfils was the more consistent in the decider to inflict just an eighth defeat of the year on Alcaraz. The 37-year-old saved all four break points he faced and rode the momentum he had gained in the second-set tie-break to earn his first Top 3 win since he beat then-No. 1 player in the PIF ATP Rankings Daniil Medvedev in March 2022 in Indian Wells.

Alcaraz was competing in his first hard-court match since March in Miami, where he reached the quarter-finals. The 21-year-old has since lifted major trophies at Roland Garros and Wimbledon and won a silver medal at the Paris Olympics.

The five-time Masters 1000 titlist Alcaraz struggled to find his usual level against Monfils and was visibly frustrated in the third set, smashing his racquet after failing to break Monfils’ serve at 1-2 in the decider.

Alcaraz continued to push but was ultimately unable to turn proceedings around against Monfils, who held firm on serve to advance. With his two-hour, 30-minute triumph, Monfils became the second oldest player to defeat a Top 3 opponent this century, joining Roger Federer, who at 38 beat World No. 2 Novak Djokovic at the Nitto ATP Finals in 2019.

Monfils pumped his chest after sealing victory before he let out a roar and embraced the support from the crowd. The former World No. 6, who beat Montreal champion Alexei Popyrin in the first round, will need to pull double duty on Friday in Ohio, where he will return later to face 15th seed Holger Rune in the third round.

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Zverev, Rublev reach Cincinnati QFs

  • Posted: Aug 16, 2024

Alexander Zverev became the 10th player in history to reach 30 ATP Masters 1000 quarter-finals on Friday at the Cincinnati Open, where he moved past Spaniard Pablo Carreno Busta 7-5, 7-6(6).

The third-seeded German recovered from squandering break advantages in both sets to eventually earn his 51st win of the season. Zverev lifted his sixth ATP Masters 1000 title in Rome earlier this year and will aim to add to that tally in Ohio, where he next meets Ben Shelton or Fabian Marozsan.

Zverev, who struck 26 winners in his two-hour, five-minute win against Carreno Busta, has fond memories in Cincinnati. The 27-year-old captured the trophy in 2021 and reached the semi-finals last season.

A deep run at the hard-court event will also boost Zverev’s hopes of qualifying for the Nitto ATP Finals. A two-time champion at the year-end event, Zverev is third in the PIF ATP Live Race To Turin.

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In other action, Andrey Rublev made it two wins in two weeks against Brandon Nakashima. He moved past the 2022 Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF champion 7-6(5), 6-1.

Rublev defeated Nakashima en route to his second ATP Masters 1000 final of the season in Montreal last week. After fending off both break points he faced in the first set against Nakashima on Friday, the No. 6 player in the PIF ATP Rankings raced clear in the second set. He hit 12 winners and committed just two unforced errors in the set to advance after 82 minutes.

Rublev will next play World No. 1 Jannik Sinner in the quarter-finals. Rublev, who is 34-16 on the year, overcame Sinner in Montreal.

Rublev is up one spot to sixth in the PIF ATP Live Race To Turin following his win and is aiming to make his fifth consecutive appearance at the Nitto ATP Finals.

Felix Auger-Aliassime earned a convincing 6-3, 6-1 victory against seventh seed Casper Ruud. The Canadian, who struck 26 winners to Ruud’s three, according to Infosys ATP Stats, will return to court Friday evening not before 7 p.m. to face Jack Draper.

Auger-Aliassime now leads Ruud 4-3 in their Lexus ATP Head2Head series. The 24-year-old trailed Ruud 1-3 as recently as April, but Felix has scored wins against the Norwegian in Madrid, at the Paris Olympics and in Cincinnati to pull ahead.

By advancing to the Round of 16, Auger-Aliassime collected his 50th match win at ATP Masters 1000 level. He is the third player born in 2000 or later to reach that milestone, behind Jannik Sinner (69) and Carlos Alcaraz (59).

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Sinner gets walkover into QFs, where he has chance for revenge

  • Posted: Aug 16, 2024

Jannik Sinner has advanced to the quarter-finals of the Cincinnati Open after Jordan Thompson withdrew from their scheduled third-round match Friday with a rib injury.

The World No. 1 in the PIF ATP Rankings will now get the opportunity to avenge last week’s loss to Andrey Rublev in Montreal. The World No. 6 defeated Sinner 6-3, 1-6, 6-2 in the quarter-finals, snapping a three-match losing streak to the Italian.

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Sinner leads their Lexus ATP Head2Head series 5-3.

Sinner, who is chasing his first title since winning the ATP 500 in Halle on grass in June, defeated American qualifier Alex Michelsen 6-4, 7-5 in his opening-round match in Cincinnati.

Last week Sinner became the first player to qualify for November’s Nitto ATP Finals in Turin.

 

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