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Roland Garros Reveals 2020 Prize Money Distribution

  • Posted: Sep 21, 2020

Roland Garros Reveals 2020 Prize Money Distribution

Qualifying to receive more than 27 per cent prize money increase compared to 2019

Consistent with a commitment from tennis’ stakeholders to provide financial support for lower-ranked players during the COVID-19 pandemic, the FFT has announced a boost in Roland Garros prize money in qualifying and the first round.

The clay-court Grand Slam is redistributing money from the latter rounds to increase qualifying prize money by more than 27 per cent from last year. Losers in the first round of qualifying will take home €10,000, a 42 per cent increase on last year.

In the main draw singles, players who fall in the first round will take home €60,000, an increase of more than 30 per cent on last year’s total. The first and second rounds of the men’s doubles have also been positively impacted by prize money increases of 30 per cent and four per cent, respectively.

The tournament, which has moved its traditional main draw late May start to 27 September, will unveil its new retractable roof on Court Philippe-Chatrier, giving players and fans guaranteed action throughout the 15-day event. Qualifying action begins Monday.

2020 Roland Garros Men’s Qualifying Prize Money

Round Prize Money
Third Round €25,600
Second Round €16,000
First Round €10,000

 

2020 Roland Garros Main Draw Prize Money

Round Singles Doubles (Per Team)
Winner €1,600,000 €319,652
Runner-up €850,500 €188,030
Semi-finals €425,250 €110,606
Quarter-finals €283,500 €65,062
Round of 16 €189,000 €38,272
Round of 32 €126,000 €23,920
Round of 64 €84,000 €14,950
Round of 128 €60,000 N/A

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Challenger Chat: Why Oscar Otte Is Dominating The Restart

  • Posted: Sep 21, 2020

Challenger Chat: Why Oscar Otte Is Dominating The Restart

The 27-year-old German is closing in on the Top 100


Oscar Otte, the World No. 136 from Cologne, Germany, describes the key to his dominant restart on the ATP Challenger Tour. In a challenging 2020 season, the Aix-en-Provence champ is keeping things simple and making fitness a priority.

“If you’re good at losing, I think you can get even better at winning.”

Oscar Otte is living by this mantra since the ATP Challenger Tour restarted last month. Hungry and motivated following the five-month COVID-19 break, Otte has shined in the return of the Challenger circuit. The German is playing the best tennis of his career in recent weeks and he took it to the next level in Aix-en-Provence, France.

Otte is 12-3 in the tour’s restart, including a title in Aix-en-Provence and final run in Ostrava. The victory in Aix was a long time coming for the 27-year-old, who was three years removed from his lone previous title in Lisbon in 2017. Moreover, Otte now owns the second-most match wins since the the ATP Challenger Tour returned to action on 17 August.

Sitting at No. 136 in the FedEx ATP Rankings, the Top 100 is well within reach in 2020. One year removed from his first Grand Slam match win at Roland Garros, before falling to Roger Federer, Otte is targeting another successful qualifying campaign at the clay-court major. The Cologne native is also looking forward to the debut of a new ATP Tour event in his hometown, with the bett1HULKS Indoors premiering in mid-October.

“It’s amazing. I’ve always said that it would be one of my dreams to play a bigger tournament in my hometown, where everbody could watch,” said Otte about the ATP 250 in Cologne. “With my friends and family there, it would be amazing. I’m really looking forward to it. Hopefully I get a wild card, but maybe I’ll get into the qualifying with my new ranking. That would be really great for me. It would be special to be able to play and perform there.”

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Final Preview: Djokovic, Schwartzman Chase Career Milestones In Rome

  • Posted: Sep 21, 2020

Final Preview: Djokovic, Schwartzman Chase Career Milestones In Rome

World No. 1 defeated Schwartzman in three sets to reach 2019 Rome final

When Novak Djokovic and Diego Schwartzman meet for the fifth time in their ATP Head2Head series (Djokovic leads 4-0) in Monday’s Internazionali BNL d’Italia final, both players will not only be fighting for the Rome trophy, but also a personal milestone.

Following the completion of his second Career Golden Masters at the Western & Southern Open last month, Djokovic is the joint Masters 1000 titles leader alongside fellow 35-time champion Rafael Nadal. The Rome final presents Djokovic with an opportunity to overtake his rival by lifting a 36th trophy at the level.

Most ATP Masters 1000 Titles

Rank Player Titles
1 Novak Djokovic 35
1 Rafael Nadal 35
3 Roger Federer 28
4 Andre Agassi 17
5 Andy Murray 14

On the other side of the net, Schwartzman is one win away from cracking the Top 10 in the FedEx ATP Rankings for the first time in his career. The Argentine can achieve the feat by defeating Djokovic for the first time to claim his maiden Masters 1000 trophy.

Djokovic has dropped just one set en route to his 10th final in the Italian capital, improving his match record to 30-1 this year. The 33-year-old has been tested throughout the week in each of his three most recent clashes in Rome.

<a href=Novak Djokovic is unbeaten in four ATP Head2Head matches against Diego Schwartzman.” />

Djokovic played an 87-minute set against Filip Krajinovic in the third round, survived a three-set quarter-final battle against Dominik Koepfer and saved two set points in the first set of his semi-final clash against Casper Ruud. The Serbian has consistently produced his best level under pressure to close in on a fifth trophy at the Foro Italico.

Djokovic’s victory against Ruud improved his semi-final record in Rome to 10-1, but the Serbian has not fared as well in championship matches at the Masters 1000 event. Djokovic owns a 4-5 record in Rome finals, which includes losses in his past three championship matches (2016-’17, ’19).

An opportunity to overtake Nadal and make further history in Rome are huge motivational factors for the World No. 1. The four-time champion is still as ambitious as he was the first time he arrived at the tournament, where he has enjoyed consistent success since 2007. Djokovic has reached the quarter-finals or better in each of his 14 appearances at the Foro Italico.

“The 1000 Masters events are as important as it gets on the Tour,” said Djokovic. “These are the events where I want to perform my best other than Grand Slams and the [Nitto ATP Finals]… Finals at such big events mean a lot even after 15 years [of] being on the Tour. I still am as motivated to get my hands on the trophy. This is what I work for as much as anybody else, really, on the Tour.”

Standing between Djokovic and the Masters 1000 titles record is a first-time finalist at the level: Diego Schwartzman. Djokovic enters the contest with a 4-0 ATP Head2Head record against the 28-year-old, but will be well aware of the threat the Argentine poses. The pair met in the semi-finals at this event last year, with Djokovic eventually prevailing in three sets after two hours and 31 minutes.

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Djokovic will face an opponent with peak confidence levels on Centrale. Schwartzman dropped just one set en route to the quarter-finals, where he earned his first victory in 10 matches against nine-time champion Rafael Nadal. Schwartzman described the straight-sets win as his “best match ever” and his final opponent was equally impressed.

“Diego played the match of his life [against Nadal]… He was so impressive,” said Djokovic. “And that proves that anything is possible, even [against] Nadal who is probably the toughest challenge in our sport, playing Nadal on clay. But he managed to win in straight sets, so that proves his quality.”

The opportunity to enter the Top 10 for the first time and lift the biggest title of his career with a single victory perhaps makes Monday’s final the biggest match of Schwartzman’s career. The World No. 15 is prepared to push himself to the limit to realise two dreams at the Masters 1000 tournament.

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“I have two dreams tomorrow. One is winning a tournament like this and the second one: be Top 10,” said Schwartzman. “Both are there tomorrow on court against Novak. I know it’s very difficult. I almost need to play more than my 100 per cent.

“I don’t want to say impossible, because it’s not impossible. I know can beat him. But it’s going to be very difficult. But the chances are there tomorrow… I’m going to do everything to be more than my 100 per cent tomorrow on court.”

After his victory against Nadal, Schwartzman was able to maintain his level and earn another milestone win just 24 hours later on Centrale. The Argentine trailed by a break on three occasions in the deciding set of his semi-final clash against Denis Shapovalov, but fought back to claim a memorable final-set tie-break win after three hours and 15 minutes.

“At the end, maybe the third set we were playing for many things: for the final, for the Top 10, for the match… The nerves were there. It was difficult,” said Schwartzman.

“But I think I took my chances when he was thinking about [the] win and nothing else, when he was serving for the match and [a] break up in the third.”

Having already ended a winless streak against Nadal, Schwartzman will now attempt to do the same against Djokovic. The rewards for victory in Rome are clear to both men. But who will be able to take their chance on Monday and place their name in the history books?

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Shapovalov On Heartbreaking Loss: 'I'm A Perfectionist'

  • Posted: Sep 21, 2020

Shapovalov On Heartbreaking Loss: ‘I’m A Perfectionist’

Canadian still has a chance to crack the Top 10

Denis Shapovalov played some of his best tennis for three hours and 15 minutes on Sunday evening in the semi-finals of the Internazionali BNL d’Italia, falling just short in a third-set tie-break against Diego Schwartzman.

If Novak Djokovic beats Schwartzman in Monday’s final, Shapovalov will still crack the Top 10 of the FedEx ATP Rankings for the first time. But the Canadian is not sweating it.

“My time will come whether it’s now or later. I think God has a path for me, and obviously today I wasn’t meant to win,” Shapovalov said. “But I’m going to keep working, keep improving, and if I don’t get there now, then I’ll just keep pushing to try to break through to the Top 10.

“I’m only 21, so I’m really happy with having that chance for now, to come that close.”

Schwartzman will be the first-time Top 10 member if he upsets Djokovic. Shapovalov was patient throughout their marathon, waiting for the perfect moment to strike in rallies with his aggressive game. But at the very end of the match, the Argentine was the steadier player.

“Definitely very pleased with myself. Obviously I’m a perfectionist. I expect a lot from myself. Definitely disappointed with today,” Shapovalov said. “Diego’s one of the greatest clay-courters out there right now, so it’s big for my part to be able to go toe-to-toe against him from the back despite struggling with my serve.

“I think it’s shown great improvement from me, and I’m really, really pleased with the way I was able to play.”

Shapovalov struck 10 aces, but hit eight double faults, with a majority of those coming in crucial moments. The 21-year-old lefty was happy that despite only winning 43 per cent of his second-serve points, he was able to hang in with Schwartzman.

“Played a great match today despite not serving nearly as good as I could. I had a chance to win it and [I was] up a break [three times] in the third set,” Shapovalov said. “I’m happy that I was able to almost find a way to win despite struggling with one of my main weapons today.”

What was the big difference in the match? According to Shapovalov, he simply lost a couple key points when it mattered.

“I don’t know if there was a key. We were both playing very even tennis off the back, and it was just a couple points. I think it was a great match from both of us,” Shapovalov said. “I feel like we both deserved to win today, so I don’t think there was any keys or anything. It was just a couple of points that made the difference.”

Shapovalov will now prepare for Roland Garros, where he has never advanced past the second round. He will certainly have momentum on his side and potentially a Top 10 ranking with it.

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Granollers/Zeballos Earn Third Title Of 2020 In Rome

  • Posted: Sep 20, 2020

Granollers/Zeballos Earn Third Title Of 2020 In Rome

Fourth seeds own 16-1 record on clay this year

Marcel Granollers and Horacio Zeballos are the only team to win multiple ATP Tour trophies this year. They captured their third team title of 2020 on Sunday at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia.

Competing in their fourth final in as many clay-court tournaments this year, the fourth seeds overcame Jeremy Chardy and Fabrice Martin 6-4, 5-7, 10-8 to capture their second ATP Masters 1000 trophy as a pair. Last year’s Coupe Rogers titlists made the crucial move at 8/8 in the Match Tie-break, earning championship point when Zeballos struck a forehand return winner. Granollers clinched the trophy with a pinpoint forehand volley.

“This is one of the best moments in my career,” said Zeballos. “This tournament has a lot of history. I watched it for many years, since I was a little kid, so this tournament is really important. Winning Rome is a huge thing for me and for sure for Marcel too, so what can I say? I am so happy. You could see it in our faces when we finished the match.”

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Granollers and Zeballos improve to 16-1 on clay this year. The Spanish-Argentine duo claimed back-to-back trophies at the Argentina Open in Buenos Aires and the Rio Open presented by Claro in February. Granollers and Zeballos also reached the championship match at the Generali Open in Kitzbühel last week (l. to Krajicek/Skugor).

This is Granollers’ second Rome crown from four finals in the Italian capital. The 34-year-old claimed the title in 2012 alongside Marc Lopez and finished as a runner-up in 2015 (w/M. Lopez) and 2017 (w/Dodig). Granollers levels his tour-level finals record at 21-21.

“Before the first clay tournament of the year in Buenos Aires, I was a long time without winning one match on clay. Last year, I didn’t win a match in all of the clay season,” said Granollers. “After Buenos Aires and Rio, I think we felt very good on court playing together. We both [grew up] playing on clay when we were young and we feel very good on clay. I think we can play very good and we are very happy to win our third title of the year on clay.”

Zeballos extends his unbeaten record to 3-0 in Masters 1000 finals. Last year, alongside his victory with Granollers in Montreal, the Argentine also was victorious at the BNP Paribas Open with Nikola Mektic.

Chardy and Martin were attempting to claim their first Masters 1000 trophy. The Frenchmen own a 3-3 team record in tour-level championship matches, with their most recent title coming on clay at last year’s Millennium Estoril Open.

Granollers and Zeballos earn 1000 FedEx ATP Doubles Ranking points and split €58,860 in prize money. Chardy and Martin collect 600 points and share €49,000.

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Scouting Report: 10 Things To Watch In Hamburg

  • Posted: Sep 20, 2020

Scouting Report: 10 Things To Watch In Hamburg

An executive summary of what fans should know about the coming week in Hamburg

The ATP Tour heads to Germany this week for the Hamburg European Open, an ATP 500 event.

Three former singles champions are in the draw, which includes nine of the Top 20 players in the FedEx ATP Rankings. ATPTour.com looks at 10 things to watch at the clay-court tournament.

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1) Medvedev’s Momentum: Daniil Medvedev will begin his clay-court swing in Hamburg fresh off his run to the US Open semi-finals. The Russian competed at this ATP 500 in 2016 as a 20-year-old, when he qualified and advanced to the second round of the main draw. Medvedev was No. 215 in the FedEx ATP Rankings at the time. Now he is World No. 5. He will open against Frenchman Ugo Humbert.

2) Will Stefanos Shine? Reigning Nitto ATP Finals champion Stefanos Tsitsipas is making his tournament debut in Hamburg. The Greek will try to replicate his previous clay-court success. Tsitsipas triumphed in Estoril last year and reached the final of the Mutua Madrid Open, an ATP Masters 1000 event. The second seed begins his run in Hamburg against Daniel Evans.

3) Gael Goes For Glory: Gael Monfils owns a 4-4 record in Hamburg. But the 2011 quarter-finalist will try to make a splash at this edition as the third seed. The Frenchman, who lifted the 2005 Sopot trophy on clay, will play Kitzbuhel finalist Yannick Hanfmann in the first round.

4) Former Champ Fabio: Fabio Fognini won his second ATP Tour title in Hamburg seven years ago. The Italian also made the final in 2015, falling short against Rafael Nadal. But he will chase a third title in Germany (also 2013 Stuttgart) starting with his opening match against wild card Philipp Kohlschreiber.

<a href=Fabio Fognini” />
Photo Credit: Hamburg European Open/Witters
5) The Start Of Rublev’s Ascent: Andrey Rublev has been one of the most in-form players on the ATP Tour this season, tallying a 20-6 record. The Russian credits some of his momentum to his run to last year’s Hamburg final.

“I won playing not good tennis, but [I made the final] just because I was fighting and I was a little bit lucky,” Rublev said. “I still won [matches]. And this sometimes is even better, because this also gives you confidence that even playing your worst tennis, you know how to win.”

6) Diego Back For More: Diego Schwartzman, who surprised nine-time champion Rafael Nadal in the Internazionali BNL d’Italia semi-finals, is the seventh seed in Hamburg. The Argentine has reached the quarter-finals in his past two appearances in Hamburg (2017, 2018) and he will play Albert Ramos-Vinolas in the first round.

7) Basilashvili Goes For Three: Georgian Nikoloz Basilashvili is the two-time defending champion in Hamburg. The World No. 32 has won two of this three tour-level titles at this event, and all three of his trophies have come at an ATP 500. He will face a tough test in the first round against fourth seed Roberto Bautista Agut.

8) Felix’s Debut: Canadian #NextGenATP star Felix Auger-Aliassime will compete in Hamburg for the first time. The 20-year-old will open against Italian Lorenzo Sonego.

<a href=Felix Auger-Aliassime” />
Photo Credit: Hamburg European Open/Witters
9) Wild Cards: The three main draw wild cards are eighth seed Karen Khachanov, German Philipp Kohlschreiber and Hanfmann, another home favourite. Dominik Koepfer originally received a wild card, but got into the main draw as a special exempt because he reached the quarter-finals in Rome.

10) Stacked Doubles Field: There are so many top doubles teams in Hamburg that 2019 Roland Garros champions Kevin Krawietz and Andreas Mies are unseeded. The four seeded duos are top seeds Juan Sebastian Cabal/Robert Farah, reigning Australian Open champions Rajeev Ram/Joe Salisbury, third seeds Lukasz Kubot/Marcelo Melo and Rome titlists Marcel Granollers/Horacio Zeballos.

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Double Digits: Djokovic Advances To 10th Rome Final

  • Posted: Sep 20, 2020

Double Digits: Djokovic Advances To 10th Rome Final

World No. 1 to face Schwartzman or Shapovalov for trophy

Novak Djokovic moved one win away from a record-breaking 36th ATP Masters 1000 trophy on Sunday with a 7-5, 6-3 victory against Casper Ruud in the Internazionali BNL d’Italia semi-finals.

The World No. 1 saved two set points in the first set and fired 12 aces to improve to 10-1 in Rome semi-finals. Djokovic will attempt to break a tie with fellow 35-time Masters 1000 champion Rafael Nadal when he faces Diego Schwartzman or Denis Shapovalov in the championship match on Monday.

“It is super important [to win the title]. Otherwise, I wouldn’t be here,” said Djokovic on court after his win. “I don’t take anything for granted, even after 15 years on the Tour, I still enjoy it.

“I still have a hunger for the titles and putting myself in a position to fight for the title is exactly where I want to be.”

Most ATP Masters 1000 Titles

Rank Player Titles
1 Novak Djokovic 35
1 Rafael Nadal 35
3 Roger Federer 28
4 Andre Agassi 17
5 Andy Murray 14

Djokovic equalled Nadal’s record Masters 1000 title haul by completing his second Career Golden Masters at the Western & Southern Open last month. Djokovic is a four-time champion in Rome.

The Serbian is now 30-1 in 2020. Only in 2011, when he won his opening 41 matches of the year, has Djokovic reached 30 victories quicker.

Djokovic’s Best Season Starts (After 31 Matches)

Win/Loss Record Year
31-0 2011
30-1 2020
29-2 2015, 2016
28-3 2013, 2014
27-4 2012

The key moment of the match came when Ruud held two set points when serving for the first set at 5-4, 40/15. Djokovic ripped a crosscourt backhand to save the first set point and reached deuce after carving a backhand drop shot. The Serbian never looked back to claim victory in his first ATP Head2Head contest against the Norwegian.

Djokovic will attempt to triumph at the Foro Italico for the first time since 2015 on Monday. The 33-year-old has finished as runner-up at the event in three of the past four years, losing to Andy Murray (2016), Alexander Zverev (2017) and Nadal (2019) in finals.

The five-time year-end No. 1 owns a combined 9-0 ATP Head2Head record against potential final opponents Schwartzman and Shapovalov. Djokovic is unbeaten in five matches against Shapovalov and owns a 4-0 record against Schwartzman. The Serbian has beaten each player once at this event.

“Both guys are in tremendous form,” said Djokovic. “Diego played the match of his life last night and he also is most comfortable on clay. Denis has improved a lot on clay over the past few years and he has got a powerful game… Whatever comes my way, I will be ready and hopefully I can get my hands on the trophy.”

Ruud was attempting to reach his third final in four clay events this year. The World No. 34 owns a tour-leading 12 wins on the surface this season (12-3). Ruud was one of the form players of February’s ‘Golden Swing’, capturing his maiden ATP Tour crown at the Argentina Open in Buenos Aires and finishing as a runner-up in Santiago.

The 21-year-old made a fast start on Centrale, anticipating Djokovic’s tactics and covering the court with great speed to gain an early break. The 2019 Next Gen ATP Finals qualifier played with confidence on his forehand and saved two break points at 3-2, but he failed to convert two set points when serving for the set at 5-4. Djokovic increased his aggression on his backhand side and landed a drop shot winner, a tactic he has used throughout the week, before earning his first break of the match.

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Djokovic served well under pressure to save three break points in a 12-minute game at 5-5 and, with added confidence, attacked his opponent’s backhand to reach set point in the following game. At that moment, Ruud attempted to strike his 13th forehand winner of the set, but misfired on his favoured shot to hand Djokovic a one-set lead.

Djokovic continued to serve with power and accuracy to escape danger early in the second set and gained the first break at 3-2 with powerful groundstrokes. The 17-time Grand Slam champion struck three consecutive winners into Ruud’s forehand corner and capitalised on a Ruud forehand error to move two games from victory. Djokovic earned success driving his backhand up the line in the closing stages and booked his place in the final when Ruud failed to control a backhand return.

”It was a tough two-setter today. It was over two hours for two sets,” said Djokovic. “I definitely had to work hard for most of the points and it was really anybody’s game in the first set… It was really windy.

“To be honest, it was probably the windiest day since we arrived to Rome and it was quite tough to handle that. But the second set was much better, I got used to it and started swinging through the ball better.”

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