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Medvedev Finds His Mojo: ‘I’m In My Best Shape’

  • Posted: Nov 13, 2020

Even after earning $12 million in prize money and bursting into the Top 5, Daniil Medvedev still doesn’t take himself too seriously. This week when Tennis TV tweeted out a brilliant passing shot Medvedev hit in his Nitto ATP Finals loss last year to Rafael Nadal, the Russian retweeted the video with the comment, “Oh you mean the match I choked”? with a host of emojis.

There’s a Russian proverb that can be loosely translated to “the first pancake is (always) lumpy,” and it applies neatly to Medvedev’s first ATP Finals experience last year. The insurgent Russian went 0-3 at the event, including the heartbreaking loss, or “choke” as he calls it, to Nadal, who came back from 1-5 down in the third set tie-break to win the match. Daniil was asked about his tweet and how last year’s performance sets him up for this year’s tournament on Friday.

“I was really disappointed because if I had won this match (against Nadal) I would have had a chance to qualify for the semis,” said Medvedev, 24, who was born in Moscow and now resides in Monaco. “It would have been a great boost for (my) confidence to beat Rafa. But it happens in tennis. It’s something I should learn from, but also forget about because I should have won. The three defeats last year don’t affect my confidence for this year.”

Medvedev’s 0-3 showing at last year’s event also included close losses in a brutal group to Alexander Zverev and Stefanos Tsitsipas. But he comes into this event with some mojo after beating a slew of excellent players, including Kevin Anderson, Alex de Minaur, Diego Schwartzman, Milos Raonic and Alexander Zverev, to win the Masters 1000 title in Bercy earlier this month.

“It’s a big boost in confidence before London,” he said of the win. “It was a great level of tennis, so I have confidence in myself, and I think it will help me here in London. Before, I won only one match in three or four years in Bercy, but this year I won the tournament, so I’m looking confident for this year in London.”

It was his first title in what has been an uneven season for Medvedev, who comes into the tournament with a 23-10 record on the year and eight career titles.

“The year was strange, so tough to say (what went wrong earlier), we’d have to take it tournament by tournament what was not good here and there,” said Medvedev, who confirmed that he will play the Australian Open in 2021. “[In] Paris, everything went together. I played really good tennis, it was tough to miss and that’s why I’m in my best shape and that’s when it’s tough to beat me… The season wasn’t easy for anybody so I’m going back to my March.”

Medvedev’s reset will take place in Group Tokyo 1970, which includes Novak Djokovic, Alexander Zverev, and Diego Schwartzman. He’s 4-0 lifetime against the Argentine, who will be playing in his first Nitto ATP Finals, and his win over

Diego at Bercy was a 6-3, 6-1 pasting that took just 62 minutes. But Daniil has a losing career mark against both Djokovic and Zverev. Medvedev has a 2-4 career mark against Novak, but they’ve only played indoors once, in Serbia in 2017 in a Davis Cup match. Medvedev retired with an injury down two sets to one in that match. But he beat Djokovic in two of their three matches last year, prevailing in Cincinnati and Monte Carlo.

Medvedev is 2-5 in his career versus Zverev; along with the recent win in Bercy he also beat the German in Shanghai outdoors last year. The charismatic Russian said on media day that his favourite movie of late is V for Vendetta, which is about an anarchist who attempts to ignite a revolution. He hasn’t caused anarchy or ignited (near) revolutions in the stands since the 2019 US Open, when he transformed from villain to fan favourite in a span of just a few days. But he comes into London with a head of steam and a few scores to settle in a group full of wolves, who’ll be as hungry for redemption as he is.

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Melzer/Roger-Vasselin Reach Sofia Final, Qualify For London

  • Posted: Nov 13, 2020

Jurgen Melzer and Edouard Roger-Vasselin clinched the final qualification spot for the Nitto ATP Finals on Friday, as they defeated Tomislav Brkic and Marin Cilic, 7-5, 6-4 to reach the Sofia Open final.

The top seeds, who stood one win from qualification in Paris last week, saved six of the seven break points they faced to advance to their second championship match of 2020. Melzer and Roger-Vasselin are attempting to capture their second title of the year, following success at the St. Petersburg Open last month.

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Melzer and Roger-Vasselin enter a packed draw at the Nitto ATP Finals. They will join Mate Pavic/Bruno Soares, Rajeev Ram/Joe Salisbury, Kevin Krawietz/Andreas Mies, Marcel Granollers/Horacio Zeballos, Wesley Koolhof/Nikola Mektic, John Peers/Michael Venus and Lukasz Kubot/Marcelo Melo at The O2 in London from 15-22 November.

In the Sofia championship match, the Austrian-French duo will face the team it eliminated from the FedEx ATP Battle For London with their semi-final victory: Jamie Murray and Neal Skupski. The Brits needed Melzer and Roger-Vasselin to lose before the final in Sofia to have a chance of claiming the eighth qualification position in London.

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The Day Ice-Borg Melted At Madison Square Garden

  • Posted: Nov 13, 2020

In the winter of 1974, a handsome 18-year-old Swede with a golden mane of long, frizzy locks turned up at the Kooyong Lawn Tennis Club in Melbourne, Australia to play in the $100,000 Commercial Union Grand Prix Masters. At the time, Sweden wasn’t exactly known for producing tennis talent.

A writer from Sports Illustrated opined that year that Sweden was “a country with a meagre athletic history save for hearty, bundled-up Vikings in snowshoes”. But this teen sensation who had qualified for the sport’s elite, eight-man season-ending Masters tournament was already an international sensation, a rock star whose instrument was a wooden Bancroft racquet. He was 18-years-old but his resume already included eight titles, including a major at Roland Garros. The teen sensation’s list of early victims read like a who’s who in the sport: Laver, Vilas, Nastase, Ashe, (Stan) Smith, Rosewall, Panatta, Connors, Kodes, Orantes and more.

The kid hadn’t qualified for the Masters based on his good looks, or the fact that teenage girls mobbed him like he was the fifth member of the Beatles at Wimbledon that summer. He came into his first Masters with a ridiculous 93 ATP tour wins that season. His first name, Björn, means bear in Swedish; his last, Borg, means castle. His middle name, Rune, was a nod to his father, a clothing salesperson who won a tennis racquet in a Ping-Pong tournament and gave it to his only child. It was too heavy, so young Björn used to hands to hit the ball against their garage door for hours and hours at a time.

At 13, young Björn once stayed on the court for more than 11 hours, winning nine matches in a single day. By 17, he had already earned enough money in the sport to buy his parents a summer house and a small grocery store they ran in the industrial town of Soldertalje. All this time, he was building toward qualifying for his first Masters, which meant the world to him.

The Swedish legend, now a youthful 64 if ever there was one, recently participated in a Zoom call with Roger Federer and Tim Henman, where he reflected on that first Masters and several others he remembers fondly. “During my time, the most important thing every year was to qualify for the ATP Finals, everyone talked about it week after week,” said Borg, who looked golden bronze after a holiday in Egypt, with his impeccably coiffed mane of neatly-parted grey hair, and a smart V-neck sweater.

Photo: Getty Images
John McEnroe, Ivan Lendl, Jimmy Connors and Bjorn Borg at the Masters, Madison Square Garden. Photo: Getty Images

“They had this huge board with our names and (ATP) points at each tournament. We talked about it the whole week, month after month. To qualify was the most important thing. I didn’t do too well (my first year at the Masters), but I was happy to be there. It was a really big thing then as it is now.”

Borg failed to make it out of the round-robin phase of that first Masters, but he made a deep impression on the Aussie crowds, New Zealnder Onny Parun 10-8 in the third, and dropping a tough match to John Newcombe, then ranked No. 2, in a pair of tie-breaks. But bigger and better things were still to come for the kid from the suburbs of Stockholm.

The following year, 1975, the tournament moved to his hometown, and he beat Arthur Ashe to face Ilie Nastase in the final, which he lost in straight sets. “Playing in your home country is a lot of pressure but I was happy the ATP Finals moved to Sweden,” Borg told Henman. “I lost in the final to Nastase but it was a big thing (to make it that far).”

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After a year in Houston, the event moved to Madison Square Garden in New York for the next 13 years. “It was a brilliant move to play there for many years,” Borg said. He played some of the best tennis of his career in that arena against his greatest rivals—McEnroe, Connors, Vilas, and Lendl. In 1978, Borg made it to the final of the tournament for the first time, losing to Connors in a hard fought three-setter.

Two years later, he won the event for the first time. Sports Illustrated called it “the best and the brightest and the most exciting tennis tournament anybody ever saw”. Borg beat Connors in the round robin and McEnroe in the semi-finals, both in riveting third set tie-breaks. Three other matches that week were also decided in third set tie-breaks.

“Those five matches that went to tie-breaks, it was unbelievable tennis,” Borg recalled. “It was a great promotion for the ATP Finals— it helped tennis a lot and it helped us a lot too.”

Vitas Gerulaitis snapped a 16-match losing streak against Connors in the semi-finals, inspiring one of the best quotes in the history of the sport: “Nobody beats Vitas Gerulaitis 17 times in a row,” he said. But Borg dismantled him 6-2, 6-2 in the final and did in fact end up beating Vitas 17 straight, finishing his career with a perfect 17-0 record against the feisty New Yorker. But aside from winning the tournament, Borg also lost his cool on court for the first time since his junior days.

At 3-all in the third set tie-break, Borg’s forehand pass was signalled good by the linesman, but Umpire Mike Lugg overruled the call, giving McEnroe the point. With the crowd booing and whistling, Borg pleaded with Lugg to ask the linesman about the call. “I got very upset,” Borg recalled. “I went to the umpire, I was pretty nice but I wanted some answers. He didn’t give me the right answer and I got a warning and then two penalty points. That was the only time in my career that I got warnings and penalties. But I won the match anyways.”

Borg recalled on the Zoom call why this episode was so unusual and memorable for him. “I was suspended for three months when I was 13 for bad behaviour and I didn’t open my mouth again because I wanted to play tennis, I didn’t want to be suspended again,” he said. “As a player you get so frustrated, you want to scream but you have to keep it inside. I think that was probably the strongest point of my game to do that. The other players have no idea what your emotion is; you just keep playing.”

Borg followed up his Masters win by winning the event again in 1981, this time beating John McEnroe, Jose Luis-Clerc, Jimmy Connors and then Ivan Lendl in the final. “I was happy to win twice and those victories mean a lot for me because it’s the best eight players in the world and it’s tough to qualify,” Borg told Henman.

But no one, perhaps not even Björn, knew that 1981 would be his last great year on Tour. He retired at 26, but could have undoubtedly added to his haul at the Masters and other tournaments if he had stayed in the sport. We’ll never know how many more titles Borg would have won, but for more than a decade, he catapulted the sport to new heights of popularity across the globe. He was and still is as Roger Federer referred to him in the recent Zoom call, “the king”.

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Murray/Skupski Keep London Hopes Alive In Sofia

  • Posted: Nov 12, 2020

Jamie Murray and Neal Skupski advanced to their third final of the season on Thursday at the Sofia Open to extend their Nitto ATP Finals qualification bid.

The British pair saved all three break points they faced to overcome Fabrice Martin and Hugo Nys 7-6(4), 6-7(2), 10-4 in just under two hours. Murray and Skupski must win the Sofia title to have any chance of qualifying for the eight-team event, which will be held at The O2 in London from 15-22 November.

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If the top seeds in Sofia, Jurgen Melzer and Edouard Roger-Vasselin, beat Tomislav Brkic and Marin Cilic on Friday, they will qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals for the first time as a team.

Murray and Skupski are bidding to capture their first team title in the Bulgarian capital. The second seeds reached their first two ATP Tour championship matches as a pair earlier this year at the Western & Southern Open and the Erste Bank Open.

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Groups Are Set For 2020 Nitto ATP Finals

  • Posted: Nov 12, 2020

Novak Djokovic, who will be bidding to earn a record-trying sixth trophy at the season finale, learned his group for the 2020 Nitto ATP Finals on Thursday. The World No. 1 leads Group Tokyo 1970 alongside Daniil Medvedev, Alexander Zverev and Diego Schwartzman.

Djokovic has a 39-3 match record on the season and has qualified for the season finale 13 times. He triumphed at the event in 2008 and 2012-15.

Nadal, who has earned his spot at the prestigious event for a record 16 consecutive years, leads Group London 2020 alongside Dominic Thiem, Stefanos Tsitsipas and Andrey Rublev. Nadal, who has a 25-5 record in 2020 with two titles, has earned a berth at the Nitto ATP Finals every season starting in 2005.

Group Tokyo 1970
Novak Djokovic
Daniil Medvedev
Alexander Zverev
Diego Schwartzman

Group London 2020
Rafael Nadal
Dominic Thiem
Stefanos Tsitsipas
Andrey Rublev

The other two former champions of the event are 2019 champion Tsitsipas and 2018 titlist Zverev. Thiem, the third seed, captured his first Grand Slam title this year at the US Open. Rublev and Schwartzman are first-time competitors at the event.

The singles draw for the 2020 Nitto ATP Finals, to be held at The O2 in London from 15-22 November, was made on Thursday and broadcast on BBC Radio 5 Live’s ‘5 Live Drive’ featuring ATP Supervisor Gerry Armstrong and 1970 tournament champion Stan Smith.

“If you look at this draw, you look at Medvedev and Zverev, who just played in the finals against each other in Paris last week, they obviously are playing quite well. They’re going to be pushing Novak in that group,” Smith said on the broadcast. “But on the other side, Rublev has really been hot overall for the year, it’s unbelievable. Tsitsipas is the defending champion and Thiem is the US Open champion, so Rafa’s got his hands full with those three guys.”

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Seven different countries are represented in the elite eight-man singles field. Four played aged 24 and under will compete at The O2. This is the 50th Anniversary of the Nitto ATP Finals, which was first held in 1970 in Tokyo, where Smith lifted the trophy. It is the tournament’s 12th and final edition in London. Next year, the season finale will move to Turin, Italy.

Italian Matteo Berrettini, the 2019 qualifier, and Canadian Denis Shapovalov are first and second alternates, respectively, in the singles field.

ORDER OF PLAY – SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2020

CENTRE COURT start 12:00 noon
Doubles TBD Doubles TBD

Not Before 2:00 pm
[3] D. Thiem (AUT) vs [6] S. Tsitsipas (GRE)

Not Before 6:00 pm
Doubles TBD Doubles TBD

Not Before 8:00 pm
[2] R. Nadal (ESP) vs [7] A. Rublev (RUS)

ORDER OF PLAY – MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2020

CENTRE COURT start 12:00 noon
DOUBLES TBD DOUBLES TBD

Not Before 2:00 pm
[1] N. Djokovic (SRB) vs [8] D. Schwartzman (ARG)

Not Before 6:00 pm
DOUBLES TBD DOUBLES TBD

Not Before 8:00 pm
[4] D. Medvedev (RUS) vs [5] A. Zverev (GER)

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