Tennis News

From around the world

Teenager Gauff beats Williams at Grand Slam again

  • Posted: Jan 20, 2020
2020 Australian Open
Venue: Melbourne Park Dates: 20 January to 2 February
Coverage: Listen on BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra and online; Live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website and app.

American 15-year-old Coco Gauff proved last year’s victory over Venus Williams was no fluke when she beat the seven-time Grand Slam champion once again to reach the Australian Open second round.

Gauff announced her arrival last July with victory over her “idol” Williams, 39, in the Wimbledon first round.

And just like last time, she did it in straight sets, winning 7-6 (7-5) 6-3.

Gauff’s celebrations were slightly delayed because she did not realise the final point had been given her way.

“That was really difficult. She played really well and I was really nervous for today’s match – I was a bit shocked when I saw the draw, but glad I was able to get through it,” said Gauff, who was making her Australian Open debut.

“I am feeling great. I really like this court and really like this crowd.”

Gauff will play Romanian world number 74 Sorana Cirstea next.

More to follow.

  • Follow live coverage of day one
  • Williams & Osaka into second round
  • GB’s Evans fights back to advance

Source link

Flawless Federer Races Through First Test In Melbourne

  • Posted: Jan 20, 2020

Flawless Federer Races Through First Test In Melbourne

Hurkacz plays Novak on Monday

After 21 consecutive appearances at the Australian Open, Roger Federer is familiar with every inch of Rod Laver Arena. The third-seeded Swiss brought the level of comfort that dozens of matches on a court can provide to his opening-round clash with Steve Johnson, sweeping aside the American 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 in a breathtaking display.

Federer said in his pre-tournament press conference that his expectations for this fortnight were low, but the six-time champion may want to raise them after his latest performance. He broke the American five times and remains unbeaten in opening-round matches in Melbourne (21-0). Federer has never lost before the third round at this event.

“I remember coming here for juniors in 1998 and then played qualies in the following year. I remember beating Michael Chang in my first main draw here [in 2000],” Federer said. “That was fun. Now he’s coaching against me [with Kei Nishikori], but we’re good friends because my kids are friends with his kids.”

Johnson arrived with confidence after winning an ATP Challenger Tour event last week in Bendigo. But his off-pace slice backhands and chip forehand returns played into Federer’s strengths, allowing the Swiss to attack with his forehand and move forward. A forehand volley winner gave Federer an immediate break in Johnson’s opening service game and he led 4-1 after 18 minutes.

Rain briefly brought both players off the court so the roof could be closed, but it did little to disrupt Federer’s momentum. He continued to coast in his service games and grabbed the early advantage.

You May Also Like:

Federer Prepared For ‘Tricky Situation’ To Start Australian Open

The second set was one-way traffic for Federer, who won 16 of the first 18 points and sprinted to a 4-0 lead. Even when Johnson made the correct play, he was often reduced to a spectator as he watched Federer whip winners past him. Federer landed 80 per cent of his first serves (16/20), consistently setting himself up for one-two punches to end points. A forehand winner from the Swiss, his 26th of the match, gave him a commanding two-sets lead.

Federer opened the third set by once again jumping out in front with an early break. He comfortably served out the match on his first try to wrap up play after just 85 minutes. Federer improved to 3-0 in his ATP Head2Head with Johnson and has yet to drop a set against the American.

Next up for Federer is Japanese wild card Tatsuma Ito or Indian lucky loser Prajnesh Gunneswaran.

Source link

Kiki Bertens column: I considered retiring at 25 because I wasn't having fun on court

  • Posted: Jan 20, 2020

Kiki Bertens, the Dutch world number 10, is the latest WTA Tour star to feature in a BBC Sport column at a Grand Slam. In her first column at the Australian Open, the 2016 French Open semi-finalist talks about how she almost retired before going on to enjoy the biggest successes of her career, the air quality in Melbourne and getting married in the off-season.

At the end of the 2017 season I was on the brink of retirement and I had a decision to make: quit playing or do things differently.

I chose to do things differently – with my approach to practice, recovery, nutrition and many other things.

As a result I reached the world’s top 10 for the first time in 2018 and won three WTA tournaments. So I guess I made the right decision!

Why was I considering retirement at the age of just 25? Because I really wasn’t having fun on court.

I was still winning matches and I was ranked 31 in the world at the end of the year so it was still going pretty well. But I was struggling a lot.

Going through the tour every year and just focusing so intensely on tennis all the time was not working for me. I had to find another way.

I was stressing too much about everything, stressing about draws, stressing about how I was practising.

If one day I did not have a good practice I was worrying a lot about how I’d play over the next few days.

Now, I still work really hard every day, of course, and do everything I can do. But off the court I relax a little more, enjoy my time with the people around me – my husband, my family and the other girls – then go again the next day.

I have changed my work-life balance for the better.

And I don’t worry as much. I think ‘OK, one day I play good, the other day maybe not’. There is always a next day.

I have realised it is more important to be happy and enjoying the life you are living – win or lose.

‘I never thought I’d reach the world’s top 10’

After deciding not to retire and carry on, I reached the world’s top 10 for the first time in 2018 and won three WTA tournaments. So I guess I came a long way.

For me it was always a huge thing to become top 10 because I’d never really seen myself being able to achieve that dream.

Then last year I won the Madrid Open – my biggest title yet – and was the first woman to win the tournament without dropping a set.

As a result I went up to fourth in the world and that meant I became the highest-ranked female player from the Netherlands ever. That was a huge thing for me and a huge deal back home.

I never thought I’d go as far as this. After doing that, everything is a bonus from now and I am enjoying it all as much as possible.

Of course I still put pressure on myself and I’m still setting goals that I want to achieve.

Improving my game by trying to play more aggressively is the main one and hopefully make steps in the rankings and the big tournaments as a result.

The furthest I have gone at the Australian Open is the third round so hopefully I can do better than that this year.

I like it here and always feel good, so I don’t exactly know why I haven’t gone further in Melbourne.

Perhaps it is because normally I start to play better when I have played a lot of matches. At the beginning of the year that is a little bit of a struggle, I still have to find rhythm.

I played some great matches in Brisbane earlier this month, where I lost to Naomi Osaka in the singles quarter-finals and also reached the doubles final with Ashleigh Barty.

So I think I’m ready and excited to see what happens.

‘People are suffering so much because of the bushfires – it is heartbreaking’

Of course I have been following the news about the bushfires that have been happening in Australia – it is heartbreaking to see so much devastation.

They are suffering so much here and I feel really bad for the people and animals.

Ash Barty – who is, of course, Australia’s world number one – is my regular doubles partner and she donated her prize money from the Brisbane International to the relief fund.

That got me thinking that I wanted to do something so I said I would donate 100 Australian dollars for every ace that I hit in the tournaments over the Australian summer.

I know it is only a small part but I wanted to get involved because it is something that is close to my heart, particularly because I’m so close to Ash.

The air quality in Melbourne has been a big talking point and when I arrived here on Tuesday night I saw the conditions were not great.

I think it was really tough for the players to play qualifying matches in that.

I had a hit on Wednesday morning when it was still not great but I only had a light hit so I didn’t have any problems with my lungs or my breathing.

But I can imagine if you’re playing for two, or two and a half, hours it is not really healthy.

I know the Australian Open is doing the best they can to find a way to overcome any problems, for them it is also a new situation. I think they are monitoring it really well.

They just have to go day by day, see what they have to do and we all hope there will be no problems.

‘I had another big match in the off-season… my wedding!’

The off-season was also pretty busy for me away from tennis – I got married!

My husband Remko is in the tennis world too, he is a physio, a fitness trainer and a coach, and he is also part of my team.

We have known each other for four years now and he proposed at the end of the 2018 season.

I was not really expecting him to propose when he did, even though he knew I really wanted it because I told him many times! So it was a big surprise.

Then all through the year we were building up to the big day and it was really exciting.

We got married at home in Breda where we live, we had a ceremony with only our close family then in the day and at night we had a fun party with more people coming for that.

A few of my friends from the WTA Tour were there – Julia Goerges is one of my closest friends so she was there for the whole day, Johanna Larsson as well, and then lots of Dutch and Belgian tennis faces were there at night.

It goes without saying, the day was really special. Now I hope married life will bring me good luck on the court too!

Kiki Bertens was speaking to BBC Sport’s Jonathan Jurejko at Melbourne Park.

Source link

Vitas Gerulaitis: The Man Who Was More Than A Quote

  • Posted: Jan 19, 2020

Vitas Gerulaitis: The Man Who Was More Than A Quote

40 years on from Gerulaitis’ famous quip after snapping a 16-match losing streak against Connors, ATPTour.com pays tribute to the legacy of the ‘Lithuanian Lion’

The 1979 year-end Masters took place at Madison Square Garden — ‘The World’s Most Famous Arena’ — in New York City. The three favourites for the tournament were clear: World No. 1 Bjorn Borg, No. 2 Jimmy Connors and home favourite John McEnroe. But what was unexpected was not only that one of the finalists came from outside of that trio, but that the tournament is perhaps best remembered for a quip rather than a match.

“Let that be a lesson to you all. Nobody beats Vitas Gerulaitis 17 times in a row!”

Gerulaitis was in-form at World No. 4, just months removed from reaching his first — and what would be his only — US Open final. In that match, the ‘Lithuanian Lion’ fell in straight sets against a fellow New Yorker and close friend in McEnroe. So while Gerulaitis had proven his level, navigating his way through that cast of legends seemed unlikely.

But Gerulaitis not only got his revenge at MSG during round-robin play, earning his first ATP Head2Head victory against the lefty McEnroe; he overcame the odds again in his next match the following day.

Gerulaitis raised his level even higher against Connors, snapping a 16-match losing streak against his fellow American with an impressive 7-5, 6-2 victory to reach the championship match. On his second match point, Gerulaitis staved off Connors’ attacks on his backhand, eventually crushing a one-handed backhand passing shot down the line, which Connors could not handle. Vitas pumped both fists in a muted celebration quickly shouting, “Yeah!”

However, it was his quip to the media that will be remembered forever. It wasn’t about the number ‘17’, nor was it about Connors. It was Gerulaitis’ way of using his sense of humour to remind the world that not only was he more than just an entertainer on and off the court, but he was a competitor who was unafraid of competing against the best in the world. That quote is still referenced four decades later, not only in tennis, but throughout the sports world.

A reporter who was in the room for Gerulaitis’ remark on 12 January 1980 was Steve Flink, who was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 2017.

“I did not think he was being serious at all. He was always self-deprecating. That is not to say that Vitas did not know how good he was; he had plenty of confidence. But he knew that line would make everyone in the room erupt into laughter, and that is exactly what happened,” Flink said. “He also knew how great Connors and Borg both were and he recognised that they were better than he was. Nevertheless, Vitas believed in himself and was proud of beating Jimmy in New York City.”

Gerulaitis beat Connors in their first-ever meeting — which also came indoors in New York, in 1972 — at the Clean Air Classic. And even though he lost their next 16 clashes, beating Connors again was not a shocker of monumental proportions, albeit an upset.

Jose Higueras was one of the eight men competing in that edition of the year-end Masters, held during the cold month of January, 1980. And although he had plenty of experience with long losing streaks himself, dropping his final final 11 matches against Borg, he was not stunned by Gerulaitis’ victory.

“It wasn’t a surprise to me just because of the type of competitor he was. His famous quote, ‘Nobody beats Vitas Gerulaitis 17 times in a row’, it’s a great quote and it kind of tells you his mindset,” Higueras said. “You could beat him, but he wasn’t going to go on the court and be beat. You would have to beat him 17 times in a row or 25 times in a row. So the fact that he beat those guys, obviously he wasn’t the favourite, but it wasn’t really a huge surprise because he was a big competitor and he always showed up.”

Patrick McEnroe was only a teen at the time, and he recalls going to MSG over the years to warm up his brother, John, ahead of matches. Gerulaitis was a mentor to the younger McEnroe.

“I kind of remember when it happened and it was just an off the cuff, witty kind of thing. He was very humble, Vitas. He was obviously a great player, but he also knew that he wasn’t as great as Connors, Borg or my brother, who were three of the greatest players ever,” said Patrick McEnroe. “He had that self-deprecating style about himself. When you compared him to everyone else on the planet, 99.8 per cent of the rest of the people, he was amazing. He was an all-time player as far as a Top 5 player, but that was his demeanour. That was really the way he was.”

Ironically enough, Gerulaitis did lose 17 matches in a row against a single player, a close friend in Borg, who defeated him a day after his Connors triumph 6-2, 6-2.

“Even with Borg, who was his best buddy, he couldn’t beat Borg… And even with John, he knew John was just a better player, more talented, but Vitas seemed to be content with where he was,” McEnroe said. “It wasn’t like he was jealous. I’m sure there was a part of him that thought, ‘I wish I had John’s touch, I wish I had Borg’s relentless competitiveness.’ Vitas had what he had, which was pretty damn good when you consider what he did with his career.”

There are plenty of stories of Gerulaitis being like a celebrity off the court, on many occasions leading players who enjoyed even more success than he did to nightclubs such as Studio 54 in Manhattan. He certainly didn’t shy away from attention, riding in a yellow Rolls Royce with the personalized license plate ‘VITAS’. But that was not the Gerulaitis who showed up to work every day, always among the first to the practice courts and one of the last to leave.

“Vitas obviously liked to live it up a little bit but he was also a guy who was a very hard worker and extremely fit. In a way his lifestyle with the fancy cars and going to the night clubs [wasn’t like his tennis]. The way he played was more about bringing your hard hat to the court,” McEnroe said. “He was just a grinder, he wasn’t a flashy player. But he was tremendously consistent and tremendously quick and very, very fit. Really, if you look at the way he lived his life, he was kind of a partier, and loved to have a great time, so you would think he would have been more of a risk taker in the way he played. But he really wasn’t.”

Gerulaitis’ father, Vitas Sr., was the first head professional at what is today the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, the home of the US Open. So it’s no surprise that Vitas was raised to squeeze the best tennis he could out of his talents.

“He worked his butt off to get really good. He wasn’t a natural talent in the same way my brother was with the racquet,” McEnroe said. “I think he had to really school himself and drive himself with his strokes to get really solid. It wasn’t like he was a flashy player. I wouldn’t call him a guy with great hands like an [Ilie] Nastase or John. He was a workhorse and that’s how he became a Top 5 player.”

Forty-three years ago, Gerulaitis won his lone Grand Slam singles championship at the Australian Open. According to his opponent from that 1977 final, John Lloyd, they not only had breakfast together that morning, but warmed up together, too.

“I remember being worried about practising again,” Lloyd recalled. “So I asked, ‘Should we practise together?’ He responded by saying, ‘What can I f****** learn about your game? And what more can you learn about my game? Of course, we’ll practise together!’”

That’s just who Gerulaitis was. As successful as he was on the court and iconic as he was off of it, Vitas first and foremost was known among his peers as a good person. Patrick McEnroe would practise with Gerulaitis at the San Francisco Tennis Club in California when Vitas was “sort of retired”, and they’d have lunch at the club.

“The bill would be $20 for the two of us and he would always leave $100 for the waiter. That was just the way Vitas was. He was one of the most generous people and very generous with me,” McEnroe said. “I think I played him one time in one of those pre-US Open exhibitions when I was probably still a teenager and he beat the crap out of me, but then he basically spent another half hour after the match telling me what I needed to work on to get better. I always looked up to Vitas. He was a special person individually.

“He was always positive. He wasn’t a guy who was going to criticise you in a negative way. He was just an extremely positive guy, very optimistic. He wasn’t saying, ‘You need to do this or that’, he just did it in a way that was very encouraging and very positive. He obviously had his demons,” McEnroe added. “But when he was on the tennis court, I never saw that. I always saw someone who was just a positive guy and really loved life and was a great friend. He was someone you could count on to be in your corner. We miss him. He was a guy who was going to continue to give a lot to the sport.”

Gerulaitis not only lost 16 matches in a row against Connors, but all 17 of his meetings against Borg, it wasn’t for lack of effort, and there was never any jealousy. Vitas continued to work to earn moments like his victories against Connors and McEnroe at MSG.

“He beat them at the right time at the right place. He beat them in New York. What a great place for him,” Higueras said. “He was a New Yorker, people loved him there. I’m sure he fed from the crowd, I’m sure the crowd fed from him and it shows his level of competing that he showed up to the max.”

Many fans today may remember his famous quote, but it’s his work ethic and mindset that helped him win a Grand Slam, capture 26 tour-level titles and ascend as high as No. 3 in the FedEx ATP Rankings. Vitas was more than the words he spoke that day.

“His personality and lifestyle overshadowed his greatness as a player. No doubt about that. He was a natty dresser who loved living in the jet-set. But that was only a part of who he was. He also was a top of the line professional who worked very hard at his craft and competed with a lot of integrity. But he just happened to come along in a golden era of the sport. He was haunted by not only Connors and Borg but also by McEnroe. Those three superstars were the pace setters of their era,” Flink said. “But the great thing about Gerulaitis was his sense of humility and perspective. He fought hard against those guys on the court but was a good friend of both away from the arena. He seemed to be able to separate friendship from business. He never held grudges against those guys. Vitas was very close to McEnroe as well. McEnroe and Connors were always at odds with each other. Yet what they most had in common was their genuine respect for Gerulaitis.”

Whatever his sphere, as a competitor, commentator and mentor, Gerulaitis commanded universal respect. Sadly, on 17 September 1994, he passed away. Staying in a guest house in Southampton, NY, Gerulaitis died of accidental carbon monoxide poisoning from a faulty propane heater, which had seeped into the heating and air conditioning system. He was 40 years old.

Source link

Andy Murray injury: Bob Bryan says Briton has 'a lot of years left' as a player

  • Posted: Jan 19, 2020

Andy Murray has “a lot of years left” at the top level of tennis, says American doubles legend Bob Bryan.

Murray, 32, pulled out of this week’s Australian Open, and two more events in February, with a pelvic injury and has not put a time frame on his return.

But Bryan, who inspired Murray to have the same career-saving hip surgery as he had in 2018, has quelled doubts about the Briton’s future.

“I expect to see him back before too long,” said Bryan.

“He just wants to be extra careful because he knows he has got a lot of years ahead and he doesn’t want to screw it up right after surgery.”

Three-time Grand Slam singles champion Murray broke down in tears at last year’s Australian Open, revealing he thought he would have to retire after a swansong at Wimbledon six months later.

However, regular conversations with 23-time Grand Slam doubles winner Bryan encouraged the Scot to have the hip resurfacing operation – where a metal cap is put over the femur head – which revived his career.

Bryan, 41, had the same surgery in 2018 and was playing doubles alongside twin brother Mike five months later.

Murray returned to the doubles court in June, winning the Queen’s title alongside Spain’s Feliciano Lopez in his first tournament since being operated on by renowned hip surgeon Sarah Muirhead-Allwood last January.

A return to singles action came in August before the former world number one won the Antwerp Open title in October.

The pelvic problem flared up during the Davis Cup in November, sidelining Murray for the majority of Britain’s run to the semi-finals, and he has not played since.

“I asked him about his speed and his strength and he says it is right where it was,” added Bryan.

“The other injury is unrelated, a freak thing.

“He is working on it. He is seeing everyone and he will figure it out. He will be back strong.”

Source link