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Medvedev Embracing Life In The Spotlight

  • Posted: Oct 27, 2019

Medvedev Embracing Life In The Spotlight

Russian aims for fifth title of 2019 in Paris

In a season filled with firsts for Daniil Medvedev, he’ll likely add another to the list at the Rolex Paris Masters by playing on centre court at the AccorHotels Arena.

The fourth-seeded Russian fell in the second round last year to Croatian Borna Coric, but arrives this year under much different circumstances. He’s jumped from No. 17 to a career-high No. 4 in the ATP Rankings over the past 12 months, but it’s his results in the second half of this season that have made fans take notice.

Medvedev has reached the final of his past six ATP Tour events, prevailing at the Rolex Shanghai Masters (d. Zverev), Western & Southern Open (d. Goffin) and St. Petersburg Open (d. Coric). He’s won 29 of his past 32 matches and arrives in Paris on a nine-match winning streak, having not dropped a set since his US Open final defeat to Rafael Nadal. The 23-year-old’s winning ways mean his days of anonymity are a thing of the past.

“More people recognise me in Russia and Europe and New York. In New York, I had to wear a hoodie all the time,” Medvedev said in his pre-tournament press conference on Sunday. “That’s because I have worked so much. I have to live with it. That’s part and parcel of my achievements and this is what I’m doing.”

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Although Medvedev is getting more attention, he hasn’t let success get to his head. The Russian still confides in the same close-knit team and keeps a low profile when possible. Although his peers on Tour certainly recognise how dangerous he is on the court, they haven’t treated him differently off of it.

“The only thing that has changed is that before I would win a tournament every four months. Every time you win a tournament, a Masters 1000, everybody congratulates you,” Medvedev said. “Now a lot of people are laughing and saying, ‘Okay, we’re not going to congratulate you anymore because we’ll have to do that every week and it’s just tiresome.’ Just jokes like this, but nothing much has changed.”

Having already secured his maiden appearance at the season-ending Nitto ATP Finals, held at The O2 in London from 10-17 November, the Russian could also end the year inside the Top 3 of the ATP Rankings. But while he’s at the front of the conversation about who will dethrone the Big Three, Medvedev has opted to run his own race.

“It’s hard to explain because when I was No. 15 [in the ATP Rankings], I was good already. Then I wanted to get into the Top 10, which is never easy. I just want to see how far I can go,” Medvedev said. “It could be No. 1. If it doesn’t happen, that means that I wouldn’t be strong enough. I know that to be high up in the [ATP Race To London], you have to do a significant effort, but I’m trying to do my best.”

Read More: Medvedev’s Ride From Doubting Top 10 Potential To Eyeing No. 1

Medvedev will begin his week against Frenchman Jeremy Chardy or American Sam Querrey. Although he’s a main contender to take the title in Paris, the Russian isn’t relying on his past success to carry him through the draw. He’s established his momentum by treating each match with the importance of a final and sees no reason to change what has been working.

“It’s not that I’m afraid, but rather that I don’t want it to stop,” Medvedev said. “I want to work as hard as I can to make sure that this momentum doesn’t stop. It has worked well so far and I hope to continue.

“My goal is still the same: to be better every day with each training, each tournament [and] to win tournaments. It’s been working well so far. It’s a source of real pleasure.”

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Roger Federer cruises to 10th Swiss Indoors title in Basel

  • Posted: Oct 27, 2019

Roger Federer captured his 10th Swiss Indoors crown with an emphatic 6-2 6-2 victory over Alex de Minaur.

The 38-year-old Swiss maestro extended his winning run to 24 matches in the event and sealed his 103rd ATP title.

He broke twice to take the first set in 34 minutes against the world number 28, playing his only sixth ATP final.

Federer, competing in his 157th ATP final, duly sealed victory in one hour eight minutes against the Australian, 20, for his fourth title of the season.

De Minaur was also seeking his fourth title of the season and attempting to become the first Australian winner of the Swiss event, which was first played in 1970.

But he had no answer to the composed brilliance of Federer, who broke for the first time in the fourth game with a perfectly controlled overhead.

Federer then produced a majestic forehand, followed by an ace down the T-line, to move three games ahead in the second set and serenely completed his fifth Swiss triumph in the past six years.

The 20-time Grand Slam winner, who first reached the Swiss final in 2000, is now only six short of the ATP record for singles titles, held by Jimmy Connors.

In his first meeting with De Minaur, Federer converted four of 10 break points and did not drop serve in a superb performance, which included prevailing in a 39-stroke rally.

“I thought Alex played a great tournament as well, and I think we both can be very happy,” he said. “But what a moment for me to win my 10th here in my hometown of Basel. I made very few unforced errors and came up with the big shots and served well when I had to.”

In the Erste Bank Open in Vienna, Austrian top seed Dominic Thiem won his fifth tournament of 2019 when he fought back to defeat Argentine Diego Schwartzman 3-6 6-4 6-3.

The 26-year-old world number five won in two hours 25 minutes for his 16th ATP title.

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Facts & Figures: 2019 Rolex Paris Masters

  • Posted: Oct 27, 2019

Facts & Figures: 2019 Rolex Paris Masters

Essential information about the #ATPMasters1000 tournament in Paris

The Rolex Paris Masters is the ninth and final ATP Masters 1000 tennis tournament on the 2019 ATP Tour calendar, and serves as the final battleground in the ATP Race To London as players attempt to clinch the remaining spots at the Nitto ATP Finals.

An 18-year-old Boris Becker won the inaugural Rolex Paris Masters in 1986, and to this day, remains the youngest champion on the honour roll. Becker claimed two more Paris titles, in 1989 and 1992. Marat Safin matched the German’s title haul with his trio of trophies in 2000, ’02 and ’04, and Novak Djokovic surpassed both with four titles, including three straight from 2013-15. 

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Djokovic looks to reclaim the ‘Tree of Fanti’ in 2019, and he leads a field that includes 2011 titlist Roger Federer; defending champion Karen Khachanov and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, the last Frenchman to win the title (2008). Rafael Nadal, who leads Djokovic in the battle for year-end No. 1, will attempt to join David Ferrer as Spanish winners at this Masters 1000 event. 

Meanwhile, Daniil Medvedev — winner of back-to-back Masters 1000 titles in Cincinnati and Shanghai and who also finished runner-up to Nadal in Montreal — will attempt to continue his run of form as he eyes his seventh straight tour-level final. Only two other singles players, Djokovic and Andy Murray, have completed the Shanghai-Paris sweep. 

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2019 <a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/tournaments/paris/352/overview'>Rolex Paris Masters</a> | ATP Masters 1000 tennis tournament in France, featuring Djokovic, Nadal, Federer, Medvedev

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Dominic's Dream: Thiem Triumphs In Vienna

  • Posted: Oct 27, 2019

Dominic’s Dream: Thiem Triumphs In Vienna

Austrian leads ATP Tour with five trophies in 2019

Dominic Thiem may have forgotten if he was five or six years old when he first visited the Erste Bank Open in Vienna, but the Austrian will always remember lifting the trophy at the Wiener Stadthalle on Sunday.

The 26-year-old defeated good friend Diego Schwartzman 3-6, 6-4, 6-3 in front of a packed home crowd in the Austrian capital, bringing his best level in crucial moments to complete the win after two hours and 25 minutes. Thiem improves to 9-0 in his home country this year, having also lifted the Generali Open trophy in Kitzbühel without dropping a set in August.

“It’s been an unbelievable year for me in Austria, to win titles in Kitzbühel and now here in Vienna,” said Thiem. “I have had some troubles to deliver my best tennis in front of these amazing crowds in Kitzbühel and also here in Vienna and now, in the same year, I win both titles. It is completely unreal to me.”

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The World No. 5 becomes the first player to lift five tour-level trophies in 2019, breaking a five-way tie with fellow Top 5 stars Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal, Roger Federer and Daniil Medvedev. Thiem extends his unbeaten streak at the ATP 500-level to 10 matches, having also lifted the China Open title earlier this month.

In his 10th straight appearance at this ATP 500 event, Thiem becomes the first Austrian to claim the trophy since Jurgen Melzer defeated Andreas Haider-Maurer in an all-Austrian championship match in 2010. Thiem, a 16-time tour-level titlist, entered the week with an 8-8 tournament record, with his previous best results in Vienna coming en route to the 2013 and 2018 quarter-finals.

The Austrian owns five FedEx ATP Head2Head victories from seven matches against Schwartzman. The two-time Roland Garros runner-up also improves to 45-16 this year. This is the fourth straight season that Thiem has recorded 40 or more tour-level wins.

“Three times this week, I came from one set down,” said Thiem. “To share the court and final with a guy who became a very close friend in all these years is very nice in one way. To beat him in such an important match is hard in the other way… It has been a dream week.”

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Schwartzman made a quick start to his second ATP 500 final, breaking Thiem on three occasions to silence the home crowd and earn a one-set advantage after 43 minutes. The Argentine soaked up Thiem’s powerful groundstrokes from behind the baseline and fired low passing shots to the laces of his opponent with pinpoint accuracy. Thiem attempted to shorten points by rushing to the net and introduced drop shots to disrupt Schwartzman’s rhythm, but the World No. 15 transitioned up the court well to finish points.

After firing an ace out wide to save break point at 2-3 in the second set, Thiem soon forced a decider to bring the crowd inside the Wiener Stadthalle to its feet. The Austrian played with great variety on his backhand side and attacked Schwartzman’s forehand to gain the break at 4-4, before firing a powerful serve down the T to level the match.

Thiem rode the momentum into the deciding set, breaking serve in the opening game with a series of flat winners down the line. The Austrian maintained his advantage and broke his opponent for the fourth time with a forehand down the line to claim the title, before collapsing to the floor in celebration.

“I think he did really well and he didn’t miss anything,” said Thiem. “I really have troubles to play against him, because it doesn’t matter what I do. If I play fast or if I play slow, he always has an answer to everything… I was fighting and, of course, I had this huge advantage with the home crowd. I used it well at the end.”

Schwartzman was bidding to follow in the footsteps of 2012 champion Juan Martin del Potro, who is the only Argentine to triumph at this ATP 500 event. The Los Cabos champion will travel to the Rolex Paris Masters in 14th position in the ATP Race To London with 2,115 points. Schwartzman trails eighth-placed Berrettini by 545 points.

“I am very happy because I have got the confidence again,” said Schwartzman. “I felt very good on court. The support of the people was crazy. It was really nice and real for me. In another place, really far from home, I felt really nice. After the first set, he played so aggressive. He was better than me and that is why he won the title.”

Did You Know?
Among players who have contested 10 or more deciding sets this season, Thiem leads the ATP Tour with a 12-2 record. Thiem recovered from a set down on three occasions this week, also completing comeback wins against Fernando Verdasco and Matteo Berrettini.

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Federer Wins 10th Basel Title

  • Posted: Oct 27, 2019

Federer Wins 10th Basel Title

Swiss now 10-5 in Basel finals

Some things seem like they’ll never change on the ATP Tour. Roger Federer won his 10thSwiss Indoors Basel title on Sunday, entering double digits at a tournament for only the second time by racing past #NextGenATP Aussie Alex de Minaur 6-2, 6-2.

Federer, playing in front of a fervent home crowd, played attacking tennis against the speedy 20-year-old, who was going for his fourth title of the season (3-1). The 38-year-old broke four times, mixing up the pace and keeping De Minaur on the move from the back of the court.

“It was fast but very nice. I think I played a great match. It was a tough opener, in the beginning, the first five games, we had some great rallies. I never looked back,” Federer said. “I was great on the offence, made very few unforced errors and came up with the big shots and served well when I had to.

“I thought Alex played a great tournament as well, and I think we both can be very happy. But what a moment for me to win my 10th here in my hometown of Basel.”

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The Aussie targetted Federer’s backhand, but Federer combatted the strategy well, slicing balls to keep De Minaur guessing. The Swiss broke twice in the opening set, smashing an overhead for a 3-1 lead and taking advantage of a loose service game from De Minaur to close out the opening set. In the second, the home favourite ripped a forehand pass to break in the second game and place a stranglehold on momentum.

“He just puts you under pressure,” De Minaur said. “Any ball that isn’t a metre from the baseline for him is a short ball. That’s something I learned the hard way today. But I can’t wait until I’m able to step out and play him again.”

The Swiss now can count Basel alongside the NOVENTI OPEN in Halle as his most successful tournaments by titles won. Federer has won his home ATP 500 during his past five appearances. He improved to 75-9 at the tournament and has won 24 consecutive matches on centre court. “[I] couldn’t be more happy,” Federer said. “What a great tournament it’s been for me, always, but particularly the last few times I’ve been here.”

Roger Federer’s Most Titles By Tournament (All Tournament Records)

Tournament

Title

Halle

10

Basel

10

Wimbledon

8

Dubai

8

Cincinnati

7

Federer won his fourth title of the season, tied for second best on the Tour, and the 103rd of his career (103-54). He will receive 500 ATP Rankings points and €430,125 in prize money. 

De Minaur, who was going for the biggest title of his career, will get 300 ATP Rankings points and €216,025 in prize money. The Aussie is projected to crack the Top 20 of the ATP Rankings for the first time in his career on Monday. De Minaur is also set to make his second appearance at the Next Gen ATP Finals, to be held 5-9 November at the Allianz Cloud in Milan.

“I’m very happy… [It’s] been an incredible experience, one which I will learn a lot from,” De Minaur said. “I think it’s a lot of good work that I’ve put in, a lot of hard work with my team. I’m happy to see the results paying off.”

Most Tour-Level Titles In 2019

Dominic Thiem 5

Novak Djokovic

4

Roger Federer

4

Daniil Medvedev

4

Rafael Nadal

4

Alex de Minaur

3

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Ram/Salisbury Lift Vienna Title, Boost London Chances

  • Posted: Oct 27, 2019

Ram/Salisbury Lift Vienna Title, Boost London Chances

Fourth seeds claim second ATP Tour team trophy

Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury increased their chances of qualifying for the Nitto ATP Finals on Sunday, defeating Lukasz Kubot and Marcelo Melo 6-4, 6-7(5), 10-5 to lift the Erste Bank Open trophy.

The American-British pairing claimed its second ATP Tour title after one hour and 47 minutes, saving both break points they faced against the top seeds. Ram and Salisbury captured their maiden team trophy at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships in March.

The fourth seeds add to their ATP Doubles Race To London total after recording their 36th tour-level victory as a team this season. Ram and Salisbury currently occupy the final qualification position in the Race with 3,490 points, with nearest rivals Henri Kontinen and John Peers holding 3,000 points ahead of the Rolex Paris Masters.

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This is the second straight year that Salisbury has captured the Vienna crown. The 27-year-old won last year’s tournament alongside countryman Neal Skupski. Salisbury improves to 4-3 in ATP Tour finals. Ram adds a 19th trophy to his collection after his 34th tour-level championship match.

Kubot and Melo were attempting to collect the Vienna trophy for the third time as a team. The 2015 and 2016 champions, who have already qualified for The O2, own a 13-10 team record in tour-level finals.

Ram and Salisbury receive 500 ATP Doubles Ranking points and split €149,010 in prize money. Kubot and Melo gain 300 points and share €72,950.

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Osaka beats Kvitova in marathon WTA Finals opener

  • Posted: Oct 27, 2019

Naomi Osaka beat Petra Kvitova 7-6 (7-1) 4-6 6-4 in a gruelling opening match of the WTA Finals in Shenzhen, which lasted two hours 39 minutes.

Japan’s world number three Osaka won the first-set tie-break after Kvitova missed three break points at 4-4.

But the Czech, 29, fought back from a break down to take the second set and force a decider.

Kvitova made Osaka wait for her win, breaking the 22-year-old when she served for the match at 5-2.

“For me it was very difficult and usually there’s first-round first jitters and you can’t really afford it as she came hard at me from the beginning,” Osaka said.

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The WTA Finals event sees the world’s top eight players compete in two round-robin groups of four, with the winners and runners-up advancing to the semi-finals.

Kvitova, ranked sixth in the world, and Osaka are in the Red Group in Shenzhen with top-ranked Australian Ashleigh Barty and Belinda Benic of Switzerland, who play each other in the second game on Sunday.

Defending champion Elina Svitolina is in the Purple Group alongside world number two Karolina Pliskova, Simona Halep and Bianca Andreescu.

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Sabalenka beats Bertens to win WTA Elite Trophy

  • Posted: Oct 27, 2019

Aryna Sabalenka has secured her third title of the year with a straight-set win over Kiki Bertens in the WTA Elite Trophy final in Zhuhai.

The 21-year-old world number 14 from Belarus cruised to a 6-4 6-2 victory over the Dutch top seed to win the second-tier version of the season-ending WTA Finals.

All three of Sabalenka’s titles in 2019 have been won in China.

She also won the Wuhan Open in September and Shenzhen Open in January.

The WTA Finals, for the top-ranked players, begin on Sunday in Shenzhen. Sabalenka will be competing in doubles there, where she and Elise Mertens are the top-seeded pairing.

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Melo/Kubot Sprint Into Vienna Final

  • Posted: Oct 26, 2019

Melo/Kubot Sprint Into Vienna Final

Rojer/Tecau advance to Basel final on Saturday

Top seeds Lukasz Kubot/Marcelo Melo found themselves in familiar territory on Saturday at the Erste Bank Open, defeating third seeds Pierre-Hugues Herbert/Nicolas Mahut 6-4, 6-4 to reach their second final in Vienna.

The 2015 champions (d. Murray/Peers) haven’t dropped a set en route to their sixth ATP Tour doubles final of the season. They’ve won 16 of their past 19 matches, taking the title at the Winston-Salem Open (d. Monroe/Sandgren) and finishing runner-up at the Rolex Shanghai Masters (l. to Pavic/Soares) and China Open (l. to Dodig/Polasek). 

Kubot/Melo will play fourth seeds Rajeev Ram/Joe Salisbury in the championship match. Salisbury prevailed here last year with Neal Skupski (d. M. Bryan/Roger-Vasselin).

Despite the loss, Herbert/Mahut secured their team berth at the season-ending Nitto ATP Finals for the fifth successive year. The reigning Australian Open champions (d. Kontinen/Peers) qualified in accordance to the Grand Slam rule after Roland Garros champions Kevin Krawietz/Andreas Mies clinched their spot at The O2 in London from 10-17 November.

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Trailing by a set and 0-3, fourth seeds Jean-Julien Rojer/Horia Tecau fought back at the Swiss Indoors Basel to win their semi-final against Ivan Dodig/Filip Polasek 6-7(3), 7-6(3), 10-5. Rojer/Tecau are aiming for their second ATP Tour doubles title of the year after prevailing in May at the Mutua Madrid Open (d. Schwartzman/Thiem).

Awaiting them in the final are Taylor Fritz/Reilly Opelka, who continued their dream run with a 6-4, 6-4 victory over Santiago Gonzalez/Aisam-Ul-Haq Qureshi. They’re both seeking their maiden ATP Tour doubles crown and Opelka is appearing in his first tour-level doubles final.

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Federer On Basel Memories: 'At Heart, I'm Always Going To Be A Ball Boy'

  • Posted: Oct 26, 2019

Federer On Basel Memories: ‘At Heart, I’m Always Going To Be A Ball Boy’

Top seed is one win from title No. 10 in Basel

The Swiss Indoors Basel holds a special place in Roger Federer’s heart for plenty of reasons. It’s where he served as a ball boy for two years, played his first ATP Tour event and faced his first Top 10 opponent. More than 20 years after he first competed in St Jakobshalle Basel, the Swiss is still creating unforgettable memories.

Federer is one match away from his tenth title in Basel after defeating Stefanos Tsitsipas on Saturday, setting up a championship clash with another #NextGenATP player in Alex de Minaur. The top seed has made the final in 13 consecutive appearances at this event and 15 overall.

“I remember playing the qualifying here in 1997 and then my first [main draw] wild card here the next year, playing Andre Agassi,” Federer said. “Who would have thought that I’d go on to have this kind of career? I remember being heartbroken losing my first final here in five sets (to Thomas Enqvist in 2000), but now there’s been another 14 since. I’m just so pleased to have made it to the final again.”

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With a 74-9 record in Basel and 23 consecutive wins on centre court, it’s hard to blame Federer for enjoying it here. But it’s not just his track record of success that keeps him coming back each year. The love he receives from the fans in every match provides an extra boost of motivation at the end of a long season.

“Even if I’m up a set and a break, the [crowd is] not just there when I’m down in the score and feel like I need it,” Federer said. “They enjoy when I’m playing good tennis and it pushes me to play even better, keep on trying every point and try to make something happen. That’s what you do with a home court advantage.”

Federer’s childhood memories of this event remain some of his fondest. Video footage of him shaking hands on court with Michael Stich after the 1993 final resurfaced this week and quickly made the rounds on social media. The Swiss still has the medals he received during his time as a ball boy.

“I loved being a ball boy here,” Federer said to Tennis TV. “I was able to see the best players in the world firsthand and see how they would prepare, how they would sweat, how they deal with the pressure. They’re good moments for me.”

The positive impact that Federer’s time as a ball boy had on him is something that he tries to pay forward. It’s become an annual tradition for him to have pizza with the ball boys and ball girls in Basel at the end of the tournament, where they also present him with a medal.

“I guess it means I’m still a ball boy, too,” Federer said. “Because at heart, I’m always going to be a ball boy.”

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