Johanna Konta vs Viktoria Kuzmova French Open 2019 Preview and Prediction
Previously winless at the French Open, Johanna Konta has a legitimate chance of making the quarter-finals at this year’s…
Previously winless at the French Open, Johanna Konta has a legitimate chance of making the quarter-finals at this year’s…
2019 French Open |
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Venue: Roland Garros, Paris Dates: 26 May-9 June |
Coverage: Live text and radio commentary on selected matches on the BBC Sport website and app. |
Second-seed Karolina Pliskova of the Czech Republic lost in straight sets to world number 31 Petra Martic in the third round of the French Open.
Pliskova, a semi-finalist in 2017, has failed to progress beyond round three in the last two years at Roland Garros.
The 27-year-old had been in good form, beating British number one Johanna Konta to win the Italian Open in Rome earlier this month.
She is the fourth women’s top-10 seed to exit the French Open this year.
Croatian Martic, who last reached the fourth round in 2012, will face two-time quarter-finalist Kaia Kanepi from Estonia or Russian world number 68 Veronika Kudermetova next.
Australian Open semi-finalist Pliskova was broken twice in the first set and three times in the second after she made 28 unforced errors and won only 33% of points on her second serve.
The world number two has yet to win a Grand Slam title but reached the US Open final in 2016.
Rafael Nadal continues his hunt for French Open No.12 on Friday, taking on his first seeded opponent of the tournament.…
Roger Federer will get to test himself against another of the game’s rising stars on Friday, taking on young Norwegian …
The headline match on the men’s side has to be the one between former French Open champion Stan Wawrinka and Grigor…
The highlight of the the women’s draw on Friday has to be the clash between Elina Svitolina and Garbine Muguruza. …
Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal look to continue their impressive Roland Garros runs in third-round action on Friday. Sixth seed Stefanos Tsitsipas seeks his 32nd tour-level win of the season and 2015 champion Stan Wawrinka faces Grigor Dimitrov in a blockbuster clash.
Third seed Federer takes on #NextGenATP Norwegian Casper Ruud, who is competing in the third round of a Grand Slam for the first time. Casper’s father, Christian Ruud, is a former Top 40 player who reached the third round here in 1995 and 1999. The Swiss star has yet to drop a set this tournament and holds a 67-16 record at the second major of the year. Ruud reached his first ATP Tour final this April in Houston (l. to Garin).
Eleven-time champion and second seed Nadal battles No. 27 seed David Goffin of Belgium. Nadal leads their FedEx ATP Head2Head rivalry 3-1 and hasn’t lost a set in their three meetings on clay. The Spaniard has lost just 13 games in his first two rounds this fortnight and is now on a seven-match winning streak on clay. Goffin also dropped 13 games in reaching the third round and is displaying the tennis that brought him to a career-high No. 7 in the ATP Rankings.
Tsitsipas returns to Philippe-Chatrier to face Filip Krajinovic. The Serbian had never won a match on the red clay of Paris prior to this year. Tsitsipas’ results this European clay swing include a stunning win over Nadal en route to a runner-up finish at the Mutua Madrid Open (l. to Djokovic), semi-final showing at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia and his third tour-level title at the Millennium Estoril Open (d. Cuevas).
Wawrinka and Dimitrov are even in their FedEx ATP Head2Head rivalry at 4-4, but the Swiss won their past two meetings in first-round clashes last year at Wimbledon and the US Open. Dimitrov defeated Marin Cilic in five sets on Wednesday for his first Top 15 win since April 2018. Wawrinka seeks his first fourth-round appearance at a major since finishing runner-up here in 2017 (l. to Nadal).
Other notable third-round matches on Friday include seventh seed Kei Nishikori of Japan taking on No. 31 seed Laslo Djere of Serbia and French wild card Nicolas Mahut looking to continue his run against Argentine Leonardo Mayer.
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ORDER OF PLAY – FRIDAY, 31 MAY 2019
Court Philippe-Chatrier start 11:00
Two WTA matches
[2] Rafael Nadal vs David Goffin
[6] Stefanos Tsitsipas vs Filip Krajinovic
Court Suzanne Lenglen start 11:00
WTA match
Martin Klizan vs [22] Lucas Pouille – To Finish 76(4) 26 63 31
[3] Roger Federer vs Casper Ruud
WTA match
[24] Stan Wawrinka vs Grigor Dimitrov
Court Simonne-Mathieu start 11:00
WTA match
Benoit Paire vs Pablo Carreno Busta
Nicolas Mahut vs Leonardo Mayer
WTA match
Court No. 1 start 11:00
Jeremy Chardy / Fabrice Martin vs Matwe Middelkoop / Tim Puetz
[31] Laslo Djere vs [7] Kei Nishikori
[WC] Gregoire Barrere / Quentin Halys vs Alex de Minaur / David Vega Hernandez
Court No. 14 start 11:00
Rajeev Ram / Joe Salisbury vs Enzo Couacaud / Tristan Lamasine
WTA match
[WC] Corentin Moutet vs Juan Ignacio Londero
Court No. 7 start 11:00
[8] Henri Kontinen / John Peers vs Marcelo Demoliner / Divij Sharan
WTA match – to finish
Guido Pella / Diego Schwartzman vs Matteo Berrettini / Lorenzo Sonego
[4] Oliver Marach / Mate Pavic vs Elliot Benchetrit / Geoffrey Blancaneaux
Dominic Inglot / Martin Klizan vs Leander Paes / Benoit Paire
Court No. 6 start 11:00
Dusan Lajovic / Janko Tipsarevic vs Denys Molchanov / Igor Zelenay
WTA match
[WC] Benjamin Bonzi / Antoine Hoang vs Rohan Bopanna / Marius Copil
Federico Delbonis / Guillermo Duran vs Miomir Kecmanovic / Casper Ruud
Court No. 9 start 11:00
Two WTA matches
Ricardas Berankis / Yoshihito Nishioka vs [10] Jean-Julien Rojer / Horia Tecau
Court No. 12 start 11:00
Pablo Cuevas / Feliciano Lopez vs Mikhail Kukushkin / Joran Vliegen
Antoine Hoang wants this week to continue for the rest of his life. The 23-year-old Frenchman is into the third round at Roland Garros, and will next meet one of the flag bearers of French men’s tennis for the past decade.
Here are five things to know about the 23-year-old Hoang:
1. He had one tour-level win before this week.
Hoang won his first ATP Challenger Tour title last October in Eckental and in February, he celebrated his maiden tour-level win at the Open Sud de France in Montpellier.
Hoang qualified for the ATP 250 event and beat Belgian Steve Darcis before losing to countryman Jeremy Chardy. The French wild card has doubled his career win total this week by making the third round in Paris.
“I could not explain. Good things happen to me this time,” Hoang said. “I’m a bit lucky sometimes. Today Fernando served for the third set. He did 40/0 on his game, and then the things turned to my side. I don’t know. I can’t explain everything. But I have nothing to lose here, so I try to enjoy every moment, to push every time.”
2. He has a university degree.
Hoang is all in on his tennis career, but he has a backup plan if things don’t go exactly to plan. He has a university degree in sports.
“My parents pushed me to study so that I could have a Plan B. I don’t know if it’s a good idea. But when one has a project, we should actually push it as far as possible at 20, 21, 22,” Hoang said.
“Now I’m giving myself 100 per cent to this project. I’m not thinking about teaching with my sports degree. Maybe I’m arriving on the Tour later than others, but I still have a lot of beautiful years ahead of me. I can evolve and progress. I do not regret what I have done so far.”
3. He is ambidextrious.
The way Hoang explains it, shoulder problems led him to decide to train with his left arm. “I made quite a lot of progress,” he said.
But once he fully recovered from his injury and wanted to again play his best, he switched back to using his right hand.
“I started playing tennis when I was a kid with my right hand, so I was playing forehand and backhand normally, but I already had a good backhand,” Hoang said. “Then when I got hurt, as I said, I learned to play with my left hand, doing the forehand and maybe the left-handed backhand.”
4. He works with a mental coach.
Perhaps Hoang has had the best week of his life because, mentally, what he needs to do on the court is clearer than ever. He worked with a mental coach before Roland Garros.
“The aim was to stay focused on my objectives, to encourage myself from the beginning to the end, even if there are mistakes, even if the match is not perfect,” Hoang said.
“I’ve been working on this on a daily basis, how to keep a positive mindset. I like to have attacking shots, so sometimes I make mistakes and it’s hard to follow this mentally because you may wonder, ‘Why are you making such mistakes?’ And this is actually what I think about myself, too. I try to be stable and composed, mentally speaking.”
The self-proclaimed introvert has stayed mentally composed despite rarely encouraging himself out loud. Hoang said showing emotions on court isn’t easy for him, but he’s working on it.
“The mental fight is important and sharing emotions with the crowd is important. I’m making efforts to do so. I’m trying to encourage myself when I tend not to. It’s very important,” he said.
Read More: Mahut Describes His Best Victory In Paris
5. He next plays the face of men’s tennis in France.
Hoang will want to play as fearless as possible when he meets Gael Monfils, surely at Court Philippe Chatrier, the main show court, or Court Suzanne Lenglen, the second biggest court at Roland Garros.
Monfils made the third round for the 11th time by dismissing countryman Adrian Mannarino 6-3, 6-4, 6-4. The 32-year-old has yet to drop a set in Paris.
“I know Gael from watching him on TV. I really enjoyed watching him, whether in Davis Cup or in other international tournaments,” Hoang said. “He’s a very nice person, so I guess the atmosphere of the match will be good. We’re not going to fight each other in that way. But the public will be behind both of us and will support a good game, so I believe we will both get support from the public.”
About playing on a bigger court, Hoang said, “All these things I’m not used to going through. It’s a first for me, and I feel that these things I wanted to go through, I didn’t want to be afraid.”
2019 French Open |
---|
Venue: Roland Garros, Paris Dates: 26 May-9 June |
Coverage: Live text and radio commentary on selected matches on the BBC Sport website and app. |
Defending champion Simona Halep made it through to the French Open third round, where she joined three-time winner Serena Williams.
World number three Halep overcame illness to beat Poland’s Magda Linette 6-4 5-7 6-3 in two hours 11 minutes.
“I didn’t feel that great. Tomorrow I will sleep all day because I am a bit sick,” said Halep.
Earlier, 23-time Grand Slam champion Williams beat Japanese qualifier Kurumi Nara 6-3 6-2.
Halep showed her intentions from the off, breaking her Polish opponent’s serve in the very first game with a stunning forehand winner.
Linette, 27, soon broke back to level the set at 2-2, before immediately losing on her own serve as Halep went on to hold for a 4-2 lead.
The next two games went against serve before Linette held and Halep secured the opening set in 49 minutes.
In the second set, Halep broke Linette’s second service game and looked set to serve out the match when she found herself 40-30 ahead at 5-4 up.
But stunning play from Linette, particularly on the forehand, frustrated Halep as the world number 87 defied her ranking to break back before winning the set.
Halep controlled the deciding set from the start, though, breaking Linette’s serve on three occasions as she went 5-1 up.
But unforced errors started to creep into her game as Linette mounted a comeback – Halep eventually wrapping up the set and match on a break.
She will next play Aleksandra Krunic or Lesia Tsurenko, whose match was suspended at 6-6 in the third set as darkness fell.
Meanwhile, there will be no French woman in the Roland Garros third round for the first time since 1986 after Caroline Garcia was knocked out.
Garcia, seeded 24th, was beaten by Russian qualifier Anna Blinkova 1-6 6-4 6-4.
Williams, 37, needed just one hour seven minutes to prevail over Japan’s Nara. The first set remained on serve for the first seven games, with world number 238 Nara proving a decent match for her opponent in the opening exchanges.
But Williams eventually broke 27-year-old Nara’s serve to move 5-3 ahead before serving out the set.
She dominated the second set, breaking Nara’s serve twice before serving out the match with an ace, having not dropped a point in the final game.
“I’m very serious when I play, but I’m happy,” said Williams.
“I have had a tough year since I twisted my ankle in Australia.
“It’s just been really tough after that. So everything definitely feels a little bit harder than normal, but at the same time, I know that it’s going to get better.”
On facing fellow American Sofia Kenin next, Williams said: “I know her game really well. She had a really great run in Australia, and I have been watching her.
“I think it will be a good match. She has a lot to bring to the table.”
Elsewhere, fellow American Amanda Anisimova reached the third round after beating 11th seed Aryna Sabalenka 6-4 6-2.
She will next play Romania’s Irina-Camelia Begu, who defeated Karolina Muchova of the Czech Republic 1-6 6-3 6-4.
At 17, Anisimova is the youngest American to reach the third round at Roland Garros since Williams in 1999.
“She’s done so much for the sport,” world number 51 Anisimova said of Williams.
“She’s a huge inspiration to me. I really look up to her. That’s just great to be achieving stuff similar to her.
“Actually when I had a tough loss at the Miami Open – it was a really long match and I was super upset in the locker room – Serena actually came up to me and we shared a little bit of a chat.
“That was really nice of her, and I’ll remember it forever.”
Williams said: “I just needed to do that, and I know she’s super young. I really love all the new young players.
“It’s just so exciting. I feel like tennis has done so much for me, and to see a new generation come through is great.”
Meanwhile, Poland’s junior Wimbledon champion Iga Swiatek, also 17,knocked out 16th seed Wang Qiang of China 6-3 6-0 in under an hour.
Swiatek will play Puerto Rico’s Monica Puig after the Olympic champion beat Russian 21st seed Daria Kasatkina 6-3 6-1.
Playing together, the Bryan brothers have a perfect record in first-round action at Roland Garros – “20 for 20,” quipped Bob Bryan following their win Tuesday. But last year in Paris, Mike Bryan bowed out in his opening match when he teamed up with fellow American Sam Querrey in a loss to Ken Skupski and Neal Skupski.
Back alongside his brother this year, Mike avenged that defeat. The seventh-seeded Bryans beat the Skupskis 7-5, 7-6(6) on Thursday to advance to the third round at the clay-court major. They also won the clash of brothers earlier this year in the final of the Delray Beach Open by VITACOST.com, the Americans’ first title since Bob’s return from hip surgery.
Top seeds Lukasz Kubot and Marcelo Melo came from behind to defeat Marcus Daniell and Wesley Koolhof 4-6, 6-2, 6-4, matching their team’s best run at Roland Garros, a Round of 16 finish last year (l. to Bopanna/Roger-Vasselin). Also in second-round action, Robin Haase and Frederik Nielsen rallied for a 2-6, 6-2, 6-3 win over Brits Daniel Evans and Cameron Norrie.
Frenchman Nicolas Mahut, who won the title last year with Pierre-Hugues Herbert, joined forces with Austrian Jurgen Melzer for a 6-2, 6-2 win over Italians Marco Cecchinato and Andreas Seppi in the first round. Mahut completed the career Grand Slam earlier this year when he and Herbert claimed the Australian Open title.