Gael Monfils extended his run of form by reaching an ATP Tour semi-final for the second consecutive week on Friday with a 6-1, 6-2 victory over Damir Dzumhur of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 70 minutes at the ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament in Rotterdam.
“It was a good one,” said former World No. 6 Monfils. “I stuck to my game plan and I am satisfied how I executed. I prepared well in the off-season and I am starting to believe that I can get back to the top of the game.”
The Frenchman will next challenge fifth-seeded Russian Daniil Medvedev, the player he lost to in last week’s Sofia Open semi-finals, or Sunday’s Open Sud de France champion and 2017 Rotterdam titlist Jo-Wilfried Tsonga of France.
Dictating with his forehand, 2016 Rotterdam finalist Monfils upped the ante on Dzumhur’s serve in the fourth game of the first set, and the Frenchman earned a second break for a 5-1 lead when Dzumhur mis-timed a drop shot. Monfils wrapped up the 38-minute opener when Dzumhur struck a backhand volley wide.
A lapse in concentration, on a forehand volley, cost Dzumhur the first game of the second set, as Monfils ripped a forehand winner past him. Dzumhur’s level improved and a wild fourth game saw Monfils lose his advantage, but the World No. 33 immediately regrouped at 2-2 and went on to complete his seventh win in nine matches in 2019. Monfils also beat Dzumhur 6-0, 6-4, 6-0 in the Australian Open first round last month.
American Reilly Opelka keeps checking off the milestones to start 2019. Last month, he earned his first Grand Slam win, upsetting No. 10 John Isner in four sets at the Australian Open. On Thursday, Opelka advanced to his third ATP Tour quarter-final at the New York Open.
The 6’11” Opelka was leading Uzbekistan’s Denis Istomin 6-7(8), 7-6(6), 1-0 when the 32-year-old retired (leg). Opelka hit 32 aces and won 95 per cent of his first-serve points (56/59) in the abbreviated match.
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The 21-year-old will try to reach his second tour-level semi-final (Atlanta 2016) when he faces Spain’s Guillermo Garcia-Lopez, who beat Aussie John Millman 7-6(4), 1-6, 6-4 to reach his first ATP Tour quarter-final of the year.
The two other Americans in singles action had a mixed day at the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum on Long Island. Sixth seed Sam Querrey had no trouble with Moldova’s Radu Albot, winning 6-3, 6-4. The 2018 finalist landed almost 75 per cent of his first serves and never faced a break point.
Querrey will face Jason Jung of Chinese Taipei. The 29-year-old upset second seed Frances Tiafoe of the U.S. 6-3, 7-5. Jung, No. 143 in the ATP Rankings, rode an early break to a one-set lead. He stumbled while serving for the match at 5-4 in the second, but he broke back immediately.
“It’s been a long time coming. I’ve worked hard for a lot of years. It hasn’t been easy. I’m just so happy for this moment and have to try to enjoy this for a couple hours and then prepare for tomorrow,” Jung said.
Tiafoe, who received a late wild card, was fresh off his first Grand Slam quarter-final at the Australian Open (l. to Nadal). “I thought he played great tonight. He came after me, and I just didn’t have answers for him,” Tiafoe said.
In doubles, Americans Tennys Sandgren/Jackson Withrow upset Bob Bryan/Mike Bryan, the top seeds, 7-6(9), 6-4. The Bryans were playing in their second event of the year after making the quarter-finals in Melbourne.
Did You Know? In the semi-finals of the Boys’ 16s singles championships at the 2004 Easter Bowl, Querrey defeated Jung 6-1, 4-6, 6-4. “I remember it was three sets, and I had a really bad back. I guess I wasn’t doing my core exercises when I was 15, but it’ll be exciting tomorrow,” Jung said.
The Secret To Querrey Serving Up A Turnaround In 2019
Feb152019
In New York, the American seeks his first title since 2017 Los Cabos
This time last year, Sam Querrey was playing arguably the best tennis of his career. In the New York Open final, the American had a chance to not just lift his 11th ATP Tour title, but crack the Top 10 of the ATP Rankings for the first time. But Querrey lost to eventual Nitto ATP Finals qualifier Kevin Anderson in a final-set tie-break.
It was part of a theme for Querrey in 2018. The 6’6” right-hander lost 22 matches last season, and eight of them came in final-set tie-breaks. Seven of those eight defeats came in the Round of 16 or earlier in a tournament, meaning that he lost out on several opportunities for big runs.
“It makes a huge difference. Not that you’re going to win every one of those, but if all of a sudden I go 50-50 on those, that’s four more matches won, that’s 100-something more ATP Ranking points and you never know what’s on the other side of those,” Querrey said. “You can continue on with more wins, so it’s tough to swallow those. I think I was pretty passive in a lot of those matches, and that’s something that I really want to focus on in those matches this year if I get to those positions again.”
Querrey owns 20 victories against Top 10 opponents, so he has proven his ability to perform under pressure. But those triumphs have come when he has swung freely and let go of any apprehension in his game, competing ‘light’. That’s something he is trying to improve in 2019.
“Sometimes it’s easier said than done. But that’s definitely going to be my theme this year, and I’m not just doing it in those pressure situations late in a match,” Querrey said. “I’m trying to do it from point one, that way, when those situations come, it’s not like, ‘Oh, now all of a sudden I’m going to try to hit the ball big.’ If you start from the first point and do those things it won’t be awkward or jarring later in a match.”
Craig Boynton, Querrey’s coach, said: “In a nutshell, it’s commitment without hesitation and letting whatever happens, let it be. Let it be. If you hit a winner, if you miss by a little, if you miss by a lot, understand the situation. Understand what you’re trying to ultimately accomplish, commit, and move onto the next.
“For Sam that is the recipe for being light and creating momentum.”
Querrey fell to No. 57 last October, eight months on from being on the doorstep of the Top 10. It’s not the first time the 31-year-old has faced adversity. A moment that sticks out came in 2009, when Querrey fell through a glass coffee table in a freak accident and missed three months after undergoing emergency surgery in Bangkok to control bleeding in his arm. In a way, overcoming that was easier for Querrey than his winless streak in deciding-set tie-breaks last season, and less frustrating.
But, just as he put that accident behind him, he’s ready to do the same to his passive attitude in 2018.
“I feel like if I would have played more aggressively or whatever I would’ve done to win those matches, it could have changed my year a little bit ,” Querrey said. “Losing 7-6 in the third, I feel like you can tweak a couple things and really change the tide.”
Querrey, now No. 49, feels that he is far away from his best tennis. On Thursday at the New York Open, he comprehensively defeated a tough Radu Albot in 70 minutes to reach the quarter-finals.
“I know what I’m capable of because I’ve done these things before, I’ve beaten those top players. It is frustrating at times when my [ATP] Ranking dips or when I lose to people. You’re going to take bad losses every now and then, but it happens probably a little too much for me,” Querrey said. “But at the same time, at any given point I feel like I can run through a tournament, play well and have those big runs, so I try to look at it that way more than the other way.”
Querrey is yet to play a final-set tie-break this season, and he is 2-2 in tie-breaks overall. But he’s not worrying about what happened in 2018.
“I’m going to try to not forget about last year, but learn from it,” Querrey said. “If I do lose those matches, I want to lose them more on my terms and I think if I do that, it’ll be a little bit easier to swallow and I’ll be able to move forward in an easier way.”
Schwartzman Advances; Thiem Scores Perfect 10 In Buenos Aires
Feb152019
Ramos-Vinolas ousts Ferrer
That losing feeling at the Argentina Open? Dominic Thiem still doesn’t know it.
The top seed stayed perfect in Buenos Aires on Thursday, winning his 10th consecutive match at the Argentina Open 6-4, 6-4 against Germany’s Maximilian Marterer. Thiem has won two titles in the Argentine capital and will face six-time ATP Tour clay-court titlist Pablo Cuevas for a place in the semi-finals.
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The Uruguayan executed some perfection as well, winning all four break points against fifth seed Joao Sousa of Portugal to advance 6-4, 7-5. Thiem and Cuevas have faced off four times, including three on clay. Thiem won two of their three clay-court FedEx ATP Head2Head matchups.
On Thursday, the Austrian was playing his first match in nearly a month, since 17 January, when he retired against #NextGenATP Aussie Alexei Popyrin in the second round of the Australian Open. But the 25-year-old showed few signs of rust on the South American clay.
Thiem broke in the ninth game of the opener, and, although he stumbled in the second, losing his serve twice, he recovered in time to break again in the ninth game for the straight-sets win. Thiem improved to 2-0 against Marterer in their FedEx ATP Head2Head series. It’s only his second win of the young 2019 season.
This year will be the last time to see David Ferrer playing on the ATP Tour, and his time in Buenos Aires arrived at its end against countryman Albert Ramos-Vinolas, who saved two match points and advanced 3-6, 7-6(9), 6-3.
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Ferrer had match points at 6/7 and 8/9 in the second-set tie-break, but both were Ramos-Vinolas’ racquet, and he eventually escaped the 20-point tie-break. The 36-year-old Ferrer plans to retire at the Mutua Madrid Open in May.
Ramos-Vinolas will face home favourite Diego Schwartzman, who fought past Slovenia’s Aljaz Bedene 6-4, 2-6, 6-2 to book a quarter-final spot. Bedene saved all four break points in the second set, but Schwartzman found ways to break through in the decider, converting three of his four chances.
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