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Johanna Konta: British number one hopes to be 'better equipped'

  • Posted: Dec 24, 2018

British number one Johanna Konta hopes she will be “better equipped to deal with challenges on court” after linking up with new coach Dimitri Zavialoff.

Konta hired Zavialoff on a permanent basis after reaching the Kremlin Cup semi-finals in October while working with him on a trial.

She says they have had a “very strong pre-season” which leaves her positive about her chances in 2019.

“He is teaching me to be quite self-sufficient on court,” said Konta, 27.

“It is much more of a partnership than I have had in previous coaching relationships.”

Konta, who parted company with American coach Michael Joyce in October, reached a career-high ranking of fourth in 2017 but goes into the new year 37th.

“I think last season I didn’t have many quarter-final or semi-final opportunities so getting to the end of a tournament was definitely a good feeling to have in the last tournament of the year,” she said.

“We’ve been in this place many times, and it doesn’t always guarantee that it kicks off well, but I definitely feel I’ve had a very strong pre-season so that has given me a good chance to have a good overall 2019.”

Frenchman Zavialoff was Stan Wawrinka’s first coach, and also helped Timea Bacsinszky break into the world’s top 10.

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How Rafa Outdid The Top 10 In 2018

  • Posted: Dec 23, 2018

How Rafa Outdid The Top 10 In 2018

Best of 2018 Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers: Part 1

Finishing a season inside the Top 10 of the ATP Rankings is an outstanding achievement. To get there, players must distinguish themselves in various facets of the sport.

Thanks to Infosys ATP Scores & Stats, ATPTour.com can show you how the Top 10 players compare to one another in many key statistical categories in both serve and return games. In 2018, Rafael Nadal led the Top 10 in six of nine key serve and return categories, helping him finish inside the Top 2 of the year-end ATP Rankings for the 10th time.

All statistics are based off of Infosys ATP Scores & Stats’ Individual Match Stats Leaderboard, which includes players who competed in a minimum of 40 tour-level main draw matches in 2018.

Return Games Won
Juan Martin Del Potro’s return to the Top 5 was aided by improved performance in his return games, as the Argentine won his highest percentage of those games since 2011 (in years he has played 40+ matches).

 Player  Winning %  Leaderboard Pos Player Winning %  Pos
 Rafael Nadal  36.6%  1  Dominic Thiem  24.4%  17
 Novak Djokovic  30.3%  3  Roger Federer  23.9%   19
 Alexander Zverev  27.6%  7  Marin Cilic  22.8%  26
 Juan Martin del Potro  25.2%  14  Kevin Anderson  16.0%  47
 Kei Nishikori  24.5%  16  John Isner  9.4%  49

First-Serve Return Points Won
Alexander Zverev improved tremendously on his first-serve return this season, bumping his winning percentage up four points. If the German won 28.4 per cent of his first-serve return points in 2018, he would have finished 27th on the ATP Tour and eighth among Top 10 players.

 Player  Winning %  Leaderboard Pos Player Winning %  Pos
 Rafael Nadal  35.7%  1  Juan Martin del Potro  30.5%  17
 Novak Djokovic  34.4%  2  Marin Cilic  29.9%   19
 Alexander Zverev  32.4%  4  Kei Nishikori  29.6%  21
 Roger Federer  32.1%  6  Kevin Anderson  26.6%  41
 Dominic Thiem  31.3%  11  John Isner  22.8%  49

Second-Serve Return Points Won
Perhaps unsurprisingly, Nadal and Djokovic finished inside the Top 3 in three of the four major return categories in 2018. That showed in their year-end ATP Ranking, with Djokovic returning to World No. 1 and Nadal finishing at No. 2.

 Player  Winning %  Leaderboard Pos Player Winning %  Pos
 Rafael Nadal  56.6%  1  Dominic Thiem  51.5%  17
 Novak Djokovic  54.5%  3  Marin Cilic  50.5%   23
 Juan Martin del Potro  52.8%  10  Roger Federer  48.3%  38
 Alexander Zverev  52.3%  12  Kevin Anderson  44.9%  48 
 Kei Nishikori  52.1%  13  John Isner  41.3%  49

Break Points Converted
This was the Top 10’s worst category of the bunch in 2018. On average, they finished 27th in break points converted. 

 Player  Winning %  Leaderboard Pos Player Winning %  Pos
 Rafael Nadal  45.6%  3  Dominic Thiem  39.3%  29
 Kei Nishikori  42.6%  11  Juan Martin del Potro  39.0%   31
 Alexander Zverev  42.1%  12  Marin Cilic  36.0%  43
 Roger Federer  41.9%  14  Kevin Anderson  35.4%  46
 Novak Djokovic  39.9%  27  John Isner  27.6%  49

Break Points Saved
Nadal was especially strong when facing break point in 2018. Entering the year, his career winning percentage saving break points was 66.3 per cent. 

 Player  Winning %  Leaderboard Pos Player Winning %  Pos
 Rafael Nadal  70.5%  2  Novak Djokovic  64.8%%  12
 John Isner  68.9%  3  Kevin Anderson  64.3%%   13
 Roger Federer  68.4%  4  Kei Nishikori  62.9%%  21
 Marin Cilic  65.4%  8  Juan Martin del Potro  62.6%  22
 Dominic Thiem  65.3%  11  Alexander Zverev  58.0%  44

Service Games Won
It’s no surprise that John Isner led the pack in service games won, claiming 93.6 per cent of those games. The American was broken just 55 times in 54 matches in 2018.

 Player  Winning %  Leaderboard Pos Player Winning %  Pos
 John Isner  93.6%  1st  Marin Cilic  87.0%  7th
 Roger Federer  91.1%  2nd  Rafael Nadal  86.4%   8th
 Kevin Anderson  89.1%  4th  Dominic Thiem  85.2%  12th
 Juan Martin del Potro  87.6%  5th  Alexander Zverev  83.0%  16th
 Novak Djokovic  87.2%  6th  Kei Nishikori  81.4%  23rd

Aces
Isner surpassed 1,000 aces for the sixth time in his career, leading the ATP Tour in the category for a record-tying sixth time.

 Player  Aces  Leaderboard Pos  Player  Aces  Pos
 John Isner  1,213  1  Roger Federer  534  11
 Kevin Anderson  1,082  2  Dominic Thiem  514  12
 Marin Cilic  592  8  Novak Djokovic  342  33
 Juan Martin del Potro  555  9  Kei Nishikori  229  57
 Alexander Zverev  549  10  Rafael Nadal  122  93

*does not abide by the 40-match rule

First-Serve Points Won
Roger Federer’s 80.2 per cent winning rate on first-serve points was the best mark of his career. Former World No. 3 Milos Raonic, while not inside the Top 10 in the ATP Rankings, topped this category in 2018.

 Player  Winning %  Leaderboard Pos Player Winning %  Pos
 John Isner  80.9%  2  Dominic Thiem  76.1%  9
 Roger Federer  80.2%  3  Alexander Zverev  74.4%   17
 Kevin Anderson  79.4%  4  Novak Djokovic  74.3%  18
 Marin Cilic  79.0%  5  Rafael Nadal  71.7%  31
 Juan Martin del Potro  76.9%  6  Kei Nishikori  71.5%  32

Second-Serve Points Won
Nadal wins more second-serve points on the ATP Tour than anyone else for the second consecutive year. Djokovic topped the list in 2015-16.

 Player  Winning %  Leaderboard Pos Player Winning %  Pos
 Rafael Nadal  59.6%  1  Kevin Anderson  54.3%  11
 Roger Federer  58.6%  2  Marin Cilic  53.7%   14
 John Isner  56.8%  4  Juan Martin del Potro  53.1%  16
 Novak Djokovic  56.6%  5  Dominic Thiem  52.7%  21
 Kei Nishikori  54.9%  7  Alexander Zverev  52.4%  26 

View the rest of ATPTour.com’s 2018 In Review series.

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Read & Watch: De Minaur Working To Back Up Breakthrough

  • Posted: Dec 22, 2018

Read & Watch: De Minaur Working To Back Up Breakthrough

Teen spent training block with fellow Aussies under tutelage of Hewitt and Roche

Alex de Minaur finished 2018 in a very different position than he started it in. The teenage Australian arrived in Brisbane this year at No. 208 in the ATP Rankings, needing a wild card to get into the main draw of the ATP Tour 250 event.

But that is where De Minaur’s dream season began, reaching the semi-finals. Then it was his first tour-level championship-match appearance in Sydney. The #NextGenATP star had won just two tour-level matches before the year, but he’d earn 28 victories in 2018. And now, after qualifying for the Next Gen ATP Finals in Milan, where he advanced to the final, the World No. 31 is hungry for more.

De Minaur spent a week in early December training under the tutelage of former World No. 1 Lleyton Hewitt and legendary coach Tony Roche — who has worked with Ivan Lendl, Patrick Rafter, Roger Federer and Hewitt — with other Australian players, including John Millman, Marc Polmans and Alex Bolt.

“There are a couple areas in his game he’s got to keep working on and obviously fitness-wise this has been a good year because the past two years he’s had to sort of set himself up for the Australian Open Wild Card Play-off [in early December],” Hewitt said. “You don’t have that many opportunities throughout a year to come together and do a training block and we see this as a massive opportunity to set the tone for the following year, for 2019, and hopefully the guys can see the intensity and the effort.”

De Minaur is known for his speed on the court. And while some players take time to build up their conditioning as they get used to the rigours of the ATP Tour, the Aussie has proven he is fit to compete with some of the best players in the world.

But that hasn’t stopped him from pushing to improve. More than 160,000 people have watched an Instagram video of De Minaur diving to the bottom of a pool, picking up a weight and swimming along the bottom of the pool with it all the way to the other side without taking a breath. It’s safe to say the 19-year-old has an impressive lung capacity.

And while it’s clear De Minaur is working hard, his brother, Dominic de Minaur, says that his sibling’s toughness on court is just part of who he is as a person.

“What you see is what you get with Alex. He’s an incredible young man, he tries his heart out and every time he goes out on the court I know that he’s going to leave it all out there,” De Minaur said. “The way he holds himself and the way he tries on the court, it’s just amazing to watch.”

De Minaur still has two more years as a #NextGenATP player. But he has already earned the respect of his fellow players. Twenty-nine-year-old compatriot Millman, who himself had a breakthrough year in 2018 — reaching a career-high World No. 33 in June — first met De Minaur two years ago during a Davis Cup tie, and he immediately took notice.

“He really impressed me back then. He was a little bit younger then, a little bit more raw. But the way he comes out on court, the enthusiasm he shows, the energy he brings, I think it’s really special. And what he did this year, I thought was incredible,” Millman said. “To come from in the 200s to sit at around 30 at his age, the sky’s the limit for him.”

Watch A Day In De Minaur’s Life:

Now, as the off-season winds down, De Minaur will return to where his breakthrough started, in Brisbane and then Sydney. But this time, all eyes will be on him.

“There’s a lot of media attention around him and playing in those Brisbane and Sydney events leading into the Australia Open, the biggest thing as it gets closer is he needs to embrace it,” Hewitt said. “He’s 19 years old. This is what you want to do. This is a great opportunity to play in some of the biggest events in your home country. He can be playing a lot of those matches on Centre Court with a full crowd behind him, and it’s about embracing it.”

De Minaur is not worried about the hype, and the pressure that comes with his 2018 breakthrough. The 19-year-old is simply focused on taking what he learned and applying it as best he can to continue his climb.

“I have a great team of guys around me that help keep me grounded and focused on the important things in life,” De Minaur said. “I’ve just got to keep doing what I’m doing.”

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Fritz & Rublev Lead Class Of 2018 #NextGenATP Graduates

  • Posted: Dec 22, 2018

Fritz & Rublev Lead Class Of 2018 #NextGenATP Graduates

Four #NextGenATP Class of 2017 members now in Top 25

It’s no secret that the #NextGenATP Class of 2017 took the ATP Tour by storm in 2018. In fact, four players who competed at the inaugural Next Gen ATP Finals in Milan finished this season inside the Top 25 of the ATP Rankings.

Karen Khachanov (No. 11), Borna Coric (No. 12), Daniil Medvedev (No. 16) and Hyeon Chung (No. 25) climbed a combined 152 spots in the Rankings in 2018 and won a total of seven ATP Tour titles. So who might make a jump like that from the #NextGenATP Class of 2018?

Taylor Fritz (World No. 49)
Fritz cracked the Top 50 of the ATP Rankings for the first time this October, but he is not a new face in the tennis world. In February 2016, in just his third tour-level event, Fritz became the youngest American to reach a championship match on the ATP Tour since Michael Chang in 1988. John Isner was the quickest American to reach his maiden final, doing so at his second tour-level event, at Washington, D.C., in 2007.

While Fritz holds just a 1-7 record against opponents inside the world’s Top 10, the American has proven he is capable of competing against the very best in the sport. Fritz has not lost in straight sets against anyone inside the Top 10 in his past six clashes against the elite group, pushing Roger Federer to three sets on grass as an 18-year-old, and extending this year’s Nitto ATP Finals champion, Alexander Zverev, to five sets at Wimbledon just six months ago.

Andrey Rublev (World No. 68)
It’s been clear for the past two years that Rublev is one of the biggest hitters from the baseline on the ATP Tour. But there’s no reason to believe the 2017 Plava Laguna Croatia Open Umag champion cannot continue improving.

Rublev climbed as high as No. 31 in the ATP Rankings earlier this year after reaching the final of the Qatar ExxonMobil Open in Doha. But a lower back injury kept the Russian out for three months, and he was forced to spend the end of the year rounding back into form. Rublev found a good level again in November, finishing in third at the Next Gen ATP Finals. And now that he’s healthy, Rublev can ride that momentum into a strong 2019.

Jaume Munar (World No. 81)
The Spaniard, who is mentored by World No. 2 Rafael Nadal — training at his academy in Mallorca — began 2018 just inside the Top 200 of the ATP Rankings. But he took a major step forward this year, reaching the semi-finals at the Generali Open in Kitzbuhel and making the last four of the Next Gen ATP Finals in Milan.

But perhaps the most revealing victory of his season was in the first round at Roland Garros, where Munar overcame a two-set deficit to beat his idol and clay-court legend David Ferrer. That win showed the world that Munar is not afraid of the big stage, and with plenty of experience gained this year — the 21-year-old earned 10 of his 11 tour-level match wins in 2018 — he can take another step forward in 2019.

Hubert Hurkacz (World No. 87)
The Polish No. 1 might not have been on many people’s radar when he began 2018 as the World No. 238. But Hurkacz had a breakthrough season, going 28-12 on the ATP Challenger Tour and winning his first two titles at that level. He also qualified for the Next Gen ATP Finals, and earned seven of his eight tour-level wins this season.

For those who have not seen Hurkacz play, his game is reminiscent of a young Tomas Berdych. Hurkacz, like Berdych, is 6’5”; he gains control of points with his serve and has relatively flat groundstrokes from the baseline. As the Pole grows older and adds muscle, he will be able to dominate rallies against plenty of players on the ATP Tour.

Reilly Opelka (World No. 100)
Few #NextGenATP Class of 2018 graduates will carry as much momentum into 2019 as Opelka, who won back-to-back ATP Challenger Tour events in Knoxville, Tennessee and Champaign, Illinois to wrap up his 2018 season. Those victories helped the American crack the Top 100 of the ATP Rankings for the first time.

Opelka ranked second on the ATP Challenger Tour this year with a 75.6 winning percentage (34-11), reaching nine semi-finals at that level. Opelka also earned his first win against a Top 10 opponent, beating Jack Sock en route to the quarter-finals of the Delray Beach Open by VITACOST.com. The 2016 Atlanta semi-finalist will look to become a mainstay on the ATP Tour next year.

 

Catch up on the rest of ATPTour.com’s 2018 In Review series.

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Australian Open: Final-set tie-breaks to be used in 2019

  • Posted: Dec 21, 2018

Tie-breaks will be played in the final set at the Australian Open for the first time in January, after organisers decided to move away from the existing practice of advantage final sets.

If the match reaches 6-6 in the final set, the winner will be the first player to reach 10 points.

Organisers made the decision following the “most extensive consultation in the tournament’s history”.

Wimbledon announced in October it would use final-set tie-breaks next year.

That change came after the final set of Kevin Anderson’s semi-final with John Isner this year lasted almost three hours.

Afterwards South African Anderson, who eventually won the set 26-24, called for a rethink of the format.

“We believe this is the best possible outcome for both the players and the fans around the world,” said Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley.

Current players, ex-players, commentators, agents and TV analysts were all consulted.

Tiley added: “We went with a 10-point tie-break at six-games-all in the final set to ensure the fans still get a special finale to these often epic contests, with the longer tie-break still then allowing for that one final twist or change of momentum in the contest.

“This longer tie-break also can lessen some of the serving dominance that can prevail in the shorter tie-break.”

The new rule will apply to qualifying, men’s and women’s singles, doubles, mixed doubles, junior singles and doubles, wheelchair singles and doubles and quads.

The first four sets for men and two sets for women will have a normal tie-break, with players winning by two clear points.

The US Open was the first grand slam to introduce final-set tie-breaks, with a first-to-seven-points game played at 6-6.

Wimbledon’s is first to seven points at 12-12, while the French Open is the only slam to have a long deciding set.

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