Polish/Brazilian team to make second team appearance in London
Lukasz Kubot and Marcelo Melo have become the fourth doubles team to qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals, to be held at The O2 in London from 11-18 November. The Polish-Brazilian team secured their place as a result of advancing on Saturday to the Rolex Shanghai Masters final, which represented their sixth ATP World Tour Masters 1000 title match (3-2 record).
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Kubot and Melo have captured three ATP World Tour titles in 2018 on the hard courts of the Sydney International (d. Struff/Troicki) and the China Open in Beijing (d. Marach/Pavic), plus the Gerry Weber Open grass-court crown in Halle (d. Zverev/Zverev). Last month, the duo also finished runner-up at the US Open (l. to M. Bryan/Sock).
Melo has now qualified for the prestigious season finale for the sixth straight year (since 2013). Three years ago, the Brazilian advanced to the final in London with Ivan Dodig (l. to Bryans). Kubot has competed at The O2 in London in 2009-10, 2014 and 2017, when, together with Melo, they finished as the year-end No. 1 team and advanced to the championship match (l. to Kontinen/Peers).
Kubot, currently World No. 5, became No. 1 in the ATP Doubles Rankings for the first time on 8 January 2018 and has spent a total of 19 weeks at the summit of men’s professional tennis. Melo has also led the team game, on a total of four occasions for 56 weeks overall.
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British number one Johanna Konta could turn to one of Stan Wawrinka’s former coaches as she attempts to return to the top 10 in the world rankings.
BBC Sport understands the 27-year-old will work with Dimitri Zavialoff on a trial basis at this week’s Kremlin Cup.
The pair practised together at the National Tennis Centre in Roehampton this week, but the relationship appears to be at an early stage.
Konta recently parted company with American Michael Joyce.
That means she is searching for a third new coach in two years.
Konta, who reached a career-high ranking of fourth after her run to the Wimbledon semi-finals last year, has fallen to 45th in the world. She worked with Joyce for less than a year.
Zavialoff, a 43-year-old Frenchman, was three-time Grand Slam champion Wawrinka’s first coach, and worked with him for 17 years.
They started working together when the Swiss was eight, and he had reached the world’s top 10 when they went their separate ways in 2010.
Konta shares the same agent as Wawrinka, having decided to switch from Octagon to StarWing Sports – which also manages Britain’s top men’s player, Kyle Edmund.
Zavialoff has also enjoyed success with another Swiss player, Timea Bacsinszky.
Bacsinszky had taken a break from the sport, and was considering a career in hotel management, when they started working together in 2013.
She has since climbed into the top 10 in the rankings, reached two French Open semi-finals, and the Wimbledon quarter-finals of 2015.
Bacsinszky has recently had a succession of injuries, and the partnership came to an end in May.
Zavialoff is said to be quiet and studious – perhaps similar in personality to Esteban Carril, who in two and a half years helped Konta move from 150 in the world to inside the top 10.
If the trial in Moscow goes well, Konta will have the advantage of being able to prepare for 2019 with a new coach already by her side.
It’s fair to say Novak Djokovic is a much different player now than he was when he and Alexander Zverev first squared off in a battle of generations in the 2017 Internazionali BNL d’Italia final in Rome.
At the time, Djokovic was in the midst of change and frustration. He had split with his longtime team two weeks earlier, and the Serbian had celebrated only two titles in the past nine months.
View FedEx ATP Head2Head for the following match-ups at the Rolex Shanghai Masters and vote for the players you think will win! Federer v Coric | Djokovic v Zverev
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Look ahead 17 months, though, and the 31-time ATP World Tour Masters 1000 champion might be reaching a new peak. He has won 16 consecutive matches, dating back to his titles at the Western & Southern Open and US Open, and is into his third ATP World Tour Masters 1000 semi-final of the season (Cincinnati, Rome) at the Rolex Shanghai Masters.
“I wasn’t, I feel like, playing as well as I’m playing today,” Djokovic said. “I’m very grateful to play on a high level. I think that I’m very close to my best, and ‘best’ changes day to day. I can always strive to be the best I can be on that given day.”
But Zverev also hasn’t stood still since winning his first Masters 1000 title on clay against Djokovic. The German has won two more Masters 1000 titles, become a Top 5 staple on the ATP World Tour and, on Friday, secured his second consecutive trip to the season-ending Nitto ATP Finals, to be held 11-18 November at The O2 in London.
“I think every year you feel more mature. Ever year you spend on tour, you feel kind of different,” Zverev said. “Last year was the first time I kind of broke through to the Top 10 and was a Top 5 player. It’s always easier to get there, but then staying there is always the tougher part.
“[I’m] solidifying that I am a Top 5 player this year, and obviously with Novak coming back, winning two Grand Slams, and other players like Del Potro playing great again, it was a much tougher year, for sure, but I feel like I’m a better player. I feel like I’m still competing for the best and biggest tournaments.”
Djokovic compared their Saturday semi-final to his quarter-final on Thursday, when he dismissed 6’8” Kevin Anderson in straight sets.
“It’s going to be definitely a close match, I think, quite similar in style of the play to today’s match. Kevin is a big server, big hitter from the back of the court, really aggressive, tall. Sascha is similar to that,” Djokovic said.
“In these kind of conditions, everything happens so quickly, so I have to be alert and very focused from the very first point, try to get as many serves back in play as I have done today.”
If the Serbian beats Zverev, he will return to No. 2 in the ATP Rankings. But in Saturday’s other semi-final, Roger Federer will try to do all he can to stay No. 2.
Watch Federer Hit Backhand Winner On The Run Against Nishikori
Watch Federer Unleash Against Nishikori
The top-seeded Swiss will meet Croatian Borna Coric in a rematch of their BNP Paribas Open semi-final, which Federer won in three sets in Indian Wells. But Coric gained revenge in June, beating the 98-time tour-level titlist in the Gerry Weber Open final in Halle.
“Both matches were very, very close… [In Halle,] it was close all the way till the end. He was better on the big points. It was tough. He played really well, I thought,” Federer said.
“He’s good in defence. He has a transition game now too, and he’s got a solid serve. He’s had a good tournament here again. I have always played him when he’s playing well. I expect it to be tough. I hope I can take it to him and play up in the court and play aggressive.”
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The Swiss reached the semi-finals with his best match yet in Shanghai, a straight-sets win against Kei Nishikori. Federer was hitting aggressively all match, trying to take advantage of the quick Shanghai courts.
Beat Coric and Federer will have a chance to play for his third Shanghai crown on Sunday. Coric advanced to the semi-finals by beating Aussie Matthew Ebden to make his second Masters 1000 semi-final of the season. He’ll try to re-create his Halle magic and reach his first Masters 1000 final in Shanghai.
Swiss plays Coric Saturday for spot in Shanghai final
There aren’t many firsts left for Roger Federer at 37 years old. But the Swiss is going through a first this week at the Rolex Shanghai Masters, where the top seed has his family with him for the first time.
“I think this year is obviously very different to previous years here in Shanghai because the family is here. Mirka hasn’t been here for ten years. The kids obviously haven’t been here before,” Federer said. “From that standpoint, it’s like a completely different feel when I wake up in the morning that’s happening, whereas in the past I have woken up and gone, ‘Hello, anybody here?’ It’s just quiet. I don’t like that so much.”
What Federer does like is winning, and he’s done just that this week. While the World No. 2 was tested early, being pushed to three sets against both Daniil Medvedev and Roberto Bautista Agut, he broke the in-form Kei Nishikori — the US Open semi-finalist and last week’s Tokyo runner-up — three times on Friday en route to an impressive straight-sets victory.
“When you don’t play as much, you really enjoy the tournaments that you do play, because every single one of them is a top priority,” said Federer, who faces Borna Coric on Saturday for a spot in the final. “But I still feel I’m able to play good tennis very quickly, and [it is the] same again this week. That’s why I’m very relieved and happy that I have actually found a really nice level this week. So we’ll see if it’s going to continue tomorrow, but we have had a good time here in Shanghai.”
And, to be fair, Federer has always played well in Shanghai. Federer, who is pursuing his 99th tour-level triumph, is now 21-4 at the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event, earning the title in 2014 and 2017. But having the rest of his family has made the experience even that much more comfortable.
“It’s great to have the kiddies here. Hearing about their adventures here in Shanghai is super exciting. Personally, I have been very busy leading up to the event. And once the tournament gets going, it’s far out from the city, so there is a lot of driving going on but also playing and sleeping,” Federer said. “But, no, it’s definitely enjoyable to be on the Tour like this. It’s a lot of organisation and a lot of communication with my wife and the team, how we can make it work the best for the kids and for us as parents.”
“They are having a blast while I’m working,” Federer said. “It’s all good.”
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One excursion Federer missed out on was a trip to Disneyland on Wednesday. Who can miss out on that?
“I was scared to go,” said Federer, smiling. “I’m scared of the rides.”
Whether Federer was kidding or not, the Swiss is simply happy to be enjoying the proverbial ride of the tournament with his family by his side. And he hopes that will translate to lifting his 28th Masters 1000 trophy on Sunday.
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