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Pan Pacific Open: Johanna Konta beats Gabriela Dabrowski to reach round of 16

  • Posted: Sep 18, 2018

Britain’s Johanna Konta registered a straight-set win over Gabriela Dabrowski to reach the round of 16 at the Pan Pacific Open in Tokyo.

Konta, ranked 43rd in the world, beat the Canadian qualifier 6-2 6-0.

The British number one did not face a break point in the match and won 10 games in a row as she closed out the victory in 65 minutes.

She will play either 2017 US Open champion Sloane Stephens or Croatia’s Donna Vekic next.

Dabrowski, a doubles specialist ranked 541st in singles, started well but was broken in the sixth game of the first set.

Konta hit 17 winners in the opening set and dropped just four points on serve in the second.

Earlier, Australian seventh seed Ashleigh Barty beat America’s Coco Vandeweghe, nine days after the two won the US Open women’s doubles title together.

Barty won 4-6 6-3 7-5 and will face either former world number one Victoria Azarenka or Kurumi Nara in the round of 16.

  • Live scores, schedule and results
  • GB ‘strong candidate’ for Davis Cup wildcard

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'The Colonel' Mikhail Youzhny Set For A Final Salute In St. Petersburg

  • Posted: Sep 17, 2018

‘The Colonel’ Mikhail Youzhny Set For A Final Salute In St. Petersburg

The Russian finished 13 straight seasons in the Top 50 of the ATP Rankings

Mikhail Youzhny’s career might not be defined by a single shot. The Russian never had a forehand like Juan Martin del Potro’s in his repertoire, and his one-handed backhand was never as devastating as Stan Wawrinka’s. But if nothing else, the Russian became synonymous with his victory salute, placing his racquet on his head after winning a match in tribute to his late father.

And in a way, that’s fitting. The 36-year-old, nicnkamed ‘The Colonel’, has been a soldier on the ATP World Tour for nearly two decades, cementing his status as a consummate professional years ago, and flourishing in an era featuring some of the best players in tennis history. Youzhny will hang up his racquets after competing at this week’s St. Petersburg Open, completing a workmanlike career that saw him climb as high as No. 8 in the ATP Rankings.

“I can say I had a great career. I never thought I could play until 2018 and I can play at a high level,” Youzhny told ATPWorldTour.com. “I was one of the youngest guys from my age who went into the Top 100 and from all the times, I was at a high level. All the time I can say I was a professional, that’s why I maybe stayed later in the tennis career.”

Youzhny never stopped looking for ways to win. Whether it was on the court with his fighting spirit, or off of it, working as hard as possible day-in and day-out.

Typically, he’d spend his offseason in Thailand. But prior to the 2018 campaign, he spent four weeks in Marbella, Spain with his physio and doctor before returning to Moscow, where he resides.

“I didn’t have good results, I didn’t have too many wins, but I still practised, I still felt I can play, I can maybe have good results. But after Roland Garros, after Antalya, after Wimbledon, it was too many close matches for me that I lost, five sets, four sets, three sets with a close tie-break,” Youzhny said. “Even during the matches I could not play consistently really good and for me it was a little tough, too much up and down and it was tough for me to recover and for me I need recovery to be 100 per cent ready for the next match. This is one side. The second side, I think in my head about my kids, family, everything. I don’t want my kids now to live my life. I think now it’s time for me to live my kids’ life.”

Most Match Wins In History By A Russian

 Player  Record
 1. Yevgeny Kafelnikov  609-306
 2. Mikhail Youzhny  498-415
 3. Nikolay Davydenko  482-329
 4. Marat Safin  422-267
 5. Andrei Chesnokov  344-259

It will be a well-earned change for Youzhny. The 36-year-old has tallied 31 Top 10 wins in his career, lifted 10 titles from 21 tour-level finals and finished inside the Top 50 of the year-end ATP Rankings in 13 consecutive years from 2002 to 2014. While the Russian, who reached the US Open semi-finals twice, has not quite found the best of results this season (6-17), he still remains two wins shy of becoming the 10th active player and 46th in history to record 500 tour-level match wins.

Perhaps the match he will be remembered for was the live fifth rubber in the 2002 Davis Cup final, when Youzhny came from two sets down to stun Paul-Henri Mathieu and clinch the title for Russia. It was very much a soldier-like effort, battling in enemy territory under the most pressure possible at just 20 years old. Former Russian president Boris Yeltsin even swarmed him after the triumph. It was the perfect precursor to the career Youzhny would create.

Youzhny Yeltsin

And if his efforts on the court don’t show enough about his character, just look at how he treated Evgeny Donskoy, a compatriot, but also a competitor. Donskoy began traveling with Youzhny and coach Boris Sobkin toward the end of 2014 after stopping his work with former World No. 1 Marat Safin. Outside of splitting travel expenses for Sobkin, Youzhny would not take any money from his countryman.

“When I got to the Top 100, I said to him, ‘Man look I cannot feel like this, I can pay already, something to Boris at least,’” Donskoy said. “He was always writing to me… when a year ago I was losing at the Australian Open, I had some problems with my family, bad moments with my family, he was always with me and always was writing to me like, ‘If you need anything, I can help you. I know that you are now a little bit down with confidence.’ After that I beat Federer two weeks after.”

And he’s not the only one who feels that way. That sentiment stretches beyond the Russian contingent on the ATP World Tour, and to a younger generation, as well.

“Incredible person, first of all. Him, his coach Boris as well, have been some of the kindest people to me since I broke out on tour,” said former World No. 3 Milos Raonic. “He’s always around, he always finds opportunities, creates opportunities for himself, plays well and he’s been a real pleasure to have on tour.”

One may wonder just how successful Youzhny would have been if he did not have to compete against the likes of Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic for virtually his entire career. But the Russian sees those rivalries as a blessing, not a curse, despite winning a combined seven of 44 FedEx ATP Head2Head meetings against the trio.

“I played at a great time I think, because I can say I played against some of the best players in the world in our era. There was Federer, Nadal, Djokovic, so I cannot give you one player who I can say this guy was the greatest I played,” Youzhny said. “All matches are different, some matches were dramatic for me, some matches were amazing. But still, I was involved with the best players in the world and it wasn’t for just one or two years, it was all of my tennis career.”

Over nearly two decades on the ATP World Tour, Youzhny learned plenty, perhaps too much to sum up in one lesson. But one thing he is taking away from his career reflects what the Russian became known for, and it can apply to all walks of life.

“If you really want to do something, and you give 100 per cent of your time to this goal, you’ll have a chance to receive back from your investment,” Youzhny said.

You May Also Like: My Masters 1000: Mikhail Youzhny

Youzhny never threw himself under the spotlight, but he was always a reliable force on the circuit. Armed with his one-handed backhand — with which he followed through with two hands — and a simple forehand stroke, the Russian was a tough out for all opponents.

“I just tried to fight until the end of the match,” said Youzhny, reflecting on what he should be known for. “But I cannot change the mind of the people and this is passed already, I cannot change it.”

It’s safe to say that Youzhny doesn’t have to. Once he strikes his final shot in St. Petersburg, it will be the tennis world saluting Youzhny.

What They Said About Youzhny:

Tomas Berdych
“I remember him since I started on the tour, and that’s already quite a few years… He’s a guy who has been around for a while. He’s achieved a lot and he was always a very, very tough opponent for me.”

Karen Khachanov
“When he was at his best form he was playing really well, beating top guys and was a Top 10 player at a time. He is a good example for Russian players. He won the Davis Cup two times. When he was younger, he was faster and hit flatter and more powerful, but he was always tough to beat. He and his coach, Boris, were always helping and following me, giving me good advice. He has been a great influence.”

Nicolas Kiefer
”I saw him and my first question was always, ‘You’re still around? You’re still playing?’ He said, ‘Yeah, well I love this sport and it’s great.’…As you can see, he’s very competitive, but he also enjoys it.”

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Wawrinka: 'I'm Playing Really Well'

  • Posted: Sep 17, 2018

Wawrinka: ‘I’m Playing Really Well’

Swiss confident in progress ahead of Khachanov clash

Stan Wawrinka got his St. Petersburg Open campaign off to a good start on Monday, battling past a tough Slovenian opponent, Aljaz Bedene, against whom he had lost once before. It wasn’t an easy match by any means, as Bedene served for the opening set. And it was another step in the right direction for the former World No. 3, whose form continues to improve after undergoing two left knee surgeries in August 2017.

“I think in general I’m playing really well,” Wawrinka said. “I think it’s getting there. I think I need to keep being patient, keep working really hard and well outside the matches because I know I need to keep doing the right things for the end of the year, try to gain some confidence and we’ll see what happens.”

It’s easy to see Wawrinka’s 14-14 record on the season and wonder whether he will return to his best form. But the 33-year-old is not looking far enough ahead to consider what ATP Ranking he wants to achieve by a certain date, or how many more titles he’d like to win.

“My goals are to finish this year well, I have a few more tournaments to play. I’ll keep working outside matches, I’ll keep pushing myself, keep trying to improve tennis-wise, physically. Also, I want to finish a good year and get a chance to do the right preparation, right offseason, push myself to be 100 per cent ready for the beginning of [next] year and then we’ll see,” Wawrinka said. “I never really put a goal of ranking, winning tournaments, things like that. I put a goal to do the right things day by day, because that’s the way I know that the results will follow.”

You May Also Like: Stan Marches On In St. Petersburg

And while Wawrinka has not advanced to a semi-final since February, his level has certainly been improving. The Swiss owns three victories against Top 15 opponents in his past two tournaments. The 16-time tour-level champion’s past three losses have all come against top-tier opponents — Rafael Nadal, Roger Federer and former World No. 3 Milos Raonic.

So Wawrinka is not in Russia to simply continue working on his game like he has been doing in practice. While he has not captured a title since triumphing in Geneva last May, he has one goal in mind.

“When I come to a tournament, it’s to win,” Wawrinka said. “It’s to win matches, to get confidence, the more you win, the better you start to play. It’s a long process, but I’m happy with today’s match. I’ve been practising enough… so I’m happy to play matches.”

Wawrinka will try to take another step forward in the second round against in-form Russian Karen Khachanov.

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Maden Makes The Most of His Metz Moment

  • Posted: Sep 17, 2018

Maden Makes The Most of His Metz Moment

Tsonga makes his return on Tuesday against defending champion Gojowczyk

Germany’s Yannick Maden took full advantage of his lucky-loser status at the Moselle Open in Metz on Monday. The German beat countryman Mischa Zverev 7-5, 4-6, 6-1 to earn his first tour-level win since May at the BMW Open by FWU in Munich.

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Maden won 76 per cent of his first-serve points and saved seven of nine break points against Zverev, No. 63 in the ATP Rankings. When Monday began, Maden, No. 120 in the ATP Rankings, wasn’t even in the draw, but he would gain entry when eighth seed Philipp Kohlschreiber withdrew from the tournament because of fatigue. Maden will next meet a Frenchman, either wild card Quentin Halys or 2017 finalist Benoit Paire.

You May Also Like: Tsitsipas: ‘It Won’t Get Easier. I’ll Only Get Better’

In Monday’s other main-draw match, Ricardas Berankis of Lithuania saved four of five break points and beat German Maximilian Marterer 7-6(1), 6-7(1), 6-4. Berankis, No. 103 in the ATP Rankings, will next meet second seed and World No. 15 Stefanos Tsitsipas of Greece.

Did You Know?
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga has an 18-3 record and is a three-time champion at the Moselle Open.

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Stan Marches On In St. Petersburg

  • Posted: Sep 17, 2018

Stan Marches On In St. Petersburg

Former World No. 3 to face red-hot Khachanov in second round

Two years ago, Stan Wawrinka made the final of the St. Petersburg Open on his debut. On Monday, Wawrinka made a good start toward going one step further in his second appearance at the tournament.

Wawrinka defeated Slovenian Aljaz Bedene 7-5, 7-6(5) to reach the second round at the ATP World Tour 250-level event, setting a tantalising second-round match against No. 4 seed Karen Khachanov.

“It was a tough match. I think in general the level was good. For sure, really tough,” Wawrinka said. “I think I fought well. It’s never easy in the first match to really feel the conditions, especially when you don’t really practise on the court. So I’m happy with a great victory, I think a good battle and a good level.”

Wawrinka fell to No. 263 in the ATP Rankings on 11 June, his lowest standing since August of 2003. But he is already back inside the Top 100 at No. 88 and in good form, winning six of his past eight matches. Now, the former World No. 3 will try to pursue his first title since last year’s Banque Eric Sturdza Geneva Open in May.

The 33-year-old had won two of his three previous FedEx ATP Head2Head meetings against Bedene, with each of those clashes coming in Chennai. And while he was broken in his third service game, the Swiss battled back to triumph after one hour and 48 minutes, saving four of five break points held against him.

He will play Khachanov for the first time with a spot in the quarter-finals on the line. It will be a tough test for Wawrinka, as Khachanov has been playing some of the best tennis of his young career. The Russian reached the semi-finals at the Rogers Cup in Toronto, and pushed World No. 1 Rafael Nadal in a four-set thriller at the US Open that took longer than four hours.

“It’s going to be an interesting match,” Wawrinka said. “He’s playing at home, with the crowd for him. He’s a young player, he’s improved a lot. He’s playing well. He played a great US Open. He’s a great guy, also, we know each other well, so it’s going to be interesting. I’m happy to play against him. I know it’s going to be a tough match, but I’m going to try to enjoy.”

In other main draw action, 2012 champion Martin Klizan beat home favourite Evgeny Donskoy 6-4, 6-4 in 90 minutes. The Slovakian remains undefeated in St. Petersburg, with just one of his six matches going to a deciding set. Klizan, who broke serve five times, will next face No. 2 seed Fabio Fognini in a rematch of the 2012 final.

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Did You Know?
Damir Dzumhur opens play on Centre Court Tuesday, competing against qualifier Lucas Miedler. One year ago, Dzumhur earned his maiden ATP World Tour title in St. Petersburg, and he now owns three tour-level trophies.

You May Also Like: First-Time Winner Spotlight: Damir Dzumhur


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Tsitsipas: 'It Won't Get Easier. I'll Only Get Better'

  • Posted: Sep 17, 2018

Tsitsipas: ‘It Won’t Get Easier. I’ll Only Get Better’

In the fifth instalment of ATPWorldTour.com’s ‘My Point’ series, Greek Stefanos Tsitsipas writes about the struggles his country has faced and why he’s motivated to make Greek tennis history

It was as if we were landing in Hell. Everywhere we looked, we saw fire.

About 10 years ago, my family and I were returning from a winter vacation in Paris. We were 30, maybe 40 kilometres away from the airport when everyone on the plane started yelling and staring out the windows.

It was dark, so we couldn’t see a lot, but what we did see scared me more than anything ever has: Attica, a region of Athens, was burning.

We hadn’t been informed before the flight that the airport was surrounded by fire, so questions raced through our minds: Where were we going to land? Would we even be landing?

Eventually, we did land, and then we drove back home, away from the flames. I remember seeing fire on both sides of our car. We turned on the TV and every channel showed the same thing: Attica on fire.

Up until July, I had never felt more pain for my country.

**

Greece is who I am. I bleed blue. I don’t understand how some guys don’t feel that way about their country. Are you kidding me? Everyone should be proud of where they come from. Πάμε! (Come on!)

It’s easy to love Greece, though. We have the most amazing, richest language that allows you to express yourself so well. We have the landscape, the water, the beaches, the history. We have friendly citizens everywhere you go. I’m in love with my country.

That’s why it hurt so badly to see fires destroying Athens 10 years ago, and why it hurt so much two months ago to see and read about the fires affecting hundreds more people, including my good friend Alex, or Alexandros, Caldwell.

We were best friends as kids and played at the Greek nationals together, from the eight and unders to the 14 and unders. I felt lucky to know Alex. It’s not often you find such nice kids with whom you can trust and be true friends.

Now he and his family live in the northeast part of Athens, where fires have done terrible things, burning through forests and killing dozens of people. And that’s where he was in July, waiting for his mom to pick him and his sister up so they could escape the fires. Alex was running around the house, trying to grab all of their stuff. But they didn’t have time. The fire was too close.

They drove to the beach and when Alex opened the door, flames rushed to his face. He started sprinting to the water. All around him was horror: People on fire, screaming in terror, running to the water. Alex and his family made it past the rocks and to the water, but too many others didn’t.

After hearing his story, I was devastated. It was one of the worst things that I’ve ever heard in my life.

The only way I could show Alex love and appreciation for how he managed to overcome everything was the Facebook fundraiser we did, when we raised three times the amount of money we hoped to get. To everyone who helped, thank you.

**

Alex, like me, doesn’t get back to Greece as often as he’d like. He plays tennis at Radford University in the U.S. Maybe we got along so well because we’re different from so many other Greeks. We have discipline.

I have many cases of friends and people who I know could have played tennis at a high level, but they weren’t committed. They missed home too much or couldn’t stand the travel.

From an early age, I knew that travelling and spending time away from my country would be my biggest challenge in tennis. But I’ve learned to love travelling. I embrace it. It expands your horizons. You meet new people and see new places.

I also know that I have to travel. To achieve my dreams, I have to stay at hotels most of the year and come back to Greece only every few months. But that’s my job, and even though I don’t always want to do it, I do, which takes discipline, a trait that I have thanks to my mixed background.

My father is Greek, and my mother is Russian. My father focused on the technical aspects of my game – developing my one-handed backhand, my net skills and helping me always take the ball early.

Tsitsipas

My mother focused on the discipline. She wasn’t strict, exactly. I’ve seen strict tennis parents. She was very demanding, in a good way. She always demanded that I do my best. “Do your job and be satisfied that you are out on the court doing what you love,” she would tell me.

I used to cry a lot when I lost matches. Other times I reacted even worse. Sometimes I would just freak out and run away from my parents and hide somewhere so they could never find me. I felt so embarrassed, so ashamed of my performance that I couldn’t face them, or anyone.

I’d hide behind cars for one hour, sometimes one hour and a half. My parents would look for me and call out my name but I refused to show my face. I hated losing. It felt like the end of the world.

My mom used to try to calm me down. “It’s all right. It just takes time. Try to do better the next time.”

When I was a kid, tennis was everything to me. My dad travelled with me. He, like my mom, isn’t a regular parent. He quit his job when I was 12 to help me achieve my dreams. That takes guts. How many dads would take such a risk?

But people who do well in sports have to have that something different, no matter if it comes from your mom, your dad or your coach. The Greek team that won Euro 2004? They had that something.

They didn’t want to, they simply didn’t want to be who everyone else was – they wanted to go out and explore the world and be the best at what they did. They made our country so proud.

Tsitsipas

I always know I’m on court for a reason – to complete a job and make something at its finest. I’m super hungry to win matches and get up in the ATP Rankings, to be the best in my country. Pressure about leading Greece? Never.

It’s very motivating to be the one who can create history in Greece and have kids look up to me later. They, like my parents did after my early losses, can be the ones chasing after me and shouting my name. I can inspire them and be the leader of tennis in Greece.

When I think about the victims of the fires, it makes me even more thankful for everything that I have and all the opportunities that await. It makes me so motivated to work hard to achieve the most that I can.

It won’t get easier. I’ll only get better.

– as told to Jonathon Braden

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Metz 2018

  • Posted: Sep 17, 2018

Metz 2018

The content of this article took place at Moselle Open

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Quito To Switch To Cordoba, Argentina In 2019

  • Posted: Sep 17, 2018

Quito To Switch To Cordoba, Argentina In 2019

Argentina to host two ATP World Tour events

The Ecuador Open, held in Quito since 2015, will move to Cordoba, Argentina in 2019, kicking off the Latin American swing in February. It will mark the second ATP World Tour 250 tournament held in Argentina, joining the Argentina Open in Buenos Aires.

The city of Cordoba, 435 miles northwest of Buenos Aires, has hosted a number of international sporting events, including FIFA World Cup football qualification matches. Octagon will stage the tournament in conjunction with Torneos, a leading sports marketing and media company.

“In partnership with Torneos, we look forward to establishing this event as a world-class 250 on the ATP calendar,” said Octagon SVP Jorge Salkeld. “With exquisite hotels and cuisine options for both visitors and players, Cordoba is the perfect city to expand the ATP’s presence in Argentina.”

Victor Estrella Burgos won the Ecuador Open in its first three editions (2015-17), while Roberto Carbelles Baena defeated fellow Spaniard Albert Ramos-Vinolas 6-3, 4-6, 6-4 in the 2018 Quito final.

Moet and Chandon off-court news

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