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30 Things To Watch In Munich, Istanbul & Estoril

  • Posted: Apr 28, 2018

30 Things To Watch In Munich, Istanbul & Estoril

An executive summary of what every fan should know about the coming week on the ATP World Tour

With the clay-court season well underway, there are three ATP World Tour 250-level events next week. At the BMW Open by FWU, World No. 3 Alexander Zverev will attempt to retain his title and earn the seventh tour-level trophy of his career. The German leads a strong field, with Spaniard Roberto Bautista Agut, Argentine Diego Schwartzman and South Korean Hyeon Chung striving for success.

Like Zverev, World No. 4 Marin Cilic is also trying to defend a title, as the top seed leads the field at the TEB BNP Paribas Istanbul Open. The Millennium Estoril Open also boasts an impressive line-up with World No. 8 Kevin Anderson and Spaniard Pablo Carreno Busta competing as the top two seeds.

View Draw: Munich | Istanbul | Estoril

10 THINGS TO WATCH IN MUNICH

1) The Champ is Here: Alexander Zverev, who turned 21 on 20 April, is already making his fifth appearance in Munich. He’s improved his results each year, from the first round in 2014 and second round in 2015 to the semi-finals in 2016 and the title last year. Zverev has been ranked in the Top 5 each week since 11 September 2017. After winning five ATP World Tour titles last season, he’s seeking his first of 2018.

2) Right at Home: German Philipp Kohlschreiber has earned 30 or more wins and enjoyed Top 50 finishes in the year-end ATP Rankings in each of the past 11 seasons. Kohlschreiber has been especially successful in Germany, where he is 116-61 (.655). The 34-year-old is making his 10th straight showing and 14th appearance overall in Munich. The three-time titlist (2007, 2012, 2016) has reached the final a total of five times.

3) Other Germans: Yannick Hanfmann, Yannick Maden, Maximilian Marterer, Florian Mayer, Jan-Lennard Struff and Mischa Zverev will also represent Germany in their native country. Marterer has had an especially strong season, winning the first seven tour-level matches of his career in 2018, not including his sixth ATP Challenger Tour title at Cherbourg, France.

4) Steady Spaniard: Like Kohlschreiber, No. 2 seed Roberto Bautista Agut is one of the ATP World Tour’s most consistent players. He has earned 40 or more wins and enjoyed Top 25 finishes in the year-end ATP Rankings in each of the past four seasons. Bautista Agut, 30, won the biggest of his eight tour-level titles at Dubai on 3 March.

5) On the Rise: No. 3 seed Diego Schwartzman has achieved a new career-high ATP Ranking 15 times since the start of 2017, peaking at No. 15 on 2 April. Schwartzman did not drop a set en route to his first ATP World Tour 500-level title at Rio de Janeiro on 25 February.

6) Asian Sensation: Hyeon Chung of South Korea is 18-7 this season after ending 2017 by winning the Next Gen ATP Finals title. Chung’s ATP Rankings rise began at 2017 Munich, where he reached his first ATP World Tour semi-final as the World No. 78. He returns to Munich this week as the No. 4 seed.

7) 300 Wins: No. 5 seed Fabio Fognini is one win from 300 at the tour-level for his career. The 2014 Munich finalist bids to become the fourth Italian player to win 300 matches. Retired players Corrado Barazzutti and Adriano Panatta reached the milestone, while Andreas Seppi earned his tour-level victory in 2016.

8) Monfils in Munich: No. 7 seed Gael Monfils comes back to the ATP World Tour this week. The Frenchman returned from a right knee injury to win his seventh ATP World Tour title at Doha in January. But Monfils, who hurt his back at the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event in Indian Wells, has not played since 13 March.

9) Doubles Details: Lukasz Kubot and Marcelo Melo are co-No. 1s in the ATP Doubles Rankings. They are joined in the field by Max Mirnyi and Philipp Oswald, who are 20-8 with three ATP World Tour titles since debuting as a team last August.

10) 39 & Counting: Kohlschreiber faces a stern test in the opening round against 39-year-old Croatian Ivo Karlovic. In Houston, the 6’11” right-hander became the oldest player to advance to an ATP World Tour semi-final since Jimmy Connors at San Francisco in 1993. Kohlschreiber leads their FedEx ATP Head2Head series 3-2.

10 THINGS TO WATCH IN ISTANBUL

1) The Champ is Here: World No. 4 Marin Cilic returns to Istanbul as the No. 1 seed. He took a wild card in 2017 and did not drop a set en route to the title, including victories over this year’s No. 2 seed Damir Dzumhur, last year’s No. 1 seed Milos Raonic and 2016 champion Diego Schwartzman. The Croat has won an ATP World Tour title in 10 straight seasons and is seeking his first championship of 2018.

2) Three’s a Crowd: After reaching finals at Wimbledon and the Australian Open, Cilic achieved a career-high No. 3 in the ATP Rankings on 29 January. Cilic became the 16th World No. 3 since 25 July 2005. Only four players have been in the Top 2 since that date 13 years ago: Rafael Nadal, Roger Federer, Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray. Alexander Zverev, who is competing in Munich, is the current World No. 3.

3) Determined Damir: Dzumhur ended 2017 on a 24-7 run, highlighted by his first two ATP World Tour titles at St. Petersburg and Moscow. The Bosnia & Herzegovina native reached the quarter-finals this year in Montpellier and Marseille.

4) Bernie’s Back: Tomic accepted a wild card into Istanbul and is playing at the event for the third straight season. Still only 25 years old, Tomic failed to qualify at the Australian Open and has played only one ATP Challenger Tour match since then. But Tomic has captured three ATP World Tour titles in his career and finished runner-up twice.

5) Italians in Istanbul: Four Italians are competing in Istanbul this week: No. 3 seed Andreas Seppi, No. 5 seed Paolo Lorenzi, 22-year-old Matteo Berrettini and Thomas Fabbiano. Seppi lost to another Italian, Cecchinato, in the Budapest semi-finals on Saturday, his second semi-final of the season.

6) Feet of Clay: No. 4 seed Aljaz Bedene won 16 straight clay-court matches overall in April 2017. He’s back to his best on clay in 2018 with runs to the Buenos Aires final, Rio de Janeiro quarter-finals and Budapest semi-finals. Bedene, who will resume that semi-final against Aussie John Millman on Sunday, is seeking his first ATP World Tour title in Budapest this weekend.

7) 500 Wins Club: Russian veteran Mikhail Youzhny is three tour-level wins from 500 for his career. Youzhny is hoping to join former World No. 1 Yevgeny Kafelnikov (609 victories) as the second Russian player to win at least 500 matches. Youzhny, who turns 36 in June, has captured 10 ATP World Tour titles.

8) Two Turks: Wild cards Marsel Ilhan and Cem Ilkel will represent Turkey at the TEB BNP Paribas Istanbul Open this week. While Ilhan is a former Top 100 player, Ilkel is seeking his first ATP World Tour victory. Ilkel is 0-7 overall at this level, including Istanbul losses in 2015, 2016 and 2017.

9) International Flair: Top seeds Ben McLachlan and Nicholas Monroe lead the doubles field in Istanbul. Born in New Zealand and educated in California, McLachlan represents Japan. The 25-year-old won his first ATP World Tour title at Tokyo last October with countryman Yasutaka Uchiyama.

10) Millman Rising: Millman managed to win just three tour-level matches in 2017 after spending the beginning of the season battling injury. But the Aussie is off to a strong start in 2018, claiming eight tour-level victories thus far as well as triumphing at the ATP Challenger Tour event in Kyoto, Japan. He is tied at a set apiece in the Budapest semi-finals, which will be completed Sunday ahead of the championship match.

10 THINGS TO WATCH IN ESTORIL

1) The Champ is Here: The second-seeded Pablo Carreno Busta is 11-2 at the Millennium Estoril Open and will have appeared at all four editions of the event. He reached the semi-finals in 2015 and the final in 2016 before winning the 2017 title without dropping a set. Following a run to the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 Miami semi-finals, Carreno Busta reached the Barcelona semi-finals before losing to #NextGenATP Greek Stefanos Tsitsipas on Saturday.

2) Greece’s #NextGenATP Star: Stefanos Tsitsipas is only 19, but he’s already the highest-ranked Greek in ATP World Tour history. This Monday, the former World No. 1 junior will achieve a new career-high ATP Ranking for the seventh time in 2018. He beat No. 7 Dominic Thiem on Friday for the biggest win of his career before ousting Carreno Busta to advance to his maiden tour-level final, in which he will play World No. 1 Rafael Nadal.

3) Big Foe on the Come Up: #NextGenATP American FrancesTiafoe is 11-6 this season after starting his career 9-29. Tiafoe followed his first semi-final and final with his first title at Delray Beach on 25 February, becoming the youngest American champion on the ATP World Tour since 19-year-old Andy Roddick won at Houston in 2002. Tiafoe earned the first clay-court tour-level win of his career in Houston on 9 April.

4) De Minaur Delivers: #NextGenATP Aussie Alex de Minaur made history on home soil in January with runs to the Brisbane semi-finals and Sydney final. The Aussie, now 19, became the youngest semi-finalist in Brisbane history and the youngest player to reach semi-finals in consecutive weeks since 18-year-old Rafael Nadal in 2005.

5) Elite Eight: No. 1 seed Kevin Anderson is ranked a career-high No. 8 after starting the year 17-5. Anderson has reached three finals in 2018, highlighted by his triumph at the New York Open. He beat Carreno Busta in a third-set tie-break at Indian Wells before losing to him in a third-set tie-break at Miami.

6) Pride of Portugal: Joao Sousa reached a career-high No. 28 in the ATP Rankings in 2016 and is the highest-ranked Portuguese player in ATP World Tour history. The 29-year-old Sousa seeks his maiden victory at the Millennium Estoril Open (0-3).

7) Career Year: No. 3 seed Kyle Edmund reached his first Grand Slam semi-final at the Australian Open, ended Andy Murray’s 12-year reign as the No. 1 Brit in the ATP Rankings on 5 March, then advanced to his first ATP World Tour final at Marrakech earlier this month. 

8) Remarkable Comeback: Andujar used a protected ranking to enter both Marrakech and Estoril after undergoing three right elbow surgeries. As the World No. 355, Andujar won the Marrakech title to become the lowest-ranked champion on the ATP World Tour since No. 550 Lleyton Hewitt triumphed at Adelaide in 1998.

9) Speaking of Hewitt: De Minaur grew up idolizing Hewitt, who is travelling with the teen this season and will play doubles with him this week. Hewitt last played singles at the 2016 Australian Open, but has played doubles with countrymen John Peers, Jordan Thompson and Sam Groth since then.

10) In-Form Chilean: One of the most dangerous unseeded players in the field is Chilean Nicolas Jarry. The 22-year-old had just five tour-level wins prior to this season, but he has earned 14 already in 2018, making his first quarter-final in Quito, semi-final in Rio de Janeiro and final in Sao Paulo.

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No Shoe, No Problem For Stefanos

  • Posted: Apr 28, 2018

No Shoe, No Problem For Stefanos

#NextGenATP Tsitsipas advances to maiden ATP World Tour final

Not a lot has gone wrong for #NextGenATP Stefanos Tsitsipas at this week’s Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell — except for losing his shoe in the middle of a point.

The 19-year-old was leading 3-0 in the opening set against Pablo Carreno Busta on Saturday and held a 15/30 advantage on the Spaniard’s serve. But when Tsitsipas slid to his right to whip a heavy forehand high over the net, his left shoe slipped off. While his shot landed in, the teenager was unable to win the point.

Tsitsipas

“Not sure I’ve ever seen that, especially on a clay court,” former World No. 4 James Blake said with a chuckle while commentating on the match on Tennis Channel. “He might need to tie those a little tighter!”

And while he let slip the opening in Carreno Busta’s service game, it did not stop Tsitsipas from regrouping to become the first Greek man to reach an ATP World Tour final since Nicholas Kalogeropoulos in 1973 (Des Moines, Iowa).

“I cannot explain it. [It was] probably because of the shoelaces,” Tsitsipas said. “I should tie my shoelaces more.”

You May Also Like: With Dad’s Shoelaces, Tsitsipas Upsets Goffin

It is not the first time Tsitsipas has had a shoe malfunction in the middle of a match, either. In last year’s Antwerp quarter-finals, the Greek needed his Dad’s shoelaces to finish off a victory against Belgian David Goffin. Two shoe incidents on the ATP World Tour, two triumphs for Tsitsipas.

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Nadal claims 400th clay court win ahead of final against unseeded Greek teenager

  • Posted: Apr 28, 2018

Rafael Nadal will face Greek teenager Stefanos Tsitsipas in Sunday’s Barcelona Open final after claiming his 400th career clay court victory.

The Spaniard defeated world number 10 David Goffin of Belgium 6-4 6-0.

But Tsitsipas, the world number 63, continued the most successful week of his career, beating Spanish fifth seed Pablo Carreno Busta 7-5 6-3.

He becomes the first Greek player to reach an ATP Tour final since Nicholas Kalogeropoulos in Des Moines in 1973.

Nadal, who was coming into the game on the back of 17 consecutive clay court victories and 42 consecutive sets, lost his first service game to the Belgian, but quickly broke back to recover his composure and he went on to ease to victory.

His way to an 11th title in the Spanish city is blocked by 19-year-old Tsistipas, who has yet to drop a set at the tournament and is the youngest Barcelona finalist since Nadal in 2005.

After defeating world number seven Dominic Thiem on Friday, he served five aces and won 78% of first serves to see off his Spanish rival in one hour 35 minutes.

Whatever the result of Sunday’s final, he will become the first Greek player to break into the world’s top 50 when the latest men’s rankings are released on Monday.

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Tribute: Rafa Hits 400 Clay-Court Match Wins

  • Posted: Apr 28, 2018

Tribute: Rafa Hits 400 Clay-Court Match Wins

ATPWorldTour.com pays tribute to the Spanish icon on his latest milestone

Rafael Nadal has become the fourth player in ATP World Tour history (since 1973) to record 400 clay-court match wins after his semi-final victory over David Goffin on Saturday at the Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell.

While Argentina’s Guillermo Vilas (659), Spain’s Manuel Orantes (502) and Austria’s Thomas Muster (422) have all won more matches on the red dirt, no player has achieved a better winning percentage on the surface than Nadal, according to the FedEx ATP Performance Zone.

Over the past 15 seasons, ever since his first tour-level clay-court victory over Karel Kucera of Slovakia in the 2003 Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters first round, Nadal has compiled a 400-35 match record on terre battue – a winning percentage of 91.9 – and a record 54 trophies. His titles haul includes 11 at Monte-Carlo, 10 at Roland Garros, and tomorrow he’ll be hoping for an 11th in Barcelona.

CLAY-COURT MATCH WINS LEADERS (Since August 1973)

Player Clay W-L Record Winning % Clay Titles
1) Guillermo Vilas (ARG) 659-162 80.3% 49
2) Manuel Orantes (ESP) 502-150 77.0% 30
3) Thomas Muster (AUT) 422-127 76.9% 40
4) Rafael Nadal (ESP) 400-35 91.9% 54

As Bjorn Borg, a winner of 30 clay crowns – including six at Roland Garros – told ATPWorldTour.com, “To win on clay you have to practise your positioning a lot, how you strike the ball to set up a point and your movement.

“Nadal has worked so hard to develop his backhand, particularly the crosscourt shot, which is not only a winner shot, but also an attacking stroke in defence. He plays with tremendous intensity, as if every point is a match point. Nadal has excellent footwork, so he’s able to position himself in good time and rarely gets into trouble. He is quick to move up the court. His serve often sets up the point, while the pace and placement of his forehand enables him to finish points.”

In an era of all-court players, Nadal has developed his legacy as a red dirt warrior to become an icon of the sport with an 888-186 (.823) record and 76 trophies – including 16 Grand Slam championships and 31 ATP World Tour Masters 1000s.

What makes Nadal’s single-surface match record of 400 victories all the more remarkable is that only 79 other players in 45 seasons of ATP World Tour history have compiled 400 total match wins or more.

CLAY-COURT & OVERALL RECORD COMPARISONS (Since August 1973)
See how Nadal’s clay-court record and overall career statistics compare to other leading performers.

Player Clay W-L Record Winning % Clay Titles Overall W-L Record Winning % Titles
1) Rafael Nadal (ESP) 400-35 91.9% 54 888-186 82.3% 76
2) Bjorn Borg (SWE) 251-41 86.0% 30 609-127 82.7% 64
3) Ivan Lendl (CZE/USA) 327-76 81.1% 28 1,068-242 81.5% 94
4) Guillermo Vilas (ARG) 659-162 80.3% 49 929-286 76.5% 62
4) Novak Djokovic (SRB) 189-49 74.9% 13 788-168 82.4% 68

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Briton Evans wins on return from drugs ban

  • Posted: Apr 28, 2018

Britain’s Dan Evans made a winning return from a drugs ban with victory in round one of qualifying for next week’s ATP Challenger Tour event in Glasgow.

The 27-year-old, who was suspended for 12 months after testing positive for cocaine last April, beat compatriot Ed Corrie 6-3 7-6 (8-6).

He saved a set point in the second-set tie-break before closing out victory.

The former British number two will re-enter the world rankings if he beats Ireland’s Sam’s Barry on Sunday.

Evans was given a wildcard for the qualifiers by the Lawn Tennis Association.

  • Read more: Cocaine is a ‘life-ruiner’ – Evans
  • Live scores, schedule and results

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'Cocaine is a life-ruiner' – Evans set to return after drugs ban

  • Posted: Apr 28, 2018

“If you saw the ruins it left behind, you’d be pretty confident I won’t take that drug again.”

Last April, a month after reaching a career-high ranking of 41, Britain’s Dan Evans failed a drugs test at an ATP event in Barcelona. He had taken cocaine out of competition four days earlier.

This weekend, the 27-year-old will attempt to qualify for the ATP Challenger Tour event in Glasgow, having been awarded a wildcard by the Lawn Tennis Association on his return from suspension.

Evans is full of regret.

“It’s a shocking drug, and it’s not just in sport – it’s terrible in life. It’s a life-ruiner,” said Evans at the Scotstoun Tennis Centre.

“It’s like drink-driving – everyone knows you shouldn’t drink-drive. I took it. I knew beforehand I shouldn’t have. It’s illegal for one, never mind me being a sportsman.

“It’s the worst thing I’ve ever done. It’s a shocking thing to do, it’s let down many people. Not just that, it’s brought unwanted press to tennis.

“God knows what some of the greats of the game thought when that sort of thing comes into the headlines.”

Evans could have faced a four-year ban but that was reduced by the International Tennis Federation (ITF) because cocaine is not performance-enhancing and it was taken out of competition.

The ITF said Evans “promptly admitted his violation” and it accepted his account that the substance was only still in his system because “leftover” cocaine had accidentally mixed with permitted medication in the “same pocket of his washbag”.

‘There’s been some terrible moments’

Evans says he did not play tennis for eight and a half months, and left his racquet at his parents’ house so he was not haunted by the sight of it.

He returned to training in late February, and says he was “terrible” in a “horrible” first session back.

Evans has passed much of the past year on the golf course, and away from social media. There was a holiday in Marbella, which he says was low-key, but he spent most of the time in Cheltenham with his girlfriend Aleah, sometimes struggling to fill his days.

“I was saying to my girlfriend how long a working day actually is: 9 to 5 is a long, long time,” he said. “Daytime TV is not good.

“It wasn’t easy, there’s some terrible moments in those nine months. At the start I was heartbroken not to be playing tennis.

“There isn’t that much you can do in the day when other people are working.”

Something else Evans found difficult was telling friends and family about his indiscretion.

“It’s just a terrible conversation, whoever it’s with,” he said.

“There’s that many people that support you, even if it’s a text at the end of the match, or they stay up when you’re playing in America and are knackered for work the next day.

“The embarrassment you put your girlfriend’s mum through, her parents, that’s not what they want their daughter round, is it? And then you’ve got your mum at work, or my sister at work.

“It’s not a situation I hope anyone will be in again.”

Dan Evans factfile
Born 23 May 1990, Birmingham
Turned pro 2006
Best Grand Slam performances Australian Open: 4R (2017); French Open: 1R (2017); Wimbledon: 3R (2016); US Open: 3R (2013) and (2016)
ATP Tour titles 0
ATP Tour finals 1 (Sydney 2017)
Career prize money £1,053,266
2017 prize money £319,132
Highest world ranking 41 – March 2017

Evans, who looked to be in good shape in practice on Friday, is without a coach and has not decided on his schedule for the next few weeks.

He will face compatriot Ed Corrie, the world number 427, on Saturday.

Evans is unranked, and admits to many doubts, but believes he can fight his way back into the world’s top 50.

“If my body holds up, I think so, unless the game has considerably moved on in a year,” he said. “Seeing the older guys do well, that was the only thing I was really looking out for when I wasn’t playing.

“I had doubts every day and I still have doubts now, and there will still be doubts until there are two digits next to my name.

“A year’s a long time, especially when I was doing nothing. I probably won’t feel stress like I have in the last year. Winning tennis matches, or losing tennis matches, won’t be such a big deal.”

Evans would not be drawn on whether he had ever taken drugs before last April, but says he has been tested four times since returning to training at the Edgbaston Priory Club in Birmingham.

He has also told his story in two videos, which the LTA will distribute to players as part of its drug education programme.

His wildcard for Glasgow was awarded after he passed a range of physical, medical and nutritional tests set by the LTA.

The organisation’s chief executive, Scott Lloyd, says further support will be forthcoming as long as Evans keeps his side of the bargain.

“If he continues to do that, then we want to help him make that road back to the top of the game,” said Lloyd,

“We have zero tolerance to doping, but what I think Dan has shown us thus far is that he is absolutely willing and trying to do that to the best of his ability.

“He needs to earn his way back into the tour, and I think he wants to demonstrate that, too – I genuinely do.

“This is not about handouts, this is about providing the opportunity.”

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Resilient Goffin Hoping To Stun Rafa Once More

  • Posted: Apr 27, 2018

Resilient Goffin Hoping To Stun Rafa Once More

Belgian looking to win back-to-back matches against Nadal

All of the numbers, including their FedEx ATP Head2Head series (2-1 Nadal), suggest Rafael Nadal will advance to his 11thBarcelona Open Banc Sabadell final on Saturday, when he faces fourth seed David Goffin in the semi-finals.

Nadal has won 17 consecutive matches and 42 consecutive sets on clay, dating back to his 2017 Rome quarter-final loss to Dominic Thiem. The Spaniard also didn’t drop a set against Goffin during their two clay-court FedEx ATP Head2Head matchups (2017 Monte-Carlo, 2017 Madrid). And Nadal has won 10 Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell titles.

You May Also Like: Nadal Forced To Rally In Barcelona

But don’t be surprised if Goffin challenges and breaks at least one of Nadal’s streaks during their fourth FedEx ATP Head2Head matchup.

Goffin beat Nadal the last time they played, during a tight opener at the 2017 Nitto ATP Finals 7-6(5), 6-7(4), 6-4. So the Belgian should carry plenty of confidence onto Pista Rafa Nadal.

Watch Highlights: Goffin Earns First Win At The O2

Goffin also doesn’t play your typical clay-court game. Instead of standing feet behind the baseline and going for long rallies, the Belgian tries to hug the baseline and take the ball early, which could apply some unique pressure to Nadal, who reached the semi-final with a 6-0, 7-5 win against Slovakia’s Martin Klizan.

Goffin’s road to his first Barcelona semi-final has been much more complicated. The No. 10 player in the ATP Rankings has lost the opening set in all three of his matches, but he’s ran away in each of the three deciders as well.

Watch: Goffin’s My Story

The scores of his deciding sets so far in Barcelona have been 6-2 vs. Marcel Granollers, 6-0 vs. Karen Khachanov and 6-2 vs. Roberto Bautista Agut. In other words, the Belgian is again showing the resiliency that helped him make his debut at the Nitto ATP Finals last year.

In 2017, Goffin led the Tour by winning 14 times after dropping the first set. His deciding-set record of 22-6 was also an ATP World Tour best. So far this season, according to his FedEx ATP Win/Loss Record, Goffin is 4-4 when losing the first set and 3-1 in deciding sets.

Read More: The Most Telling Stats of 2017

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