'Top drawer tennis' – Boulter puts GB ahead in BJK Cup
Watch the best shots as Katie Boulter beats Sweden’s Kajsa Rinaldo Persson 6-1 7-6 (7-5) to put Great Britain 2-1 ahead in the Billie Jean King Cup play-offs in Birmingham.
Watch the best shots as Katie Boulter beats Sweden’s Kajsa Rinaldo Persson 6-1 7-6 (7-5) to put Great Britain 2-1 ahead in the Billie Jean King Cup play-offs in Birmingham.
Ivan Dodig and Austin Krajicek are off the mark at the Nitto ATP Finals.
Competing together in Turin for the second time, the top-seeded duo notched its first match win at the prestigious season finale by downing Maximo Gonzalez and Andres Molteni 6-4, 6-2 on Sunday at the Pala Alpitour.
The opening game of the 2023 Nitto ATP Finals featured a stunning back-and-forth point at 30/30, which included a behind-the-back reaction half-volley from Molteni before Dodig powered a forehand winner. That outcome proved to be a sign of things to come, as Dodig and Krajicek held firm in a series of important moments to clinch a 77-minute victory in Green Group.
“It was very important. I think we played a great match today,” Dodig told ATPTour.com. “To win 6-4, 6-2 is a great start for us. It’s still the group stage and it’s the first match, but it was very nice to play today in a full stadium. We had a good time, great fun with a good crowd, so great to be back in Turin and great to start with a win.”
The Croatian-American pair won three deciding points in the first set, including in the opening two games of the match, to move ahead inside the Pala Alpitour. They then broke their seventh-seeded opponents Gonzalez and Molteni twice in the second set to avenge their defeat in their only previous Lexus ATP Head2Head meeting with the Argentines in the Cincinnati semi-finals in August.
Currently leading the Pepperstone ATP Live Doubles Teams Rankings, Dodig and Krajicek are one of five teams competing at the Nitto ATP Finals that could end the year as the Tour’s top team. Sunday’s win was a confidence-boosting start to Dodig and Krajicek’s campaign in Turin, where they lost all three of their group-stage clashes in Match Tie-breaks in 2022.
“Last year we lost three matches in difficult situations,” said Dodig. “This year we’ve come better prepared. Through the year we have played consistently and are the best team, for now. There is more confidence, and it’s all about the big points and how you play them. We’re really happy about today. Those couple of big points, we played well.”
Krajicek is competing at the Nitto ATP Finals for the second time this year. Dodig is making his ninth appearance at the season finale, where he reached the championship match in 2014 alongside Marcelo Melo.
Canada will face Italy in their maiden final of the Billie Jean King Cup in Seville on Sunday.
This year’s doubles field at the Nitto ATP Finals features a mix of established teams and breakthrough stars. Ivan Dodig and Austin Krajicek are leading the way as the top seeds.
“It feels great to come back here, for us a second time as a team together. I’m really enjoying it. Happy that we had a great season. And to finish it here, it’s always the best thing,” Dodig said. “That’s why we fight through the year, to play this one. And hopefully this time we can have a good run.
“Last year, we had great matches. We lost all the matches in the [Match] Tie-break. Hopefully this time, we can do it better. But all in all, great season. Happy to be back.”
The best of the best 🔥
Which team will come out on top and claim the #NittoATPFinals 🏆? pic.twitter.com/cfjumyXx8v
— ATP Tour (@atptour) November 11, 2023
Dodig and Krajicek won this year’s Roland Garros title and triumphed on four other occasions: at Rotterdam, Monte-Carlo, Queen’s Club and Beijing. But the Croatian-American duo will face stern tests in every match of Green Group action, with all teams in Turin champions in their own right.
First up for Dodig and Krajicek will be Argentines Maximo Gonzalez and Andres Molteni on Sunday. The Argentines are both debuting at the Nitto ATP Finals at age 40 and 35, respectively.
“I’m very, very happy. We are enjoying the week, enjoying every practice and tomorrow the match. It’s like a dream come true,” Molteni said. “We always see this tournament, big players from all around the world — and from Argentina as well — playing this tournament. So now we are here playing and we are very happy and very proud that we made it to qualify this year.”
Doubles Stars Ready For Nitto ATP Finals
Defending champions Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury are back in the field, competing in the season finale for the fifth consecutive year. In the middle of the season, their Turin hopes seemed in doubt. But they returned to form by winning the US Open for the third straight year.
“It’s amazing to defend the title here, or to try to defend the title, I should say. But I think it’s even more special, because we probably were on the outside looking in for six months of this year,” Ram said. “So the fact that we really basically qualified in the last six months, I think is something that we’re pretty proud of. We didn’t didn’t have a great start to the year, but we really came on strong to get here in the end.”
In the end, this is the event the players wait for all season. Santiago Gonzalez, who will be making his debut alongside Edouard Roger-Vasselin, is excited to get started.
“It was the only tournament left in my bucket list to play. So I’m very happy to do it this year after an amazing year,” Gonzalez said. “At the end of the day we are playing the best teams in the world, so we can win or lose any match. So we will try our best on court.”
Gonzalo Escobar and Aleksandr Nedovyesov saved two mach points in the Sofia doubles final to claim their second tour-level title as a team. The Ecuadorian/Kazakhstani team defeated third seeds Julian Cash and Nikola Mektic 6-3, 3-6, 13-11 to earn a dramatic victory in what was their fourth final in 14 tour-level tournaments together.
“A [Match] Tie-break is always a lottery, but I think in the end we were just a little bit more aggressive,” said Nedovyesov. “Luck was there as well I guess… It was a great tournament.”
Escobar/Nedovyesov will finish the season in 23rd place in the Pepperstone ATP Live Doubles Teams Rankings after a successful close to a week in which Escobar earned his 100th tour-level doubles win. The Sofia title is the Ecuadorian’s fifth at tour-level and Nedovyesov’s second.
“Very happy for the title. But it’s also been a tough year, so this makes me proud of the work we’ve done,” added Escobar.
Hugo Nys, Jan Zielinski” />
Photo credit: Moselle Open
Top Seeds Nys/Zielinski Retain Metz Trophy
Hugo Nys and Jan Zielinski saved their most dominant performance for last in the Moselle Open. After a pair of Match Tie-break wins either side of a walkover, the Monegasque/Polish duo defeated Germans Constantin Frantzen and Hendrik Jebens 6-4, 6-4 to complete a successful title defence in Metz.
Nys/Zielinski saved both break points they faced while converting two of their three break chances — one in each set.
The title is their third on the ATP Tour, with their lone title outside of Metz coming earlier this season at the ATP Masters 1000 event in Rome. Behind the strength of those two trophies this campaign, they will finish the 2023 season in ninth place in the Pepperstone ATP Live Doubles Teams Rankings.
Watch the best shots as Great Britain’s Katie Boulter beats Sweden’s Caijsa Hennemann 6-2 6-1 to put them level at 1-1 in the Billie Jean King Cup play-offs in London.
Watch the best shots as Great Britain’s Katie Boulter beats Sweden’s Caijsa Hennemann 6-2 6-1 to put them level at 1-1 in the Billie Jean King Cup play-offs in London.
Jodie Burrage is stunned by Kajsa Rinaldo Persson to put Great Britain 1-0 down against Sweden in their Billie Jean King Cup play-off.
Britain’s Jack Draper misses out on a first ATP Tour title with a three-set defeat by Adrian Mannarino in the Sofia Open final.
The 2023 Nitto ATP Finals kick off on Sunday with a pair of heavy-hitting clashes at Turin’s Pala Apitour. Home favourite Jannik Sinner bids for a positive start to his campaign in Green Group when he takes on Stefanos Tsitsipas in the opening singles clash of the day, before defending champion and World No. 1 Novak Djokovic meets Holger Rune in the evening session.
Can the home fans help Jannik Sinner kick-start his Nitto ATP Finals campaign on Sunday in Turin?
The 22-year-old Italian takes on Stefanos Tsitsipas in his opening match in Green Group at the Pala Alpitour, where the Italian is competing at the season finale for the second time, but the first as a direct qualifier. Sinner will hope that the locals can cheer him on to victory against an opponent whom he trails 2-5 in their Lexus ATP Head2Head series.
“[I’m] happy that this event is here in Turin,” Sinner told ATP Media on Friday. “Hopefully it’s something positive for me trying to have a great connection with the crowd and hopefully I can handle it and handle the situation with the right mentality, because I feel I have a little bit more pressure, which is a very positive sign for me.”
Despite his strong history in their matchup, the 2019 Nitto ATP Finals champion Tsitsipas will be wary of the threat posed by Sinner, who holds a 57-14 record for a year in which he has lifted four tour-level titles, including his maiden ATP Masters 1000 crown in Toronto.
“He tends to play very fearless tennis and he moves very well,” said Tsitsipas. “He has improved his movement a lot and his consistency in his shots. I do believe that he’s a very athletic player. Not very [muscular], not very heavy. He has that lightness about him when he covers the court.
“He can kind of get anywhere in the court within a few seconds and his reaction is very good. He has very good abilities and talent when it comes to feeling the ball and getting behind it.”
Tsitsipas is 51-22 for the season, and bounced back from a mid-season blip with three consecutive semi-finals (Antwerp, Vienna, Paris) prior to Turin. The 25-year-old, who became an ATP Tour champion for the 10th time in Los Cabos in August, will hope to find rhythm behind his serve to keep Sinner on his toes on the historically fast surface at the Pala Alpitour.
“His strength is the serve and his high intensity,” said Sinner. “He puts a lot of intensity on the court. He also tries to go to the net a lot more, so it’s not easy to play against him. I’m really looking forward to it. It is going to be the first match for both of us.”
Tsitsipas Toughest To Break Of All Turin Contenders
In Sunday’s evening session, Novak Djokovic and Holger Rune bring their intriguingly poised rivalry to Turin just nine days after they played out a tough quarter-final battle at the Rolex Paris Masters.
It was World No. 1 Djokovic who prevailed on that occasion to level the pair’s Lexus ATP Head2Head series at 2-2. The Serbian went on to lift his record-extending 40th ATP Masters 1000 trophy in Paris-Bercy, and he begins his bid to become Nitto ATP Finals champion for a record seventh time on an 18-match unbeaten streak at Tour-level.
Djokovic’s three-set victory in Paris snapped a two-match losing streak against Rune. The 20-year-old Dane, who is making his Nitto ATP Finals debut this week in Turin, defeated the Serbian in the 2022 Paris championship match and in Rome earlier this year. He will hope to use those wins as a template for when he steps out on court Sunday inside the Pala Alpitour.
“You cannot wish that he misses a shot or wish that he has an off day,” Rune told ATP Media on Friday. “He loses probably four to five matches a year, so he doesn’t have off days. The only wish you can have in yourself is to try to play your best tennis and be the most focused on the court in your life. You have to be ready to give everything.”
Djokovic will have extra motivation when he steps on court on Sunday in Turin. Should he defeat Rune, he will secure the coveted ATP Year-End No. 1 presented by Pepperstone honour for a record-extending eighth time.
“For me, the biggest goal right now is to end the season as the No. 1 player in the world, so hopefully I can clinch it,” said Djokovic. “I need one win, so hopefully that happens. Then of course, I would love to win the tournament as well. But that’s the goal and then let’s see what happens afterwards.”
Helping Rune in his bid to deny Djokovic a winning start in Turin is the Serbian’s former coach, Boris Becker. The ATP Tour legend joined Rune’s team last month, and he spent time speaking to both his former and current charges during Friday’s media day in Turin.
“Along with [Carlos] Alcaraz, they are the same generation, [Holger is] one of the leaders of the Next Gen and probably one of the players that will carry tennis in the decade to come,” said Djokovic. “We’re going to see a lot of him I’m sure in the future.
“He’s got Boris Becker, the legend of the game, in his corner now and he’s been improving himself as well. Every time we face each other, it’s a close match, so I’ll probably have to expect that one again.”
Novak Djokovic/Holger Rune/Boris Becker” />
Novak Djokovic, Holger Rune and Boris Becker on Friday in Turin. Photo Credit: Corinne Dubreuil/ATP Tour
The first match of this year’s prestigious season finale will see top-seeded doubles pair Ivan Dodig and Austin Krajicek take on Argentine duo Maximo Gonzalez and Andres Molteni in Green Group. Dodig and Krajicek are chasing their first match win on their second appearance in Turin.
In the evening session, fourth seeds Santiago Gonzalez and Edouard Roger-Vasselin will look to extend their eight-match winning streak against Marcel Granollers and Horacio Zeballos.