Italy’s Paolo Lorenzi extended his FedEx ATP Head2Head advantage to 3-1 against Albert Ramos-Vinolas of Spain, knocking out the top seed 6-3, 7-5 on Wednesday at the Sydney International. Lorenzi had an immaculate day serving, capturing 90 per cent of his first-serve points and saving both break points.
Ramos-Vinolas has been the top seed two times in his career, and he’s lost in the first round both times. The Spaniard also fell in the first round of the German Tennis Championships 2017 to eventual champion Leonardo Mayer of Argentina. The 36-year-old Lorenzi will next face Russian qualifier Daniil Medvedev, who beat American Jared Donaldson 6-3, 4-6, 7-5 in two hours and six minutes. Medvedev also beat Donaldson in four shortened sets in November 2017 at the inaugural Next Gen ATP Finals in Milan.
Fourth seed Fabio Fognini, Lorenzi’s countryman, achieved his best showing in Sydney, advancing to the quarter-finals with a 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 victory against Ukraine’s Alexandr Dolgopolov. Fognini had been 0-3 in Sydney second-round matches (2012, 2013, 2015).
The Italian will next play fifth-seeded Frenchman Adrian Mannarino, who didn’t face a break point in his 6-2, 6-1 win against Ricardas Berankis of Lithuania, who was a finalist in at the VTB Kremlin Cup in Moscow last October.
Is it David Ferrer’s turn to roll back the years and enjoy a throwback season? The 35-year-old Spaniard looked as dominant as ever on Wednesday, needing only 66 minutes to prevail past 2017 finalist Joao Sousa of Portugal 6-2, 6-2 at the ASB Classic in Auckland.
Ferrer, a four-time champion (2007, 2011, 2012, 2013), lost only eight service points (33/41, 80 per cent) and won almost 75 per cent of his second-serve return points against Portugal’s No. 1.
Ferrer enters the 2018 season just inside the Top 40, at No. 38. He won his 27th ATP World Tour title last year in Bastad after finishing 2016 without a title. Ferrer captured five ATP World Tour crowns in 2015.
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The former World No. 3 will meet fourth-seeded American John Isner or Next Gen ATP Finals champion Hyeon Chung in the quarter-finals. Isner and Chung play the final match on centre court on Wednesday evening.
Top seed and defending champion Jack Sock didn’t win a set in his return to Auckland. The World No. 8 was upset by German Peter Gojowczyk 6-3, 6-3 in only 61 minutes. The big-serving Sock was broken four times and won only 33 per cent of his second-serve points (9/27). Gojowczyk picked up his second Top 10 win.
The German reached the quarter-finals last week at the Qatar ExxonMobil Open in Doha before falling to eventual champion Gael Monfils. Sock was playing his first match of 2018. In the quarter-finals, Gojowczyk will face Dutchman Robin Haase, who beat Slovakian Lukas Lacko 7-6(4), 6-3.
Czech Jiri Vesely, the 2015 champion, won in a third-set tie-break for the second consecutive match, advancing past third seed Sam Querrey of the U.S. 6-4, 6-7(10), 7-6(5). The 24-year-old Vesely is going for his second ATP World Tour title this week and will next face 2016 Auckland champion Roberto Bautista Agut. The Spaniard improved to 5-0 in his FedEx ATP Head2Head series against American Steve Johnson with a 2-6, 6-2, 6-1 victory.
Sydney defending champion opens up about how his kids have motivated him
At every barrier Gilles Muller crossed during his career-best 2017 – the usual ups and downs of a season, the elbow injury and the mental wear of it all – the left-hander had two people on his mind: Lenny, 6, and Nils, 5 – his two sons.
Ever since the boys were born, Muller had sought to share tennis with them. The Luxembourg native wanted to extend his career long enough so that he would still be playing at a high level once Lenny and Nils were old enough to remember Dad’s tennis life.
Read & Watch: Muller’s First Title Like A Movie
“I always wanted to see them in the stands, watching me play,” Muller exclusively told ATPWorldTour.com.
A year ago in Sydney, it happened. During the 2017 Sydney International final, Muller, then 33, ended his five-match losing streak in ATP World Tour finals and won his maiden ATP World Tour crown (d. Evans). His wife, Alessia Fauzzi, and their boys were in the stands, and Lenny and Nils joined Muller on court for the celebration.
“All those years paid off, to stay patient, show a lot of perseverance and just keep believing in yourself. Those are the most important things,” Muller said.
Watch Muller Share His Maiden Title With His Sons
The 6’4” left-hander returns to Sydney this week but in a much different place than where he was 12 months ago. Not only has Muller won a title, but he added another in 2017, winning the Ricoh Open in ‘s-Hertogenbosch (d. Mahut). The two-time titlist also has two brand-new words in front of his name in Sydney: defending champion.
“Last year I had probably one of the most beautiful days of my tennis career here so coming back, it’s a very special feeling,” Muller said.
The 34-year-old kicked off his 2018 last week at the Brisbane International presented by Suncorp (l. to Chung). It was Muller’s first match since 21 September at the Moselle Open in Metz (l. to Basilashvili). The left-hander shut down his season early because of inflammation just under his serving elbow.
“I played with the pain during the [U.S.] summer and then I decided that it was better to stop the season and get ready for next season,” Muller said. “I was feeling it a lot when I was serving and when I was playing forehands. So I did some rehab and then I started to get ready for the 2018 season quite early.”
Muller’s health – or more aptly put, his lack of injuries – was the reason behind his late-blooming career year. In years prior and during last year, for the first time, Muller was able to play consecutive months without having to sit out because of knee or elbow pain.
Watch How Muller Perfects His Lefty Serve
In 2009, Muller’s knees bothered him so much he couldn’t even fully train and practise to get into match shape. But his ATP Ranking was around No. 80, which allowed him entry into Grand Slam draws and some Masters 1000 tournaments, along with their bigger pay cheques, so he felt like he couldn’t afford to take time off to rehab the injuries.
“I was able to play, but I wasn’t in the best shape to be able to play full seasons, to go deep into the tournaments,” he said. “I had a good tournament here and there, but then I had to take some time off because I felt some pain somewhere.”
Another injury, however, forced Muller to sit out. A few years later, he felt a nagging pain in his serving elbow, and doctors found a piece of bone in one of his joints, forcing him to miss six months of the 2013 season. The time off also let him rehab his knees and refresh his mind.
“I was able to work out every day,” Muller said.
At last healthy – and 10 pounds lighter – Muller strung together the best years of his life. He had never finished a season inside the Top 50 before 2014, and he’s never finished a season outside of the top half since.
Getting Better With Age: Muller Climbs The ATP Rankings
Year
Year-End ATP Ranking
Age
2017
No. 25
34
2016
No. 34
33
2015
No. 38
32
2014
No. 47
31
2013
No. 366
30
2012
No. 68
29
“The thing that always helped me to get through the difficult times was my kids,” Muller said. “Back then they were just babies. They had no clue what I was doing. And I always dreamt of having them around in tournaments and watching me play. That was a big motivation, and I’m very happy that I stayed strong at that time.”
Muller, who will turn 35 in May, talks freely and often reflectively about entering the final years of his career. If he could do it all over again, sure, he’d change some things. But being the first player from Luxembourg to achieve a number of ATP World Tour milestones, Muller is mostly just proud of what he’s accomplished.
“I had to find a way to get to the top because nobody was there to help me, nobody was there to show me. I mean now you see there’s so many players from different countries and they’re helping the kids in their countries to improve, to show them how it’s done, to show them what to do to get there, and I didn’t have that,” Muller said.
“Obviously I had to make a lot of things by myself, definitely I made some wrong choices, but at the end of the day I’m very proud because I decided everything by my own. I am now what I am because of me, not because of anybody else.”
Besides his two titles, Muller’s 2017 was also highlighted by his first Wimbledon quarter-final, when he staved off a comeback against two-time champion Rafael Nadal 6-3, 6-4, 3-6, 4-6, 15-13 to advance past the fourth round at SW19.
“There’s a moment where you kind of think, ‘OK, this is it now because there’s no way Rafa is going to drop the fifth set’. But then I told myself to just stay calm,” Muller said.
Read More: Muller Stuns Nadal In Wimbledon Classic
The mindset that helped him against one of the greatest players of all-time was the same one that helped him in Sydney, and will help him again in 2018, where he’ll try to impress his two biggest fans every time he takes the court.
“The most important for me is to stay healthy. I saw again last year how quick it can go with a small injury, and then you’re missing a couple of months,” Muller said. “I worked very hard physically in the off-season. I hope I’m ready to go for the whole season, and to just enjoy it. I’m going to be turning 35 this year so I don’t have many years ahead of me. I’m just hoping to enjoy it and make the best of it.”
Defending champion Johanna Konta was beaten in the first round of the Sydney International, less than a week before the start of the Australian Open.
The British number one lost 6-3 7-5 to Agnieszka Radwanska in a repeat of last year’s final.
World number nine Konta, 26, had retired from her last tournament in Brisbane because of a hip injury.
“I felt I recovered a lot quicker than I anticipated, which is a massively positive thing,” she told BBC Sport.
“I think I’m right where I should be, coming off the end of last year. I’m happy again with the different kind of players that I’ve played so I feel good going into Melbourne – as good as I can feel.”
Konta is set to be seeded 10th for the opening Grand Slam of 2018, which begins on 15 January.
Neither she nor former world number two Radwanska were able to dominate with their serve in the first set, with Konta in particular struggling on her second serve as her Polish opponent converted three of her five break opportunities.
Konta again had trouble holding serve in the second set but showed signs of a fightback when she broke while trailing 4-1 in the second, but was unable to build as Radwanska sealed victory in one hour and 49 minutes.
Radwanska, now down to 28th in the world having been hampered by injury last year, will face American qualifier Catherine Bellis in the second round.
Also through to the second round is Angelique Kerber who came from a set down beat second seed Venus Williams 5-7 6-3 6-1.
Former world number one Kerber is now ranked 22nd after a disappointing run of form in 2017 but she showed signs of resurgence against the American.
Williams, who was playing in the Sydney tournament for the first time since 1999, finished the first set strongly, coming from 5-3 down to win four consecutive games.
But, playing in her first match of the season, her accuracy deserted her at times in the second set and Kerber capitalised and went on to show her strength in the decider.
Analysis
BBC tennis correspondent Russell Fuller
Konta made a bright start – moving, bending and stretching well – but lost her way against the crafty 2012 Wimbledon finalist. It was a horrid first-round draw.
Radwanska’s stout defence and lack of pace caused many problems for Konta, who missed far too frequently from the baseline.
The Pole won seven games in a row at one stage, and had a double-break advantage in the second set. Konta rallied well, but could not quite extend the match into a decider.
There will be a subsequent loss of ranking points for Konta, but of greater importance was the speed of her recovery from the hip injury.
Aljaz Bedene insists he has not let anyone down by switching his allegiance back to Slovenia.
The world number 51 became a British citizen in 2015, but has once again opted to play for his country of birth from the start of this year.
The 28-year-old is desperate to compete at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.
A change in International Tennis Federation rules had prevented him representing Britain in either the Olympics or Davis Cup.
He describes his time in British colours as a “great journey, with a bad ending”.
“It wasn’t because I didn’t like Britain, because I really wanted to play for Great Britain,” he told BBC Sport as he spoke about his decision for the first time.
“At the end of the day, it wasn’t my decision. It was the ITF’s decision. It was tough, but what I did was right. I did everything that I could. It’s a sad story at the end, but it’s a new beginning.”
Bedene says he does not feel uncomfortable to have sworn an oath of allegiance to his adopted country. And he denies he became a British citizen just to further his Davis Cup and Olympic ambitions.
“No, the main reason was I felt I wanted to give something back to the country that gave to me,” he adds. “I was living there, and I felt like I was living there for longer than really I was.
“And I was a bit sad, but I had to decide at the end as it wasn’t healthy for me. I really wanted to play the Davis Cup and the Olympic Games. When things are out of your hands, it is not easy to accept them.”
The former British number two admits it has been a little strange to see ‘Slovenia’ against his name at his opening events of the year in Doha and Sydney. But he hopes British fans will get behind him when he plays at Wimbledon.
Bedene will retain his British passport and still employs the British coach Nick Cavaday. But despite his sadness with how this chapter of his career came to an end, his conscience remains clear.
“I did this with a clean purpose. I want to have a clean relationship with everyone and I have spoken with [the LTA’s Legal Director] Stephen Farrow, who was helping me a lot with that. I did everything I could. They did everything they could, really.”
ATPWorldTour.com pays tribute to the new doubles No. 1
As Marcelo Melo’s results dropped off from the 2017 Brisbane International presented by Suncorp and the clock edged closer to midnight in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, on Sunday night, 9,347 miles away — and with a 16-hour time difference — in Sydney, Australia, Lukasz Kubot received news.
The 35-year-old Pole had risen to No. 1 in the ATP Doubles Rankings, tied with his partner Melo. For the first time since Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan jointly held top spot for the final time on 25 October 2015, the team discipline has two stand-out performers.
View Latest Emirates ATP Doubles Rankings
Speaking at the Sydney International on Tuesday, having reflected on the achievement overnight, Kubot told ATPWorldTour.com, “It’s a dream. As a doubles player, I am very happy and proud of my achievements with Marcelo [Melo] last year. It paid off, we’re now the No. 1 team [in the Emirates ATP Doubles Rankings] and also No. 1s in the individual list as well.
“It means a lot to me. I’m shocked by this, but I think the passion and hard work we undertake every day continues to drive us forward.”
While Kubot starts his first week at No. 1, Melo begins his 41st week in the top spot — having attained the lofty position for the first time on 2 November 2015. After a 2017 season of hard graft, including six titles (including Wimbledon and three ATP World Tour Masters 1000 crowns) from 10 finals, it is fitting that Kubot and his Brazilian partner should stand together.
“We’re focusing on the big events and use Marcelo’s experience – in those situations and being No. 1 before,” said Kubot. “For me, it’s a new situation. Right now we’re coming to tournaments as favourites, so there is a lot of pressure on our shoulders, but we continue to work hard every day. We’re still trying to improve a lot of things, do our best and develop some new patterns of play. It’s going to be an interesting year.”
As a singles competitor, the former World No. 41 Kubot reached two ATP World Tour finals at 2009 Belgrade (l. Djokovic) and the 2010 Brasil Open (l. Ferrero). He also contested an all-Polish quarter-final against Jerzy Janowicz at Wimbledon in July 2013. But he solely focused on doubles in late August 2016 and this week he has become the 51st player since 1976 to reach the pinnacle of the sport.
“It’s great for Poland,” said Kubot. “I’m happy that I’m one of the ambassadors for tennis in the country, putting Polish tennis on the map of the world. I’m very happy and proud. I’m grateful to Wojtek Fibak, who was No. 2 in doubles [5 February 1979] and Top 10 in singles [25 July 1997]. He gave me a lot of advice, from his experience, and motivation. I learned a lot from former No. 1s to get here, such as Jonas Bjorkman. I still want to get better, remain healthy and to stay on the Tour as long as I can.”
Kubot and Melo began their 2018 ATP World Tour season and their quest for a ninth team crown on a strong note, defeating Florin Mergea and Nenad Zimonjic 7-6(6), 6-3. They will face Damir Dzumhur and Roman Jebavy in the second round on Wednesday.
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