US Open 2023 results: Coco Gauff beats Karolina Muchova after protest
American teenager Coco Gauff is into her first US Open singles final after beating Karolina Muchova in a semi-final disrupted by protesters.
American teenager Coco Gauff is into her first US Open singles final after beating Karolina Muchova in a semi-final disrupted by protesters.
With players again struggling with the heat at the US Open, BBC Sport looks at the impact on their bodies and what organisers do to protect them.
Hot temperatures continue to affect players at the US Open, with Nicolas Mahut feeling dizzy and Rajeev Ram having to eat mid-match.
When Madison Keys arrived home from Roland Garros this year following a second-round loss, she asked her fiancé, Bjorn Fratangelo, for help. The American’s coach had split with her after Charleston and she competed in Europe alone.
“It didn’t go so well. She had some tough losses, and she came home and asked for my help. And the first thing I said was like, ‘Are you sure?’” Fratangelo told ATPTour.com. “Because we’ve done a great job of kind of staying out of each other’s careers over the seven years we’ve been together. And she said yes.”
Since the Monday of the second week of Roland Garros, Fratangelo has served as Keys’ coach. The former No. 99 player in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings is still an active player and recently qualified for the ATP 500 event in Washington, but has been focussed on helping the US Open semi-finalist.
“I’m honestly pretty chronically injured. D.C. just happened to be because the list dropped,” Fratangelo said. “I hadn’t really been practising, if I’m going to be completely honest.”
The 30-year-old figured he might as well take the opportunity to compete there. But the World No. 638’s performance in Washington was not the start of a surge back towards the top of the sport.
“It was nice in a way and it was also a little bit sad, because since then things have kind of gone downhill with the injury and stuff, it’s in my foot. So I really haven’t hit much since. I played [an ATP Challenger Tour event in] Cary afterwards and I haven’t really hit much since then,” Fratangelo said. “It’s actually both feet. I have some genetic problems with some bones in my big toes. And I’ve actually fractured both of my sesamoid bones in both toes.”
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In a way, working with Keys in a coaching capacity has been a welcome distraction.
“It was a blessing to kind of have some other things to focus on. I did some coaching stuff for the USTA while I was out last fall with the juniors and stuff and I really enjoyed it. And that was kind of the first time that I thought like, ‘Wow, this coaching stuff is actually a little bit more fun than I thought it would be,’” Fratangelo said. “When she asked if I could go to the grass-court season with her and do Eastbourne and Wimbledon, of course I said yes. I wasn’t doing much and I didn’t expect to have the success that we’ve had and she’s had.
“She’s done an unbelievable job winning Eastbourne, quartering at Wimbledon, and now, kind of taking the momentum in the summertime. It’s been great.”
After the first couple days of standing behind Keys on the practice court and telling her what to do — which he does not like to do — it has been “pretty easy” for Fratangelo to adjust to his coaching role.
He has had to work on scouting the Hologic WTA Tour players since he does not know the women particularly well. And it has taken getting used to days dragging when he is not the one warming up, hitting, going through a pre-match routine, doing physio work and so on.
“You have a lot to think about, planning how to play,” Fratangelo said. “For instance, [against Marketa] Vondrousova tonight, I was second-guessing myself. ‘Is it the right way? Should I watch more?’ You just have a lot more time to think about kind of nothing. It makes the day a little bit long.”
But overall, Fratangelo has enjoyed the experience, especially with Keys.
“I think I have a good mind for the game and I’ve taken it myself as far as I’ve gone,” Fratangelo said. “I think that maybe even some of my frustration over the years of maybe not surpassing my career high or whatever it’s been, is just not being able to do the things that I think I need to do. So to put that on someone else has actually been quite awesome. Because it kind of just solidifies how I think of the game or how I see the game so far.
“And obviously look, we’re best friends. She’s my fiancée. There’s nothing we keep from each other and it’s been very collaborative and it’s been a lot of fun I think for both of us.”
An exciting two weeks at the US Open has clinched key milestones for several rising stars on the ATP Tour, most notably American Ben Shelton. The 20-year-old has produced a career-best performance to climb 28 spots to a career-high No. 19 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings.
The 2022 NCAA singles champion, who was No. 173 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings this time last year, will clash against Novak Djokovic in Friday’s semi-finals. Shelton is the youngest US Open men’s semi-finalist since Michael Chang in 1992.
Italian Matteo Arnaldi is another bright young star who enjoyed a standout run at the American Slam, launching himself inside the Top 50 of the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings for the first time. A competitor at last year’s Next Gen ATP Finals, the 22-year-old survived Frenchman Arthur Fils in five sets and upset 16th seed Cameron Norrie to reach the fourth round.
Dominic Stricker made a splash at Flushing Meadows by stunning seventh seed Stefanos Tsitsipas in a five-set, second-round match. The Swiss lefty struck 78 winners throughout the four-hour, 10-minute encounter and maintained his form to make the fourth round, setting him up for a Top 100 debut on Monday.
Borna Gojo and Rinky Hijikata found success at the season’s final major, earning them a spot in the Top 100. The Croatian Gojo, who is No. 76 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings, advanced through qualifying en route to a fourth-round appearance. Hijikata also reached the round of 16, lifting him to No. 81 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings.
On the ATP Challenger Tour, Thiago Seyboth Wild was crowned champion at last week’s Challenger Citta’ di Como in Italy to also seal his Top 100 breakthrough this coming Monday. The 23-year-old has collected three Challenger trophies this season and earned his career-best victory at Roland Garros, where he upset Daniil Medvedev.
India’s Rohan Bopanna has returned to the US Open final 13 years after his first appearance in the title match, teaming with Australian Matthew Ebden to defeat Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut in Thursday’s semi-finals.
The duo saved a break point on Ebden’s serve at 2-4 to avoid going down a double break in the first set, which they eventually captured in a tie-break. They claimed two breaks in the final set to close out the match 7-6(3), 6-2, hitting 36 winners to 19 from the Frenchmen.
“When we held after saving a break point to avoid going down a double break in the first set, that was really important,” Bopanna said. “We got some great energy from the crowd. Back in the final 13 years later for me, so I’m very happy.”
A winner of 24 tour-level doubles titles, Bopanna is looking for his first Grand Slam title at the age of 43. In 2010 he and Pakistani partner Aisam-Ul-Haq Qureshi finished runners-up to Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan in the US Open final.
Ebden won the 2022 Wimbledon doubles title with Max Purcell, with whom he also reached the 2022 Australian Open doubles final.
Bopanna and Ebden, who won the Indian Wells title in March and reached the Wimbledon semi-finals in July, improved to 32-15 since teaming at Adelaide-1 in the first week of the season.
They are third in the Pepperstone ATP Live Doubles Teams Rankings and seem likely to qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals in Turin from 12-19 November.
“Rohan beat me here [in 2018] so I thought we should partner up,” Ebden quipped post match. “We were both looking for partners at the end of last year so we decided to have a crack and we’ve been really enjoying it. Probably from the second month we’ve been going really well.”
In Friday’s final Bopanna and Ebden will play the winner of two-time defending champions Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury and Roland Garros champions Ivan Dodig and Austin Krajicek.
Remember the name Daniel Rincon.
For tennis fans that are tuned into junior Slam results, they will already be familiar with Rincon, who won the 2021 US Open boys’ singles title. Now the 20-year-old is rising on the ATP Challenger Tour, having reached four semi-finals in his past six events.
Three months before Rincon won the junior crown at Flushing Meadows, he was walking across the stage at the Rafa Nadal Academy as a graduate of the 2021 class. Throughout his time in Mallorca, Rincon soaked in valuable lessons, perhaps no experience more memorable than training with fellow lefty, 22-time major champion Nadal.
“He gives a lot of importance to footwork, going in and back the whole time, not just staying in the same place,” Rincon told the ATP Challenger Tour media team last week. “I think during the four, five years that I got the chance to practice with him being at the academy, that’s the most important thing that he says to me almost every day, so I take it very seriously and I try to improve it a lot.
“It’s great that the academy brings the players this opportunity. Playing with one of the greatest of all time is such an advantage and I tried to take the most out of it every day. He’s such a good guy, such a nice person and he always tries to help all the players. He gave me so many tips during practices when we go to drink water. We talk about my game, what I should develop and improve. It’s Rafa, so I tried to take the most out of it.”
While at the Academy, Rincon would also find time to enjoy golfing around the Spanish island, stating, “I tried to go with my friends almost every weekend we can.” When asked who would win between him and Nadal in golf, Rincon cracked a laugh, “Rafa for sure.”
Rincon is just the latest star from the Nadal Academy to be making waves on the Challenger circuit. His roommate at ‘RNA’, 19-year-old Abdullah Shelbayh, last year became the first player from Jordan to win a match in Challenger history at the Mallorca Challenger. In February, Shelbayh became the youngest Arab to reach a Challenger final in Manama. The two left-handers, who often partner in doubles, are climbing the Pepperstone ATP Rankings together.
Jordan’s Shelbayh Makes ATP Challenger Tour History At Rafa Nadal Open
Since the start of July, Rincon has won 15 of 22 Challenger matches, including a semi-final run last week at the Rafa Nadal Open by Movistar, which is held at the luxurious academy. At a career-high No. 198 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings, the Madrid native hopes this is a sign of things to come.
“I started having a really good summer, I reached three semi-finals in a row. Then another quarter-finals. And Mallorca [was] my fifth quarter,” Rincon said. “It’s been an amazing summer and I hope to continue this way.
“Playing challengers is a big difference to the ITF and junior level. Players are better and it also shows when you have to practice with them. I think it also helped a lot in my development. Because maybe you finish a tournament, you lost in the first round, you still get the chance to practise with great players. Also they give you a lot of facilities to practice, where other circuits you don’t have many chances. So it’s great for the players and for our practices.”
This year’s WTA Finals will be staged in the Mexican resort of Cancun – but the agreement leaves the door open for Saudi Arabia to host the event in future.
One of the major storylines of the 2023 season has been the rivalry between Carlos Alcaraz and Novak Djokovic. Alexander Zverev has had a taste of both players excellent form across the American hard-court swing.
Having fallen in two tight sets to eventual Djokovic at the Western & Southern Open in Cincinnati last month, the German was beaten in straight sets by Alcaraz on Wednesday as his promising US Open run was ended at the quarter-final stage. Zverev was unable to identify a clear leader in terms of level within Alcaraz and Djokovic’s Lexus ATP Heaf2Head rivalry but is in no doubt that the chasing pack has some work to do to catch the pair up.
“I played Novak in Cincinnati, I played Carlos here. I think they are very, very similar from the level of the game,” said Zverev in his post-match press conference at Flushing Meadows. “There are some things that Novak does better; there are some things that Carlos does better.
“I think they are at a level of their own at the moment. The other guys gotta catch up. That’s as simple as that.”
Alcaraz’s US Open Title Defence Moves Into Top Gear
Alcaraz delivered a top-class quarter-final display in New York to continue his US Open title defence in style, but Zverev’s challenge to the Spaniard was hampered from the second set onwards by a problem with his left glute.
“I was in the match the first set. I could have broken, it could have gone my way, it didn’t,” reflected Zverev. “Then the second set I felt something in my hamstring glute, left side. I couldn’t push off on my serve anymore. My serve speed was down quite a lot compared to the other days. Against him especially I needed a good serving day otherwise it would have been difficult.
“I think my biggest weapon was kind of taken away after the first set and it’s difficult to even compete if you don’t have that.”
Zverev said that his physical struggle was not related to his lung-busting four-hour, 41-minute fourth-round triumph against Jannik Sinner. Despite his exit to Alcaraz in the last eight, the 26-year-old can reflect on another solid fortnight in a season during which he has made an increasingly impressive recovery following a serious ankle injury in 2022.
“I think we were both physically done after that match,” said Zverev, who leaves New York with a 42-21 record for the year, of the Sinner clash. “I thought I recovered quite well. Just looking at the facts, I think we finished at 1:30 at night. We played 4 hours, 40 minutes. For that I think I recovered quite okay. But today wasn’t enough to be competitive.”
The pressure of competing as defending champion at a Grand Slam for the first time has done little to throw Carlos Alcaraz off course this US Open.
The Spaniard eased to a straight-sets quarter-final victory against 12th seed Alexander Zverev on Wednesday night, a stark contrast to his five hour, 15-minute triumph against Jannik Sinner at the same stage at Flushing Meadows a year ago. Yet it is not just the manner of his win against Zverev that has the top seed feeling confident as he prepares to meet Daniil Medvedev in the semi-finals.
“I’m more mature now. I grew up a lot since last year,” said Alcaraz in his post-match press conference. “Last year I was facing my first semi-final of a Grand Slam. Now I’m facing my fourth one. I feel like I’m a totally different player.
“It doesn’t matter that last year I got my first Grand Slam, that I won my first semi-final and final of a Grand Slam. I feel like I’m more mature. I deal better with the pressure in those kinds of moments. I feel like I’m different, a different person and a different player.”
Alcaraz’s US Open Title Defence Moves Into Top Gear
Alcaraz’s mental approach of treating the majors like he does any other tournament has helped him handle the hype this fortnight in New York. His form at Flushing Meadows, where he has dropped just one set en route to the last four, has been a continuation of a scintillating 2023 season for the 20-year-old, who is now the owner of a Tour-leading 58-6 record.
“I’m doing the same things,” said Alcaraz. “Before matches I’m doing the same things. Mentally it can change a little bit going into tournaments that are the best-of-five, but I try to do the same things.
“I’m doing well during the season. Why do I have to change it? I just do the same things.”
The @carlosalcaraz show rolls on in New York 🤩@usopen | #USOpen pic.twitter.com/vhQHd92qmY
— ATP Tour (@atptour) September 7, 2023
The Spaniard’s ability to stay clutch at key moments played a crucial role early in his win against Zverev. He saved two break points at 3-4 in the first set against the German before claiming a decisive break of his own in the next game to kick-start his march to victory.
“Obviously watching the level Sascha was playing in the first set, being able to win it, it was great for me, to give me more confidence,” said Alcaraz. “Probably he got down a little bit in the second set and I took my chances.
“So it was great. Coming to the third set, knowing that I’m up, playing a great level, for him it was really, really tough. Obviously, he was struggling a little bit physically in the third set, but it was great to be able to win in straight sets.”
Alcaraz now turns to his third Lexus ATP Head2Head clash of 2023 with Medvedev. He claimed dominant victories against the 2021 US Open champion at Indian Wells in March and Wimbledon in July, and the Spaniard will try to emulate his gameplan from those triumphs when he steps onto Arthur Ashe Stadium on Saturday.
“The last matches that I played against Daniil, I played a perfect tactical game,” said Alcaraz. “I did all the things that I had to do against him pretty well. I think my game suits pretty well against that type of opponent like Daniil.
“So I’m going to try to do the same things that I did, for example, in Indian Wells and in Wimbledon, and hopefully get the win and play the same level that I played in those matches.”