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Watch Turin draw live: Will Alcaraz land in Sinner's group?

  • Posted: Nov 06, 2024

Fans will be able to watch live as the elite eight players at the Nitto ATP Finals are placed into their four-man groups in Turin on Thursday. A live stream of the draw will be available on nittoatpfinals.com at approximately 12:45 p.m. CET/6:45 a.m. ET.

Top seed Jannik Sinner heads the Ilie Nastase group and could find himself matching up with archrival Carlos Alcaraz, who comes into the tournament as World No. 3. New World No. 2 and two-time tournament champion Alexander Zverev heads the John Newcombe group, where he could face 2020 champion Daniil Medvedev.

Alcaraz and Medvedev will be randomly drawn into either the Nastase or Newcombe groups. World No. 6 Taylor Fritz and No. 7 Casper Ruud will also find themselves in opposing groups, as will No. 8 Alex de Minaur and No. 9 Andrey Rublev. (World No. 6 Novak Djokovic has withdrawn from the event due to injury.)

The doubles field will be split into the Mike Bryan Group and the Bob Bryan Group.

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Shapovalov downs Borges in Belgrade for milestone win

  • Posted: Nov 06, 2024

Denis Shapovalov is rounding off his comeback season in style with an impressive run at the Belgrade Open.

The 25-year-old produced a near-flawless performance on Wednesday to defeat fifth seed Nuno Borges 6-2, 6-4 and advance to his 40th tour-level quarter-final. Shapovalov, who came through qualifying, was clinical on serve throughout the match, during which he won 91 per cent (31/34) of points behind his first delivery, according to Infosys ATP Stats.

“It was a fast-paced match today, I started really well out the gates,” said Shapovalov, who broke Borges’ serve in the opening game. “I kept the momentum going. I’ve been playing well all week, so I am very happy with another win.

“It’s one of the best wins of the season for me, so I’ll enjoy it a little bit and then I’ll start thinking about the quarter-finals.”

Shapovalov’s 2023 season was cut short by a knee injury, but the Canadian has made a steady return to action throughout this year. With his 64-minute win, the former No. 10 in the PIF ATP Rankings is into his third tour-level quarter-final of 2024 (Washington, Basel).

Shapovalov will next face Christopher O’Connell for a spot in the last four after the Australian fired past Daniel Altmaier 6-3, 6-1.

Earlier, Francisco Cerundolo served up some revenge by ousting Roman Safiullin and levelling the pair’s Lexus ATP Head2Head series at 1-1. The third seed, who fell to Safiullin in the first round of Wimbledon in July, dialled in for a 6-4, 6-4 win.

“I knew it was going to be a super tough match, but I think I played pretty well,” said Cerundolo, who improved to 34-30 on the season. “I’m super happy because he is a tough player. If you don’t serve well, his return will come fast and then it’s difficult.”

Cerundolo fired six aces and saved each of the two break points he faced en route to a one-hour, 31-minute triumph. In his 22nd tour-level quarter-final, Cerundolo will face Serbian wild card Hamad Medjedovic.

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Elsewhere, Laslo Djere was forced to dig deep to notch back-to-back wins on the ATP Tour for the first time since October last year. The Serbian wild card saved two set points in the second set, but held his nerve to outlast lucky loser Duje Ajdukovic 6-1, 7-6(8) to secure his spot in the last eight.

“In the first set, I played my best tennis of the year,” said Djere. “In the second set, it was a battle. I really wanted to win and I am happy that I pushed through it.”

The 29-year-old will next face Fabian Marozsan, who moved past home hope Dusan Lajovic 6-3, 7-5 to reach his fifth tour-level quarter-final.

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Sinner hits practice court with Fritz at Nitto ATP Finals

  • Posted: Nov 06, 2024

Preparations for the 2024 Nitto ATP Finals are in full swing. World No. 1 Jannik Sinner took to the Inalpi Arena’s centre court for a practice session with second-time qualifier Taylor Fritz on Wednesday.

The pair, who went head to head in this year’s US Open final, were the first to hit on the court as anticipation builds around the fourth edition of the season finale in Turin. 

<img alt=”Taylor Fritz ” style=”width: 100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/11/06/11/35/fritz-nitto-atp-finals-2024-wednesday-practice.jpg?w=100%25″ />

Taylor Fritz prepares for his second appearance at the Nitto ATP Finals. (Credit: Andrew Eichenholz/ATP Tour)

Sinner fell short to Novak Djokovic in last year’s championship-match clash in Turin, but will be eager to go one further this time around. The Italian clinched his maiden Grand Slam title at the Australian Open in January, and did not look back in an emphatic year. 

Fritz made the semi-finals on his debut appearance at the Nitto ATP Finals in 2022. Now, after another stellar season, during which he reached his maiden major final, the American is back on the hunt in Turin.

DRAW CEREMONY
The draw is set to take place on Thursday 7 November at approximately 12:45 p.m. CET, following the pre-tournament press conference.

In recognition of the first No.1s in the PIF ATP Rankings, and the most successful doubles team in history, the singles groups for this year’s Nitto ATP Finals will be the Ilie Nastase Group and the John Newcombe Group, while the doubles groups will be the Bob Bryan Group and the Mike Bryan Group.

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#NextGenATP Michelsen ends Gasquet's fairytale run in Metz

  • Posted: Nov 05, 2024

Alex Michelsen had little time for sentiment on Tuesday at the Moselle Open.

The #NextGenATP star rallied from the brink of defeat to secure a thrilling comeback victory over Richard Gasquet, ending the Frenchman’s fairytale final run in Metz. Michelsen saved two match points in the deciding-set tie-break before sealing a 6-7(4), 7-6(3), 7-6(8) triumph.

“I wasn’t really thinking, I was just playing,” said Michelsen, who is second in the PIF ATP Live Race To Jeddah. “I felt super calm in the pressure moments and I think that was why I came through. I was down two match points and I found two winners.”

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In an absorbing battle, it was Michelsen who held his nerve, striking 65 winners en route to his seventh quarter-final of 2024. The 20-year-old will next face either Buyunchaokete or qualifier Jesper de Jong for a place in the last four.

“He’s been doing it for 20 years and he is still that good,” Michelsen added of Gasquet, who is retiring at the conclusion of Roland Garros 2025. “He’s an incredible player. I knew it was going to be a tough battle. All the credit to him for competing as hard as he could.”

Gasquet, who made the first of his 33 ATP Tour finals in Metz, was bidding to become the oldest quarter-finalist in tournament history. The 38-year-old had the match on his racket at 6/4 in the final set tie-break, but Michelsen produced some inspired tennis to cross the line.

Earlier, it seemed as if the news that Andrey Rublev had qualified for the Nitto ATP Finals might just have been his tonic.

The top seed at the indoor ATP 250 dialled in for a hard-fought 7-6(3), 7-5 win over Lorenzo Sonego, the 2022 champion. In a battle dominated by the server, Rublev found the only break of the match to seal a one-hour, 52-minute victory.

Rublev has since withdrawn from the main draw citing abdominal pain, meaning that the winner of the clash between Jan-Lennard Struff and Corentin Moutet will advance to the semi-finals. 

“It was a tough match, he is playing really well, he beat me the last two times,” said Rublev, who levelled the pair’s Lexus ATP Head2Head series at 2-2. “With the way he serves, and how he plays with the forehand, it’s really tough to play against him. The first set could have gone either way, but as soon as I had a chance, I was able to take it.”

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Lehecka passes Cilic test in Belgrade: 'He hasn't forgotten how to play'

  • Posted: Nov 05, 2024

Jiri Lehecka delivered a statement performance against Marin Cilic on Tuesday at the Belgrade Open to serve up some Czech history.

The fourth seed powered to a 6-4, 7-6(4) victory, becoming the first Czech player to reach seven ATP Tour quarter-finals in one season since Tomas Berdych in 2017. With the one-hour, 43-minute win, Lehecka extended his perfect record against opponents outside the Top 100 in the PIF ATP Rankings to 8-0.

“He didn’t forget how to play,” Lehecka said of Cilic, the former World No. 3. “We saw that today, it was a good test for me. It’s always a good win against a very experienced player, a Grand Slam champion, so I’m very happy.”

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Lehecka was ruthless on serve throughout the match, during which he won 89 per cent (33/37) points behind his first delivery, according to Infosys ATP Stats. In the last eight, the 22-year-old will face qualifier Lukas Klein, who earlier upset seventh seed Tomas Martin Etcheverry 6-4, 7-6(8).

Elsewhere, Hamad Medjedovic continued his return to form with a hard-fought win over Aleksandar Kovacevic to advance to his third tour-level quarter-final. The wild card did not face a single break point, en route to a 7-6(5), 6-4 triumph.

“I was a bit tight in my first match [against Brandon Nakashima],” said Medjedovic, the reigning Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF champion. “But now I have got into the rhythm, I am feeling great with the home crowd and I’m really enjoying it.”

Medjedovic will face either third seed Francisco Cerundolo or Roman Safiullin, who earlier secured his 50th tour-level win by defeating Fabio Fognini 6-3, 6-3.

On a day of Serbian success, Laslo Djere won the battle of two wild cards with a commanding 6-4, 6-4 victory over Stan Wawrinka. The 29-year-old, who notched his third tour-level win on home soil, will face lucky loser Duje Ajdukovic in the second round.

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Bravo: Behind the rise of Sinner & an Italian tennis empire

  • Posted: Nov 05, 2024

It is summertime in Italy, and on this Sunday afternoon members at the Harbor Club Milano are divided on which tennis matches to watch. The one on the big screen features Italians Simone Bolelli and Andrea Vavassori playing in the Terra Wortmann Open final. Or walk outside the clubhouse, and watch the qualifying matches of the ATP Challenger event.

These are the glory days for Italian tennis. On any given Sunday, you will likely see an Italian player in the hunt for a trophy on the ATP Tour and Challenger Tour.
“[Jannik] Sinner is the most popular sportsman in Italy,” says Massimo Giomba, a veteran journalist for Italy’s tennis news website Ubitennis. “All companies want to have his face to make advertising. And many people are interested about tennis now. It even happens on the metro you can hear normal people discussing the chances of Sinner or [Lorenzo] Musetti to win the tournament or to climb the rankings.”

<img alt=”Lorenzo Musetti” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/11/04/16/29/musetti-sardegnach-2024.jpg” />Lorenzo Musetti in action at the 2024 Sardegna Open. (Photo Credit: Mike Lawrence/ATP Tour)

Italians are not only climbing the PIF ATP Rankings, they are absolutely stacking it. With Sinner currently crowned the best player in the world, and Musetti on the rise at No. 17, Italy’s supply chain of players is well-balanced and flourishing. Like the national high-speed train, La Frecciarosa, Italy has steamrolled perennial powerhouse Spain off the tracks with the most players in the Top 100 of the PIF ATP Rankings by a non-grand slam nation.

“As I always said, we are lucky because we have junior tournaments, we have Future events, and then we have a lot of Challenger events in Italy,” says Jannik Sinner, who this year became the first Italian man to rise to World No. 1. “Which potentially could give a chance for the young players, having some wild cards, trying to understand what the level is until a certain point and talking about ranking-wise. Then after we have also big events. In Turin, we have the [Nitto] ATP Finals.”

If all roads lead to Rome, then they are most certainly paved with ATP Challengers. This year Italy will host 19 ATP Challengers. The return on investment for the Federation of Italian Tennis and Padel (FITP) has been a dependable production pipeline of players ranked inside the Top 500. In addition to keeping both players and coaches on task, Italy’s focus on staging more Challengers has better prepared its players to succeed on the ATP Tour. Right now, eight Italians are in the Top 75 of the PIF ATP Rankings.

<img src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/08/28/15/31/cagliari-challenger-wednesday.jpg” style=”width: 100%;” alt=”Lorenzo Musetti and Mariano Navone” />
The Sardegna Open is one of 19 Challenger Tour events hosted by Italy. (Photo Credit: Mike Lawrence/ATP Tour)

Every nation needs a leader, someone to light the way for the younger generation to follow. Argentina had Guillermo Vilas, Czechoslovakia had Jan Kodes, and Sweden had Bjorn Borg. For Italy, that man was Adriano Panatta. In 1976, Panatta won both the Italian Open and French Open.

Claudio Pistolesi was just nine years old when Panatta won the French Open. “To watch him [Panatta] play was both pleasure and pain,” recalls Pistolesi. “Some players play tennis from the textbook. Not so with Panatta, he performed magic.”

True that. Watch the videos and count all the Houdini-like escapes. Panatta played high-stakes tennis, saving match points with a Bond-like demeanour and derring-do escapes. Panatta would often employ the most dramatic tactics possible and in doing so gave Italy their first taste of cardio tennis.

<img src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/08/28/16/18/panatta-bravo-italy-2024.jpg” style=”width: 100%;” alt=”Adriano Panatta” />
Adriano Panatta defeated Harold Salomon in the 1976 French Open final. Photo: AFP/Getty Images)

“Yannick Noah may have inspired France,” claims Pistolesi, “but Adriano Panatta united Italy. And in doing so, he took tennis from an elite sport to a popular sport.”

With the barrier broken, a steady stream of Italians began to breach the walls of the Top 100: Pistolesi, Andrea Gaudenzi, Renzo Furlan, Gianluca Pozzi, Davide Sanguinetti, Cristiano Caratti, Filippo Volandri, Potito Starace, Simone Bolelli, Andreas Seppi, and Paolo Lorenzi.

And then came Fabio.

In Italy, Fabio Fognini is affectionately called ‘The Pope’. Meaning that Fognini can do whatever he wants and that people will always love him. Whether he plays with divine inspiration like his 2015 US Open third-round, come from behind five-set win over Rafael Nadal. Or swats balls with apparent indifference while saving five match points, and committing 12 foot faults against Albert Montanes at the 2010 French Open. Fabio Fognini is the proverbial box of chocolates that Italians just cannot get enough of.

<img src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/08/28/16/16/fognini-bravo-italy-wednesday.jpg” style=”width: 100%;” alt=”Fabio Fognini” />
Fognini has won nine titles on the ATP Tour and reached No. 9 in the PIF ATP Rankings. (Photo Credit: Mike Lawrence/ATP Tour)

Another pleasant surprise for Italian tennis was the shock ascent of Matteo Berrettini and Lorenzo Sonego. The fact that neither player was on anyone’s junior watchlist might have been a blessing in disguise. As well as a credit to the depth of developmental coaching in Italy.

“As juniors, both Matteo (Berrettini) and Lorenzo (Sonego) had the benefit of no expectations and unnecessary pressures,” believes Pistolesi. “Same like Sinner. Plus, they had some good fortunes to have been joined with exactly the right coach at the age of magic where kids can believe in dreams. And maybe even more important, these two special coaches believed in them.”

“I have been asked what made Matteo (Berrettini) special,” says former coach Vincenzo Santopadre. “And my answer is this. Almost every day he was showing me how he has this quality of listening. Not only hearing but listening deep inside of himself and committing these lessons to his memory. He could record everything that was taught to him that was important to getting better in tennis. And another reason is, unless you were with him every day, in good times and bad, you could not see this incredible desire to be great.”

<img alt=”Matteo Berrettini ” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/11/04/15/49/berrettini-wimbledon-2021-sunday.jpg” />
Matteo Berrettini reached the Wimbledon final in 2021. (Photo Credit: Corinne Dubreuil/ATP Tour)

The dream came true in the summer of 2021 at the Wimbledon Championships. That is when Matteo Berrettini marched onto Centre Court for the championship match against Novak Djokovic, becoming the first Italian men’s singles finalist in tournament history and first Italian Grand Slam men’s singles finalist since Panatta at 1976 Roland Garros.

It has long been an open secret that the best way to develop a nation’s tennis is through the three Cs: Coaches, Competition, and Courts. So, why don’t more countries do better? It can be a bit tricky. For starters, national associations often go corporate and employ a top-down management style that can damage more than develop.

In 2011, Donato Campagnoli, currently the consultant for the Department of Tactical-Technical of the FITP, was the only Italian coach at the ITF Worldwide Coaches Conference in Port Ghalib, Egypt. That would soon change. Thanks to an O.K.R action plan by the FITP, today Italian coaches boast the highest number of attendees in coaching education courses. Then there is Alberto Castellani, who has been a father figure to so many Italian coaches and players over the decades. Castellani is the president of the GPTCA, and regularly conducts over 40 coaching workshops a year from Rome to Rio.

According to Campagnoli the FITP created the Sistema Italia. “A project for the creation of a territorial ecosystem based on the cultural elevation of all the stakeholders involved in racquet sports,” states Campagnoli.

In more simple words, the FITP had to repair relationships. Step one, they (FITP) decided, was to stop separating the players from their coaches and cherry-picking the best players out of the local clubs.

8 Italians in Top 75 in the PIF ATP Rankings

 Rank  Player  Age
 1  Jannik Sinner   23
 17  Lorenzo Musetti  22
 32  Flavio Cobolli   22
 35  Matteo Berrettini  28
 38  Matteo Arnaldi   23
 43  Luciano Darderi  22
 51  Lorenzo Sonego   29
 74  Fabio Fognini  37

“We made a collective decision at the FITP that the best place for the players to develop was at home with their families,” says Campagnoli. “That they should continue with the coaches who trained them, and remain at the clubs who have supported them from the first bounce of the ball.”

Now that everyone was working together, the FITP started spending money in all the right places. The FITP began an ambitious campaign of financially supporting all clubs that wanted to host professional tournaments. With courts and competitions in place, the FITP decided to befriend the coaches.

“Today, it is a new culture and approach by the Federation,” says Vincenzo Santopadre. “The FITP helps all the coaches with many forms of support from coaching education materials and workshops, access to analytics, physiotherapists, and fitness coaches.”

The FITP accepted that if they were going to lead a tennis revival, they would need to stop the bossing and start listening to their best talents. That done, the FITP was not content to sit back now that they had made friends and influenced others. The FITP’s masterstroke came with SuperTennis, a TV tennis channel. SuperTennis not only attracted lots of sponsors, but equally important, it broadcasted tennis to an audience hungry for all things tennis.

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“SuperTennis has been huge for us,” claims Francesco De Laurentiis, Director of Tennis at the Sporting Club Sassuolo. “SuperTennis shows not only the big tournaments but also the Challengers, WTA, ITF Tours, and even some juniors! So people get to know players [ranked] from 500 to the Top 10. Therefore, they become known and popular so parents and junior players get closer to the tennis competition system and their interest in being part of it grows.”

Massimo Giomba believes that there is one more reason for success.

“Another factor is a sort of emulation game,” begins Giomba. “Sinner, Musetti, Luciano Darderi, Matteo Arnaldi, and Flavio Cobolli were born between 2001 and 2003. They have been playing against each other since Juniors. When one of them began to win in his professional matches, the other boys were thinking: “He won, why not me too?”. So now all these boys are in top 100. Others as Francesco Passaro, Mattia Bellucci, Matteo Gigante and Giulio Zeppieri are not so far behind.”

<img alt=”Flavio Cobolli” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/11/04/22/15/cobolli-training-2024″ />Flavio Cobolli, 22, began the year outside the Top 100 but cracked the Top 30 during a year in which he won 35 tour-level matches. Photo: Corinne Dubreuil/ATP Tour

Alfred Hitchcock said that good drama should, ‘always make the audience suffer as much as possible.’ Hitchcock might have been talking about tennis in Italy. Watch a tennis match in Italy, and you will be treated to the very best and the worst expressions in the Italian language. A mash-up of blessings, curses, and hand gestures that need no translation. For Italians, a good tennis match is not just a game but a theatre that demands more than just a ball passing over a net. Italians want to be entertained, and the more drama the better.

These days Italian tennis fans are getting more than just dramatic tennis matches to watch. Thanks to greater cooperation between the FITP and local clubs, players and coaches are free to deliver results that allow everybody to celebrate.

 

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Italian players inside Top 100/Top 500 vs. other countries

Country Top 100 Ranking  Top 500 Ranking 
France 10 45
United States 10 42
Australia 10 24
Italy 9 39 

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