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Cervara Exclusive: How Medvedev Went From Cold To Gold

  • Posted: Apr 03, 2023

Cervara Exclusive: How Medvedev Went From Cold To Gold

ATPTour.com speaks exclusively to Medvedev’s coach after Miami final

Daniil Medvedev earned his fifth ATP Masters 1000 trophy when he defeated Jannik Sinner on Sunday for the Miami Open presented by Itau title. It was the best moment yet of a torrid stretch for the 27-year-old, who also claimed crowns in Rotterdam, Doha and Dubai and reached the final at Indian Wells.

Less than two months ago, Medvedev was No. 12 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings, his lowest point since July 2019. Now he is back to World No. 4 with an opportunity to surge higher during the clay-court season.

After Medvedev’s Miami triumph, ATPTour.com caught up with his coach, Gilles Cervara, who revealed when everything turned around, why opponents struggle so much against the former World No. 1 and more.

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Last year was tough for Daniil. The start of this year was tough. When did everything click and turn around?
For me, it turned around just before Rotterdam. I remember as a coach the three days in Rotterdam before the first round on court were very, very tough. I felt after the Australian Open, during two weeks of practising, but then a few days before the first round in Rotterdam, I felt Daniil quite nervous, quite not confident.

But I felt also he could play good tennis. My job at that time was to find the way to talk to him in a good way to find the good button inside himself to make him practise well and to win the sets during practices. That’s what happened.

Even if he was not ready to realise that he was playing good at that time, I felt that I touched something. Then the first round against [Alejandro] Davidovich [Fokina] was key, to win this one even [though he was] in trouble. And then day after day was getting better and better and then the win against Felix [Auger-Aliassime] made also another important step to get on fire.

What was the piece of advice you gave him?
It was not special advice… I know Daniil, I know how it works with him. I try to adapt with the situation and what he says is very important. Let’s say I talked about this book, it’s like water. I try to be like water, to use the good wave, let’s [put it] like this.

And because he’s a smart guy and he’s an amazing player, when you touch the good thing, he’s able to transform sh** to gold, let’s say it like this.

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What is it that people don’t understand about Daniil and his game?
Tough to say. Tough to say because I’m not in front of him to say it. But sometimes his shots have power, sometimes not. Sometimes you expect something but he goes the other way. Sometimes you expect a deep ball and it comes short with no consistency.

Then one thing [that is] important is he is like a wall. Every ball is coming back and he’s not missing. He’s serving, he’s running. He’s able to almost find a solution for any problem.

He’s an amazing fighter. He really wants to win all the time, so he doesn’t give anything to the opponent and he pushes the opponents at a level that sometimes — I’m not talking about the top players because they’re used to it — but for the other players, they’re not used to playing every point like this. The combo of this makes him so tough to play.

After the Carlos Alcaraz match at Indian Wells where he lost in the final, it would have been easy for him to maybe be down. But he came back and played a great tournament even though historically this swing was never great for him results-wise. How important was it for Daniil to bounce back like that?
Him and I and all the team, our job, I know myself and I know Daniil, we want to win. It’s like [in] our skin to play to win. That’s all it’s about in fact. So you try every day when you are on court to do the best you can do. When you play you want to win.

For example, a small joke when I play snooker with Daniil, I’m ready to get crazy to win against him and he is the same. So there is a lot of tension between us, you can feel it, because he wants to beat me and I want to beat him.

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Wrecking Ball: Medvedev's Bewitching Backhand

  • Posted: Apr 03, 2023

Wrecking Ball: Medvedev’s Bewitching Backhand

Learn how the 27-year-old earned his fourth title of 2023

Nobody on the planet loves backhand-to-backhand rallies more than Daniil Medvedev.

Medvedev defeated Jannik Sinner 7-5, 6-3 in the Miami Open presented by Itau final on Sunday on the back of dominating backhand exchanges through the Ad court.

The secret sauce of Medvedev’s flat, “knuckle-ball” backhands is that they are almost impossible to do anything with. They come at you flat and low, skidding through the court. They are not fast enough that you can use the raw power back against him or slow enough to step in and dominate. They live in a maddening “middle world” that bamboozle opponents into self-destruction.

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Medvedev Wins Maiden Miami Title, Fourth Trophy Of 2023

Backhand Groundstroke Performance

Medvedev

• Total = 97

• Errors = 5

• Winners = 3

• Opponent Forehand Errors From A Backhand = 6

• Opponent Backhand Errors From A Backhand = 12

• Opponent Backhand Volley Error From A Backhand = 1

Sinner

• Total = 92

• Errors = 19

• Winners = 0

• Opponent Forehand Errors From A Backhand = 3

• Opponent Backhand Errors From A Backhand = 1

Medvedev’s unorthodox backhand only yielded five errors from 92 shots, or one error every 18 backhands. Sinner’s more aesthetically pleasing backhand committed 19 errors from 92 backhands, which was good for one error every five backhands. It was a miss-match that provided Medvedev with a “go-to” winning pattern of play from start to finish.

Medvedev’s backhand was able to extract 12 backhand errors from Sinner, while the Italian was only able to extract a solitary backhand error from Medvedev from his own backhand. Overall, Medvedev hit 97 forehands and 97 backhands for the match and had little desire to hit run-around forehands in the Ad court. Medvedev only hit 10 run-around forehands in the Ad court, while Sinner hit 41.

Medvedev knew his backhand was the wrecking ball.

What’s fascinating about Medvedev’s backhand is that he voluntarily hits it from extremely deep in the court. Medvedev made contact with his backhand 46 per cent of the time from further back than two metres behind the baseline. Sinner made contact just 16 per cent of the time with his backhand from the deep section of the court.

What’s also interesting to note is that Medvedev’s backhand strategy enabled him to hit more backhands inside the baseline than Sinner. Medvedev hit 20 per cent inside the baseline, while Sinner was just at 11 per cent.

He stands deep where he can’t be hurt and quickly moves forward to hurt you when the opportunity arises.


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Sinner’s backhand started the match well, making only two errors from the first 22 backhands struck. It was a vastly different story at the start of the second set, where Sinner committed five backhand errors from the first twelve backhands hit. Four of those errors were committed from not being able to handle a Medvedev cross court backhand.

Medvedev’s backhand got off to a flyer, making the first 30 backhands in a row, including one winner, and forcing seven opponent errors. Medvedev’s backhand was the rock he relied on in the second set, making only two errors from 31 backhands while extracting eight errors from Sinner.

Medvedev’s backhand remains an enigma for opponents. Medvedev won a healthy 61 per cent (45/74) of his baseline points for the match. Sinner only managed to win less than half of that, at 30 per cent (19/64).

Medvedev’s bewitching backhand strikes again.

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Medvedev: 'Best Start To A Season I've Ever Had'

  • Posted: Apr 02, 2023

Medvedev: ‘Best Start To A Season I’ve Ever Had’

Fourth seed has won four titles in his past five events

Daniil Medvedev is a former World No. 1, a Grand Slam champion and now a five-time ATP Masters 1000 titlist. For all his accolades, he may never have had a better stretch than the one he is currently on. His maiden trophy triumph at the Miami Open presented by Itau improved his 2023 record to 29-3 and earned him his fourth trophy in his past five events.

“It’s the best start of the season I have ever had. Amazing amount of points won,” said Medvedev, who now enjoys a 600 point lead over Novak Djokovic in the calendar-year Pepperstone ATP Live Race To Turin.

“I think 2019 was great also with six finals and it was also new for me in 2019. So I think it’s kind of the same,” he also said. 

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Medvedev won four titles in his breakout 2019 season and matched that tally in 2021. Just over three months into 2023, he has already equalled that mark with his 7-5, 6-3 victory against Jannik Sinner on Sunday, with plenty of time to add to it.

The 27-year-old was particularly happy that his recent run has come at events across the world, with all different hard-court conditions: He won titles in Rotterdam, Doha, Dubai and Miami and reached the final in Indian Wells.

Medvedev has now won five of the six hard-court ATP Masters 1000s, in addition to his runner-up finish last month in Indian Wells. He’s also won the 2020 Nitto ATP Finals title and the 2021 US Open crown in addition to his consecutive Australian Open final runs in 2021 and 2022.

Medvedev’s ATP Masters 1000 Titles

Miami 2023
Toronto 2021
Paris 2020
Shanghai 2019
Cincinnati 2019

Speaking in his post-match press-conference, the self-defined hard-court specialist explained why he is so comfortable on the surface.

“Generally I love hard courts. I love playing on it. If it would be my choice, it would be only hard courts, but I completely understand that that’s not fair, if we can say like this.

“I feel the best at my game on hard courts. Even if I know that I can play well enough on the grass and clay, on hard courts I feel the most fluid. On hard courts I can play not my best tennis but still win the matches. That’s a big difference.”

While Medvedev’s 29 tour-level wins this season pace the ATP Tour, his competitors can only hope the upcoming transition to clay courts cools off the soon-to-be World No. 4.

“Now clay season starts so we’ll see how you do there,” Sinner teased during his runner-up speech. “But I wish you all the best.”

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Sinner: 'I'm Getting Closer & Closer'

  • Posted: Apr 02, 2023

Sinner: ‘I’m Getting Closer & Closer’

Sinner up two spots to No. 9 in Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings

Defeated but not dejected, Jannik Sinner was keen to focus on the bigger picture following his straight-sets loss against Daniil Medvedev in the Miami Open presented by Itau title match on Sunday.

The Italian advanced to the semi-finals at the first ATP Masters 1000 event of the season in Indian Wells and backed up that run by reaching his third final of the year in Miami. He leaves South Florida holding a 9-2 record across the ‘Sunshine Double’.

“It’s always going to be a tough, tough challenge for me to play against [Medvedev]. But I feel like I’m getting closer and closer,” Sinner said. “Even today I felt like that the chances are there, so that’s the good thing and the positive thing.

“The good thing is that after Indian Wells compared to here I have improved. I felt better on court. That’s the most important,” Sinner later added.

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Sinner is up two spots to No. 9 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings following a series of impressive results in South Florida. The 21-year-old defeated Top 10 star Andrey Rublev in the fourth round before he overcame top seed Carlos Alcaraz in an epic three-set semi-final battle.

The 10th seed struggled physically at times during the match against Medvedev. He revealed that while his three-hour, one-minute win against Alcaraz had given him confidence, he felt the physical and mental effects during the final.

“It takes a bit [out of you] because that was a match [against Alcaraz] I was very looking forward to,” said Sinner. “I was preparing a lot. In the other way, when you step off court, you feel also confident. Because winning against Carlos, it was a very, very good win.”

Most Tour-Level Wins In 2023

Player  Record
Daniil Medvedev 29-3
Jannik Sinner 21-5 
Cameron Norrie 21-5
Taylor Fritz  20-6
Carlos Alcaraz 18-2
Novak Djokovic 15-1

Sinner now trails Medvedev 0-6 in their ATP Head2Head series. The 21-year-old is eager to learn from his latest defeat as he targets further improvement during the clay swing.

“Every player has one or two players where you don’t feel that comfortable with. He’s for sure one of mine,” Sinner said when asked about Medvedev. “He’s also one of the best players in the world. But still, I have to improve to beat him. Like all the other players they try to improve, and then we see in the future how it goes. But it’s going to be a good challenge for me.”

Sinner now holds a 7-3 record in tour-level finals, having lost to Hubert Hurkacz in his only other ATP Masters 1000 title match in 2021.

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Medvedev Wins Maiden Miami Title, Fourth Trophy Of 2023

  • Posted: Apr 02, 2023

Medvedev Wins Maiden Miami Title, Fourth Trophy Of 2023

Fourth seed extends lead atop Pepperstone ATP Live Race To Turin

Playing in his fifth ATP Tour final is a many tournaments, Daniil Medvedev continued his blistering form to claim his first title at the Miami Open presented by Itau. With a 7-5, 6-3 victory against Jannik Sinner, Medvedev improved to 24-1 in his past five events, including four titles.

After falling to Carlos Alcaraz two weeks ago in the Indian Wells final, the fourth seed was rock-solid against Sinner as he frustrated the Italian with his calculated baseline game. Medvedev is now 6-0 in his ATP Head2Head against Sinner, also having beaten the Italian in the Rotterdam final in February.

Sinner made a bright start and scored the first break by ending a marathon game with a difficult drop volley, but Medvedev snapped back by showing his range from the baseline and baiting the Italian into errors. While Sinner had success attacking early, Medvedev showed his range to keep his opponent behind the baseline, ultimately wearing the 10th seed down with his consistency and well-timed aggression.

Medvedev took control of the match with a four-game burst from 5-5 in the opening set, taking full advantage of some sloppy groundstrokes from Sinner. Though he appeared to be fading physically after his epic win against Alcaraz in the semis, Sinner summoned the energy to break back for 1-2, only to see Medvedev re-establish his advantage at 3-1.

The fourth seed did not face a break point in the match after Sinner created five in the fifth game of set one, and Medvedev served his way to victory with little resistance as he wrapped up his 19th career title after one hour, 34 minutes.

More to follow…

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Medvedev, Sinner Make Moves, Earn Chance To Surge On Clay

  • Posted: Apr 02, 2023

Medvedev, Sinner Make Moves, Earn Chance To Surge On Clay

Medvedev to climb to World No. 4, Sinner World No. 9

Daniil Medvedev will return to World No. 4 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings on Monday following his title at the Miami Open presented by Itau. It continues a big surge for the 27-year-old, who was outside the Top 10 as recently as the week of 13 February.

But after winning titles in Rotterdam, Doha, Dubai and Miami in addition to reaching the final in Indian Wells, the former World No. 1 is in position to make a charge for the top of the sport during the clay-court season.

In 2022, Medvedev underwent a procedure to fix a small hernia following Miami. That kept him out for most of the clay season, during which he only earned 180 points (all at Roland Garros). That means Medvedev, despite his past comments about the surface, has a lot to gain on clay.

Medvedev trails World No. 3 Stefanos Tsitsipas by just 620 points in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings. However, the Greek is defending 2,230 points during the clay-court season, 2,050 more than Medvedev.

Heading into the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters, which begins on 9 April, Medvedev will have a chance to challenge for World No. 3. Tsitsipas will be defending 1,000 points while Medvedev has no points to defend because he did not compete in the tournament last year because of his injury.

As the world’s best transition to clay, Carlos Alcaraz will only be 1,630 points ahead of Medvedev in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings, and he is defending 1,870 points during the swing. Novak Djokovic returns to World No. 1 on Monday and will start the clay swing 2,010 points ahead of Medvedev.

Jannik Sinner, who reached his second Miami final, will also be in good position to make a move in the coming weeks. The Italian will return to the Top 10 at World No. 9 (tied for his career-high) on Monday and he is only defending 630 points on clay. As recently as February, he was ranked as low as World No. 17.

Sinner reached two ATP Masters 1000 quarter-finals on clay last year (in Monte Carlo and Rome), but never advanced further. One big run can send him to a new career-high Pepperstone ATP Ranking.

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Ferrer Awards Lopez Barcelona Wild Card

  • Posted: Apr 02, 2023

Ferrer Awards Lopez Barcelona Wild Card

Spanish lefty to make 22nd appearance in tournament

Feliciano López announced early this season that it will be his last on the ATP Tour. David Ferrer was keen to do something special as a parting gift. He surprised Lopez at his home in Madrid with an invitation to the Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell. 

The director of the ATP 500 event, which takes place on clay from 17-23 April, made the trip to the player’s house to tell him the news in person. “He was the last person I was expecting to see,” admitted López when he opened the door. “I wasn’t expecting this visit.

Ferrer explained: “This is a wild card for you to come and play on centre court.”

The news means that the event has now publicly announced its first invitation, which has gone to a player who played his first professional match in Barcelona at the age of 16. Now 41, López will say his goodbyes having competed there 22 times with a 21-21 record, and reached the quarter-finals in 2011 and 2012. 

“I’m very grateful to everyone that forms part of the tournament organisation and, of course, to David Ferrer for giving me this opportunity once again,” Lopez said. “David is a very special person in the world of tennis, there are few players who are more loved and respected than he is.

“In Barcelona they can be very happy that they made the right choice, there could not be a better ambassador for the tournament. I’m especially excited that he is running Barcelona and I’m doing Madrid at this point in our lives. We are on parallel paths.”

Lopez, who is also the Mutua Madrid Open Tournament Director acknowledged that, “Barcelona is where I started my career and this city will always have a special place in my heart. Being able to have a send-off at this tournament is the end to my career that I always dreamed of. I left home very young, at 13, and I have many great memories from the city.”          

Lopez, No. 551 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings in 1998, received an invitation to play in Barcelona qualifying, and he certainly made the most of his opportunity. In his first professional match on the courts of the RCTB-1899, he beat Jan Weinzierl 6-3, 6-3. In his next encounter he made history, qualifying for the main draw by defeating Marcos Górriz 6-2, 6-4.

In his first match in the main draw, he clashed with Jiri Novak, his first Top 100 opponent (No. 90), but it was the end of the road for him, he lost the encounter 6-0, 6-2. 

However, in the doubles competition his name appears on the roll of honour after his 2018 victory alongside Marc López. “It was one of those great moments in my career. Before then I’d come so close to the title with Rafa [they lost in the final] and it was a tournament that I felt like I should win. I played with Marc, who was also very excited to win it because it was his club and it’s a week I’ll remember for the rest of my life.

Did You Know?
López holds the record for appearances at the Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell with the 22 he will reach this season. He played every year from 2001 to 2012, was absent in 2013, but returned in 2014 and has since played there every season. Rafael Nadal, who will reach 17 this year, is second on the list.

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Scouting Report: Ruud, Tiafoe & Musetti Headline In Estoril, Houston & Marrakech

  • Posted: Apr 02, 2023

Scouting Report: Ruud, Tiafoe & Musetti Headline In Estoril, Houston & Marrakech

An executive summary of what every fan should know about the coming week

After the hard-court action of the ‘Sunshine Double’, the ATP Tour returns to clay this week as Estoril, Houston and Marrakech host a trio of ATP 250 events from 3-9 April.

Casper Ruud is the top seed at the Millennium Estoril Open, where the Norwegian is looking to kick-start his season with a deep run in Portugal. Home favourites Frances Tiafoe and Tommy Paul lead the field at the Fayez Sarofim & Co. U.S. Men’s Clay Court Championship, while Lorenzo Musetti headlines the draw at the only ATP Tour event on the African continent, the Grand Prix Hassan II.

ATPTour.com looks ahead at five things to watch at each event.

View Draws: Estoril | Houston | Marrakech


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FIVE THINGS TO WATCH IN ESTORIL

1) Ruud To Find Form?: Ruud’s hunt for consecutive tour-level wins in 2023 goes on after he won just a match apiece in Indian Wells and Miami. The World No. 4 will hope that the switch to clay, the surface on which he has won eight of his nine ATP Tour titles, can be the catalyst for improved results.

Ruud is the top seed on event debut at the Millennium Estoril Open, where he opens against Giulio Zeppieri or 2018 champion and home favourite Joao Sousa, as he looks to improve his 5-6 record for the season.

2) Hubi Targets Clay Success: In stark contrast to Ruud, Hubert Hurkacz has won none of his six tour-level titles on clay. The Pole will nonetheless be confident of making his mark as the second seed on his first Estoril appearance. He reached the quarter-finals on the surface at the ATP Masters 1000 event in Madrid last year and is chasing his second ATP Tour trophy of the year after his Marseille triumph in February.

3) Baez Defends Crown: Sebastian Baez launched himself into the ATP Tour winners’ circle for the first time a year ago in Estoril, where he defeated Marin Cilic, Richard Gasquet and Tiafoe en route to the title. The Argentine is seeded fourth for his title defence and is the only player in the draw to have already lifted a tour-level clay-court trophy in 2023, after his triumph at home in Cordoba in February.

4) Shelton Makes Red Clay Debut: Ben Shelton is a rare anomaly on the ATP Tour. The #NextGenATP American has broken the Top 40 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings but is still yet to compete professionally on red clay.

That will all change this week in Estoril, where the eighth-seeded American takes on Constant Lestienne in the first round. The 20-year-old will hope he can adjust quickly to make a winning start on the surface and set a potential second-round clash against former World No. 3 Dominic Thiem.

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5) Borges/Cabral Seek Title Repeat: Home pairing Nuno Borges and Francisco Cabral surged to the doubles title in Estoril as wild cards last year, and the Portuguese are back to defend their crown at the clay-court ATP 250. Andreas Mies and Hugo Nys are the top-seeded team, with Marcelo Melo and John Peers seeded second.


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FIVE THINGS TO WATCH IN HOUSTON

1) Tiafoe, Paul Lead Field: Six of the eight seeds at the Fayez Sarofim & Co. U.S. Men’s Clay Court Championship are Americans, and they are led by Top 20 stars Tiafoe and Paul. Both are chasing their maiden tour-level title on clay in Houston, where Tiafoe reached the quarter-finals in 2022.

2) Isner Brings Big-Serving Threat: The man that ended Tiafoe’s 2022 run in Texas was John Isner. The 6’10” American went on to reach the championship match, where he was edged by the 6’11” Reilly Opelka in the tallest ATP Tour final in the Open Era.

Despite that defeat, the fourth-seeded Isner knows what it takes to triumph in Houston. He lifted the trophy there in 2013 and holds an 18-11 overall record at the only ATP Tour event in the United States contested on clay.

3) Former Champs From U.S. Eye Repeat Glory: Wild cards Jack Sock and Steve Johnson inject some serious Houston pedigree into the draw. The former World No. 8 Sock reached back-to-back finals in 2015 (when he defeated Sam Querrey to claim the title) and 2016, while Johnson lifted the trophy in 2017 and 2018.

Third seed Brandon Nakashima, fifth seed J.J. Wolf and seventh seed Marcos Giron are among the other Americans hoping to ride home support to victory in Houston.

4) In-Form Garin To Shine?: The fourth and final former champion in the draw is Cristian Garin. The Chilean, who lifted the Houston trophy in 2019, arrives at this year’s event off the back of a strong ‘Sunshine Double’. As a qualifier, the former World No. 17 reached the fourth round in Indian Wells and the third round in Miami, and he will hope to maintain that form in pursuit of his first ATP Tour title since 2021.

5) Hijikata/Kubler Top Seeds: Rinky Hijikata and Jason Kubler charged to the Australian Open title in thrilling fashion in January, but the duo arrives in Houston having since suffered two consecutive defeats. The Australians are the top seeds in a field that also includes home favourites Nathaniel Lammons and Jackson Withrow, while 2022 doubles winner Max Purcell partners Jordan Thompson.

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FIVE THINGS TO WATCH IN MARRAKECH

1) Musetti Seeks First Title Of Year: The 21-year-old Musetti is the top seed at the Grand Prix Hassan II, where the Italian is looking to reverse a downturn in his form that has seen him earn just one win in his past six tournaments. Musetti reached the quarter-finals on debut in Marrakech a year ago and will start his 2023 campaign against Hugo Gaston or Jan-Lennard Struff.

2) Evans Eyes Deep Run: The second-seeded Daniel Evans has also struggled for wins in recent weeks, but the Briton is one of the toughest competitors on Tour and will be confident of turning things around on his second Marrakech appearance. While clay is not his preferred surface, the 32-year-old’s previous achievements include a semi-final run at the 2021 Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters.

3) Dutch Duo Among Seeded Stars: Botic van de Zandschulp and Tallon Griekspoor are the third and fourth seeds, respectively, in Marrakech. Both have already broken new ground in 2023: Griekspoor lifted his maiden ATP Tour title in January in Pune, while Van de Zandschulp last week defeated Ruud in Miami for the first Top 5 win of his career.

4) Gasquet, Jarry Compete: Like Griekspoor, Richard Gasquet and Nicolas Jarry are chasing their second tour-level title of the season in Morocco. Auckland champion Gasquet has reached at least the quarter-finals on all three of his previous Marrakech appearances, while Santiago winner Jarry is making his tournament debut.

5) Granollers/Middelkoop Lead Doubles Field: The vastly experienced Marcel Granollers and Matwe Middelkoop, who own 38 ATP Tour titles between them, are the top seeds in Marrakech. Alexander Erler/Lucas Miedler and Jeremy Chardy/Fabrice Martin are among their rivals on the North African clay.

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How Sinner Is Pushing Opponents To The Limit

  • Posted: Apr 02, 2023

How Sinner Is Pushing Opponents To The Limit

Italian playing for first ATP Masters 1000 title Sunday

Sometimes it seems like Jannik Sinner is playing a video game when he steps on the tennis court. The 21-year-old defies convention with his levels of power and precision.

Most players cannot hit the ball as hard as the San Candido native, nor can they come close. But when they do, they might land one shot and hit the next ball 10 feet past the baseline or into the bottom of the net. Sinner, an easygoing former junior skier from northern Italy, whips the ball with such calm that it is as if he is playing ping-pong on a tennis court.

Some people call playing so aggressively ‘redlining’. For Sinner, it is just another day at the office. He is a ball-striking machine.

There are players with more finesse who make better use of spins and angles. As far as pure gripping and ripping goes, few, if any, do it better than Sinner.

The 2019 Next Gen ATP Finals champion has plenty of flair, too. Take the magical point he played when serving at 4-2, 0/15 in the Miami Open presented by Itau semi-finals against World No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz. The Spaniard has quickly become a human highlight reel, with fans sitting on the edge of their seats waiting for him to produce a magical moment. It appeared he would do it again Friday evening inside Hard Rock Stadium.

After escaping several tough moments in the rally, Alcaraz ended up at net to position himself to come out on top. Sinner responded with a perfect curling backhand pass that the diving top seed was unable to reach.

Sinner raised his right arm in the air and waved the crowd to get loud. Alcaraz is a show-stopper, and the Italian is proving he is, too.

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“That’s why Jannik is such a great player, as well. Not only with [his] great serve, great movements, it is because he pushes the opponent to the limit,” Alcaraz said in a press conference at Indian Wells. “[He is] trying to play aggressive with great shots. And to the opponent it’s really tough to be focused, mentally and physically, during the whole match.

“That’s [why] I love playing against him, as well, that it pushes me to the limit. I have to be really, really focused. I love to feel that.”

Sinner explained in Miami — and has also done so previously — that Alcaraz brings the best out of him and forces him to find even better tennis within himself. “Today, you have to go for shots where usually you don’t go for it,” he said in Florida. “I think he has a little bit the same feeling, I guess.”

After Alcaraz lost their semi-final in a memorable three sets, the Spaniard said: “I feel something different about the crowd when I play against Jannik.

“I think around the world it’s probably all the people watching this match because I think it’s really beautiful to watch.”

The analytics verify Sinner’s level. According to Tennis Insights, Sinner’s Shot Quality on forehand, backhand and return across ATP Tour events in 2023 has been among the top three for each stroke. Shot Quality is calculated in real time by analysing each shot’s speed, spin, depth, width, and the impact it has on the opponent.

But despite those stats, there have been near misses in match results within the past year. Sinner earned match point against Alcaraz in the fourth set of last year’s US Open quarter-finals before succumbing in a gripping five-setter that ended at 2:50 a.m. Alcaraz went on to claim his maiden major and become the youngest World No. 1 in Pepperstone ATP Rankings history.

Sinner was left to wonder what could have been. After that match he said, “I think this one will hurt for quite a while.”

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The Italian then dropped another heartbreaking five-setter in the fourth round of the Australian Open to Stefanos Tsitsipas. In February, he let slip a one-set advantage against Daniil Medvedev in the Rotterdam final.

The Italian has channelled the pain from those losses into progress. Sinner is playing the best tennis of his career. If he defeats Medvedev on Sunday to lift the trophy, he will climb to a career-high World No. 6 on Monday. And if you ask Sinner, the tennis machine still has plenty of upgrades to make.

“For sure I feel like I can serve much better. Physically I can get stronger,” Sinner said after defeating Emil Ruusuvuori earlier in the tournament. “Also my forehand and backhand. I mean, trying to go more to the net, and I [need to] just to try it also out in matches.”

Given the current state of his game, that is a daunting prospect for his rivals on the ATP Tour. It is also a confidence-boosting one for the man himself.

“For sure, knowing that already I am where I am right now, knowing that I can play good tennis, and if I play good tennis I can play even with every player [is good],” Sinner said. “So let’s see.”

Sinner has been knocking on the door of a huge result. Will Sunday be the day he barges through for his first Masters 1000 title?

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