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Giri Nathan Awarded Tom Perrotta Prize For Tennis Journalism

  • Posted: Aug 18, 2022

Giri Nathan Awarded Tom Perrotta Prize For Tennis Journalism

The award is in memory of American writer Tom Perrotta, who passed away aged 44

The International Tennis Writers Association (ITWA) is delighted to announce Giri Nathan as the inaugural winner of the Tom Perrotta Prize for Tennis Journalism.

The annual prize, which is awarded to a writer under the age of 40 who shows excellence in tennis journalism and which includes a $2,000 cash award, will be presented during the US Open at Flushing Meadows.

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The five-strong judging panel loved Nathan’s “refreshing” writing style, particularly in two pieces for Racquet Magazine; “Big Nick Energy”, about Nick Kyrgios and “Emma, Inc”, which examined the impact of Emma Raducanu’s stunning US Open triumph in 2021.

The award is in memory of American writer Tom Perrotta, whose exemplary contributions to tennis were curtailed by his untimely death at the age of 44.

The Association of Tennis Professionals, The Women’s Tennis Association, The International Tennis Federation and The International Tennis Writers Association co-sponsor the award.

ITWA would like to thank all those who entered or were nominated and those who gave their time and expertise to judge the entries.

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Nadal Looks Forward After Cincinnati Loss: 'I Know The Way'

  • Posted: Aug 18, 2022

Nadal Looks Forward After Cincinnati Loss: ‘I Know The Way’

Spaniard upset by Coric in first match since Wimbledon withdrawal

Playing at the Western & Southern Open for the first time in five years on Wednesday night, Rafael Nadal showed the Cincinnati fans why it was worth the wait to see their 2013 champion return. But after battling Borna Coric for an engrossing two hours, 51 minutes on centre court, the Spaniard bowed out of the ATP Masters 1000 event after his opening match.

Playing in his first match since withdrawing ahead of the Wimbledon semi-finals with an abdominal tear, Nadal dropped a 7-6(9), 4-6, 6-3 decision to the Croatian as he struggled to consistently play at the level which has propelled him to four tour-level titles this season.

“Obviously I didn’t play my best match,” Nadal said in his post-match presser, later revealing he was only able to play two practice sets in the buildup. “[It is] something that can happen. Historically this tournament has been difficult for me. So coming back from a tough period of time, [it is] something that’s easy to accept and easy to say congrats to Borna, that he played better.”

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Nadal missed out on two set points in a dramatic first-set tie-break but regrouped to force a decider. Down the stretch, Coric dictated the rallies as he claimed his lone break of the match midway through the final set to earn the statement victory.

“It’s difficult to take a lot of positive things, but I need to improve,” Nadal said. “I need to practise. I need to return better. I need days [on the court], and that’s the truth. Obviously I had my chances in the beginning. In the tie-break I had two important chances with two set points that I played terrible with two more-or-less easy shots.”

The 36-year-old also rued “a couple of terrible points” after he created an opening at 0/30 early in the third set, but kept a positive outlook overall.

“You lose, you move forward. I know the way,” he said. “The main thing for me is to stay healthy. It has been a difficult injury to manage, to be honest. The last month and a half hasn’t been easy, because having a tear on the abdominal, you don’t know when [you are]100 per cent over the thing, so that affects a little bit in terms of not [being] sure if you are able to try your best in every serve.”

He now turns his attention to the US Open, where he will have a chance to return to the top spot in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings for the first time since early 2020.

“I need to move forward and just start to think about the energy that the crowd gives me in New York,” he said. “I know it’s a very special place for me, and I enjoy it. [I’ve had] unforgettable moments there, and I’m going to try my very best every single day to be ready for that.”

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Fit-Again Coric Spoils Nadal’s Cincinnati Return

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Preview: Felix, Sinner Clash For QF Berth

  • Posted: Aug 18, 2022

Preview: Felix, Sinner Clash For QF Berth

Medvedev, Shapovalov, Fritz, Rublev also in action on Thursday

As far back as his 2016 breakthrough at Flushing Meadows, when as a highly touted teen he claimed the US Open boys’ singles title, Felix Auger-Aliassime has had to tote some outsized outside expectations.

Here we could barely pronounce his name, yet we were sure this uncannily athletic Canadian was destined for a title-filled career. The thing is, we forgot that he was just 16; we expected it all to happen overnight.   

“You shouldn’t listen to what is said outside,” said Auger-Aliassime last week in his native Montreal, where he became the first Quebecois to reach the quarter-finals of the National Bank Open Presented by Rogers on home turf. “You always try to see the future. I do that, too. But what a player has to do is to keep a cool head because every point you play, you must win them by yourself. You have to win each match you play and start again every day. Nothing is easy.”

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The successes would indeed come. In 2019, the then-18-year-old became the youngest member of the Top 25 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings in 20 years, the youngest ATP 500 finalist (Rio de Janeiro) in a decade, and the youngest Miami Open semi-finalist in tournament history, which dates back to 1985. By 2021, he had cracked the Top 10, only the third Canadian to do so after Milos Raonic and Denis Shapovalov, while reaching the Wimbledon quarter-finals and US Open semi-finals.

But after going winless in his first eight finals at the tour level, some began to wonder if he had what it took to deliver on all that promise they had first pinned on him back in 2016. That is until he helped lead his countrymen to the 2022 ATP Cup title (beating the likes of Alexander Zverev), then went on to defeat two Top-10 opponents (Andrey Rublev and Stefanos Tsitsipas) in capturing his first ATP trophy in Rotterdam.  

“Tennis is a sport, many things happen: Sometimes good things, sometimes not as good,” said Auger-Aliassime, now 22. “The important thing is to keep going. Even when you win, it’s important to see what you can improve. I’ve been doing that for my whole career.”


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The seventh seed this week at the Western & Southern Open in Cincinnati, Auger-Aliassime is poised for a third-round meeting with 10th seed Jannik Sinner. He defeated the Italian in their only other ATP Head2Head encounter earlier this year in the Round of 16 at the ATP Masters 1000 Madrid, 6-1, 6-2. The outcome could be telling as both players jockey for position in the Pepperstone ATP Live Race To Turin. Auger-Aliassime has already moved up one spot this week to sixth position, while Sinner is 15th and could surge into the Top 8 with a title. The Canadian could further distance himself with another win on Thursday.

A quarter-finalist this year at the Australian Open, Dubai, Miami, Monte-Carlo, Rome and Wimbledon, Sinner claimed his first title of 2022 last month in Umag (def. Carlos Alcaraz, 6-7(5), 6-1, 6-1). Since adding Darren Cahill to his coaching team (he joins Simone Vagnozzi), Sinner appears to be playing an even more aggressive brand of tennis, something that was on display this week on his 21st birthday in a three-hour, 15-minute, 6-7(9), 6-4, 7-6(6) opening-round win over Aussie Thanasi Kokkinakis. A six-time ATP titlist, he is chasing his maiden Masters 1000 crown in Cincinnati, where he reached the second round in his tournament debut a year ago.

Next up for World No. 1 and 2019 champ Daniil Medvedev is 31st-ranked Denis Shapovalov, who held off American Tommy Paul in Round 2, 3-6, 6-4, 6-3. The Canadian, who is coming off back-to-back wins for the first time since reaching the quarter-finals in Rome in May, is an even 2-2 against the top-ranked Medvedev, having dropped their most recent encounter last year at the Laver Cup in Boston, 6-4, 6-0.

Now 13-3 in his past five tournaments, highlighted by his second Eastbourne title and his Grand Slam-best quarter-final run at Wimbledon (l. to Rafael Nadal in five sets), Taylor Fritz will do battle with 2021 Cincinnati finalist Andrey Rublev. The American got the best of Rublev in March en route to his first ATP Masters 1000 crown in Indian Wells (7-5, 6-4 in the semi-finals), and now holds a slight 3-2 edge in ATP Head2Heads.

“I need to attack as much as possible. He’s a very aggressive-minded player like I am, as well,” observed Fritz, now 21-7 on hard courts and 15-3 at ATP Masters 1000 events this season. “I feel like I need to try and beat him to the punch as much as possible. I can’t be the one being passive, letting him move me around the court, work me around the court. I just need to kind of focus on myself, play my game and be aggressive.”

The No. 3 seed Alcaraz is looking for his second consecutive win over Marin Cilic in 2022. The Spaniard, 19, downed the Croat vet on his way to the Miami Open crown in April (6-4, 6-4 in Round 2), his first of two ATP Masters 1000 titles on the year.

Cilic, 33, captured the 2016 title in Cincinnati, ousting then-eighth-ranked Andy Murray in the final, 6-4, 7-5.

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Fit-Again Coric Spoils Nadal's Cincinnati Return

  • Posted: Aug 18, 2022

Fit-Again Coric Spoils Nadal’s Cincinnati Return

Croatian earns best win since March return from shoulder surgery

Borna Coric picked up his fifth tour-level win since his March return from shoulder surgery on Wednesday at the Western & Southern Open. But with this one, the former World No. 12 announced that he is back at his best.

The Croatian edged Rafael Nadal 7-6(9), 4-6, 6-3 to advance to the third round in Cincinnati, battling for two hours, 51 minutes to secure his biggest win of the season by both opponent and stage. After taking a dramatic first-set tie-break in which both players saved two set points, Coric scored his first break of the match midway through the decider as he dictated play in the final set.

“It has been very, very special,” Coric said of his win on centre court. “I was out for the last two years and I didn’t play on the big stage in front of the crowd and everybody. I was honestly just looking forward to playing this match as I haven’t had that in the last two years. Now that I won, it’s kind of crazy.”

Nadal’s defeat ends his bid for a return to the top spot in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings this week. The World No. 3 will have another chance to leapfrog Alexander Zverev and Daniil Medvedev at the US Open.

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Both players opened confidently despite a relative lack of match play — Coric playing his sixth tour-level contest since withdrawing ahead of Wimbledon and Nadal taking the court for the first time since pulling out of the grass-court Slam ahead of the semi-finals.

Nadal made a particularly strong start, pumping his fist after stepping into a down-the-line backhand on the very first point and not committing an unforced error until the seventh game. Coric also settled in quickly with a first-round win against Lorenzo Musetti already under his belt, and he began to enjoy the better of the rallies until a one-hour rain delay came with Nadal leading 5-4.


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When they returned and soon after headed to the tie-break, Nadal roared with the crowd as he battled back from 2/4, but was left to rue a missed swinging volley at 6/5. With Nadal’s double faulted on Coric’s third set point, the Croatian made amends after a botched drop shot on a short ball at 9/8.

Nadal capitalised on the lone break point midway through an entertaining second set, with both players creating stunning angles to complement strong baseline hitting. Both competitors flashed quick hands at the net as well, with each winning 10 of 15 net points.

Coric applied greater pressure in the decider and was a deserved winner after securing his first break of the match to move ahead 4-2. He backed up the breakthrough with a love hold and had no problems serving out the match after opening his final service game with a statement winner to cap a gruelling rally.

He will next face Roberto Bautista Agut, who advanced to the third round with a 6-3, 6-3 win against home hope Marcos Giron earlier on Wednesday.

“It’s going to be a very interesting match,” said Coric, who holds a 5-4 ATP Head2Head series lead against the Spaniard. “I need to be very aggressive for sure, especially because I was playing for a very long time today and I also finished very late. So I’m going to be even more aggressive probably. “

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Dimitrov/Rublev Win Cincinnati Doubles Opener

  • Posted: Aug 18, 2022

Dimitrov/Rublev Win Cincinnati Doubles Opener

Krawietz/Mies save two match points to reach quarter-finals

Grigor Dimitrov and Andrey Rublev cashed in on a ruthlessly efficient performance on return to advance to the second round of the Western & Southern Open on Wednesday. The singles stars edged Daniel Evans and John Peers 7-6(5), 7-5, converting on all three of their break chances and winning 86 per cent of their first-serve points. 

Despite failing to serve out the opening set, losing a deciding point at 5-4, the duo regrouped to win the tie-break by taking its final three points. They were again denied on a deciding point in their first attempt to serve out the match at 5-4 in the second set, but responded with an immediate break back before serving out the win to love.

The pair will next face second seeds Marcel Granollers and Horacio Zeballos, who received a bye into the second round.

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Holger Rune and Stefanos Tsitsipas also advanced, taking a 6-2, 6-3 decision against David Vega Hernandez and Rafael Matos. Sixth seeds Tim Puetz and Michael Venus join them in the second round after a 6-2, 6-1 win against the Argentine pairing of Francisco Cerundolo and Diego Schwartzman.

In second-round action, Kevin Krawietz and Andreas Mies saved two match points against Alex de Minaur and Cameron Norrie from 7/9 in a Match Tie-break, winning the final four points of a 4-6, 6-3, 11-9 victory. The two-time Roland Garros champions defeated reigning Miami titlists Hubert Hurkacz and John Isner on Tuesday in the opening round.

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Thiem Awarded US Open Wild Card, Monfils Withdraws

  • Posted: Aug 18, 2022

Thiem Awarded US Open Wild Card, Monfils Withdraws

Querrey, Shelton among other main draw wild cards

Dominic Thiem was awarded a main draw wild card into the US Open, the tournament announced on Wednesday.

The Austrian captured his first Grand Slam title at the US Open in 2020 and owns a 22-6 record at the season’s final major.

The former No. 3 player in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings is working his way back from a wrist injury, which prevented him from defending his title at Flushing Meadows last year.

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Also receiving wild cards into the main draw were Americans Sam Querrey, Emilio Nava, JJ Wolf, Ben Shelton and Learner Tien, as well as Frenchman Ugo Humbert and Australian Rinky Hijikata.

Shelton, this year’s NCAA singles champion, has enjoyed a breakthrough run at the Western & Southern Open, where on Wednesday he upset World No. 5 Casper Ruud to reach the third round on his ATP Masters 1000 debut.

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The tournament also announced Americans who will receive a qualifying wild card: Murphy Cassone, Oliver Crawford, Martin Damm, Brandon Holt, Aleks Kovacevic, Bruno Kuzuhara, Alex Rybakov, Ethan Quinn and Zachary Svajda.

Gael Monfils, a former semi-finalist in New York, withdrew from the tournament due to an injury he suffered in Montreal.

“Following the latest medical exams that I took upon returning in Europe, I will sadly not be able to play at the US Open this year,” Monfils tweeted. “I am forced to undergo a new period of treatment before being able to resume tournaments.”

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Clinical Tsitsipas Back On Track With Cincy Win

  • Posted: Aug 17, 2022

Clinical Tsitsipas Back On Track With Cincy Win

Greek earns first win since Wimbledon

Stefanos Tsitsipas put an emphatic end to a two-match losing streak with a strong opening performance on Wednesday at the Western & Southern Open. The Cincinnati third seed rode a dominant serving performance and clean hitting to a 6-3, 6-3 win against Filip Krajinovic to earn his first victory in two events since Wimbledon.

The Greek was downed by Nick Kyrgios in a memorable third-round encounter on the London lawns and fell victim to an upset bid from #NextGenATP Briton Jack Draper last week in Montreal. But after two tough holds to open his Cincinnati campaign, he found a groove on serve and off the ground to power past Krajinovic behind two mid-set breaks.

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Tsitsipas scored six love service holds, including each of his final four service games, and dropped just three points on first serve in the one-hour, nine minute match. He finished with a pristine 92 per cent (34/37) win rate on first serve while making 76 per cent of his first deliveries.

In a clean match all around, the Greek hit 28 winners (including 14 aces) to just four unforced errors as he outclassed his opponent on Court 3.

The Cincinnati fourth seed will next face 13th seed Diego Schwartzman, who outlasted Aslan Karatsev 7-6(3), 3-6, 6-2 on Tuesday evening.

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Isner Aids Ailing Ball Boy, Felix Helps Fan

  • Posted: Aug 17, 2022

Isner Aids Ailing Ball Boy, Felix Helps Fan

Players quick to step in when help is needed

John Isner was one point from winning the first set of his second-round match at the Western & Southern Open on Wednesday against eighth seed Hubert Hurkacz when he heard murmurs in the crowd. Naturally, the American turned around.

At 6/3 in the tie-break, Isner did not expect to see a ball boy fainting on the other side of the court. Immediately, the 37-year-old ran to help as best he could. Hurkacz and a woman who identified herself as a doctor also pitched in.

“I don’t think I did anything special,” Isner told ATPTour.com. “I saw Hubi running to the side of the court and it’s a scary thing because he had this ‘he-saw-a-ghost look’ in his face and he collapsed, and luckily someone was there. But I think people need to realise how hard it is what these ball boys and ball girls do. It’s a tough job out there in the heat. We appreciate their effort so much out there.

“From what I hear, the kid is going to be okay and hopefully he’s getting some fluids and in the air conditioning right now resting up. Someone told me that he remembers watching me since he was four years old or something like that, so that’s very cool to hear. But it was definitely a very scary situation and [I am] just glad that he seems to be okay.”

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Isner went on to battle past Hurkacz 7-6(5), 6-7(5), 6-2 in two hours and 32 minutes to reach the third round in Cincinnati. The incident occurred at a pivotal point of the match, but that did not matter to the 16-time ATP Tour titlist.

“It doesn’t really matter what point it’s at,” Isner said. “Tennis is microscopic compared to a scary situation like that, so just glad to see he’s doing okay.”

That was not the only heat-related incident on Wednesday at the Lindner Family Tennis Center. When Felix Auger-Aliassime led Alex de Minaur 2-0, 40/40, play was halted when a fan fell ill.

The players retreated to their chairs at the time. Upon realising what had happened, Auger-Aliassime quickly passed an ice towel through the crowd to the fan and then found a bag of ice as well.

<a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/felix-auger-aliassime/ag37/overview'>Felix Auger-Aliassime</a>

Felix Auger-Aliassime is a fan favourite in Cincinnati.

“She didn’t look well at all. It was worrying. She didn’t look good and I think that’s the first thing: the health of the crowd, the players, everybody involved. You kind of forget about the match when it comes to that point,” Auger-Aliassime said. “You just hope it was nothing too bad, I was a bit scared for her. But luckily everything went fine.

“I think it’s a normal thing as players. We’re there and if we can help just by giving ice for an ice towel, that’s the minimum we can do. But people also came to help pretty quickly and it’s nice to see people acting like this together.”

As focussed as professional tennis players are, they are aware of their surroundings and do not think twice about doing the right thing under such circumstances.

“At the end I’m a human first. I’m a tennis player after,” Auger-Aliassime said. “I come here, there are people who come and see us play and it’s a pleasure to play in front of them. It’s great to get good words from people, to sometimes share a few words if I have time. It’s good energy. I like to get that support and give whatever I can to the people who come and watch.”

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