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Alcaraz passes Medvedev SF test in Beijing

  • Posted: Oct 01, 2024

Carlos Alcaraz’s red-hot run of hard-court form shows no sign of slowing down at the China Open.

The Spaniard on Tuesday overcame Daniil Medvedev 7-5, 6-3 to reach the final at the ATP 500 in Beijing. Alcaraz prevailed in a high-quality first set that featured five breaks of serve before accelerating past Medvedev in the second to wrap an 88-minute semi-final triumph.

“I think we both started the match pretty well,” said Alcaraz after extending his winning streak to eight tour-level matches. “It was a little bit unusual, with serve being broken many times in the first set. I broke his serve [for 3-2] and then in the next game, I don’t know what happened to me. I probably lost focus a little bit, missed a few first serves that against Daniil on a hard court is a really important weapon. You have to put good first serves in to put yourself in the position to attack.

“I’m really happy that I didn’t lose my focus too long in the first set. I recovered it as soon as I got broken, and I’m really happy that at the end of the set I was able to play really good tennis in the return game and then serving at 6-5. I did a really good game. After that, once you are one set up, it’s a little bit easier, playing against Daniil with more confidence.”

Medvedev’s second-set efforts appeared to be undermined by an issue with his hip, for which he received treatment from the physio at 2-3 and 3-4. Yet the No. 5 in the PIF ATP Rankings continued to compete well after both changeovers.

“Sometimes you think, ‘OK, it’s done’, but it’s not done. You have to keep fighting,” reflected Alcaraz. “You have to keep playing the same way that you were playing before and just forget about the opponent. You should focus on yourself and your tennis, so that’s what I tried to do. I was still playing the same way I had played until that point in the match. I didn’t lose the focus in that moment, so I’m really happy that I kept pushing.”

Alcaraz completed his win having converted five of 11 break points he earned, according to Infosys ATP Stats. He is the third player to reach five tour-level finals this season, after World No. 1 Jannik Sinner and Casper Ruud.

[ATP APP]

After improving his Lexus ATP Head2Head record against Medvedev to 6-2, Alcaraz set a championship-match clash against top seed Sinner or home wild card Buyunchaokete in the Chinese capital. If Sinner reaches the final, it would represent a rematch of their 2023 Beijing semi-final, which the Italian won in straight sets en route to the title.

With his semi-final victory, Alcaraz also kept up his bid to haul in Sinner in the race to become ATP Year-End No. 1 presented by PIF. Currently second in the PIF ATP Live Race To Turin, the Spaniard currently trails Sinner by 2,860 points, although the World No. 1 can extend his lead further by defeating Buyunchaokete later on Tuesday.

Since his disappointing second-round loss to Botic van de Zandschulp at the US Open, Alcaraz has gone unbeaten in singles across the Davis Cup Finals Group Stage, Laver Cup and China Open. The 21-year-old is chasing his first tour-level title since Wimbledon in July. Alcaraz has also triumphed at the ATP Masters 1000 event in Indian Wells and Roland Garros this season.

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Djokovic 'plays big' at Great Wall of China

  • Posted: Oct 01, 2024

Novak Djokovic has long been considered a wall on the tennis court. That took new meaning on Sunday, when he spent time at the Great Wall of China.

In the spirit of ‘Play Big’, Lacoste hosted a special event at the Ju Yong Guan pass in Beijing. Located in the Changping district, Ju Yong Guan is one of the best-preserved passes along the Great Wall of China.

[ATP APP]

<img alt=”Novak Djokovic” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/10/01/04/42/djokovic-great-wall-2024-1.jpg?w=100%25″ />
Photo credit: Lacoste
Ambassadors, celebrities and media were among those who attended the event, where a tennis court was set up. Djokovic enjoyed hitting some balls with Chinese actor Wang Yibo.

Yibo wrote on Instagram: “I’m truly honoured and delighted to have played tennis with an Olympic Champion at the iconic Great Wall! Big thanks to @lacoste , and thank you Nole @djokernole ! I’m already looking forward to our next match, will keep training hard and play big.”

 
 
 
 
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A post shared by 王一博 (@yibo.w_85)

Djokovic commented on the post: “Pleasure to play with you on Great Wall of China. Looking forward to hosting you on one of my matches soon.”

The Serbian star will now enjoy the Asian Swing and continue his pursuit of his 100th tour-level title.

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Alcaraz climbs to second in Live Race; How far away is first?

  • Posted: Sep 30, 2024

Carlos Alcaraz climbed to second in the PIF ATP Live Race To Turin on Monday when he reached the China Open semi-finals. How far from first is the Spaniard?

Jannik Sinner still leads Alcaraz by 2,990 points in the PIF ATP Live Race To Turin, which serves as an indicator for ATP Year-End No. 1 presented by PIF. The Italian is in very good position to become the first Italian to claim the honour.

Alcaraz is well placed to finish in the year-end Top 2 for the third consecutive season. Two years ago, aged 19, he earned ATP Year-End No. 1 presented by PIF. Last season, he finished No. 2.

PIF ATP Live Race To Turin (as of 30 September)

 Player  Points
 1) Jannik Sinner  9,200
 2) Carlos Alcaraz  6,210
 3) Alexander Zverev  6,115
 4) Daniil Medvedev  4,620
 5) Taylor Fritz  3,890
 6) Casper Ruud  3,795
 7) Andrey Rublev  3,580
 8) Alex de Minaur  3,305

Alcaraz’s hopes of ending the season at No. 1 are not completely dashed, either, with plenty of points still up for grabs in the next month and a half. But to put any pressure on Sinner, Alcaraz must continue winning, starting with his Beijing semi-final against Daniil Medvedev.

Sinner, Alcaraz and Alexander Zverev have qualified for the Nitto ATP Finals, which will be played from 10-17 November in Turin. The next in line to qualify is Medvedev, who is fourth in the Live Race.

[ATP APP]

Medvedev is trying to earn his place at the season finale for the sixth consecutive season. The 2020 Nitto ATP Finals champion knows it will not be easy to move closer by defeating Alcaraz on Tuesday.

“Tough test against Carlos,” Medvedev said. “Maybe he’s a bit less than Jannik in the zone, but when he’s in the zone, he’s probably the best player in the world. Tough to play him. I feel like now he’s in the zone. So it’s a great test for me.”

Medvedev owns a 730-point advantage over fifth-placed Taylor Fritz in the Live Race. If he wins the Chinese ATP 500 title, he would increase his lead over the American to 1,030 points.

First-placed Sinner will face home favourite Buyunchaokete in the other Beijing semi-final.

Seventh-placed Andrey Rublev had a big opportunity to surge to fifth in the Live Race by winning the Beijing title. However, he fell to Buyunchaokete on Monday evening in the quarter-finals.

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#NextGenATP Butvilas wins first Challenger title; Fearnley, Ritschard set for Top 100 debut

  • Posted: Sep 30, 2024

Three players secured memorable milestones Sunday when they triumphed on the ATP Challenger Tour.

#NextGenATP Edas Butvilas earned his maiden Challenger crown while Jacob Fearnley and Alexander Ritschard are set to crack the Top 100 of the PIF ATP Rankings on Wednesday following their title runs.

The 20-year-old Butvilas won the LTP Challenger in Charleston, South Carolina, where he became the first lucky loser champion at that level since February 2023 (Matteo Gigante, Tenerife). Butvilas downed American Nishesh Basavareddy 6-4, 6-3 in the final.

[ATP APP]

Entering the 2024 season, there had only been two Lithuanian winners in Challenger history: Ricardas Berankis and Laurynas Grigelis. But Lithuania has two #NextGenATP players who have added their names to the mix this year: Vilius Gaubas, who won the Cordenons Challenger, and Butvilas.

Up eight places to 14th in the PIF ATP Live Race To Jeddah, Butvilas is aiming to make a late push for maiden qualification for the 20-and-under Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF, which runs from 18-22 December. His countryman Gaubas is ninth.

Fearnley, 23, continued his unstoppable run at the Co’met Orleans Open. The Briton has won four Challenger titles this year, including the past three he has played. Prior to this season, Fearnley had only competed in one Challenger match, but the former Texas Christian University standout now boasts a 23-1 season record at that level.

Highest win percentage in a Challenger season (min. 20 matches played)

Player Record Win Percentage
Janko Tipsarevic (2017) 20-0 100%
Jacob Fearnley (2024) 23-1 95.8%
Leander Paes (1999) 20-1 95.2%

World No. 98 in the PIF ATP Live Rankings, Fearnley dropped just one set all week in Orleans, where he defeated home hope Harold Mayot 6-3, 7-6(5) in the final.

“It was a very, very difficult match. I was feeling pretty comfortable until about 5-3 [in the second set]. I had some opportunities but credit to Harold, he kept fighting and made it very difficult for me,” Fearnley said. “It’s never easy to serve out a title, especially a big one in front of a French crowd.”

Ritschard is also set to make his Top 100 debut after winning his third title of the year. The 30-year-old, who is one place behind Fearnley at No. 99 in the PIF ATP Live Rankings, won the Del Monte Lisboa Belém Open in Portugal. The Swiss overcame Belgian Raphael Collignon 6-3, 6-7(3), 6-3 in a two-hour, 37-minute final.

<img alt=”Alexander Ritschard celebrates winning the Lisbon Challenger.” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/09/30/17/37/ritschard-lisbonch-2024.jpg” />
Alexander Ritschard celebrates winning the Lisbon Challenger. Credit: Beatriz Ruivo/FPT
“The result, the winning, and all this is just the reward for hard work,” Ritschard said. “I consider myself still young, but I guess in the world of tennis people see 30 and they think, ‘Oh, he’s on his way out’. But for me, it’s just getting started. I just want to see how far I can go. I think I have what it takes to play at the top and I just want to explore how far I can take it.”

Argentine Juan Manuel Cerundolo won his third Challenger title of the year and 10th overall at the Challenger Dove Men+Care Antofagasta in Chile.

<img alt=”Juan Manuel Cerundolo at the Antofagasta Challenger.” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/09/30/17/38/cerundolo-antofagastach-2024.jpg” />
Juan Manuel Cerundolo at the Antofagasta Challenger. Credit: Challenger Dove Men+Care Antofagasta
The eighth seed relied on rock-solid counterpunching to overcome Paraguay’s 20-year-old Adolfo Daniel Vallejo 3-6, 6-2, 6-4 in the final. Cerundolo, 22, saved 11 of 15 break points faced, according to Infosys ATP Stats.

Tung-Lin Wu was crowned champion at the Bangkok Challenger, where he advanced through qualifying en route to lifting the trophy.

The 26-year-old, who hails from Chinese Taipei, downed American Mackenzie McDonald 6-3, 7-6(4) in the final to claim his second Challenger title and first since April 2022. Wu dropped just one set across seven matches in Thailand.

<img alt=”Tung-Lin Wu in action at the Bangkok Challenger.” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/09/30/17/35/wu-nonthaburich-2024.jpg” />
Tung-Lin Wu in action at the Bangkok Challenger. Credit: Bangkok Challenger

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The Nomadic Life… with Arthur Fils

  • Posted: Sep 30, 2024

Arthur Fils is one of the brightest young stars in tennis and he has shown that this week at the Kinoshita Group Japan Open Tennis Championships, where he is into the final.

The Frenchman, who is first in the PIF ATP Live Race To Jeddah, is still learning new things about life on Tour. ATPTour.com caught up with Fils earlier in the year to learn about what he enjoys about traveling, his favourite places to visit, his walk-on song and more.

Are there two essential non-tennis items you would always take with you when on Tour?
A speaker, and city clothes.

Have you ever forgotten an important item when going on Tour?
If I forget my racquet, then of course it’s a big problem! But I think for me, I cannot play if I forget my headphones. I’m always [tuned] into music, and if I forget my headphones, I’m going to play badly for sure.

What is your walk-on song?
It depends, but a lot of French rap, and there is one French rapper, called Gradur.

And do you enjoy traveling the world, or is it just something you do?
I’m still young, so of course, I enjoy it. Maybe [it’s not] for the guys who are 35 or 40. [and] they do [it] because they play tennis. But me, I’m still young so I love to travel, sometimes with my friends, sometimes with my family, and every time with my coach. It’s super nice.

Is there a time when you decide to go to a tournament because you just want to see the city?
Yes, Rio. With Rio I went there because it was a dream for me to go to Rio.

What’s your favourite vacation destination?
Last year, I went to Mauritius and it was unbelievable. This year we want to go either in Oman or in the Red Sea, in Saudi Arabia. It looks unbelievable, better than Maldives.

[ATP APP]

And are there any routines or activities you do when you are away to, like, create a sense of home?
We go out to restaurants when we can, there are some great restaurants. In London, when we go, we go to good restaurants.

How do you try to overcome jet lag? Do you have, like, any tactics? Strategies? Do you suffer badly from jetlag?
I can sleep whenever I want, so I don’t care. Right before coming here [to talk to you], I was taking a nap for an hour. 

And last one, are you someone who gets the airport with lots of time, or you, like, half an hour, 20 minutes before the flight?
I don’t take a lot of time, but the thing is, my coach is a little bit old, Sebastien [Grosjean]. So he wants to be there three hours before the flight, even if we are in priority or whatever, he still wants to be there three hours before the flight. Who likes hanging out waiting for their plane?

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Fils hits 'best passing I ever hit in my life' to reach Tokyo final

  • Posted: Sep 30, 2024

Arthur Fils’ reaction said it all.

After hitting a final forehand passing shot to close out a 7-6(8), 7-6(10) victory against Holger Rune in the Kinoshita Group Japan Open Tennis Championships semi-finals, the Frenchman fell to the court.

“It’s the best passing I ever hit in my whole life, man. The passing went crazy. I was going exactly for this one and it went so good out of my racquet. It was an amazing one,” Fils said in his on-court interview. “When I went to the passing, I got big cramps in the quads and I said to myself, ‘Okay, I need to win this one because otherwise I don’t know how I’m going to do it’.

“I saw the passing and just laid down because I was completely tired [from] the match and all the week.”

Fils is into his fourth ATP Tour final and his second at an ATP 500, after lifting the trophy in Hamburg earlier this year. He will face countryman Ugo Humbert for the crown in Tokyo.

Humbert leads the pair’s Lexus ATP Head2Head series 3-0, including a 6-2, 6-2 win just two months ago in Montreal. Even so, Fils is happy to face a friend in the final.

“It’s amazing. For now I’ve never beat him, so I’m going to come on the court as an underdog,” Fils said. “We like this position, especially in the final. So let’s see how it [will] go.”

[ATP APP]

Rune won three more total points than Fils in their semi-final according to Infosys ATP Stats, but the Frenchman found a way through two tight tie-breaks.

The first-placed player in the PIF ATP Live Race To Jeddah, 20, saved three of the four break points he faced to become the third-youngest finalist in tournament history.

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Sinner now leads ATP Tour wins for 2024 season

  • Posted: Sep 30, 2024

Jannik Sinner now leads the ATP Tour wins for the 2024 season, according to the Infosys ATP Win/Loss Index.

The Italian claimed his 58th victory of the season (58-5), breaking a tie with Alexander Zverev for the ATP Tour-lead, by easing into the China Open semi-finals on Monday evening. The No. 1 player in the PIF ATP Rankings eliminated big-hitting Czech Jiri Lehecka 6-2, 7-6(6).

“We always try to improve day by day and I feel like the result is coming in what level you’re playing throughout the season, how consistent you are as a player,” Sinner said in his on-court interview. “You also have to be ready mentally to do that. So we just try to stay in the present moment. We know what we have done this season, which is great for me. But every match we see we can improve, which is very good.”

The 23-year-old faced two set points at 4/6 in the second-set tie-break, but rallied to close out his victory in one hour and 45 minutes. He will next take on Buyunchaokete after the home favourite upset fourth seed Andrey Rublev 7-5, 6-4.

Sinner has now won 14 consecutive matches dating back to the start of the Cincinnati Open. He has claimed 50 straight wins against players outside of the world’s Top 20.

[ATP APP]

 

For most of the match against Lehecka, the top seed was in full control. He did not face a break point until 5-5 in the second set, when the Czech raised his level to earn two chances.

But whereas Sinner needed three sets in his first two matches in Beijing, this year’s Australian Open and US Open champion was able to get through without facing a decider. He now leads Lehecka 2-0 in their Lexus ATP Head2Head series.

“I felt like I had some chances in the second set a little bit before, I couldn’t use them. But then it gets a bit tricky, I was serving [at] 5-all, he had a couple of break points, but then I served well fortunately,” Sinner said. “And [in a] tie-break everything can happen. I was down and then I returned very well on 4/6, served well on 5/6. So happy how I handled a tough situation. Feel like I still can improve a couple of things here so hopefully tomorrow is going to be that day when I feel better on the court.

“But Jiri, we played in Indian Wells again, so we know each other a little bit more now. He’s a very tough player to play against so I’m very happy to be in the next round.”

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Humbert accelerates past Machac for Tokyo final berth

  • Posted: Sep 30, 2024

Ugo Humbert successfully halted Tomas Machac’s mid-match momentum on Monday to book his spot in the Kinoshita Group Japan Open Tennis Championships final in Tokyo.

The Frenchman raised his level after a tough second set to seal a 6-3, 3-6, 6-2 semi-final triumph at the hard-court ATP 500. Humbert produced his best tennis of the match to reel off four straight games from 2-2 in the third set to advance to his third ATP Tour final of the season (Marseille, Dubai).

“It feels good. It was not my best match this week, but I still have the win so I’m very proud of that,” said Humbert. “It was not easy. I had difficulties in the second set, but in the end, I found the solution and stayed calm. I’m into my seventh ATP Tour final, so I’m very happy.

“It was not easy, because he didn’t allow a lot of rhythm… At the end of the second set, I tried to speak to myself a little bit. After, the last four games were amazing.”

Humbert will seek to improve his perfect 6-0 record in tour-level finals when he takes on sixth seed Holger Rune or #NextGenATP Arthur Fils in Tuesday’s final in Tokyo. The Frenchman, who has risen four spots to No. 15 in the PIF ATP Live Rankings as a result of his run in Japan so far, is chasing his third ATP 500 crown after his victories in Halle in 2021 and Dubai earlier this year.

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