Raducanu reaches Korea Open quarter-finals
Great Britain’s Emma Raducanu reaches the quarter-finals at the Korea Open after beating China’s Yue Yuan in straight sets in Seoul.
Great Britain’s Emma Raducanu reaches the quarter-finals at the Korea Open after beating China’s Yue Yuan in straight sets in Seoul.
American Martin Damm walked onto the practice court for his final training session before this year’s grass-court swing. The 20-year-old was eagerly waiting to compete professionally on grass, the surface on which he beat Carlos Alcaraz at the Wimbledon junior event in 2019.
But in an instant, Damm suffered a freak injury that kept him out of the game for three months. He tore two ligaments in his left ankle before the training session even began.
“I just stepped and next thing I know, I’m on the ground in crazy pain. It was brutal,” Damm told ATPTour.com at the Saint-Tropez Open, an ATP Challenger Tour 125 event. “I just stepped, I didn’t necessarily roll it or fall.
“I think something must have been bad in the ankle. It must have been getting close to it and it was just a matter of what day it was going to happen. I don’t think these things just happen out of nowhere. I couldn’t even put my heel down to the ground the first two weeks.”
[ATP APP]Before the injury, Damm was enjoying some of the best results of his career. He reached his first ATP Challenger Tour final in January and made a third-round run at the ATP Masters 1000 event in Miami two months later.
Now Damm is “getting used to trusting my ankle a little more” and aiming to find the level he was producing in the first half of the year.
The son of 40-time tour-level doubles titlist Martin Damm, the Florida native has unique attributes that make him a tricky opponent. Turning 21 at the end of September, Damm stands tall at 6’8” and is left-handed.
“Not many players were or are like that. It definitely has its advantages and disadvantages. I think the great thing is that I’m lefty and the size. Hopefully my serve can get to a point where it’s one of the best in the world,” Damm said.
“At the same time, the game has progressed so much the last few years, everyone is so good at hitting a tennis ball. So unfortunately it’s not only about the serve and how you hit the ball. The majority of it is the physical side, fitness, and the mental side of it as well.
“I think it’s time to look past forehands, backhand and serves. Obviously it’s great to have that in the toolbox, but you have to be an absolute beast mentally and physically as well to compete with those guys. I think that’s something I need to improve the most in.”
Damm has learned the importance of mental fortitude from his father, whose biggest career doubles title came at the 2006 US Open alongside Leander Paes. The American has also been working with USTA mental performance coach Larry Lauer for seven years.
“[My dad] told me no matter how bad it gets, just keep working,” Damm said. “At the time, it might feel like career-ending losses but at the end of the day, it’s just one match and the season is so long. Keep your head down, keep working and know that the tough times will pass at some point.
“My dad and Larry say, ‘Just accept it, move on, keep working and tomorrow is a new day’.”
[NEWSLETTER FORM]#NextGenATP Chinese star Shang Juncheng delivered in front of a lively home crowd on Thursday at the Chengdu Open, where he moved past former World No. 4 Kei Nishikori 6-4, 6-4 in a high-quality first-round match.
Shang is one of the most exciting prospects on the ATP Tour and the 19-year-old showed why against the 34-year-old Nishikori. He hit cleanly off both wings and dug deep when serving for the match in the second set, fending off two break points before eventually advancing to level the pair’s Lexus ATP Head2Head series at 1-1.
Shang was full of praise for Nishikori after his win.
“His returns are unbelievable, some of the best in the world,” Shang said. “His game is taking the ball early. He doesn’t give you much time and he can defend anything that is coming at him. All the players are tricky but it is tough to play him because he moves in the same way as I do. It was a very good match and he is a really good guy and we get along well off the court.”
Shang shines in Chengdu 🪩
The 19-year-old continues to impress as he rallies past Nishikori 6-4 6-4!@ChengduOpen | #ChengduOpen pic.twitter.com/nNb1rapOss
— ATP Tour (@atptour) September 19, 2024
Shang has now earned 20 tour-level wins in a season for the first time, highlighted by semi-final runs in Hong Kong and Atlanta. The lefty will hope to perform well on home soil during the Asian swing in an aim to further cement his chances of qualifying for the Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF, due to take place from 18-22 December. Shang is currently third in the PIF ATP Live Race To Jeddah.
“The goal for Asia is to be healthy and happy,” Shang said. “I don’t get to play at home much. The fans don’t get to watch the Chinese players much, so it is to have fun.”
The World No. 67 has won his past seven first-round tour-level matches and will next meet Roman Safiullin or Fabio Fognini.
Nishikori was making his debut in Chengdu. The 12-time tour-level titlist struck the ball well against Shang but struggled physically at times, receiving treatment on his left leg and right elbow.
[ATP APP]Australian Alexsandar Vukic saved one match point to earn a hard-fought 3-6, 7-6(9), 6-4 win against former World No. 12 Borna Coric at the ATP 250.
Vukic, who leads Coric 2-0 in the pair’s Lexus ATP Head2Head series, will aim to reach the quarter-finals at a tour-level hard-court event for the first time this season when he takes on Spaniard Pedro Martinez in the second round.
Chinese wild card Zhou Yi earned his first ATP Tour win after Chun-Hsin Tseng was forced to retire in the third set. Zhou led 2-6, 6-1, 3-1 when Tseng stopped. The No. 531 player in the PIF ATP Rankings meets Adrian Mannarino or French qualifier Terence Atmane in the second round.
In other action, qualifier Alibek Kachmazov advanced, defeating American Aleksandar Kovacevic 6-4, 7-6(7), while Yannick Hanfmann beat Japanese wild card Shintaro Mochizuki 6-4, 7-6(4). Christopher O’Connell eliminated Pavel Kotov 6-4, 7-5.
[NEWSLETTER FORM]‘Does this little guy also want to try a ball?’
That was the question that started it all for Alexander Blockx, who began playing tennis at age four. Blockx’s brother Maxime, three years his senior, was taking tennis lessons and while Alexander was watching courtside, coach Philippe Cassiers uttered the phrase that kickstarted the Belgian’s journey in the sport.
To this day, Blockx is coached by Cassiers, a 15-year partnership that has featured great success. Blockx became the junior No. 1 in singles and doubles in 2023, the same year he won the Australian Open boys’ singles event.
Competing mostly on the ATP Challenger Tour this season, the 19-year-old is living out his dream as a professional tennis player, a pinch-me moment for someone whose start in tennis was nearly accidental.
“It wasn’t planned for me, I was just going with to see [my brother] a bit,” Blockx recalled to ATPTour.com. “Eventually when we got there, the coach asked my parents, ‘Does this little guy also want to try a ball?’ I said, ‘Yes’, and I started playing and never stopped.”
[ATP APP]Cassiers, who runs a tennis academy outside of Antwerp, instantly noticed Blockx’s natural ability.
“There was a little boy sitting on the bench next to mommy and daddy — and that was Alexander,” Cassiers said. “I asked, ‘Do you want to try?’ He stood up and was like, ‘Let’s do it’. We threw him a couple balls and you could tell he was really motivated, ready to play right away. He wasn’t scared. He was ready to go for it and it was really fun. I talked to his parents, ‘Maybe we should try training for the little one as well’. We have been working ever since.”
Blockx is not the first professional athlete in his family. His father Oleg was a track athlete, excelling in hurdle races while Blockx’s mother Natalia was a professional swimmer.
The #NextGenATP teen has never played any sport besides tennis. As a child, he was too busy dominating tennis tournaments, even above his age group.
“You have big dreams, but when I realised I was good at the sport was when I was playing with guys older than me, two or three years older than me. Because against my age and a year older, I barely lost a game every time we played until the age of 14,” said Blockx, who is 24th in the PIF ATP Live Race To Jeddah.
“First, I played the Belgian tournaments. I was winning almost everything and then my coach said, ‘Okay, now we are going to play a higher age group’. I started winning everything so we started playing international to see how that goes. In under 12s, I played 45 matches and won 42 I think. So then we were like, ‘Okay, there’s real potential’. At the age of 12, I realised I want to go all in and it might actually work out.”
Currently No. 264 in the PIF ATP Rankings, Blockx has gained more attention since the start of 2023, when he became Belgium’s third junior Slam champion and first at Melbourne Park. Jacques Brichant (1947) and Kimmer Coppejans (2012) triumphed at Roland Garros.
<img src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/09/18/22/19/blockx-australian-open-2023-junior-champion.jpg” style=”width:100%;” alt=”Alexander Blockx wins the 2023 Australian Open junior title.” />
Alexander Blockx wins the 2023 Australian Open junior title. Credit: Manan Vatsyayana/AFP via Getty Images
“It was amazing. Also because of the way I won it, 11/9 third-set tie-breaker [in the final],” Blockx said. “The whole week I played some good players: [Joao] Fonseca, against Learner [Tien] in the final.”
Blockx this year has made three semi-final appearances on the ATP Challenger Tour, with two of those runs coming prior to a two-month injury layoff in the middle of the season. Blockx was playing his second match in what was supposed to be a five-week Asian swing in April when he tore a ligament in his right ankle, sidelining him until mid-July.
Now back at full health, Blockx showed flashes of his best level last week when he made his Davis Cup debut, which he labelled as, “one of the best experiences of my life so far on a tennis court”. Blockx represented his home country against Italy and pushed former World No. 6 Matteo Berrettini to three sets.
One key element in Blockx’s breakthrough, according to Cassiers, has been his charge’s genuine love for the sport.
“He has a passion for tennis that is really unbelievable,” Cassiers said. “It’s becoming more of an obsession at the moment. He’s really, really into the game. I see many players during the last years, and I’ve never seen a player this passionate and obsessed with the game and [with] the will to improve.
“Off the court, he’s following websites, Challenger TV, YouTube and all these things. You can ask him very hard questions, ‘In 2020, who played the quarter-finals of Madrid?’ Or whatever, he is going to be able to give you an answer with the scores. Off the court, he’s still busy with tennis things.”
[NEWSLETTER FORM]Greek duo Stefanos Tsitsipas and Maria Sakkari will team once again when the United Cup kicks off the 2025 season on 27 December.
Paris Olympics gold medallist Zheng Qinwen and World No. 9 in the PIF ATP Rankings Casper Ruud will also return to lead China and Norway, respectively.
Tsitsipas and Sakkari have helped Team Greece to the knockout stages in the previous two editions of the tournament, without tasting ultimate success.
Tsitsipas is hoping the strong team culture he and Sakkari have built so far at the United Cup will hold Team Greece in good stead for 2025.
“The team we have built with Maria over the last few years is definitely one that gives us a lot of opportunities to go big and create a lot of damage on the field,” he said. “Getting the opportunity to have a lot of good individuals within one team gives us a lot of motivation and a lot of reasons to go out there and fight for our best.”
A sense of patriotism keeps bringing the World No. 12 Tsitsipas back to the United Cup.
“Representing Team Greece in a team competition like that at the beginning of the year is something that allows me to be really patriotic and start the year very strong,” he said. “Knowing that we come from a country rich in history and good traditions and values when it comes to sports is an extra reason to go out there and represent tennis, try and do as good as we can to uplift tennis and bring its highest value in our country.”
Tournament Director Stephen Farrow believes the combination of Tsitsipas and Sakkari perfectly encapsulates the atmosphere of the international mixed-teams event.
“Tsitsipas and Sakkari qualified Greece at the first two editions of the United Cup. They are both fan favourites and are looking forward to starting their year with us in 2025,” he said.
[ATP APP]“The Greek fans in both Perth and Sydney have supported the United Cup with great passion. They bring an unrivaled energy in support of their country’s biggest sporting stars, which is the essence of the United Cup.”
Meanwhile, World No. 7 Zheng led Team China to a United Cup quarter-final berth earlier this year and has ensured China’s qualification once again.
“I’m delighted to be able to qualify China again for the United Cup,” said Zheng, the first Chinese player in history to win an Olympic tennis medal in singles. “The United Cup presents a unique opportunity to play for our country in a mixed team environment, similar to the Olympics, and we couldn’t be more excited to share this experience together.”
Farrow is grateful a player of Zheng’s quality has recommitted to compete at the United Cup.
“Zheng has had an incredible 2024. She reached the final of the Australian Open in January, won gold in Paris and has maintained her Top 10 ranking throughout the year,” said Farrow of the player who also recently reached the US Open quarter-finals. “She’s a great player and a big personality and it’s fantastic to welcome her back to the United Cup.”
Ruud is also set to feature at the tournament as he headlines Norway’s third United Cup campaign. The 25-year-old went undefeated in his singles matches at the last United Cup and took the Norwegians to the quarter-finals.
“Casper Ruud’s consistent results on the Tour has again allowed Norway to secure their position at the United Cup for another year. Ruud’s early commitment recognises the value in participating in global team competitions,” Farrow said.
The 2025 United Cup starts on 27 December and features 18 countries battling it out across both Sydney and Perth. The champions will be crowned in the final on 5 January.
[NEWSLETTER FORM]ATP Tour stars from the past and present stood before an iconic landmark on Wednesday evening in Berlin for the official pre-event photograph of the 2024 Laver Cup.
Captains and players partaking in this year’s edition of the teams event headed to the German capital’s Brandenburg Gate for a spectacular sunset shot. Former No. 1s in the PIF ATP Rankings Bjorn Borg and John McEnroe are this year captaining Team Europe and Team World, respectively, for the seventh and final time, and they will have some of the current day’s finest talent to choose from across 20-22 September at Uber Arena.
Borg’s Team Europe lineup includes home favourite Alexander Zverev, Carlos Alcaraz, Daniil Medvedev, Casper Ruud, Grigor Dimitrov, and Stefanos Tsitsipas, with Flavio Cobolli and Jan-Lennard Struff in Berlin as alternates. The Roland Garros and Wimbledon champion Alcaraz is looking forward to making his bow in an event that pits six of the best European stars against six players from the rest of the world.
“I think it’s a unique event,” Alcaraz told media after the photoshoot. “I’m supporting my opponents from the rest of the year, so it’s going to be a little bit weird for me but I think it’s going to be fun. The format is unique as well, so I’m super excited to start the event and see how it’s going to be on Friday and at the weekend. Really happy to be here at the Laver Cup.”
Always a pleasure to have @rogerfederer in town 🤩@LaverCup | #LaverCup pic.twitter.com/WwqPtunJCM
— ATP Tour (@atptour) September 18, 2024
The World No. 7 Taylor Fritz is the highest-ranked star on Team World. The American will hope to back up his run to his maiden Grand Slam final at the US Open with a strong showing in Berlin.
“I’m super excited I’m here,” said Fritz. “I’ve heard really good things about Berlin and so far I’m really enjoying it. It’s one of those places, that if Laver Cup wasn’t here, I might never have gotten the chance to come.”
For McEnroe, the fact that this will be his last as captain of Team World only serves as extra motivation. The American hopes to steer his roster, which includes Fritz, Frances Tiafoe, Ben Shelton, Alejandro Tabilo, Francisco Cerundolo and Thanasi Kokkinakis, to a third consecutive Laver Cup triumph.
“My idol as a kid was Rod Laver, and Roger Federer was the most beautiful player, one of the best people I’ve ever met. He came up with this idea, and to be able to do this with my best rival and great friend Bjorn Borg [is great],” McEnroe told ATPTour.com. “It’s pretty tough and when you lose, it sucks, but it’s still a great experience to be part of this. Hopefully, since we finally won the past two, we can go out with a bang.”
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Wu Yibing was around 14 years old when he noticed a strange swelling on his left foot. The on-and-off pain was the result of a slight fracture that did not require immediate surgery, but doctors advised that it would likely need treatment in the future.
After nearly a decade of waiting, Wu opted for surgery late last year. It was a tough moment for the Chinese star who was in the form of his life. A fierce competitor with a fierce forehand, Wu triumphed at the Dallas Open to become China’s lone ATP Tour titlist in February 2023. He later hit a career-high No. 54 in the PIF ATP Rankings.
But shortly after the US Open, Wu was forced to put an early end to his dream year.
“I felt like it bothered me a lot last year after the grass season. Maybe the surface change and also the shoes, I didn’t feel really used to,” Wu told ATPTour.com at the Hangzhou Open, where he is competing in front of his home fans this week. “So I started to feel it more after grass and that’s why I decided to do the surgery after the US Open.”
[ATP APP]Since undergoing surgery, Wu has competed in just one ATP Tour event (Houston this year). Then he missed an additional four-and-a-half months. Wu did not compete from March 2019 until January 2022 due to several injuries, including issues with his elbow, which required surgery, his lower back, shoulder and wrist.
“I think the tougher parts of life always teach you something. I think we can all take these parts as motivation,” Wu said. “Mentally I will be even tougher because of the things I’ve [been] through. It’s not easy for everybody.”
Wu’s latest comeback featured a positive start. He immediately won his fifth ATP Challenger Tour title in August in Jinan, China. It was just his second outing of the year.
“That was very special. I feel like the work I put in before starting to play again was all worth it,” Wu said. “A lot of practice, a lot of effort outside the tournaments. A lot of work in the gym. Hopefully everything can come together, [I can] be healthy and play good tennis again.”
<img src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/08/24/12/51/yibing-jinanch-2024.jpg?w=100%25&hash=86502B8304761A06BCF6BC7CCA65E83C” style=”width:100%;” alt=”Wu Yibing triumphs at the 2024 Jinan Open.” />
Wu Yibing triumphs at the ATP Challenger Tour 50 event in Jinan. Credit: Jinan Open
For many Chinese fans, this year’s Asian hard-court swing marks the first time they can watch Wu in person since his rapid rise in 2023.
Competing this week in his birth city Hangzhou, Wu is making his first ATP Tour appearance on Chinese soil since 2018. It is a grand homecoming for the World No. 566.
“I actually drove by the West Lake a few days ago and the facility was right there. It brings me back. A lot of good memories,” Wu said. “As a young kid, four or five years old, playing with regular racquets, which were cleaning the floor!”
Nine months into the season, the wild card Wu will aim for his first tour-level win of the year when he faces #NextGenATP Coleman Wong in the first round.
[NEWSLETTER FORM]Carlos Alcaraz and Flavio Cobolli may be in Berlin this week primarily to play tennis, but that didn’t stop the ATP Tour stars from testing their football skills with some local experts on Wednesday afternoon.
Ahead of the 2024 Laver Cup in the German capital, Team Europe’s Alcaraz and Cobolli challenged members of Bundesliga team FC Union Berlin to a game of football and tennis at Uber Arena. Both tennis stars are big football fans: Alcaraz supports Spanish giant Real Madrid, while Italy’s Cobolli is a huge fan of AS Roma.
🎾 x ⚽️@carlosalcaraz and @cobollifla challenged members of @fcunion to a friendly competition.@LaverCup | #LaverCup | 📸: Getty Images pic.twitter.com/VbKTrXea5O
— ATP Tour (@atptour) September 18, 2024
Alcaraz and Cobolli also visited Berlin’s renowned East Side Gallery in its historic Friedrichshain district, where they swapped football jerseys and Team Europe jackets with their footballing counterparts. The representatives from FC Union Berlin included Head Coach Bo Svensson and co-trainers Babak Keyhanfar and Tijan Njie.
The No. 3 in the PIF ATP Rankings, Roland Garros and Wimbledon champion Alcaraz is the only Laver Cup debutant on Team Europe’s six-man roster at this year’s edition of the teams’ event. Cobolli is in Berlin as an alternate for captain Bjorn Borg’s team, which will take on the Team World roster captained by John McEnroe.
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For the past 20 years, Beijing has been home to the China Open, an outdoor hard-court tournament that has attracted some of the ATP Tour’s biggest names.
The ATP 500, which has been a combined event since its inception in 2004 after the WTA Tour moved its WTA 1000 from Shanghai, has been won by a host of notable champions, including Marat Safin, Rafael Nadal, Andy Roddick, Novak Djokovic, Andy Murray, and most recently, Jannik Sinner.
Ahead of the 20th anniversary edition of the event, ATPTour.com looks back on some of the men’s singles champions in Beijing.
[ATP APP] 2004: Safin, Beijing’s First Champion
There can hardly have been a more emphatic first champion in Beijing than Safin. The former No. 1 in the PIF ATP Rankings competed as the fifth seed in the inaugural edition of the ATP 500 and he did not drop a set all week.
Safin’s dominance in the Chinese capital kick-started a red-hot run on the hard courts. He won ATP Masters 1000 events in Madrid and Paris later that year, before lifting his second Grand Slam title at the 2005 Australian Open.
<img src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/09/20/13/15/safin-beijing-2004-trophy.jpg” style=”width: 100%;” alt=”Marat Safin” />
Marat Safin lifts the trophy at the inaugural China Open in 2004. Goh Chai Hin/AFP via Getty Images
2005 & 2017: Nadal Bookends in Beijing
Nadal won the Beijing title on his both his event debut in 2005 and his most recent appearance there in 2017. He defeated Juan Carlos Ferrero and Guillermo Coria en route to the 2005 crown, a title run that in came in the midst of his stunning breakout season during which he won 11 tour-level titles overall.
Twelve years later, in 2017, the Spaniard triumphed in Beijing once again, despite facing two match points in his first-round match against former World No. 10 Lucas Pouille. Nadal defeated three opponents from the Top 20 of the PIF ATP Rankings — John Isner, Grigor Dimitrov and Nick Kyrgios — to cap his run in the Chinese capital.
“It is an important title for me,” said Nadal after his 2017 triumph. “The last year that I had the trophy with me was in 2005. In 2005 I never would have believed that I will keep playing tennis in 2017… I’m very happy.”
<img src=”/-/media/images/articles/nadal-beijing-2024-20-years-on.jpg” style=”width:100%;” alt=”Rafael Nadal” />
Rafael Nadal wins the 2017 Beijing title. Photo Credit: Etienne Oliveau/Getty Images
2008: Roddick, Beijing’s Only American Winner
In 2008, Andy Roddick achieved history by becoming the first and only American to raise a title at the China Open.
The 2003 US Open champion lifted his fifth and final ATP 500 title in Beijing, where he defeated his fellow former World No. 1 Ferrero in the quarter-finals and Dudi Sela in the championship match.
<img src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/09/20/13/08/roddick-beijing-2008-backhand.jpg” style=”width: 100%;” alt=”Andy Roddick” />
Andy Roddick in action during the 2008 Beijing championship match. Photo Credit: Andrew Wong/Getty Images
2009-10, 2012-15: The Djokovic Dynasty in Beijing
Novak Djokovic has become synonymous with Beijing’s tournament. The Serbian holds a 29-0 record at the ATP 500.
In 2009, the Serbian defeated Marin Cilic in straight sets to win his first China Open title. The victory over the Croatian opened the door to years of Djokovic dominance in the Chinese capital, including titles in five of the next six years (2009-10, 2012-15). The former World No. 1 has won the China Open six times, a tournament record, without dropping a single set in the final on any occasion.
“This is right at the top, one of the best achievements I’ve had in my career,” said Djokovic prior to his 2015 championship-match clash with Nadal. “Every time I keep coming back, I have these positive, great memories from the success, the great performances I had on the centre court, support, just overall feel is very positive. I try to use that in my favour.”
<img src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/09/20/13/12/djokovic-beijing-2015-celebration.jpg” style=”width: 100%;” alt=”Novak Djokovic” />
Novak Djokovic defeats Rafael Nadal in the 2015 China Open final. Photo Credit: Chris Hyde/Getty Images
2016: In the Midst of Murray Magic
Andy Murray arrived at Beijing in 2016 on the backdrop of a remarkable year. The Scot was in the midst of an incredible season that included becoming the first player to win back-to-back Olympic Gold medals, while also winning the Wimbledon championships and reaching two other major finals (Australian Open, French Open).
In the 2016 China Open, Murray capped off a dominant year, by defeating two former Top 10 players to win his first title at the China Open. Murray won 26 straight matches to finish the year as the ATP Year-End No. 1 presented by PIF.
<img src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/09/18/20/25/murray-beijing-2024-20-years-on.jpg” style=”width:100%;” alt=”Andy Murray” />
Andy Murray won his sole Beijing title in 2016. Photo Credit: Emmanuel Wong/Getty Images
2023: Sinner flourishes in Beijing
One of the key moments of Jannik Sinner’s breakthrough 2023 season was in Beijing, where he defeated two Top 3 players, Carlos Alcaraz and Daniil Medvedev, to lift the title. Medvedev had won all six of their previous Lexus ATP Head2Head matchups.
Sinner’s impressive form carried over to 2024, when he won his maiden major at the Australian Open before becoming the first Italian No. 1 in PIF ATP Rankings history in June.
With these historic moments in mind, the stage is set for this year’s edition of the China Open, which will be played from 26 September-2 October.
Will a Chinese man break through to triumph on home soil? Zhang Zhizhen, who recently won the mixed doubles silver medal in the Paris Olympics, is the country’s leading hope. Other home favourites to watch include #NextGenATP Shang Juncheng and Buyunchaokete.
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Coco Gauff ends her partnership with coach Brad Gilbert just a fortnight after what she described as a “disappointing” US Open title defence.