Stuart Parker: Jersey tennis player relishing Queen's opportunity
Jersey’s Stuart Parker says he is relishing the chance play at Queen’s after being given a wildcard to play at the event.
Jersey’s Stuart Parker says he is relishing the chance play at Queen’s after being given a wildcard to play at the event.
Stefanos Tsitsipas pays tribute to his grandmother who he reveals died five minutes before his French Open final against Novak Djokovic.
Zizou Bergs was physically drained as he embarked on his stay in Almaty, Kazakhstan. The budding Belgian star, who turned 22 just two weeks ago, entered the clay-court stop on the ATP Challenger Tour in search of much-needed energy as he battled an illness.
“It was a very tough week for me,” said Bergs. “I was feeling sick early in the week and it’s very difficult to get fit during a tournament when you’re not feeling well.”
Bergs battled fatigue throughout the week, but the Belgian refused to succumb as he navigated a strong field at the Beeline Challenger 80. Frequently down but never out, he would make a serious statement on the clay of Almaty.
Bergs rallied from a set down three times and fought off a match point en route to arguably his biggest victory on the Challenger circuit. Despite his physical struggles, the Belgian relied on his trademark guile and determination to triumph in Almaty. He would defeat home hope Timofey Skatov 4-6, 6-3, 6-2 in Sunday’s championship.
It was a third ATP Challenger Tour crown of the year for Belgium’s newest star, who joins Jenson Brooksby and Sebastian Baez atop the 2021 titles leaderboard. At the age of 22, he is the youngest player from his country to lift three trophies in a season since a 21-year-old Johan Van Herck in 1995.
“I was down a lot, but I came through,” Bergs added. “I feel very happy but also very tired. This is incredible. I was waiting for the opportunity to play Challengers because I was playing many Futures early in the year. Starting from my first opportunity, winning the title in St. Petersburg, I’m now winning a lot. This was just my fifth tournament on clay and I won again, so it’s promising for the rest of the year. I will try to keep going to make the next steps, but winning three times in such a short period is a pretty incredible feeling.”
Also the champion on the indoor hard courts of St. Petersburg and Lille, it was Bergs’ first victory on clay in his young career. Moreover, his 16-2 record puts him among the Challenger Tour’s win percentage leaders. Only Brooksby and Baez own better records thus far in 2021.
Bergs opened the tournament with a 2-6, 7-6(9), 6-3 comeback win over Marcelo Tomas Barrios Vera, saving a match point along the way. And he would earn three straight deciding-set victories in the quarter-finals, semis and final, including two more come-from-behind wins over home favourites Dmitry Popko and Timofey Skatov.
2021 ATP Challenger Win Percentage Leaders
Player | Wins-Losses (Pct.) |
Titles |
Jenson Brooksby |
21-2 (91.3) | 3 |
Sebastian Baez | 20-2 (90.9) | 3 |
Zizou Bergs | 16-2 (88.9) | 3 |
Jaume Munar | 13-2 (86.7) | 1 |
One of the more fiery personalities and determined fighters on tour, it was Bergs’ relentless attitude that carried him through the week in Almaty. Also a big hitter from the back of the court and crafty competitor in the trenches, the Belgian dug deep to find his way to the winners’ circle.
“My coaches helped me a lot this week. They have been my biggest influence. My tennis coach (Bertrand Tinck) has helped me come to the net and be more aggressive. He made steps with me that no one else could do. And of course my mental coach who has been traveling with me now. He has put me in the right mindset. With him, I’ve played four or five tournaments and only lost one match. It’s pretty insane. He’s an incredible guy too and I’m super happy I have them on my team. I appreciate them a lot.”
Bergs will soar 39 spots to a career-high No. 220 in the FedEx ATP Rankings on Monday.
Stefanos Tsitsipas revealed early Monday morning on Instagram that he learned five minutes before his Roland Garros final against Novak Djokovic that his grandmother on his father’s side had passed away.
“Five minutes before entering the court my very beloved grandmother lost her battle with life. A wise woman whose faith in life, and willingness to give and provide can’t be compared to any other human being that I have ever met,” Tsitsipas wrote. “It’s important to have more people like her in this world. Because people like her make you come alive. They make you dream.
“I would like to say that regardless of the day, circumstance or situation, this is entirely dedicated to her, and only her. Thank you for for raising my father. Without him this wouldn’t have been possible.”
Tsitsipas lost a tough five-setter against World No. 1 Djokovic. But in his Instagram post, the Greek put the loss in perspective.
“Life isn’t about winning or losing. It’s about enjoying every single moment in life whether that’s alone or with others,” Tsitsipas wrote. “[It is about] living a meaningful life without misery and abjection. Lifting trophies and celebrating wins is something, but not everything.”
Novak Djokovic has passed Stefanos Tsitsipas to lead the FedEx ATP Race To Turin, after the World No. 1 fought back from down two sets to love for the sixth time in his career to win the Roland Garros title.
Djokovic started the fortnight in Paris just 190 points behind Tsitsipas and on Sunday he beat the Greek star 6-7(6), 2-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-4 for his 19th Grand Slam championship crown. It leaves the Serbian superstar just one trophy away from all-time major title leaders Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal (both on 20).
Tsitsipas, who had led the 2021 year-to-date standings ever since he clinched his first ATP Masters 1000 title at the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters on 18 April, is now 610 points behind Djokovic (5,170) on 4,560 points following his first Grand Slam final appearance. Djokovic beat 13-time Roland Garros champion Rafael Nadal, who is up to fourth place (2,940), in the semi-finals.
FedEx ATP Race To Turin (View Latest Standings)
Player | Points |
1) Novak Djokovic | 5,170 |
2) Stefanos Tsitsipas | 4,560 |
3) Alexander Zverev | 2,970 |
4) Rafael Nadal | 2,940 |
5) Andrey Rublev | 2,770 |
6) Daniil Medvedev | 2,590 |
7) Matteo Berrettini | 1,805 |
8) Aslan Karatsev | 1,730 |
9) Jannik Sinner | 1,510 |
10) Hubert Hurkacz | 1,470 |
The 34-year-old Djokovic has captured the Nitto ATP Finals title on five occasions (2008, ’12-15) and is bidding to finish 2021 as year-end No. 1 for a record seventh year, which would break a tie with Pete Sampras (1993-98) for the most year-end No. 1 finishes in FedEx ATP Rankings history. Djokovic has compiled a 27-3 match record in 2021.
Alexander Zverev (2,970), Nadal, Andrey Rublev (2,770) and Daniil Medvedev (2,590 points), who are in third through sixth places respectively, are separated by just 380 points as the battle to secure a spot in Turin starts to intensify at the mid-point of the 2021 season.
Matteo Berrettini improved his chances of qualifying for the Nitto ATP Finals for the second time in three years (also 2019) following a run to the Roland Garros quarter-finals (l. to Djokovic). He rises two places to move up to seventh (1,805), 75 points ahead of eighth-placed Aslan Karatsev (1,730), this year’s Australian Open semi-finalist (l. to Djokovic) and Dubai champion.
Jannik Sinner, the 19-year-old #NextGenATP Italian, lost on Parisian clay to Nadal in the fourth round, but also jumped two spots to ninth (1,510) and remains ahead of Poland’s Hubert Hurkacz (1,470), the Miami Open presented by Itau champion, and Casper Ruud of Norway (1,465).
Diego Schwartzman has moved into contention for a Nitto ATP Finals spot for a second consecutive year, jumping 14 places to 13th (1,030 points) after the Argentine advanced to the Roland Garros quarter-finals (l. to Nadal). Another player who made the last eight in Paris, Spain’s Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, rose 18 spots to 14th (950 points). Schwartzman remains 700 points behind Karatsev, while Davidovich Fokina is 780 points adrift of the final automatic qualification place.
This week, the ATP Challenger Tour returned to grass for the first time in two years, as the lawns of Nottingham welcomed players back to the prestigious Viking Open.
Frances Tiafoe wasted little time in finding his form on the surface, streaking to his first grass-court title in dominant fashion. The Maryland native ousted close friend Denis Kudla 6-1, 6-3 in just 70 minutes on Sunday, marking the culmination of a week that saw him lose just one set and save 21 of 25 break points faced.
The title match marked the first time that two Americans faced off for a grass-court crown on the Challenger circuit. Kudla, who had defeated Tiafoe in their two previous encounters, battled a determined countryman in Sunday’s championship.
“I was waiting for this for a very long time,” said Tiafoe during the trophy ceremony. “Denis battled hard all week. I know grass is one of his favourite surfaces, so I hope he wins next week but I’m happy to get this one. I needed it bad. And it’s my first title with [coach Wayne Ferreira], so hopefully we’ll get some ATPs next.
“Lastly, I have to say to Denis that I wouldn’t be the guy I am without you bro. I’ve been trying to chase you since I was a kid. It feels good to beat you today but I’ve always looked up to you and I’m happy for our practices together and our friendship. In all my success in the future, I want to say thank you.”
Photo: Nathan Stirk/Getty Images
Tiafoe is no stranger to success on grass, having advanced to the quarter-finals at the 2018 cinch Championships at Queen’s Club. He would go on to reach the third round at Wimbledon just weeks later.
The 23-year-old’s victory was also his sixth on the ATP Challenger Tour and first since he prevailed on the clay of Parma in 2020. Tiafoe is making a habit of lifting trophies in recent years, having won seven of his last eight finals on the ATP Tour and Challenger circuit combined. He is projected to rise to No. 65 in the FedEx ATP Rankings on Monday.
Kudla, meanwhile, was bidding for his second grass-court crown (Ilkley 2015). The American enjoyed an impressive week himself, stopping #NextGenATP star Tomas Machac in the first round, before defeating home hopes Liam Broady and Daniel Evans and saving a match point against Poland’s Kamil Majchrzak in the semi-finals. Evans was the top seed and defending champion at the Challenger 125 event.
Both finalists will look to continue their strong form on the turf next week, with Tiafoe traveling to London to compete at Queen’s Club and Kudla staying in Nottingham for the second of back-to-back Challengers there. Tiafoe opens against Aljaz Bedene, while Kudla is set to face fourth seed Kevin Anderson.
Novak Djokovic says “everything is possible” as he targets a ‘golden’ Grand Slam in 2021 after winning the French Open for the second time.
Forty-nine drop shots.
Novak Djokovic defeated Stefanos Tsitsipas 6-7(6), 2-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-4 to win his second Roland Garros title on Sunday, with drop shots being an integral part of his stunning comeback victory. Djokovic hit 27 drop shots, including nine for clean winners, while Tsitsipas was not far off with 22 drop shots of his own.
The two players combined for an average of one drop shot every six points, or basically one a game for 48 games. The drop shot moved from a side-show, secondary tactic, to become a key strategic ploy to yank the opponent to all compass points of Court Philippe-Chatrier.
The last drop shot of the match was hit by Djokovic with Tsitsipas serving at 30/15, 3-5 in the fifth set. Djokovic’s drop shot adroitly displayed the strategic cunning of the Serb to escape one pattern of play that favoured Tsitsipas and shift gears into another that attacked the Greek’s legs and spirit.
Tsitsipas hit two forehands cross court to Djokovic’s forehand to start the rally, trying to bulldoze a forehand error just like he had successfully done in the opening two sets. Djokovic bailed out of the Deuce court exchange by taking his second forehand high down the line to Tsitsipas’ backhand. The high percentage shot for the Greek was now cross court to Djokovic’s backhand.
That’s where the trap was set.
Djokovic stepped forward to the backhand groundstroke like he was going to rifle it back cross court to Tsitsipas’ backhand. He then switched at the last second and hit a deft drop shot up the line that Tsitsipas could only watch.
Wily from Djokovic. Deflating for Tsitsipas.
Djokovic started with a flurry of eight drop shots in the first set, while Tsitsipas hit back with nine of his own. These early drop shots were designed more as a clever surprise tactic by both players as well as inducing the lactic acid buildup in their opponent’s legs from sprinting forward.
Raising the bar. ALWAYS! ?#RolandGarros | @DjokerNole pic.twitter.com/r1qZ2n0GEA
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 13, 2021
Djokovic hit six drop shots in the second set, with two being outright winners from the forehand wing. He gradually moved away from drop shots with five in the third set and just one in set four. He had found other strategic ways to break down Tsitsipas’ game.
Djokovic came back to the tactic in the fifth set, hitting seven. As the match progressed, Tsitsipas attacked less and played neutral from deeper behind the baseline, which was to Djokovic’s benefit. Once the final set rolled around, Djokovic reached back into his bag of drop shot tricks to punish Tsitsipas for camping too far behind the baseline.
Break Points
In the initial two sets, Tsitsipas got a look at eight break points, converting three of them. In the remaining three sets, Tsitsipas failed to sniff a single break point, while Djokovic feasted on 13 break points, winning four of them. The depth of Djokovic’s groundstrokes pushed Tsitsipas back to a location from where he could not hurt Djokovic. Then the drop shot barrage savaged the Greek’s legs and lungs as he was constantly pulled to the front of the court. That took its toll as the break point opportunities evaporated.
Rally Length
The dominant grouping of points in the final was in the 0-4 shot range, where almost 54 per cent of total points were played. That means each player hit a maximum of just two shots in the point for over half of all points played.
Rally Length Breakdown
When Tsitsipas had to hit two shots or less to win the point, he forged a three-point advantage (85-82) against Djokovic for the match. In the first two sets which Tsitsipas won, his winning margin in the 0-4 shot rally length was a healthy 40-25. Djokovic dominated the match when the rally reached five shots or longer, winning 82 points to 62. In the last three sets, that margin was a resounding 48-32.
Tsitsipas started so strongly, but the energy and focus that was required to build a two-set lead ultimately became unsustainable. Once Djokovic broke early in the third set, he said post-match, “I liked my chances from then onwards. I felt like he was starting to overthink… I got into his head,” he said.
Sprinting side to side against Djokovic in a Grand Slam final on the crushed red earth is challenging enough. Lunging forward to also cover 27 drop shots in the shadow of the net proved a bridge too far.
Down two sets to love in the final of Roland Garros, Novak Djokovic walked out of Court Philippe-Chatrier for a brief break. Two and a half hours later, he was a champion in Paris after rallying back against fifth seed Stefanos Tsitsipas to lift his 19th Grand Slam trophy.
World No. 1 Djokovic was hitting differently, serving better and his body language was visibly much more positive throughout the final three sets of his 6-7(6), 2-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-4 victory against the Greek player.
The key, Djokovic said afterward, was using that small pause to make a big shift in his internal dialogue and silence the ‘voice’ planting seeds of self-doubt as Tsitsipas fearlessly blasted winner after winner past him.
“To be honest, I was never really vocal when I speak to myself. I keep those internal conversations internally in my head,” Djokovic revealed in his post-match press conference. “There’s always two voices inside: one [is] telling you that you can’t do it, that it’s done, it’s finished. That voice was pretty strong after that second set.
“I felt that that was a time for me to actually vocalise the other voice and try to suppress the first one that was saying I can’t make it. I told myself I can do it [and] encouraged myself. I strongly started to repeat that inside of my mind, [and] tried to live it with my entire being.”
“Once I started playing in that third set, especially in the first few games, I saw where my game [was] at, it kind of supported that second voice that was more positive, more encouraging,” he added. “After that there was not much of a doubt for me.”
The result was a second Coupe des Mousquetaires for Djokovic – and another rewritten chapter in the tennis history books.
Simply unstoppable ?@Infosys #RolandGarrosWithInfosys pic.twitter.com/RqoVEDtQOV
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 13, 2021
After becoming only the sixth man in the Open Era to pull off a two-sets-to-love comeback in a Grand Slam final, Djokovic sealed a historic second Career Grand Slam. He stands alone as the only player to achieve this feat twice in the Open Era, and is only the third player in history to do so alongside Aussie legends Roy Emerson and Rod Laver.
“Of course, I am thrilled and I’m very proud of this achievement. [Being] part of the history of the sport that I love with all my heart is always something that is very inspiring and very fulfilling for me,” Djokovic said. “I couldn’t be happier and more satisfied with this kind of scenario in the past 48 hours.
“[This] probably ranks at the top three all-time achievements and experiences that I [have] had in my professional tennis career: going through [a] four-and-a-half battle with Rafa [Nadal] on his court, then bouncing back after not practising yesterday, just coming in today with as much as recharged batteries and energy regained to fight another battle of four-and-a-half hours against Tsitsipas.”
Djokovic, who won a record-extending ninth Australian Open title to start the season, is now one of the rare few players to achieve the Melbourne-Paris double in the same year, and the only one to do it twice in the Open Era (also 2016). He sits just one Grand Slam title behind Big Three rivals Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, who have each won 20, for the most all-time men’s singles titles.
Merci beaucoup ❤️??? #RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/9sec67ivN0
— Novak Djokovic (@DjokerNole) June 13, 2021
He will head to Wimbledon with a chance to make it three Grand Slams in a row, and potentially eye a ‘calendar-year Grand Slam’ by winning all four majors in the same year. His coach, Marian Vajda, believes it’s possible.
Djokovic, who seems to have rewritten the definition of ‘impossible’ along with the tennis history books, was not coy either when asked about his next big goal.
“Everything is possible. Definitely in my case I can say that what I’ve been through in my career, in my life, this journey has been terrific so far,” Djokovic said. “I’ve achieved some things that a lot of people thought it would be not possible for me to achieve.
“I will enjoy this win and then think about Wimbledon in a few days’ time. I don’t have an issue to say that I’m going for the title in Wimbledon. Of course, I am… I’ve had a great success in the past couple of Wimbledon seasons that were played. I won in 2018 and 2019 there. Hopefully I can keep that run going.”
By now, anyone should know better than to count out Novak… even Novak.
Novak Djokovic wins his 19th Grand Slam title after fighting back from two sets down to beat Stefanos Tsitsipas in the French Open final.