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ATP And Lacoste Extend Partnership

  • Posted: Nov 21, 2020

The ATP and Lacoste have announced a multi-year extension of their highly successful partnership. The agreement will see Lacoste transition into an Official Supplier of the ATP Tour, through 2023, following a long-standing partnership with the Nitto ATP Finals, the ATP’s season-ending finale.

The new agreement will see Lacoste become the Official Outfitter and Official Footwear of the ATP Tour, granting the ‘Crocodile’ brand marketing rights and exposure on ATP Tour digital platforms.

In addition, Lacoste will continue to outfit ATP staff throughout the season.

“We are proud to be extending the ATP’s long-term relationship with Lacoste, now in its 19th year,” said Massimo Calvelli, ATP CEO. “As one of the world’s leading fashion brands, whose heritage is rooted in tennis, Lacoste has huge crossover appeal and is a perfect fit for the ATP and our vision for the sport. We are excited at the opportunity to continue our storytelling together.”

“At Lacoste, elegance is more than just a story of style on and off the court, it is a state of mind that we have shared with the ATP for 19 years now and that we are proud to perpetuate today with the renewal of our contract” said Thierry Guibert, Lacoste CEO.

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Ashe, Nastase At His Nastiest, and a Double DQ In Stockholm

  • Posted: Nov 21, 2020

It had been a season to remember for both Arthur Ashe, who had captured the Wimbledon crown, and also Ilie Nastase, a player who tried to be, at the same time, an artist and an actor. But on 30 November 1975, on the opening day of the $130,000 Commercial Union Masters [now named Nitto ATP Finals], Nastase saw his five-year winning record over Ashe coming to an end. In arguably the most controversial moment in the 50-year history of the year-end championship, the very character of each player, the paper-thin tennis rulebook and, at that time, how the sport was officiated, were all called into question.

The seeds had been sown even before a ball had been hit, the night before. Sitting in the cocktail bar of the Grand Hotel, a home to high-profile events and celebrities for 100 years in Stockholm, Nastase was holding court, just 24 hours before playing Ashe in their opening match. As Ashe entered, Nastase asked, “How are you feeling? Good, I hope. I’m going to give you a hard time tomorrow.” Ashe, now sitting beside Nastase at the bar, laughed heartily at times — he knew what the Romanian was like — and soon sipped at his drink. Others were falling about laughing, listening to Nastase rattle on, when Ashe slipped off his stool to leave, prior to telling the barman, “That’ll be on Mr Nastase’s cheque.” As Ashe left, he tapped Nastase on the shoulder, a big grin on his face.

Fast forward to the next evening, and Nastase trailed Ashe 6-1, 5-7 and 1-4, 15/40, in the deciding set. Tensions were high, stoked in the locker room prior to walking out onto the indoor carpet court at the Kungliga tennishallen. Ashe, a winner of nine singles titles in 1975, had benefitted from some close line calls at 5-5 in the second set, which ended with Nastase striking a ball into the advertising boards at the side of the court, close to a lines judge. The 29-year-old was then warned for poor sportsmanship, and later stalled play and continued to stop Ashe’s service motion. Nastase was being heckled by a man in the crowd and walked from the baseline to scream, ‘Are you talking to me?’ Nastase, who’d also then won nine titles that year, then mimicked his opponent’s serve, asking, “Are you ready, Mr Ashe?”

By this stage, Horst Klosterkemper, the 36-year-old German referee, was sitting uncomfortably in his courtside chair, wondering if the chair umpire would take action. He didn’t. After a two-minute delay by Nastase, which saw him bounce the ball an inordinate number of times, Ashe said, “That’s it. I’ve had enough”. He stormed to the side of the court, picked up his spare racquet, a towel and jumper and began to walk off. Klosterkemper rushed on in an attempt to first disqualify Nastase but began to plead with Ashe. It was too late.

Klosterkemper, who would soon establish the World Team Cup at the Rochusclub in Dusseldorf, told ATPTour.com 45 years on, “At that time, the rules were so flexible that even I, as the referee, was not entitled to go on the court. But I thought I had to go down from my seat in the stands, because the chair umpire did not succeed in giving Ilie a definite warning or disqualify him. When they changed sides at 4-1, Ilie was stalling and talking to the public and I saw, from my point of view, the chair umpire didn’t do anything.

“Before I came onto the court, the chair umpire tried in a very polite way, asking Ilie to continue. Someone in the crowd shouted out, ‘Get on with it!’ Then Nastase turned around and talked to crowd. He then turned to Arthur on the other side of the net, ‘Are you ready Mr Ashe?’ There, I felt the chair umpire was too polite and didn’t control Ilie. So I made up my mind to disqualify him, but by the time I got to the court, I had no chance because Arthur was leaving the court.

“Arthur got so irritated that he went to his bags, picked up his racquets and I rushed onto the court, to ask him, ‘Arthur, please, stay on the court otherwise you disqualify yourself!’ And Arthur said, ‘I’m finished, that’s enough’. He then left the court, and I went back to the chair umpire, outside of the rules, to ask him to disqualify Ilie, which he then did. Ilie said, ‘No, no, I’m the winner. He left the court.’

Klosterkemper had umpired a few Davis Cup ties before being appointed as the 1975 Masters referee, but there were no professional officials at the time. “Bud Collins, who interviewed me courtside for NBC Sports, asked as to my professional status. ‘I’m sorry, I am doing this as an honorary job’, I said. Afterwards, Bud then said, jokingly, ‘Good luck, I’m sure that the lawyers of Ilie Nastase will get hold of you.’”

Minutes later, John Beddington, in his fourth year as Tournament Director, debated with Klosterkemper, the umpire and Hans-Ake Sturen of the Stockholm Grand Prix tournament, in the same locker room as Nastase, who was sitting rather sheepishly behind clothes and towels, unbeknownst to a still irate Ashe. “I had never experienced Arthur in a fury – he was really, really angry and I doubt if it ever happened again,” Beddington told ATPTour.com, 45 years on. “The problem which faced us was that Arthur’s offence — walking off court — was every bit as bad as Ilie’s. Taking the law into his own hands did not help and he refused to continue the match by returning to the court. Nobody wanted to default Arthur – and he had been provoked. After a considerable discussion, Horst decided to default both players, which would give them both a loss in the round-robin format.”

But by defaulting them both, the eight-player round-robin tournament — featuring two groups of four players — was broken. “I’ll appeal against that,” said Ashe, when the decision was made. “You won’t get away with it.” A compromise was needed and Klosterkemper, Beddington, Sturen and Commercial Union boss Geoff Mullis were soon debating with ITF President Derek Hardwick, who’d left the Kungliga tennishallen for the hotel only 30 minutes prior to the incident.

Ashe knew the rules as he’d helped write them, and years later, in the company of his wife, Jeanne, they sat with Klosterkemper at the Rochusclub in Dusseldorf during the 1979 World Team Cup. Ashe admitted, “That night, I knew I had to sit down and begin building on the Code of Conduct [which today amounts to 420 pages in 2020]. It’s a shame that this incident happened, you did your best. But the rules did not exist.”

“Arthur had an impeccable character and integrity,” Ashe’s good friend Fred McNair, who was competing with Sherwood Stewart in the 1975 Masters doubles, told ATPTour.com. “Arthur honoured the sport and honoured himself by rising above it. He could have forced Horst to take Nastase off the court, but he made a different statement, peacefully.”

The next morning, on what was the second day of the 1975 Masters tournament, the committee overturned Klosterkemper’s original decision after a four-hour meeting. “I still have the three-page letter Arthur handed me later on the evening of the match, appealing the default and declining to continue to participate in the Masters until a firm decision was made,” Beddington, the Tournament Director of the Rogers Cup between 1979 to 1994, told ATPTour.com. “Arthur claimed that a draw or a double default, was, in effect, no decision at all, and it was hard to argue against his logic. His letter ended by offering his ‘sincere regrets for any inconvenience caused’.”

Nastase
Ilie Nastase receives the 1975 Masters trophy from Sweden’s Princess Christina.

The impasse was short-lived and at a late lunch in the Grand Hotel, with Klosterkemper sat at another table, Nastase tip-toed over to Ashe to present the American some red, white and yellow flowers. “Please forgive me,” the Romanian said. “I forfeit the match. I give it to you.”

Ashe, the dignified ATP President and role model, called the whole episode a “travesty and a bad joke”, while for three-time Masters champion Nastase, who’d won 18 of 20 matches at the tournament in the past four years, it was the day that he learned a lesson. Even today, Nastase greets Klosterkemper by saying, “Thank you for disqualifying me, because from that moment on, I concentrated on my tennis.” Klosterkemper adds, “He knew it was his bad behaviour and he really did feel guilty. When he learned his lesson that night, he tried to play tennis properly.”

Ashe, who later admitted he was “mad for the first time in 10 years” in walking off the court against Nastase, went on to beat Adriano Panatta 7-6, 6-3 the next night to qualify outright for the semi-finals. So it was Nastase who watched on nervously, from the stands, two days later, as Manuel Orantes needed to beat Ashe in straight sets in order to join Bjorn Borg, Guillermo Vilas and Ashe in the final four. Otherwise, Nastase would qualify. There was no special reason for Ashe to extend a helping hand to Nastase. As he had already qualified, Ashe could have tanked the match to keep Nastase from qualifying for the semi-finals, but the American defeated Orantes 6-4, 6-1 with aggressive net play. Nastase left the Kungliga tennishallen after the first game of the second set, assured of his place in the semi-finals, where he’d meet Vilas.

“The most remarkable thing was that Arthur’s behaviour was exemplary, he was such a role model,” said Klosterkemper, who would return to the Nitto ATP Finals as Tournament Chairman in 1990, when the competition was played in Frankfurt. “If Arthur had lost to Orantes, even one set, then Ilie would not have been able to qualify for the semi-finals. But Arthur won two-sets-to-love, meaning Orantes was out and Ilie had a chance to come back. Imagine what that says about Arthur. I felt that Ilie learned his lesson that day and I am convinced that he really tried to concentrate on tennis, and that he showed the world that he was not only a clown, but he could also win events.”

Nastase didn’t lose another set all week. He went on to beat Orantes 3-6, 6-4, 6-4 and Panatta 7-6, 3-6, 6-0 in the Blue Group, then powered past Vilas in the semi-finals. Ashe lost to White Group runner-up Bjorn Borg 6-4, 3-6, 6-2, 6-2. John Barrett, in the World of Tennis Yearbook wrote, “Nastase, wielding his racquet like a wand, conjured pure magic from the ball in destroying Vilas 6-0, 6-3, 6-4. The young bull of the Pampas was reduced to impotence — every charge was parried; every attack blunted until the despairing Vilas was executed at the last by the flashing Romanian rapier.”

Nastase proved too strong for Borg, winning 6-2, 6-2, 6-1 in a final that lasted just 65 minutes to claim the $40,000 first prize. It was pure tennis and earlier this month, Borg told ATPTour.com, “I lost in the final to Nastase. There was a lot of pressure. I thought I had a good chance, but I didn’t play well in the final and Ilie did. I don’t really know what happened, I won five games over three sets.”

While it proved to be Nastase’s fourth and final Masters title, with his .880 winning percentage (22-3) remaining a record to this day, it was the double disqualification in November 1975 that set Ashe on a path to developing a professional Code of Conduct. From 12 points on a sheet of paper, the now 420-page book is very much the American’s work, 45 years on.

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Medvedev Says He's Not Mr. Perfect, Rather Mr. 25%

  • Posted: Nov 21, 2020

After bowing out of last year’s Nitto ATP Finals with a disappointing 0-3 record in his tournament debut, Daniil Medvedev returned to London hoping to redeem himself and claim a victory at The O2.

He’s done that and much more: The only player to advance to the knock-out stages undefeated, Medvedev has yet to drop a set and looked unstoppable as he breezed past 2018 champion Alexander Zverev, World No. 1 Novak Djokovic and Roland Garros semi-finalist Diego Schwartzman.

Despite the level he’s shown, the Rolex Paris Masters champion was deadpan realistic about his chances as he prepared to contest his first Nitto ATP Finals semi-final.

“I mean, when it’s four people left, first of all, even if you give yourself [a] really small chance, it’s 25%. It’s one out of four,” Medvedev quipped in his post-match press conference after doling out a 6-3, 6-3 defeat to Schwartzman.

Medvedev advanced to face World No. 2 Rafael Nadal, a player who has defeated him in all three of their previous matchups, including back to back finals last year at the Western & Southern Open and the US Open. But the one freshest in Medvedev’s mind was last year’s Nitto ATP Finals heartbreaker, where the Russian player let slip a 5/1 lead in the third set tie-break as Nadal came back to win. 

But rather than rue his bad luck, Medvedev seemed downright chipper about the prospect of a rematch against the 20-time Grand Slam winner.

“I like playing all of the [Big] Three,” he said in an on-court interview. “When I was so young, just starting to hold the racquet and just started to be interested in tennis – because actually I was not watching it when I was four or five – I started to see Grand Slams.”

“Basically when I started playing it, Roger was already there, I think, winning almost everything. Then Rafa came to make his mark, and then Novak came to try to disturb them all the time,” he later joked in press.

“So [it’s] always great to play against them. I’m really looking forward to the match, feeling confident. I think Rafa is also.”

[WATCH LIVE 2]

It’s an easy confidence from a player who burst onto the scene just a year ago, and took to the game’s biggest stages like a veteran during his electrifying run to the 2019 US Open final. He avoided the dreaded sophomore slump in style, and now the three-time ATP Masters 1000 titlist looks right at home at the top of the game – and right alongside his childhood idols.

“A new match is a new match. It’s [been] one year already,” he said of his Grand Slam defeat to Nadal. “Even though we all know who Rafa [is], everybody changes. So I’m sure he changed [a] few small things in his game. I changed mine.

“So a new match is never the same. Even [if] you can play him in round robin, you can win, and then you can lose in the final, something like this…

“I’m enjoying this moment, and hopefully I can continue it till Sunday. Let’s call it Monday.”

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Video Review Confirms Not-Up Call In Djokovic-Zverev Match

  • Posted: Nov 21, 2020

Video Review was used at the Nitto ATP Finals on Friday to verify a not-up call against 2018 champion Alexander Zverev.

The German was leading World No. 1 Novak Djokovic 6-5 in the second set when the Serbian hit a backhand drop shot. Zverev rushed forward and stretched to scrape up a low forehand, but chair umpire Mohamed Lahyani ruled that the ball had bounced twice.

Zverev, believing he had gotten to the ball on one bounce, requested a Video Review. After about a minute, Lahyani confirmed his call, and Djokovic won the point.

[DATA DIVE]

This is the first year that Video Review has been used at the Nitto ATP Finals, but it has previously been used at the Next Gen ATP Finals and the ATP Cup. Players are able to request Video Review for suspected not-ups, foul shots, touches and other reviewable calls. The tournament is also utilising Electronic Line-Calling for the first time.

Djokovic won the match 6-3, 7-6(4) to earn his spot in the semi-finals of the season finale. Zverev was eliminated.

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Can Medvedev Finally Crack The Nadal Code?

  • Posted: Nov 21, 2020

They were born 10 years apart, one in Mallorca, the other in Moscow. The Mallorcan is gunning for the one big title that’s eluded him. The insurgent Muscovite is looking to win what would be his biggest prize yet. The younger man is a hunter seeking redemption and to prove himself, while the veteran is the hunted, a man with nothing to prove except perhaps to remind us that his generation isn’t ready for the sport’s changing of the guard quite yet.

One has the rippling biceps, the other the long limbs seemingly built to reach balls in other postal codes. They come from different worlds, one with Latin blood and Mediterranean sensibilities, the other with Slavic blood and cool Russian conviction. Each man now stands in the other’s way and only one gets to keep playing tennis after Saturday’s semi-final clash for the ages.

Daniil Medvedev hasn’t beaten his Nitto ATP Finals semi-final opponent, Rafael Nadal, in three ATP Head2Head clashes. But don’t let that goose egg fool you — Medvedev took the Spaniard to the brink in last year’s US Open Final and, in their most recent duel, he led 5/1 in a deciding set tie-break last year at this very tournament.

Both enter the match looking like a rare vintage of Chateau Lafite; if they were stocks, you’d want to own them. Medvedev clinched his group with straight-sets wins over Alexander Zverev and Novak Djokovic, while Nadal lost a pair of riveting tie-breaks to Dominic Thiem, but rebounded strongly against Stefanos Tsitsipas.

A reporter asked Nadal Thursday if Medvedev vintage 2020 is a new and improved varietal he hasn’t faced before.

“I don’t think nobody is completely different player, no?” said Nadal, 34, who is No. 2 in the FedEx ATP Rankings. “I think he’s playing great, but we can’t forget that last year he played amazing too. He played the final in Washington, final in Montreal, winning Cincinnati, final US Open. Then he won in Shanghai and I think a couple more tournaments. So better than this is very difficult, no? He has plenty of confidence and [he is] playing [at a] very, very high level. But we are in the semi-finals of the Nitto ATP Finals so we can’t expect another story, no?”

But later in the press conference, Nadal seemed to reconsider if facing Medvedev for a fourth time might present a new story, given the Russian’s momentum.

“The end [was] a very strange end of the match, no?” said Nadal, referring to the tie-break of their last match. “[It’s] true that [in] the end I was lucky and he [made] a couple of mistakes to close the match. I know it’s a different story. He’s playing great. I think last year he was very tired mentally at the end of the
season. I think this year is a different story.”

[DATA DIVE]

So after two narrow losses to Nadal, will Medvedev get his story straight on the fourth try? The defeats could give him confidence, since he got so close to the prize, or they could haunt him because he failed to close the sale. If his social media posts are any barometer, bet on the former. Last week, when Tennis TV tweeted out a brilliant passing shot Medvedev hit in his Nitto ATP Finals loss last year to Nadal, the Russian retweeted the video with the comment, “Oh you mean the match I choked?” with a host of emojis.

Acceptance is officially the final stage of coping with grief but a good sense of humor doesn’t hurt either. And Medvedev certainly showed he has that at the US Open last year. He verbally sparred with fans early on in the tournament but when he dropped the first two sets of the final to Nadal, the crowd embraced him, propelling him to push the Spanish champ to five grueling sets.

Both of these losses came down to a few key points. Rafa’s experience allowed him to keep cool and prevail. Medvedev said Wednesday that tennis is a game of decisions. In some key moments last year at the event, he made the wrong ones. But he hopes this year will be a different story.

“Of course [I’m] really happy, because after last year, [I finished] 0-3, the [loss] against Rafa, so you always have doubts in your head like maybe next year is going to be [the] last year in London, I’m going to go out there and be tight, again, I’m not going to show anything in the Nitto ATP Finals,” said Medvedev, 24, who is ranked No. 4 in the FedEx ATP Rankings. “Well, [this hasn’t been] the case. [I] finished number one in the group already, which is great.”

The Muscovite enters the semi-finals as the only undefeated player left in the draw. In fact, the Russian did not drop a set in his Group Tokyo 1970 wins against Zverev, Djokovic and Diego Schwartzman.

The match is a toss-up. The hunted has the experience, gravitas, and motivation to capture the one big trophy that’s eluded him. The hunter, 26-10 on the year, is on a surface he prefers and is riding an eight-match win streak going into his match with the Spaniard. The winner will be the man who can win the thigh-busting, track-meet rallies and then quickly collect themselves for the next point.

[WATCH LIVE 2]

On Thursday, Nadal sounded like a king who still relishes fending off new threats and challenges to his kingdom.

“It’s true I never won [this tournament], but sometimes you play well and you don’t win, no?” said Nadal, who married his longtime girlfriend Maria Francisca Perello a year ago at a seaside fortress in Mallorca. “I am looking forward to playing against probably the player who is playing better the past couple of weeks, and I’m excited about that. Let’s see. [It’s] going to be [an] amazing challenge and I hope to be ready for it.”

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Thiem v Djokovic: Will King Novak Stand Or Fall?

  • Posted: Nov 21, 2020

Dominic Thiem’s siege on tennis royalty — the Big Three — started six years ago, when he entered the Top 50 and has been in high gear since at least 2016, when he broke into the Top 10. Nearly all of this time, he’s been firing arrows at the three kings, causing damage here and inflicting some pain there. But for the most part, his ascent of tennis’ Mt. Everest has been slow going, as tennis’ ruling class has held its ground.

With the world’s top four ranked players, who own the past 10 majors, clashing Saturday, the results will offer us some clues into what’s been perhaps the slowest-moving tennis story of all time.

[DATA DIVE]

For years now, tennis’ smart set have been writing ‘changing of the guard’ stories that now look like premature Big Three tennis obituaries. This summer, Thiem broke through with his first major, winning the US Open. But he didn’t have to beat the three kings and thus the question remains: When will it be the Thieminator’s time? A first title at the Nitto ATP Finals could be the start of the long-awaited generational power shift, but another loss will make tennis fans question if the end of the Big Three’s reign is anywhere in sight.

After booking his passage into the semi-finals with a win over Alexander Zverev Friday, the Serbian king spoke of Thiem’s noble quest.

“Obviously [the US Open title] was a huge boost for him,” Djokovic said. “[He] got that kind of pressure and expectation off his back. So I’m sure that allows him to kind of also swing freely on the court and play even better than he did before.”

Djokovic has beaten Thiem in seven of their 11 ATP Head2Head clashes, but the first five — all decisive wins for the Serb from 2014-’17 — are ancient history at this point as Thiem is a much better player. The Austrian has won two of their past three encounters, including one in a third-set tie-break last year at this event. All three of these affairs were popcorn matches, brutal for the players but a delight for the fans.

The cross-generational rivalry really took flight in the semi-final of Roland Garros last year. It took four hours and 13 minutes for the Thieminator to outlast the indomitable Serb, 7-5 in the fifth set. It was a huge win because it was exactly the sort of match that Nole typically finds a way to win.

Thiem took another step forward, foiling the Belgrade-born Serb at last year’s Nitto ATP Finals, where he came back from 1/4 down in the third-set tie-break, clinching a semi-final berth in the process. Djokovic spoke of Thiem as though he was a noble warrior after that match, saluting him for playing “courageous tennis” and for “going for broke”. The Austrian said the match was “what I’ve practised all my life for, all my childhood for.”

[WATCH LIVE 1]

Djokovic was asked, once more, about his rivalry with Thiem and that loss Friday.

“I have lots of respect for Dominic and his game and his work ethic,” said Djokovic, 33, who owns 17 major titles. “Every time we got to play I think in the last three, four matches, it was some marathon, thrilling encounters… It’s semi-finals, so I’m expecting a tough battle, no question about it. He’s in a very good form. He loves to play on this surface. Obviously, he played the final last year. He beat Roger and myself last year at The O2. He’s a Grand Slam champion.”

Tsistipas beat Thiem to win the title at The O2 last year in a third-set tie-break and talk in the sport, once again, was of generational change — the new guys slaying the Big Three dragons. But then Djokovic said “not so fast, kids” with a three-hour, 59-minute, five-set win over Thiem in the final of this year’s Australian Open. Thiem prevailed at the US Open in September, but Nadal won his 13th title at Roland Garros to highlight the Big Three’s long-term dominance at the majors.

The Thieminator isn’t Next Gen, nor is he Old Guard. At 27, he’s in his prime. Novak has carried the No. 1 position in the FedEx ATP Rankings around the world, guarding it the way a knight protects his finest suit of armour. Thiem can’t overtake Djokovic with a win Saturday, but he can chip away and solidify the fact that he’s no one-hit wonder after his US Open triumph. For his part, a win for Novak will bring him one victory away from equalling Roger Federer’s mark of six Nitto ATP Finals titles.

Thiem said after his win over Nadal this week that he’s playing even better here than he was at the US Open. Djokovic agrees, but still sees himself as the man to beat, tennis’ Baron of Belgrade, Sultan of Sweat, Kaiser of Kopaonik, and Holy Serbian Emperor all in one.

“You know, if I manage to play as well as I did today, and show up with a high quality of tennis, I think I have a good chance to win.”

Who’s the favourite? That depends on what side of the fortress you’re watching the match from.

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Djokovic Ready For ‘Marathon Thrillers’ Against Thiem In SFs

  • Posted: Nov 21, 2020

World No. 1 Novak Djokovic moved one step closer to a record-equalling sixth title at the Nitto ATP Finals on Friday after a straight-sets victory over former champion Alexander Zverev secured his place in the semi-finals.

It was a winner-takes-all clash after both players accumulated a 1-1 record in Group Tokyo 1970.  Djokovic got the job done in two sets to edge Zverev 6-3, 7-6(4) and seal his ninth semi-final in 13 appearances at the season-ending event.

[WATCH LIVE 2]

The victory avenged his defeat to Zverev in the 2018 Nitto ATP Finals championship match, which saw the German lift his biggest trophy after a straight-sets stunner. It also sets up another shot at revenge, as he will take on Dominic Thiem in the last four.

“I lost to him last year in the group stage. It was a thriller, 7-6 in the third set,” Djokovic recalled in his post-match press conference. “I have lots of respect for Dominic, his game, his work ethic. Nico Massu, all his team, they’re all very nice people. They’re very dedicated and humble…

“He’s a Grand Slam champion, so obviously that’s a huge boost for him, getting that kind of pressure and expectation off his back, so I’m sure that allows him to swing freely on the court and play better than he did before.”

Djokovic came into the Nitto ATP Finals looking to add another crown to his already glittering 2020 season, which began with his eighth Australian Open title and a head-turning 26-match winning streak. He continued to dominate with ATP Masters 1000 triumphs at the Western & Southern Open in New York and the Internazionali BNL d’Italia in Rome. Djokovic clinched the year-end No.1 FedEx ATP Ranking for a record-equalling sixth time.

It’s an impressive record for any player, and even more so considering the Tour’s six-month pause mid-way through the season. Djokovic assured press that he’s feeling fresh ahead of the semi-finals, but admitted that the mental toll of the current conditions has added its own set of unique challenges.

“I don’t feel maybe as exhausted this year at the end of the season as most of the other seasons, but I think mentally and emotionally it has taken a lot out of players because it’s very demanding, I think, to be constantly in the quarantine and not be able to go out and walk around,” he said.

“Constantly being present and being in that competitive mode, even if you are not competing in a specific week, you’re still training and thinking about the season and what is coming next. I look forward to hopefully finishing off the season in the best possible manner, but I also look forward to rest before the next one.”

Before Djokovic can take a break, he’ll have to clear another tough challenge as he takes on World No. 3 Thiem for a spot in the championship match of the season finale. Djokovic leads the Austrian 7-4 in their FedEx ATP Head2Head series, with their past five matches going to either a tie-break or a deciding set.

“It’s the semi-finals, so I’m expecting a tough battle, no question about it,” Djokovic said. “He’s in very good form, he loves to play on this surface. Obviously he played in the final last year. He beat Roger [Federer] and myself last year in The O2… 

“Every time that we got to play, at least in the past three or four matches, [those were] some marathon thrilling encounters… If I manage to play as well as I did today and show up with a high quality of tennis, I think I have a good chance to win. I’m just hoping I can start off the match as well as I did today.”

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Medvedev Beats Schwartzman, Carries Momentum Into Nadal SF Showdown

  • Posted: Nov 20, 2020

What a difference a year makes. Daniil Medvedev went winless at last season’s Nitto ATP Finals, but on Friday, he completed a perfect 3-0 run through Group Tokyo 1970.

Medvedev defeated tournament debutant Diego Schwartzman 6-3, 6-3 to carry plenty of confidence into the semi-finals, in which he will play World No. 2 Rafael Nadal in a rematch of the 2019 US Open final.

“I was playing great in the two previous matches. I think it is always good to stay undefeated for the confidence. I wanted to win the match, so I am really happy that I have done it,” said Medvedev in an on-court interview. “I was serving really good today, so that helped me a lot throughout all the match.”

[DATA DIVE]

Only three players have won the season finale the year after making a winless debut at the prestigious event. Medvedev is now just two victories from becoming the fourth player in that elite group. Nadal leads their ATP Head2Head series 3-0, including a stunning comeback from 5-1 down in the third set of their clash at last year’s Nitto ATP Finals.

“I like playing all of the [Big] Three. When I was so young, starting to hold the racquet and just started to be interested in tennis… I started to see Grand Slams,” Medvedev said. “First it was Roger winning everything, then Rafa came and started to make his mark and then it was Novak. It is a great pleasure to play against all of them and I am really looking forward to tomorrow.” 

The recent Rolex Paris Masters champion is known for his unflappable defence, which he used to frustrate five-time champion Novak Djokovic in a straight-sets victory on Wednesday. But against the Argentine, he played with atypical aggression to triumph after one hour and 14 minutes. 

Medvedev, the first Russian to compete in the Nitto ATP Finals in consecutive years since 2009 titlist Nikolay Davydenko (2005-09), has not yet lost a set. He is the only player to go undefeated in group play.

[WATCH LIVE 2]

The 24-year-old drives opponents crazy by playing from well behind the baseline and putting them in awkward positions with his defence. But he signaled new intentions on Centre Court against Schwartzman, breaking for a 2-1 lead in the first set with a forehand winner down the line. 

Medvedev continued to attack throughout the match, frequenting the net. That left Schwartzman struggling for answers, and he was never able to make enough in-roads with his serve to trouble the World No. 4. The debutant only won 58 per cent of his service points and was broken three times.

“[Going] 0-3 in your first Masters doesn’t mean anything. I can say [that] with my experience that I had last year,” Medvedev said. “Hopefully he can qualify for the next one.”

[WATCH LIVE 3]

Medvedev dominated with his first serve, winning 88 per cent of those points. The three-time ATP Masters 1000 champion also saved the two break points he faced.

The Russian now leads Schwartzman 5-0 in their ATP Head2Head series. He has won 10 of their 11 sets, and all 10 sets he has won have come by a margin of 6-4 or greater.

Schwartzman finishes the best season of his career with a 25-15 record. It was a year of firsts for the Argentine, who cracked the Top 10 of the FedEx ATP Rankings and reached his first Masters 1000 final among other accomplishments.

“I’m really proud because I did many great things in many different weeks this year. But also, I have the feeling in my body that I have to improve, because I want to be here again,” Schwartzman said. “But to be here again, I have to do better.”

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Melzer/Roger-Vasselin Into Semi-finals, Granollers/Zeballos Retire

  • Posted: Nov 20, 2020

Seventh seeds Jurgen Melzer and Edouard Roger-Vasselin have secured their spot at the top of Group Bob Bryan after Marcel Granollers and Horacio Zeballos retired in the opening set, 6-6, (1/0) [ret].

Roger-Vasselin and Melzer were in control of their fate in Group Bob Bryan, but had a tough task ahead as they needed to win in straight sets to book their place in the last four.

Granollers and Zeballos took control of the match at the start, breaking early at 2-1 and leading for most of the opening set. They even served to take the set, but were broken as the seventh seeds came roaring back and levelled the score at 5-5.

Granollers, who had been struggling with a shoulder injury that required a medical time out late in the set, found himself unable to continue and retired from the match one point into the first-set tie-break.

As a result, Melzer and Roger-Vasselin soared to the top of Group Bob Bryan, sealing their spot in the semi-finals as they continued their search for their first Nitto ATP Finals title. Granollers and Zeballos also advanced to the semi-finals. Mate Pavic and Bruno Soares have been eliminated from the tournament.

[WATCH LIVE 3]

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