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Medvedev: 'I’m Really Trying To Make My Opponent Crazy'

  • Posted: Nov 08, 2020

Daniil Medvedev plays tennis unlike anyone else at the top of the ATP Tour. The Russian’s shots aren’t smooth like Roger Federer’s or overwhelming like Rafael Nadal’s. He can’t make his body appear elastic the way Novak Djokovic does, either. But the 24-year-old finds ways to win, and part of the secret to his success is how he views his game.

“I’m really trying to make my opponent crazy,” he said.

Medvedev did that once again on Sunday to win the Rolex Paris Masters, capturing his third ATP Masters 1000 title by battling from a set down to defeat Alexander Zverev.

“I’m really happy with the final, with the win here, especially my level of game was really top-level this week. I think it’s not easy for guys to play against me when I play like this,” Medvedev said. “Today was a really tight match… after the first set I didn’t know actually what to do, because I had zero break points. I didn’t feel good returning his serve. He serves amazing. I lost my serve. Got a little bit tight. I was feeling like the match could slip [out] of my hands.”

Medvedev does not blow opponents off the court, but he continuously claws his way into matches and frustrates opponents, physically wearing them down. Perhaps most importantly, he has a good sense of the moments he needs to seize. As the Russian put it, he was “fighting like an animal” early in the third set and that proved critical in his victory.

“I have been working on my mental strength for a long time. I think I have done a lot of progress, because even if you see me still doing meltdowns, it’s nothing compared to what I was when I was a junior,” Medvedev said. “I worked a lot on it, and I’m really happy with how I’m performing with my mental strength many times.”

At last year’s Nitto ATP Finals, Medvedev led Rafael Nadal 5-1 in the third set of their round-robin match and he even earned a match point. But Medvedev let slip that match. Zverev was playing lights-out tennis early in their Rolex Paris Masters final, but this time it was the Russian who turned the tables to overcome a deficit in a big match.

“You will not all your life just be there crying about this match. [It] was almost [the] last match of the season for me,” Medvedev said. “I knew I had to leave it behind, just learn from it and learn how, ‘Okay, if you’re up 5-1 and you lose even your serve on 5-2, you should not go crazy, because you are still up.’”

This was Medvedev’s first final of the season. Last year, he led the ATP Tour by making nine championship matches. But towards the end of his victory in Bercy, the Russian appeared back at his best.

“It’s something that it’s tough to control. And I think if you succeed to control it, then you’re going to be an even better player, because many times you’re going to have days where you step on the court and you don’t feel the ball so well, can miss some shots,” Medvedev said. “Here even [in the] third set when I saved those three break points… [I just went] to the net, made volleys, all this stuff. You know that you almost cannot miss. And to beat you he needs to make a winner.

“When it’s like this, it’s really tough to play guys. That’s what top players are capable of doing. Hopefully I can do this many more times.”

Medvedev will try to maintain his momentum at the Nitto ATP Finals, where he went 0-3 last year.

“For sure [I am] coming [in] better shape than last year. Last year [I] was really exhausted, lost [my first match] in Paris. That’s when you lose your confidence. When you lose first round you always lose your confidence,” Medvedev said. “[I] just won this tournament, [I’m] going to have a few days off. [I will] come to London, practise good. Hopefully [I] can get some wins there.”

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Korda's Maiden Moment: 20-Year-Old Claims First Pro Title

  • Posted: Nov 08, 2020

Victory is even sweeter for those who wait. Just ask Sebastian Korda.

On Sunday, the #NextGenATP American claimed his first professional title at the ATP Challenger Tour event in Eckental, Germany. Korda dominated as the week progressed, dropping just one set at the Challenge Eckental. It all culminated with a 6-4, 6-4 win over Ramkumar Ramanathan in the championship.

“I’m super happy to pull through,” said Korda after the match. “It was a tough match today and it wasn’t easy.  He serves and volleys on carpet, but I’m happy with the way I stayed calm and finished it off.”

It was a long time coming for Korda, who had dropped his first eight finals as a professional. Since concluding his junior career with a victory at the Australian Open in 2018, he lost six title matches on the ITF circuit and two at the Challenger level, in Nur-Sultan and Champaign last year.

But, 2020 has proven to be a rebirth for the 20-year-old. After coming so close in the Champaign final exactly one year ago, holding a championship point against J.J. Wolf, Korda has been more determined than ever to finally flip the switch. He has been on a mission in recent months, reaching the Round of 16 as a qualifier at Roland Garros and winning 13 of 15 matches since the start of that memorable fortnight.

“In the past, I’d get frustrated in finals. Every little mistake would weigh on me, but today I was able to stay calm through the whole match. The way I finished it off made me super happy.”

Following such a big result at a Grand Slam, players often struggle to rediscover their rhythm in their return to the ATP Challenger Tour. Even as he moved from clay to carpet, Korda made the transition look seemless. He would carry the momentum to Germany, reaching the quarter-finals in Ismaning and then lifting the trophy in Eckental.

“Ever since the US Open, I’ve felt comfortable and confident, especially against the bigger guys. I’m pretty skinny and tall, so during the [COVID-19] break, I worked to get stronger and sort of grow into my body. The way I’m playing, it has helped a lot.”

American #NextGenATP Winners (since 2015)

Year Winners
2020 Sebastian Korda
2019 J.J. Wolf
2018 Taylor Fritz, Reilly Opelka, Michael Mmoh, Tommy Paul
2017 Frances Tiafoe, Stefan Kozlov, Noah Rubin, Mmoh
2016 Ernesto Escobedo, Tiafoe, Kozlov, Fritz
2015 Jared Donaldson, Fritz, Rubin

At the age of 20 years and four months, Korda is the youngest winner from the United States in 2020. In fact, his victory marks the sixth straight year in which an American aged 21 & under has won a title. A year ago, Wolf achieved the feat and was preceded by 15 other #NextGenATP winners since 2015.

Korda is projected to rise 20 spots to a career-high No. 116 in the FedEx ATP Rankings. He will continue his push towards the Top 100 when he concludes his 2020 campaign at the Orlando Challenger in two weeks.

“I have a flight tomorrow morning at 6am, going back to the States, but I’ll definitely celebrate tonight.”

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Medvedev Completes Comeback, Earns Third ATP Masters 1000 Crown

  • Posted: Nov 08, 2020

Daniil Medvedev became the fourth Russian to capture the Rolex Paris Masters title on Sunday with a 5-7, 6-4, 6-1 comeback victory against Alexander Zverev.

In a repeat of last year’s Shanghai final, the 24-year-old stepped in and raised his game in the second set to turn the match in his favour. Medvedev entered the contest with a 1-5 ATP Head2Head record against his rival, but saved six of seven break points to earn his third ATP Masters 1000 crown from four finals. The World No. 5 earned his first service break at 4-4 in the second set and charged to the title from that point by winning eight of the final nine games.

“It is great. I am really happy,” said Medvedev in an on-court interview. “I don’t show this after the match, but I am really happy to win matches. Before the tournament, I was not in my best form, playing not so bad with zero finals this year. I was complaining to my wife like, ‘Oh my god, I don’t have the level. I don’t even have one final. I am playing so bad.’ Finally, I am the winner of Bercy, a tournament that I love.”

Medvedev joins countrymen Marat Safin, Nikolay Davydenko and Karen Khachanov on the Paris honour roll. The Russian, who was appearing in his first final of the year, improves to 23-10 in 2020. 

Russian Rolex Paris Masters Champions

 2020  Daniil Medvedev
 2018  Karen Khachanov
 2006  Nikolay Davydenko
 2004  Marat Safin
 2002  Marat Safin
 2000  Marat Safin

Medvedev entered the tournament with wins in just three of his previous eight matches. But the Russian No. 1 found his level in Paris to defeat two former Wimbledon finalists — Kevin Anderson and Milos Raonic — and two of this year’s Nitto ATP Finals qualifiers — Diego Schwartzman and Zverev — to end a 13-month title drought. Medvedev will now turn his attention to the Nitto ATP Finals in London, where he will be making his second straight appearance from 15-22 November.

“I was playing really good in this tournament, especially today,” said Medvedev. “After the first set, I could [have] given up because Sascha was serving well and playing well. I just stayed there and at one moment I raised my level higher and higher and started to put pressure on him and it worked. It broke his level a little bit.”

Zverev was attempting to win three consecutive ATP Tour titles for the first time. The German, who defeated Rafael Nadal in the semi-finals, arrived in Paris after back-to-back title runs at indoor hard court events in Cologne last month.

Zverev was also bidding to follow in the footsteps of his coach David Ferrer by winning the tournament. The Spaniard captured the biggest title of his career at the Accor Arena in 2012 with a straight-sets win against Jerzy Janowicz.

“Credit to him. He’s a great player,” said Zverev. “It’s his first tournament win of the season. I know his season wasn’t the easiest one, whereas I have to say my season [has] actually [been] going quite well.

“We will see how it goes with London. I’m happy with my tennis. I just need to maybe recover a little bit physically.”

Medvedev Paris 2020 Final Rally Hit Points

Zverev Paris 2020 Final Rally Hit Points
Hawkeye data courtesy ATP Media

The first set appeared to be heading to a tie-break, as neither man created a break point in the opening 11 games. But Zverev made a late move at 6-5 to move one set from the title. The Hamburg-native played with aggression on his forehand and capitalised on backhand errors to earn three consecutive set points. Zverev converted his third opportunity when Medvedev failed to control an attempted forehand down the line.

Zverev served powerfully and covered the net with great skill to hold a 15-minute service game at 1-1 in the second set. But Medvedev raised his game at 4-4 to win eight of the final nine games and the trophy. 

The Russian took advantage of short balls and capitalised on volley errors from Zverev to break to love at the start of the deciding set. Medvedev ground Zverev down from the baseline in extended rallies to increase his lead and decrease his opponent’s energy levels. The eight-time tour-level titlist claimed the trophy when Zverev committed his third double fault of the match.

Medvedev receives 1000 FedEx ATP Ranking points and earns €225,210 in prize money. Zverev gains 600 ATP Ranking points and collects €150,000.

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Felix & Hurkacz Save 5 M.P. To Lift Paris Trophy

  • Posted: Nov 08, 2020

Felix Auger-Aliassime and Hubert Hurkacz saved five championship points on Sunday to capture their first team title at the Rolex Paris Masters.

The unseeded pair recovered from the brink of defeat to upset second seeds Mate Pavic and Bruno Soares 6-7(3), 7-6(7), 10-2 in one hour and 52 minutes. Auger-Aliassime and Hurkacz faced championship point at 5-6, deciding point in the second set and rallied from 3/6 and 6/7 down in the second-set tie-break en route to victory.

”It is huge [to win this title]. Felix played unbelievable,” said Hurkacz in an on-court interview. “Bruno and Mate are great doubles players and they played unreal. We had no chances throughout the sets. We kept ourselves in the tie-breaks and we are so happy to win.”

[WATCH LIVE 1]

Auger-Aliassime and Hurkacz were competing for just the second time as a team in Paris this week. The Canadian-Polish tandem, which owns a 6-1 team record, reached the ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament quarter-finals on its team debut in February.

”We didn’t expect before this week that we were going to play on Sunday,” said Hurkacz. “[I am] a bit surprised, but happy to finish the season like this.”

Auger-Aliassime and Hurkacz defeated four seeded teams en route to their first doubles trophy. Prior to their win against Pavic and Soares, the Top 40 singles stars also beat top seeds Robert Farah and Horacio Zeballos in the second round, seventh seeds John Peers and Michael Venus in the quarter-finals and Lukasz Kubot and Marcelo Melo in the semi-finals.

”I enjoy my time with him and I have to say Hubert is a really nice person and he has a really good heart,” said Auger-Aliassime in an on-court interview. “He gives everything out there, he has fun and he is always smiling. It is a joy to play with him and be around him. We have known each other since we were juniors a little bit… This was so unexpected. We started with a great match and just kept playing better and better… Everything went on our side this week.”

Pavic and Soares were attempting to capture their second ATP Masters 1000 title as a team. Last year’s Shanghai titlists did not drop a set en route to the championship match. Pavic and Soares will now travel to London to compete as the top seeds at the Nitto ATP Finals, which will be held at The O2 in London from 15-22 November.

Auger-Aliassime and Hurkacz earn 1000 FedEx ATP Doubles Ranking points and share €91,665 in prize money. Pavic and Soares collect 600 points and split €69,000.

Did You Know?
Auger-Aliassime and Hurkacz are the first team ranked in the Top 50 in singles to win the Paris doubles title since Frenchmen Nicolas Escude (No. 41) and Fabrice Santoro (No. 35) in 2002.

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Scouting Report: 10 Things To Watch In Sofia

  • Posted: Nov 07, 2020

The final ATP 250 of the season begins on Sunday at the Sofia Open in Sofia, Bulgaria. Three Top 25 players in the FedEx ATP Rankings lead the singles draw, with the final spot in the Nitto ATP Finals doubles field still up for grabs.

Will Denis Shapovalov live up to his position as top seed? Will Felix Auger-Aliassime capture his first ATP Tour title? ATPTour.com looks at 10 things to watch in Bulgaria.

View Sofia Draws: Singles | Doubles

[WATCH LIVE 2]

1) Shapovalov Shining: The 21-year-old Canadian will make his Sofia debut against Radu Albot or Yuichi Sugita as he begins his pursuit of a first ATP Tour title in 2020. The lefty, who cracked the Top 10 in the FedEx ATP Rankings for the first time on 21 September, will try to finish inside the year-end Top 10 with a strong performance in Bulgaria.

2) Felix’s Pursuit: Auger-Aliassime has reached six ATP Tour finals, including three this season (Rotterdam, Marseille, Cologne-1). Will the 20-year-old Canadian claim his first tour-level title in Sofia? Auger-Aliassime, who will play in the Rolex Paris Masters doubles final on Sunday alongside Hubert Hurkacz, is making his debut at the ATP 250. He will play Caruso or Kuzmanov in the second round.

3) Canadian History: This is the first time that Canadians are the top two seeds at an ATP Tour event (since 1990). Shapovalov is the top seed for the first time at a tour-level event and Auger-Aliassime has twice previously been the second seed (2019 Chengdu and 2020 Adelaide).

4) De Minaur Delivering: Alex de Minaur is finishing the season on a high, reaching the Antwerp final and the Paris third round. The Australian will try to maintain his momentum in Bulgaria, where he will play a qualifier or lucky loser in his opener.

5) Sinner’s Surge: Reigning Next Gen ATP Finals champion Jannik Sinner has surged into the Top 50 in the FedEx ATP Rankings this season. The 19-year-old will try to finish his 2020 on a high with a strong performance at this ATP 250, where he plays Marton Fucsovics in the first round. Sinner made his first Grand Slam quarter-final at Roland Garros and then reached the semi-finals at Cologne-2.

6) Doubles Battle: The FedEx ATP Battle For London is nearly complete. Only one doubles place remains at the Nitto ATP Finals, and two teams will try to earn that spot in Sofia. If top seeds Jurgen Melzer and Edouard Roger-Vasselin make the final at the ATP 250, they will guarantee their qualification. If second seeds Jamie Murray and Neal Skupski do not make the championship match, Melzer and Roger-Vasselin will earn their place in London. The Brits must make the final to be in contention for qualification.

7) Bulgarian ATP Cup Stars: Two members of this year’s Bulgarian ATP Cup team received wild cards for Sofia: Kuzmanov and Adrian Andreev. Kuzmanov earned two straight-sets win at that event, defeating Belgium’s Steve Darcis and Moldova’s Alexander Cozbinov. He opens against Caruso.

8) First-Time Titlist: John Millman is fresh off winning his first ATP Tour title at the Astana Open in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan. The Aussie, who is making his Sofia debut, is the sixth seed. Millman will play Bulgarian wild card Adrian Andreev in the first round.

9) Returning Finalist Fucsovics: Last year, Hungarian Fucsovics made the Sofia final. Daniil Medvedev beat him 6-4, 6-3 for the trophy. Fucsovics is back and he will try to go one step further. The 28-year-old made the third round at the US Open and the fourth round at Roland Garros. He will begin his tournament against Sinner.

10) Junior Stars: Two of the tournament’s wild cards are 19 years old. In 2019, Czech Jonas Forejtek was the junior World No. 1 and won three junior Grand Slams (US Open singles, Australian Open and Wimbledon doubles). In 2018, Andreev — who was a member of Bulgaria’s ATP Cup team this year — reached World No. 2 and captured the junior US Open doubles crown.

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Preview: Medvedev Faces Familiar Foe In Paris Final

  • Posted: Nov 07, 2020

Daniil Medvedev last reached a championship match on the ATP Tour 13 months ago, but the 24-year-old will likely feel a sense of familiarity when he steps onto the court Sunday to compete for the Rolex Paris Masters title.

The last final Medvedev played was also at an ATP Masters 1000 event: the 2019 Rolex Shanghai Masters. The Russian succeeded on that occasion with a straight-sets victory against Alexander Zverev. The same man stands between him and this year’s Paris trophy.

Medvedev arrived in the French capital searching for form after losing five of his past eight matches. But the two-time Masters 1000 champion has raised his game at the Accor Arena to end his final drought. Medvedev has conceded only one set in Paris, with wins against Kevin Anderson, Alex de Minaur, Diego Schwartzman and Milos Raonic.

When Medvedev met Zverev in last year’s Shanghai final, he was competing in a Tour-leading ninth final of the year. But despite this being his first run to a championship match in 2020, one of Medvedev’s rivals in Paris believes he might actually be playing better this year than during his breakthrough 2019 campaign.

“I think he’s playing just as well, maybe better,” said Raonic. “Just little things, the intangibles of confidence, maybe it makes a little bit of a difference here and there. But from what I have seen him play this week and [he] even played well at the US Open, played well [at the Western & Southern Open]…… all the events he’s played on hard courts, I thought he’s looked quite good.”

Daniil Medvedev and Alexander Zverev pose for photographs following the Rolex Shanghai Masters final.

Medvedev will be competing in his fourth Masters 1000 final when he meets Zverev in Paris. The Moscow-native holds a 2-1 record in championship matches at the level, which includes victories in his past two final appearances. Prior to his title runs at the 2019 Western & Southern Open and Rolex Shanghai Masters, Medvedev finished as a runner-up to Rafael Nadal at last year’s Coupe Rogers in Montreal.

“Experience is a good key,” said Medvedev. “The first Masters [1000] final I lost actually very easy to Rafa, and then I won two… When you step out for your first Masters 1000 final, you are really tight, your hands are shaking a little bit because you think, ‘Okay, maybe that’s my last opportunity to be in the final of a Masters 1000.’ Then [the] second, third time, the more you get [to] them, the more it becomes easier to handle these emotions. So hopefully this experience can help me tomorrow.”

Medvedev may have experience and memories of defeating his Paris final opponent at this stage, but Zverev has an even greater understanding of competing in this environment. The German will be making his seventh Masters 1000 final appearance (3-3) and will be aiming to improve his 5-1 ATP Head2Head record against his Russian rival.

Prior to his loss to Medvedev in last year’s Shanghai final, Zverev had dropped just one set in four meetings against the crafty baseliner. The 2018 Nitto ATP Finals champion also added a fifth victory against Medvedev to his tally at The O2 last year.

Zverev enters the Paris final in peak form. The 13-time tour-level titlist is on a 12-match winning streak, which includes back-to-back title runs at indoor hard court events in Cologne last month. Like his final opponent, Zverev has also dropped just one set en route to the final in Paris. Zverev made it through to the semi-finals with wins against Miomir Kecmanovic, Adrian Mannarino and Stan Wawrinka, before he ended 13-time Roland Garros champion Rafael Nadal’s winning run in Paris on Saturday.

Medvedev is back to his best and has risen to this challenge before, but this time he faces Zverev in one of the most consistent periods of the German’s career. Both men know what it takes to beat the other and to succeed at this level, but only one player can lift his first Paris trophy on Sunday.

“Obviously, [the] two best players of the tournament are still left. I’m happy about it,” said Zverev. “I think [Daniil is] quite happy about it. We’re both not going to give each other anything tomorrow and we’ll see who can win.”

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Despite SF Loss, Nadal Says Paris Run 'Helpful For London'

  • Posted: Nov 07, 2020

Rafael Nadal fell short of winning his first Rolex Paris Masters title this week. But after reaching the Bercy semi-finals, the Spaniard will take confidence as he turns his attention to the Nitto ATP Finals.

“It has not been not a bad tournament. I spent hours on court. Of course I wanted to win the tournament, but it’s always difficult,” Nadal said. “But I had the right attitude during the whole event, I think, fighting in every match. That gave me the chance to play four matches that I think will be helpful for London.”

[WATCH LIVE 1]

Nadal won two three-setters en route to the last four, in which he battled hard before losing against fourth seed Alexander Zverev. The top seed has reached the semi-finals at the Rolex Paris Masters five times.

“I have been competitive, I have been there until the end against a player who is playing great on a surface that he’s winning a lot,” Nadal said. “[It] has been a positive tournament for me. Of course [I am] not happy about the loss, but that’s part of the game. I played against a great player, and I accept the defeat… He played a little bit better than me.”

Nadal will try to carry his good form to The O2 in London, where he will pursue his first trophy at the season finale. The lefty has qualified for the Nitto ATP Finals for the 16th consecutive year.

“I need to adjust a couple of things, but I am doing well on all the important things,” Nadal said. “I have one week and a little bit more to keep working, and I hope be ready for it.”

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