Serena Williams vs Qiang Wang AO 2020 Preview and Prediction
Serena Williams looks to secure her place in the fourth round of the Australian Open on Friday afternoon when she takes…
Serena Williams looks to secure her place in the fourth round of the Australian Open on Friday afternoon when she takes…
2020 Australian Open |
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Venue: Melbourne Park Dates: 20 January to 2 February |
Coverage: Listen on BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra and online; Live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website and app. |
Joe Salisbury got the better of fellow Briton Dan Evans as he progressed to the second round of the Australian Open men’s doubles alongside Rajeev Ram.
Salisbury and American Ram, the 11th seeds, beat Evans and Australian John-Patrick Smith 6-1 7-6 (7-3).
Britain’s Luke Bambridge and Japanese partner Ben McLachlan lost 7-6 (7-4) 7-5 to Bruno Soares and Mate Pavic.
Jamie Murray and Neal Skupski’s opening match was postponed until Friday due to courts needing to be cleaned.
Play was delayed on the outside courts because they had to be power-washed after dust and mud fell with the rain in a storm in Melbourne on Wednesday.
Alex Bolt is giving the home fans plenty to cheer about at the Australian Open on Thursday. The Aussie wild card is one set away from a shocking upset over fifth-seeded Austrian Dominic Thiem and leads 2-6, 7-5, 7-6(5) in their second-round battle.
Bolt’s level of play Down Under doesn’t reflect his FedEx ATP Ranking of No. 140. He reached the third round last year in Melbourne and advanced to his maiden ATP Tour quarter-final last week in Adelaide. Five of his seven tour-level wins have come on home soil.
But facing a Top 5 player is a much different proposition. Thiem was ready for the challenge and immediately broke Bolt in the opening game of the match. Striking his backhand with authority and controlling the baseline exchanges, he scored an insurance break at 4-2 and comfortably took the opening set.
The second set demonstrated how momentum can shift within mere minutes. Thiem served for the set at 5-4, but Bolt finally gave the Melbourne Arena crowd a chance to get involved. Charging the net behind aggressive approaches to knock off winning volleys, he broke Thiem and the crowd let out a roar of approval. Two games later, a forehand error from the Austrian tied up the match and completed a remarkable 10-minute turnaround.
Bolt continue to take advantage of Thiem standing well behind the baseline by hitting short angles and making timely trips to the net. The flair in his shotmaking reached dizzying heights at 4-4 in the third set, with an around-the-post forehand winner just inches above the court allowing the Aussie to hold serve and bringing the crowd to their feet.
The set moved to a tie-break and it was Bolt who struck first by cracking a big forehand return for a 2/0 mini-break lead. The wild card’s nerves were tested when he took a 6/2 lead and let slip his first three set points, but an ace on his fourth chance whipped the crowd into a frenzy as he grabbed a commanding advantage.
More to come…
Rafael Nadal looks to continue through his comfortable opening week in Melbourne with Federico Delbonis next up for…
Simona Halep looks to move one step closer to a second Australian Open final on Thursday, facing Harriet Dart in the second…
It was Friday afternoon at Melbourne Park. A new Grand Slam season means new belief and new opportunities, and the grounds were beginning to come to life as the 2020 Australian Open drew nearer.
As players descended on Melbourne in preparation for the first major of the new decade, there was still work to be done for those battling in qualifying. For those rising the FedEx ATP Rankings on the Challenger circuit, a berth in a Grand Slam main draw is a significant prize.
In the fading sunlight of Court 8, that dream became a reality for Max Purcell. Competing in his seventh Grand Slam qualifying draw, the 21-year-old Aussie tasted victory in front of the home faithful. An emphatic roar came from Purcell, as he raised his arms in triumph and screamed towards his supporters in the crowd. A straight-set victory over Jozef Kovalik completed a dream run to the main draw.
Just three days later, the Sydney native was back in Melbourne Park, but this time on Court 7. And this time he was battling reigning Next Gen ATP Finals champion Jannik Sinner in his Grand Slam debut. Purcell would eventually fall in a hard-fought clash after two hours and 19 minutes, having struck 26 winners. But regardless of the result, this is the moment the Aussie has worked for throughout his young career. Both Purcell and Sinner are perfect examples of players who have capitalised on their time on the ATP Challenger Tour. While Sinner has rapidly risen the FedEx ATP Rankings, soaring into the spotlight in just one season, Purcell is on a different path. Not all roads to the Top 100 are created equal.
As his Italian counterpart was tearing up the Challenger circuit in singles in 2019, Purcell was doing the same in doubles. Teaming with countryman Luke Saville, they lifted a total of seven trophies and secured a tour-leading 41 match wins together. Close friends off the court and strong teammates between the lines, the Aussie duo produced a magical run through the season, dominating from start to finish. They also appeared in their first ATP Tour events, earning their way into Wimbledon, as well as the 250-level stops in Newport and Los Cabos.
It is a unique dynamic for two players who have built their careers on their singles court. And while they continue to prioritise singles over doubles, the Aussies admit that their success together has helped develop their games in both disciplines. From mastering their net play and timing moving forward to honing their overall court instincts. Few singles players have made such great strides in doubles on the ATP Challenger Tour, but they are succeeding in doing just that. It’s a different path and one they hope will pay dividends in the long run.
Both Purcell and Saville first established themselves on the scene in the mid-2010s, but struggled to find consistent success as the years went on. The 25-year-old Saville is a former junior No. 1, winning the boys titles at Wimbledon in 2011 and the 2012 Australian Open. Two years later, he kicked off his pro career with an upset of Dominic Thiem at Wimbledon, rising to a career-high of No. 152 in the FedEx ATP Rankings. Purcell, meanwhile, launched his Challenger career in 2016 with an immediate splash – lifting his lone singles trophy in Gimcheon, South Korea. It came in just his third main draw appearance on the circuit.
A few years later, the Aussies find themselves on a less conventional road to the top. Winning breeds winning and it’s no surprise that Purcell marched through qualifying in Melbourne. Also the winner of 37 singles matches at the Challenger level in 2019, and a finalist in Seoul, he is just eight spots off his career-high of No. 208 in the FedEx ATP Rankings. And Saville reached his first singles semi-final in more than two years, on home soil in Launceston.
On Wednesday, the duo advanced to the second round of the Australian Open doubles, earning their first Grand Slam victory together. They will next face eighth seeds Jean-Julien Rojer and Horia Tecau.
Purcell and Saville spoke to ATPChallengerTour.com about their strong partnership and goals for 2020…
Max, Luke, it’s been an amazing run for you guys. How do you explain your success together?
Purcell: Since the beginning, we clicked really well. We both have a passion for doubles and it really helps our singles as well. We’re both aggressive singles players and like to get forward to the net. Anything to get our singles games better as well, we’re all for it. We just enjoy it the most.
Saville: We’re firstly good mates. We’re two Australians and he’s four years younger than me. It’s a funny dynamic and I’m sort of a mentor and older figure for him a little bit. He’s had a really good run in singles and we bounce ideas off each other all the time. We’re singles players first and that lets us play more relaxed on the doubles side.
How did you first decide to team up and coordinate your schedules?
Saville: To start, we won a Challenger – a big 125 event – in Bangalore at the end of 2018. We aligned our schedules a bit and play mostly in Asia. We like the faster hard courts, so we travel around and play whenever we can together. When we cracked the Top 100 and got to No. 80, we decided to play ATP Tour events together but only when there was a good opportunity. We played Wimbledon, Newport and Los Cabos. We got into Wimbledon as an alternate, ending up just slipping in there, which was awesome.
No team won more matches and titles last year than you two. Talk about the chemistry you have developed on the court. It doesn’t happen often for two singles players.
Purcell: We’re just lucky that we like playing similar schedules, so we can partner together the majority of the weeks. There were only four or five tournaments last year where we weren’t together. So many people mix up who they play with. When it gets down to those tough moments, they don’t know what their partners are doing and have that trust. We know each other so well and it feels easy. Nothing really changes when we’re on the court and we don’t have to worry about who is serving or returning well. We just find ways around it. He’s just a great guy and a great friend.
Did you surprise yourself with the success you’ve had together?
Saville: Yeah, for sure. This time last year, if someone said that we’re going to win eight Challengers, that’s pretty ridiculous. Our game style is pretty tough at the Challenger level. We need to keep improving to get better at the next level, but we still have some work to do with our game.
Obviously both of you are singles players first, but how has your run together given you confidence as a whole?
Purcell: I was always looking to come forward in singles and play at the net, but when it came down to those tough moments I wouldn’t trust it. I’d stay back. With all the tough volleys you pull out in doubles, it makes it easy to think about finishing at the net, rather than hoping players miss. That’s a huge part of tennis and you just have to get forward. So many players are walls at the back, so that’s the way tennis is going these days.
Saville: When I’m done with singles, I feel like there could be a path in doubles. I’d have a few regrets if I decided to take the full-time doubles route now. I’m playing pretty good tennis and have some momentum going. We don’t want to go fully doubles yet, but we do it where we can. There’s definitely some unfinished business on the singles court. We’re focusing on singles, but doubles is a big priority. It’s good to obviously get in Slams and financially helps a lot.
How has the doubles helped improve your singles game, particularly your net play?
Purcell: I have more confidence now. We’re doing more than an hour warmups before doubles matches, just so we can get singles and doubles practice in. We need to get enough volley work in. We’re looking to get better and better. We want to test ourselves. It would be nice to focus more on doubles because we can get into some bigger tournaments now, but we have to hold back because our singles rankings won’t get us in there. We just have to keep moving along in Challengers and hopefully our singles will get us in those bigger events.
Saville: My volleys and knowing where to cover has improved a lot. The confidence of winning matches and being in tournaments on Saturdays and Sundays – in semis and finals – is priceless as well. You have to play with extra pressure and that’s transferred a bit into my singles. Where to serve and return has also transferred over and it all ties together. There are a bunch of guys who have had success mixing singles and doubles. Herbert is one of them. With my singles game style, I like to move forward and play a front-court game. I think that ties in well with doubles. I think I can have a career being good in both.
Luke, you’re only 25 but have been on tour for many years now. You’ve experienced a lot already in your career. What would you say is the toughest part of competing at this level and rising up the rankings?
Saville: It’s been a long time without breaking through, ever since juniors. I’ve been asked a lot and it’s hard to point to where it went wrong for me. I was making a bit of a run a few years ago, getting to No. 150, but right now I have belief in myself again and I’m playing some pretty good tennis. If I lost hope by now, I’d probably have started playing full-time doubles already. We’ll see how it goes, but I’m still enjoying it. I love traveling and doing what I love. Going to different places and seeing what they have to offer is nice. And the competition of playing matches, getting better and improving the ranking is what I love. Seeing improvements in my game is what drives me. Proving to myself that I can get to the next level keeps me believing.
If you could point to one moment in 2019, what would you say was the highlight of your season?
Saville: Playing Wimbledon is definitely an achievement and we’re pretty proud of it. We snuck in as second alternates but we feel like we earned it. We were playing for six or seven months, but to get into a Slam was really good for us. We battled our way through the Challengers and didn’t need a wild card. Every Aussie Open for the past few years I’ve relied on wild cards, so that was special. Just getting into Wimbledon with what we’ve achieved leading up. There was also a final in Anning, China, where we were down a set and a break and they served for the match. We came back and won that somehow. That was definitely pleasing. We had a few moments like that throughout the year.
What are your goals for 2020? In both singles and doubles.
Purcell: Top 100 in singles in 2020 would be a big goal. I’m heading in the right direction, but I don’t like to put that pressure on myself. If Luke and I can hang around Top 50 in doubles, that would be great as well, because it can put us in any tournament we want.
Saville: I want to get back into Grand Slam qualies in singles. I want to get more singles weeks in, where I’m going far. But I can definitely use what we’ve achieved in doubles as a springboard for singles going forward. If you can get more comfortable at the next level, even in doubles, it’s all positives.
2020 Australian Open |
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Venue: Melbourne Park Dates: 20 January to 2 February |
Coverage: Listen on BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra and online; Live text on the BBC Sport website and app. |
British qualifier Harriet Dart wants to draw on last year’s chastening Australian Open experience when she meets two-time Grand Slam champion Simona Halep on Thursday.
Dart, 23, plays the fourth seed on Rod Laver Arena – where she lost 6-0 6-0 to Maria Sharapova in 2019.
“It is a great opportunity to see where my level is,” Dart, ranked 173, said.
Dart and Heather Watson, who plays 16th seed Elise Mertens, are the last British players left in the singles.
The match between Dart and Romanian Halep opens the night session on the 15,000-capacity arena at 08:00 GMT.
You can follow Dart’s progress on BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra’s Tennis Breakfast and through the BBC Sport website’s live text service.
Watson had to wait until Wednesday to play her opening match, beating Czech Kristyna Pliskova 4-6 6-3 6-1 in blustery conditions. Her second-round match is second on court 22 at about 02:00 GMT.
Thursday’s order of play on Rod Laver Arena |
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Day session starts at 11:00 local time (00:00 GMT): |
Garbine Muguruza (Spa) v Ajla Tomljanovic (Aus) |
Laura Siegemund (Ger) v Karolina Pliskova (Cze) [2] |
Egor Gerasimov (Blr) v Alexander Zverev (Ger) [7] |
Night session starts at 19:00 local time (08:00 GMT): |
Harriet Dart (GB) v Simona Halep (Rom) [4] |
Rafael Nadal (Spa) [1] v Federico Delbonis (Arg) |
Dart moved into the second round this year with a gutsy three-set win over Japan’s Misaki Doi, going some way to putting that heavy defeat by five-time Grand Slam champion Sharapova behind her.
She was also beaten 6-1 6-1 by Australia’s world number one Ashleigh Barty on Centre Court at Wimbledon last July.
“They were both completely different occasions on big courts against big players,” Dart told BBC Sport.
“I think I have kept learning from all the experiences I’ve had over the past year and hopefully I can draw on them and bring that to the match against Halep.
“She’s one of the players I particularly look up to. Her athletic ability is pretty incredible and she’s a Grand Slam champion for a reason.”
British number two Watson, 27, will meet Mertens for the second time in a week after winning their Hobart quarter-final last Thursday.
Another success for the Guernsey player would see her reach the Australian Open third round for the first time since 2013.
“Beating her last week will give me confidence to know I can beat her, especially if it gets close,” Watson said.
“I stayed calm last week and stayed there every point. That’s what you need to do against a player like her who is very solid.”
Meanwhile, 14th seeds Jamie Murray and Neal Skupski begin their men’s doubles campaign on court 14, while Joe Salisbury and Cameron Norrie are among other Britons in doubles action.
Other notable matches on Thursday |
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Margaret Court Arena: Daniil Medvedev (Rus) [4] v Pedro Martinez (Spa) (about 02:00 GMT) |
Melbourne Arena: Nick Kyrgios (Aus) [23] v Gilles Simon (Fra) (about 08:00 GMT) |
British number one Dan Evans says he would prefer to miss the Tokyo 2020 Olympics and concentrate on the hard court season in the the United States.
The 29-year-old, who is at a career-high world ranking of 32, insists his stance is not a lack of enthusiasm for representing Great Britain.
“I think everyone should represent their country for the Davis Cup, Fed Cup and ATP Cup but the Olympics is sort of an individual event,” he said.
“I’m not sure I’ll be going to Japan.”
The Olympics run from 24 July to 9 August and the tennis event, which has 64 players in singles, does not carry prize money or ranking points.
The US hard court season is made up of several events running from late July to the US Open which starts with qualifying from 24 August.
“First and foremost I have to take care of myself and my life rather than maybe taking time out – there’s some good tournaments on at that point,” he added.
“I probably won’t do it because of certain situations. I don’t have long to play as well so I probably won’t go over to Japan.”
Evans declined a place in Britain’s team for Rio 2016 after being offered a role following a spate of injury withdrawals.
He was beaten 6-4 6-3 6-4 by Japan’s Yoshihito Nishioka in his second-round match at the Australian Open on Wednesday.
Kiki Bertens, the Dutch world number 10, is the latest WTA Tour star to feature in a BBC Sport column. In her second piece from the Australian Open, the 2016 French Open semi-finalist talks about the impending comeback of her idol Kim Clijsters, why she is never satisfied after a match and how she tries not to talk tennis with her husband at the dinner table.
Even though I never really liked watching tennis too much when I was growing up, it is fair to say Kim Clijsters was my idol.
Kim was a great player, a great person and a great champion. Plus she is from Belgium, really close to where I am from, so it is pretty obvious why I liked her.
That meant I was really happy to see her announce a comeback at the age of 36 after more than seven years away from the WTA Tour.
It came as a complete surprise to me. I never saw it coming. But now I’m thinking it would be great if I could play her one day.
I don’t know how I would feel if that was to happen, but of course I would want to beat her! That’s the case with every player.
Her game was very good to watch; she was really aggressive and her movement was good.
We will have to see how successful her comeback is going to be. Maybe it won’t be that easy.
Maria Sharapova and Victoria Azarenka are examples of other former Grand Slam winners who have tried to come back after a long time away.
It is not as easy as it was before – I think the level is so high and everyone can play really well.
It will be tough for Kim and I have no idea how she is shaping up now.
But she was a great athlete in her prime and you can’t rule anything out. So let’s see what happens.
I started the Australian Open with a 6-1 6-4 win against Romania’s Irina-Camelia Begu on Tuesday – but, despite the scoreline, I was not completely happy.
Of course I am happy with the result, but I am never really satisfied with how I play. There is always something that I want to do better.
I think winning by that scoreline and not being completely satisfied is a good sign. And it is a sign of how far I have come over the past few years – and that I still want more.
My confidence has grown so much in the past few years that even when I’m not playing my best, I still feel calm on court and find a way to win.
Against Begu, I was not playing really aggressively, apart from my serve, which I used really well.
The rest of my game was more about moving a lot from side to side, making as many balls as I could and just putting it back in the court.
For the next match, and if I want to go deeper in the tournament, I will have to play more aggressively.
On Thursday, I will play Arina Rodionova in the second round – she is an Australian wildcard who I’ve never faced before.
That is going to be a tough one, like all matches are at a Grand Slam. She had a good first-round win, losing the opening set to Ukraine’s Kateryna Bondarenko before turning the match around.
Arina is from Melbourne so I’m sure she will have the crowd behind her, but that does not faze me.
It is really exciting when I play someone I have never played before. My coach Elise Tamaela went to watch her match to find out how she is playing.
Normally I rely on Elise going to a match and listening to what she tells me about an opponent, as well as drawing on my own experiences.
But if I’ve never played a girl before, then I will also watch videos of her play on the internet. That’s my homework.
I will watch it and see what she did well but I think it is more important to concentrate on my own strengths.
As I told you in my first column, I got married in the summer to my husband Remko, who is part of my team.
He is a physio and a fitness trainer, but a coach as well, and my coach Elise is also a fitness trainer and physio. So they can do both – and if I’m not happy with one, then I can switch to the other!
It is great he is part of our team because otherwise we’d have no time to see each other.
Remko has his own tennis academy in Belgium so he travels with us for half of the year.
I think it is good that he travels with us only half of the time, and not full time, because I think that would make it a little bit tougher.
We manage to balance our work and private life very well; we have found a good way to do that.
Most of the time when we are on site at a tournament it is work, and that really starts when he is doing my warm-up before practice.
At the end of the day, when we have finished stretching and the rest of my recovery routine, he becomes my husband again and the work stops.
Then we can do normal stuff as husband and wife, go for a nice dinner, watch a movie or just relax.
When we are having dinner in a restaurant, we try not to talk about tennis – but sometimes it is hard.
Does whoever bring up to tennis first at the dinner table have to pay the bill? Not at the moment. But that’s a good idea, maybe we will start doing that!
Kiki Bertens was speaking to BBC Sport’s Jonathan Jurejko at Melbourne Park
Swiss reaches third round in Melbourne for 21st time
Roger Federer improved to 41-0 in the first two rounds of the Australian Open on Wednesday night, moving past Filip Krajinovic 6-1, 6-4, 6-1 at Rod Laver Arena.
The six-time champion started and finished with a flourish to extend his unbeaten ATP Head2Head record against Krajinovic to four matches. Federer ripped 42 winners to break serve seven times throughout the one-hour, 32-minute encounter.
Federer is now just one win away from winning his 100th match at the Australian Open. The Swiss, who owns a 99-14 record at Melbourne Park, is the only man to win 100 matches at a Grand Slam event. Federer owns a record 101 wins at Wimbledon.
Federer will need to beat Australian John Millman to reach that mark at the year’s opening major championship. Millman, who beat Federer in four sets at the 2018 US Open, defeated 31st seed Hubert Hurkacz 6-4, 7-5, 6-3 in two hours and 28 minutes. Federer leads Millman 2-1 in their ATP Head2Head series.
Federer is aiming to equal Novak Djokovic’s record of seven Australian Open titles this year. The 38-year-old captured his sixth trophy at this event in 2018, beating Marin Cilic in five sets to add a 20th crown to his record Grand Slam titles haul. Rafael Nadal can equal that total at this event if he wins his second Australian Open title.
Krajinovic was aiming to equal his best Grand Slam result by reaching the third round in Melbourne for the second straight year. The Serbian also reached the third round at Roland Garros last year.