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GB's Dart reaches Australian Open first round

  • Posted: Jan 17, 2020

Harriet Dart became the fourth British woman to reach this year’s Australian Open first round after she won her final qualifying match.

Dart, 23, won 6-1 6-3 against Italian Giulia Gatto-Monticone in Melbourne.

The world number 169, who lost in the first round last year, joins Johanna Konta, Heather Watson and Katie Boulter in the main draw.

She will find out her opponent when qualifying is completed and the winners are placed in the draw.

The Australian Open, which is the first Grand Slam of 2020, starts at Melbourne Park on Monday.

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Harris Serves Way Into First ATP Tour Final In Adelaide

  • Posted: Jan 17, 2020

Harris Serves Way Into First ATP Tour Final In Adelaide

Auger-Aliassime plays Rublev in second semi-final

South African Lloyd Harris reached his first ATP Tour final on Friday at the Adelaide International, battling past American Tommy Paul 6-4, 6-7(3), 6-3 in two hours and nine minutes.

“I’m so excited to be in the final here in Adelaide. Just ecstatic with the match I played,” Harris said. “Looking forward to [the final] tomorrow.”

Last year, Harris made his first tour-level quarter-final and semi-final in Chengdu as a lucky loser. But the World No. 91 has gone one step further in Adelaide, blasting 13 aces and winning 85 per cent of his first-serve points against the man who is one spot ahead of him in the FedEx ATP Rankings.

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This was the first ATP Tour semi-final between two qualifiers since Roberto Carballes Baena beat Andrej Martin in Quito in 2018. Harris was on the back foot towards the end of the second set, despite recouping a break to force a tie-break, as Paul was taking control of rallies more often and not allowing the South African to dictate play.

But Harris, who defeated fourth seed Pablo Carreno Busta and sixth seed Cristian Garin earlier in the ATP 250 tournament, was undeterred. He lost just two first-serve points in the decider en route to his victory. Harris will play second seed Felix Auger-Aliassime or third seed Andrey Rublev for the trophy.

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How Federer Uses New Balls To His Advantage On Hard Courts

  • Posted: Jan 17, 2020

How Federer Uses New Balls To His Advantage On Hard Courts

Infosys ATP Insights learns who best takes advantage of fresh balls on serve

New balls, please…

With the Australian Open on the horizon, an Infosys ATP Insights deep dive of serve performance with new balls over the past five seasons uncovers how players take advantage of the fresh, faster balls on hard, grass and clay courts.

Serving With New Balls – Holding Serve 2015-2019

 Surface  Player  Service Games Held %
 Grass  Milos Raonic  100%
 Hard  Roger Federer  94.58%
 Clay  John Isner  95.24% 

1. Roger Federer Leads On Hard Courts
Breaking Roger Federer’s serve on hard courts when he is serving with new balls is an almost insurmountable task. Federer has lost serve only 11 times out of 203 service games on hard court in the past five years when serving with fresh balls. Overall, John Isner has won the most service games on hard with new balls with 214 service games, while Dominic Thiem has played the most, with 233 service games.

The five best performers holding serve with new balls on hard (minimum 20 attempts) in the past five seasons:

1. Roger Federer = 94.58% (192/203)
2. Ivo Karlovic = 94.01% (157/167)
3. Nick Kyrgios = 93.79% (166/177)
4. Reilly Opelka = 93.24% (69/74)
5. John Isner = 92.24% (214/232)

2. Milos Raonic Is Perfect On Grass Courts
In the past five years, Milos Raonic has played 43 matches on grass and served with new balls 64 times. He has impressively won every one of those service games. Overall, Raonic has won 70 per cent (49/70) of his matches on grass throughout his career, proving to be his most successful surface. Surprisingly, he has not yet won a grass-court event, but was a finalist at Wimbledon and Queens in 2016, and Stuttgart in 2018.

The five best performers holding serve with new balls on grass (minimum 20 attempts) in the past five seasons:

1. Milos Raonic = 100% (64/64)
2. Ivo Karlovic = 98.31% (58/59)
3. Matteo Berrettini = 95.45% (21/22)
4. Kevin Anderson = 94.92% (56/59)
5. Marin Cilic = 94.74% (54/57) 

3. John Isner Surprises On Clay Courts
You would not naturally think of the 34-year-old American Isner as a leader in clay-court performance metrics, but his form is unsurpassed on the surface with new balls, holding serve 95.24 per cent (60/63) of the time. In fact, Isner’s hold percentage on clay with new balls is better than on grass or hard.

John Isner Winning Percentage Holding Serve With New Balls (2015-19)

 Surface  Winning Percentage
 Clay  95.24% (60/63)
 Grass  92.59% (50/54)
 Hard  92.24% (214/232)

The five best performers holding serve with new balls on clay (minimum 20 attempts) in the past five seasons:

1. John Isner = 95.24% (60/63)
2. Kevin Anderson = 93.75% (45/48)
3. Hyeon Chung = 91.43% (32/35)
4. Steve Johnson = 91.07% (51/56)
5. Juan Ignacio Londero = 89.47% (34/38)

Serving with new balls offers a distinct advantage for the server. Breaking it down by the surface helps identify which players naturally perform better on which surface.

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Murray refuses to put time frame on recovery after injury setback

  • Posted: Jan 17, 2020

Andy Murray says he is not putting a time frame on his recovery from a pelvic injury after delaying his comeback to the middle of February at the earliest.

The injury forced him to miss this month’s Australian Open.

He now says “bone bruising” is taking longer to heal than expected.

The Scot, 32, last played at the Davis Cup in November and will now miss tournaments in France and the Netherlands next month.

“I don’t want to rush anything or put a timeline on my recovery,” said the three-time Grand Slam champion.

“I’m going to listen to my body and step back on the court to compete when the time is right.”

He added: “The bone bruising is taking longer to heal that first thought, so I won’t be playing in Montpellier or Rotterdam in February.”

Murray, who had hip resurfacing surgery at the beginning of 2019, is continuing his rehabilitation and training in the gym, including yoga sessions.

After Wimbledon in 2017, he missed almost a year of tennis because of a career-threatening hip injury.

He then played in only two tournaments between October 2018 and the start of June 2019.

With Feliciano Lopez, Murray won the men’s doubles at Queen’s Club last June and returned to singles’ action in August.

Victory over Stan Wawrinka in the final of an ATP Tour event in Antwerp, Belgium, in October was Murray’s first title in two years, before he got injured during the Davis Cup a month later.

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'Stef Is Kind Of A Genius': Tsitsipas Gearing Up For An Even Better 2020

  • Posted: Jan 16, 2020

‘Stef Is Kind Of A Genius’: Tsitsipas Gearing Up For An Even Better 2020

Catch up with the 2019 Nitto ATP Finals champion’s off-season preparation

Stefanos Tsitsipas punctuated his 2019 season in the greatest way possible, winning the Nitto ATP Finals in London, marking the biggest title of his career. The sixth seed at the Australian Open, Tsitsipas will now try to build on that great finish in the year ahead.

“It was a great end of the year, coming in London strong from the very beginning, full of confidence. It just gave me so much to work around with. I felt very flexible in my way of thinking,” Tsitsipas said. “At the end I left from London with the trophy, which I couldn’t really believe what just happened. It was a great, great week with good fan support, a good team around me.”

The Greek had already shown his potential, winning three prior ATP Tour titles and reaching two ATP Masters 1000 finals. But defeating Roger Federer, Daniil Medvedev, Dominic Thiem and Alexander Zverev in one week broke new ground for the 21-year-old.

“I remember playing the Next Gen Finals [in 2018] and thinking to myself that the young generation I’m currently facing at the Next Gen ATP Finals is the future,” Tsitsipas said. “Players are young, they’re ambitious, they play so well. There’s nothing to fear of going out and playing with the elder players. So for me, that was very crucial to be in that kind of thinking and that kind of mindset.”

That paid dividends, as Tsitsipas is now not only the future, but the present. He certainly made an impression on those around him, including mentor Marcos Baghdatis.

“He came on end of the year finding again his rhythm,” Baghdatis said. “I find it incredible what he did. For me, Stef is kind of a genius.”

Tsitsipas’ run in London didn’t come out of nowhere, though. It was the high point of a steady progression that began at the end of 2018, when he won the Next Gen ATP Finals in Milan. Just two months later, he reached the Australian Open semi-finals, upsetting Federer in Melbourne.

“The fact that the semi-final, you start off with a bang beating Federer and a semi-final finish at the Australian Open was huge and then I think the momentum just went on from there,” said Mark Philippoussis, an 11-time ATP Tour champion. “Finishes strong at The O2. I felt like we saw him raise his game a level and really see what he’s capable of.”

After his big win to end 2019, Tsitsipas took some well-earned time away from the court to reset, visiting Iceland, Cyprus and Oman before heading to Dubai for his off-season training.

“It’s rare that I get to do these kinds of things,” Tsitsipas said. “I’m usually very focussed and concentrated on my tennis, so I really cherish the fact that I’m able to travel and go to places away from tennis and not be concentrated on tennis despite my love for the sport.”

Now Tsitsipas is ready to try to progress even more in 2020.

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Medvedev, Tiafoe Among Five Must-See First-Rounders At The Australian Open

  • Posted: Jan 16, 2020

Medvedev, Tiafoe Among Five Must-See First-Rounders At The Australian Open

ATPTour.com breaks down five first-round matches to watch in Melbourne

[4] Daniil Medvedev (RUS) vs. Frances Tiafoe (USA) — Head2Head: Medvedev 1-0
Memories of shirt-ripping celebrations remain vivid for Frances Tiafoe, who beat Kevin Anderson and Grigor Dimitrov en route to the 2019 Australian Open quarter-finals. With that run, the American broke into the Top 30 of the FedEx ATP Rankings for the first time, but upon his return to Melbourne Park this year, Tiafoe will now be remembering not to turn his back on Daniil Medvedev, his first-round opponent, if he is to kick-start his 2020 ATP Tour season.

Medvedev, who put together a 20-3 record on the North American summer hard-courts, culminating in a run to the US Open final, beat Tiafoe 6-2, 7-5 at the Citi Open in Washington, D.C. Tiafoe, at 4-5 in the second set, brought Medvedev to the net with a drop shot, before flicking a backhand volley past his opponent and turning his back on the court. But, with impressive speed, Medvedev changed direction to track down the ball and chip it into the vacant space for a winner.

World No. 4 Medvedev started the year for Team Russia at the ATP Cup, beating three Top 20 players in five matches, while Tiafoe looks to bounce back from first-round exits in Doha and Auckland in the first two weeks of this year.

Reilly Opelka (USA) vs. [12] Fabio Fognini (ITA) — Head2Head: 1-1
Power meets finesse as Reilly Opelka, who hit 1,023 aces and won 91 per cent of his service games in 2019, faces off against Fabio Fognini, whose best performance in 12 Melbourne appearances came two years ago with a fourth-round run (l. to Berdych). Opelka, at 6’11”, has a 13” height advantage over Fognini and in their past two matches has hit 49 aces — 26 aces in a 6-3, 6-4, 6-7(6), 6-3 victory in the 2019 US Open first round and 23 aces in the Davis Cup Finals in Madrid, which Fognini won 6-4, 6-7(4), 6-3. World No. 12 Fognini arrives at the Australian Open after the birth of his second child, a daughter, Farah, on 23 December. He has got off to a 1-3 start in 2020.

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[9] Roberto Bautista Agut (ESP) vs. Feliciano Lopez (ESP) — Head2Head: 2-2
Coming off the best season of his career, Roberto Bautista Agut has started 2020 with a bang, going 6-0 for Team Spain en route to the ATP Cup final. Next week, at Melbourne Park, last year’s quarter-finalist comes up against a fellow Spaniard, Feliciano Lopez, who is appearing in a record-extending 72nd consecutive Grand Slam championship. While they’ve met on four previous occasions, Lopez has won both of their hard-court clashes at the 2014 Rogers Cup and 2016 BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells. It will be a contrast of styles as Bautista Agut will look to pit his baseline game against the attacking nature of Lopez, who, at 38, is hoping to recall memories of his 2012 and 2015 runs to the fourth round.

Sam Querrey (USA) vs. [25] Borna Coric (CRO) – Head2Head: Coric 1-0
It wasn’t until his fifth visit that Borna Coric tasted victory at the Australian Open, en route to the fourth round last year. But 12 months on, Coric returns looking to rebuild his confidence having ended 2019 on a six-match losing streak, following on from reaching his sixth ATP Tour final at the St. Petersburg Open (l. to Medvedev) in October. With a 1-3 mark in 2020, heading into Melbourne, the World No. 28 squares off against Sam Querrey for the second time. In their only previous meeting at 2015 Roland Garros, Coric won 7-6(8), 6-3, 0-6, 6-3. The 32-year-old Querrey has beaten eight Top 30 players since rising to No. 11 in the FedEx ATP Rankings in February 2018, and with a big serve, that reaped 690 aces in 2019, the American’s game may well test the defensive baseliner, Coric.

[11] David Goffin (BEL) vs. Jeremy Chardy (FRA) – Head2Head: 1-1
Having dropped to No. 33 on 17 June, David Goffin set about rising up the FedEx ATP Rankings in the second half of last year, reaching two ATP Tour finals at the Grass Court Open Halle (l. to Federer) and the Western & Southern Open in Cincinnati (l. to Medvedev) and recording 22 match wins. The Belgian, who reached the 2017 quarter-finals in Melbourne, will hope to beat Jeremy Chardy for the second time in three meetings, having beaten the Frenchman at Wimbledon in July, and begin his push back into the Top 10. Chardy, who was also a quarter-finalist at the major in 2012 (l. to Murray), completed 2019 on a high with victory over No. 4-ranked Medvedev en route to the Last 16 at the Rolex Paris Masters in November. He has beaten three Top 10 players at major championships (No. 7 Nalbandian at the 2008 Roland Garros), No. 7 Juan Martin del Potro at the 2013 Australian Open and No. 7 David Ferrer at 2018 US Open), and last beat a Top 20 opponent, the recently retired Tomas Berdych, last year at Roland Garros.

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'It boils my blood': GB's Broady furious about air quality email

  • Posted: Jan 16, 2020

Britain’s Liam Broady has described an email sent to players defending the decision to allow play at the Australian Open despite the poor air quality as a “slap in the face”.

He says it “boils his blood” that he was made to play his first-round qualifying match on Tuesday.

The 26-year-old was “gasping for air” as he lost to Belarusian Ilya Ivashka.

Play had earlier been suspended for an hour as Melbourne was blanketed in smoke from the bushfires.

The email was sent to male players by the ATP Tour and Tennis Australia, and has been seen by BBC Sport.

It concludes the “conditions are challenging, but the medical experts say they are acceptable for play”.

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In a post on social media earlier on Thursday, Broady outlined his concerns.

“The more I think about the conditions we played in a few days ago, the more it boils my blood. We can’t let this slide.

“The email we received yesterday from the ATP and AO was a slap in the face. Conditions were ‘playable’. Were they ‘healthy’?

“Citizens of Melbourne were warned to keep their animals indoors the day I played qualifying, and yet we were expected to go outside for high-intensity physical competition?

“What do we have to do to create a players’ union? Where is the protection for players, both male and female? On tour we let so many things go that aren’t right but at some point we have to make a stand. ALL players need protection not just a select few.”

Slovenia’s Dalila Jakupovic was forced to retire from her qualifying match after a coughing fit and says other players she spoke to reported breathing difficulties and headaches.

The email to ATP members said “player welfare is utmost in our considerations”, and details the hitherto undisclosed protocols that Tennis Australia has put into place.

A ‘PM2.5’ air quality reading is being taken every four minutes at Melbourne Park. Whenever the reading exceeds 200, Tennis Australia says play is suspended.

Readings elsewhere in the city on Tuesday suggested the air quality index was over 200, but the email says “no play has taken place at any time above the 200 threshold on the PM2.5 scale”.

It also claims some sporting organisations have a threshold of 300 before they take any decision to suspend play.

There were no problems with air quality as qualifying continued on Thursday. Wednesday’s heavy rain has brought in cooler conditions, with Melbourne’s air officially rated as “good”.

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‘A lot are saying they can’t wait to get out of Australia right now’

American player Noah Rubin, who lost in the first round of qualifying on Wednesday, said a lot of players felt “disrespected” by the email, which he described as being sent “too late”.

Former Wimbledon junior champion Rubin, 23, says he had “blood and black stuff” coming out of his nose after his match, also complaining of irritated eyes and shortness of breath.

“A lot of players have been feeling it in the throat and eyes,” Rubin, who was not the source of the leaked email, told BBC Sport. “It can’t be healthy breathing it in.

“The talk between players is about disappointment. A lot are saying they can’t wait to get out of Australia right now and we love playing in Australia.

“It’s left a bad taste in a lot of people’s mouths – almost literally.

“We feel awful about what is happening with the fires – it is terrible and obviously there are way worse things – but we’re talking about how are we having a tournament going on, and how do we not know how to go about it? Why can’t we play inside; why are there not emergency things taking place?”

Rubin added he had approached Tennis Australia and the ATP for clarity, accusing them of being defensive when he asked for more communication to be given to the players about why decisions had been made.

American player Nicole Gibbs, who was treated for a mouth cancer last year and had two months out following surgery, urged tournament officials to display the air quality numbers in the players’ locker rooms.

“We should have access to the air quality numbers and the associated health risk of whatever that valuation is,” said Gibbs, who lost to Britain’s Harriet Dart in qualifying on Thursday.

“We have TVs in our locker room which show us what the heat index is at any time so I’ve been expressing to tournament officials I’d also like to see the air quality.”

Hear more from Nicole Gibbs on 5 live Sport from 19:00 GMT on Thursday

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Australia fires: How poor air quality affects tennis players

  • Posted: Jan 16, 2020
2020 Australian Open
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.

Coughing fits, retirements and player anger – this week’s Australian Open qualifying has been repeatedly affected by the country’s ongoing bushfire crisis.

So how does the “very poor” air quality affect elite athletes?

Professor of sport and exercise science John Brewer explains.

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The quick science bit

When we exercise and we take air into our lungs, there are minute sacks in our lungs called alveoli. They extract oxygen from that air and take that into the blood stream and then into the muscles to help provide the body with the energy it needs.

If that air going into their lungs is contaminated with other particles from the bush fires, then that can really impact on the ability of the sacks to transport the all-important oxygen into the blood stream.

For tennis players, that can cause extra fatigue, perhaps the loss of concentration, plus headaches and nausea, as well as slow their recovery rate afterwards.

The numbers

At rest, most people will breathe in, and out, around 10 litres of air per minute.

Just under 21% of this consists of oxygen.

During exercise this demand for energy, oxygen and air increases significantly, and in a sport such as tennis where players need to perform repeated bursts of high-intensity activity, the amount of air going into and out of the lungs can often approach 100 litres per minute, a 10-fold increase.

What about players with asthma?

For players who have pre-existing conditions such as asthma, the irritation caused by the particulates in the air could trigger a reaction that narrows the airways, and makes breathing and oxygen uptake even harder.

In some cases this could prevent them from playing altogether, causing significant respiratory distress, which if untreated could pose a risk to the player.

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Don’t forget the heat

High levels of heat and humidity are a routine challenge for players at the Australian Open, and will result in higher heart rates and breathing frequency as players cope with the physiological demands of keeping cool and preventing their body temperature from rising too high.

In those conditions, the heart has to work much harder to pump blood to the skin so that body heat can be lost, and this extra load on the heart will be even greater when air in the lungs is of a poor quality.

Players will find themselves fatiguing rapidly as they cope with a lack of oxygen in the blood, and the high heart rates they will experience as the body combats the effects of heat and dehydration.

Any longer-term impact?

The poor air quality and smoke particles will affect spectators as well as players, and some of the air quality levels that have been recorded equate to smoking large numbers of cigarettes a day.

As well as restricting breathing and oxygen transport capacity, prolonged exposure to smoke-polluted air is almost certainly going to impact on the health of the general population, with the potential for harmful chemicals and particulates to enter the lungs and cause long-term damage.

Spectators who are concerned should be advised to wear face masks that will help filter the harmful particulates from the air that they breathe in.

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'The tournament will happen' – Australian Open to go ahead, says Tiley

  • Posted: Jan 16, 2020
2020 Australian Open
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.

Australian Open organisers are confident the tournament will start and finish on time despite continuing health concerns over Melbourne’s air quality from bushfires in the country.

Some players have complained about having to play qualifying matches in smoky conditions.

“There is a lot of speculation about the Australian Open not happening, or starting later,” said tournament director Craig Tiley.

“The Australian Open is happening.”

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Slovenia’s Dalila Jakupovic had to be helped off court when she retired from her qualifying match on Tuesday because of the “unhealthy” air quality.

British player Liam Broady said having to play his first-round qualifier on the same day “made his blood boil”, adding he was “gasping for air” as he lost to Belarusian Ilya Ivashka.

People in Melbourne were advised to stay indoors and keep pets inside on Tuesday.

A number of players have also criticised the tournament for not postponing the matches, with American Noah Rubin saying he had “blood and black stuff” coming out of his nose following his match on Wednesday.

Tiley says he understands the anger of the players, adding he believes it stems from the confusion of seeing different measurements of air quality depending on the app or website they used.

Rubin, a former Wimbledon junior champion, also told BBC Sport he was unhappy with the communication from tournament officials, saying they were reluctant to explain the figures to the players.

“Air quality is a very complex and confusing issue which relates to a number of different factors,” said Tiley.

“There are number of different air quality measures and it is made more complex by going on an app. There are different apps and websites which give you different readings.

“This is about trusting the medical advice and trusting the expertise and scientific advice of the people who analyse this every day.

“The safety, the wellbeing and the health of the players is the priority for us, as with our staff and our fans.”

Tiley said the tournament decided to use a ‘PM2.5 concentrate’ measure to monitor the air quality levels after receiving advice from environmental and medical experts.

A PM2.5 reading is being taken every four minutes at Melbourne Park. If the reading exceeds 200, Tiley said it would be deemed hazardous and play would be suspended.

He says no reading has exceeded the 200 mark while matches have been in progress at Melbourne Park. However, it did exceed that mark – rated as ‘very unhealthy’ – on Tuesday, when qualifying was delayed by an hour.

If play is suspended, the Tennis Australia chief executive says the tournament will continue indoors under the roofs on Rod Laver Arena, Margaret Court Arena and Melbourne Arena.

“We do have three indoor arenas in which we can compete. It may look differently but the tournament will happen,” Tiley said.

“We are speculating if that would happen but if we had to work it out we would.

“We don’t expect that to happen because we haven’t yet seen anywhere in the world where there has been above that 200 on the PM2.5 concentrate consecutively over two weeks.”

The first Grand Slam of the year gets under way on Monday.

Hear more from Craig Tiley on 5 live Sport from 19:00 GMT on Thursday

  • What is being done to fight the bushfires?
  • A visual guide to Australia’s bushfires

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Britain's Dart one match from main draw in Melbourne

  • Posted: Jan 16, 2020
2020 Australian Open
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.

British number three Harriet Dart reached the third round of Australian Open qualifying with a straight-set win over American Nicole Gibbs.

The 23-year-old world number 169 won 6-2 6-3 and faces Italy’s Giulia Gatto-Monticone for a place in the main draw.

However, fellow Briton Samantha Murray Sharan, 32, lost 2-6 6-4 6-4 in the opening round to China’s Yue Yuan.

Canada’s Eugenie Bouchard also reached the third round with a 6-3 6-1 victory over Australia’s Maddison Inglis.

The former Australian Open semi-finalist will play Italian Martina Trevisan next.

In the men’s draw, Belgian Steve Darcis played the final match of his career in a first-round defeat.

The 35-year-old, who beat Rafael Nadal in the 2013 Wimbledon first round, lost 7-5 7-5 to France’s Elliot Benchetrit.

“A wonderful page in my life turns,” said Darcis on Twitter following his exit.

“Thank you all for your support and thank you also to those who by demolishing me made me stronger.”

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