Fed Cup: Harriet Dart loses thriller to Viktoria Kuzmova – best shots
Watch some of the best shots as Harriet Dart loses a thrilling match against Viktoria Kuzmova, meaning Great Britain now trail Slovakia 2-0 in their Fed Cup qualifier.
Watch some of the best shots as Harriet Dart loses a thrilling match against Viktoria Kuzmova, meaning Great Britain now trail Slovakia 2-0 in their Fed Cup qualifier.
Monfils, Goffin play during evening session
Seventh seed Filip Krajinovic saved two set points in the second set to beat France’s Gregoire Barrere 6-2, 7-5 in 75 minutes on Friday at the Open Sud de France. Krajinovic, who won the first four games of the match, saved two set points at 4-5, 15/40. He now plays Canada’s Vasek Pospisil, who led three-time former champion Richard Gasquet 6-1, 1-0 when the Frenchman retired after 32 minutes of play.
Later today, top-seeded Frenchman Gael Monfils, the 2010 and 2014 titlist, faces Norbert Gombos, while Pierre-Hugues Herbert looks to break a four-match losing streak against second seed David Goffin.
Serbian/Croatian Team Reach Doubles Final
Nikola Cacic and Mate Pavic recovered from 1-4 down in the first set en route to a 7-6(3), 7-5 victory over Tomislav Brkic and Ante Pavic for a place in the Montpellier doubles final.
Watch the best shots as Slovakia’s Anna Karolina Schmiedlova beats Great Britain’s Heather Watson in straight sets in the opening match of their Fed Cup qualifier.
Fed Cup: Slovakia v Great Britain |
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Venue: AXA Arena NTC Bratislava, Slovakia Dates: 7-8 February (15:00 GMT) Surface: Clay |
Coverage: Watch on BBC Red Button, iPlayer & online Friday, 7 February 14:45-19:00 & Saturday, 8 February 14:55-22:00; live text coverage on the BBC Sport website. |
Great Britain trail Slovakia 1-0 in their Fed Cup qualifier after Heather Watson was beaten in straight sets by Anna Karolina Schmiedlova.
Watson lost 6-2 6-3 to the world number 199 on clay at the AXA Arena in Bratislava.
The 27-year-old Briton, ranked 74, paid the price for only converting one of nine break points and 43 unforced errors.
Harriet Dart faces Viktoria Kuzmova in the second singles rubber on Friday.
The reverse singles and doubles rubber will be played on Saturday in the best-of-five tie.
The winner of the tie will join 11 other nations at the new Fed Cup Finals in Budapest from 14-19 April.
Watson lost the opening two games of the match, missing four break points in Schmiedlova’s opening service game.
She fought back to 2-2 and was then 30-0 up on her serve but the Slovakian won the next four points at the start of a run of six consecutive games.
Watson steadied herself in the second set but was always trailing and was broken again in the final game, a forehand volley wide when faced with an open court all too typical of her performance.
Britain are without world number 14 Johanna Konta, who has opted to sit out the Fed Cup this year to protect her body, and Katie Boulter.
GB, who returned to the World Group for the first time since 1996 by beating Kazakhstan in a play-off last April, are among eight seeded nations in the qualifiers.
The eight winners of this week’s qualifying ties will join 2019 finalists Australia and France, hosts Hungary and the Czech Republic in the new 12-team Fed Cup Finals, which will be played on clay in Budapest.
There is an $18m (£14.2m) prize fund and of that, $12m (£9.5m) will go to the players, and the other $6m (£4.75m) to their national associations.
Under the previous format, the champions needed to negotiate three home or away ties. Now they play no more than one.
Vesely saves two match points in deciding-set tie-break
Second seed Ricardas Berankis booked a place in his first ATP Tour semi-final for more than two years on Friday after he recovered to beat fifth-seeded Japanese Yuichi Sugita 4-6, 7-6(4), 6-2 in two hours and 16 minutes at the Tata Open Maharashtra.
Sugita, who reached an ATP Challenger Tour final in Noumea (l. to Wolf) at the start of the 2020 season, came within a point of a set and 3-0 lead on three occasions, but Berankis battled back for a place in his first semi-final since October 2017 at the VTB Kremlin Cup.
The Lithuanian, who is through to his fourth tour-level semi-final, now faces Jiri Vesely, who lived to fight another day after saving two match points against Ilya Ivashka in a 2-6, 6-1, 7-6(11) victory over two hours and 30 minutes. The Czech saved match points at 5/6 and 9/10 in the third-set tie-break.
Later in the day, fourth seed Soonwoo Kwon takes on eighth seed Egor Gerasimov, while sixth seed James Duckworth meets qualifier Roberto Marcora.
Former world number one Naomi Osaka suffered a shock 6-0 6-3 loss to Sara Sorribes Tormo as Spain took a 1-0 lead in their Fed Cup tie against Japan.
Osaka lost her opening 10 points on serve as Sorribes Tormo dominated in the opening set of the match at La Manga Club in Murcia.
The Japanese player led 2-0 in the second set, but Sorribes Tormo, ranked 78th in the world, fought back.
The winners will be one of 12 nations in April’s new-look Fed Cup Finals.
“We knew Sara could make it very uncomfortable for Naomi and she stuck to the gameplan perfectly,” said Spain captain Anabel Medina Garrigues.
Carla Suarez Navarro, playing in what is likely to be her last home Fed Cup tie, faces Japan’s Misaki Doi in the second singles match later on Friday.
Great Britain are also trying to book their place in the Fed Cup Finals and they play away in Slovakia this weekend.
Twelve months ago, Juan Ignacio Londero was a relative unknown on the ATP Tour. The Argentine, No. 112 in the FedEx ATP Rankings, hadn’t won a tour-level match and received a wild card at the inaugural Cordoba Open.
But Londero won the ATP 250 and during the past year, he has proven his maiden title run was no fluke. Londero is at a career-high No. 50, and he returned to the Cordoba quarter-finals on Thursday night.
The 26-year-old beat countryman Pedro Cachin 6-3, 6-3 and will next meet Serbian Laslo Djere. Londero won 79 per cent (26/33) of his first-serve points and saved all five break points faced.
“I was a little nervous and that’s why I talked to myself a lot and that’s how I got in the game. The way I have to activate [myself] is by encouraging myself a lot. If I keep quiet, that doesn’t happen. It was a game with many nerves for me, and I am glad I won it in straight sets,” Londero said.
“For me, it is more a motivation than a pressure to play in Cordoba and try to defend the title. If I had to defend the tournament elsewhere, without having the support of my family, my friends who can see me live, the truth is that I think it would be more difficult anywhere else. I have been having a good time.”
Djere, the 2019 Rio presented by Claro champion, beat Spanish qualifier Pedro Martinez 6-3, 6-4. The Serbian finished 2019 on a seven-match losing streak but ended that in his first match of 2020 in Doha. He will try to reach his first semi-final since July at the Plava Laguna Croatia Open Umag (l. to Balazs).
“The next match against Djere will be difficult, but I go game-by-game, point-by-point. I only think about the next one, to prepare well and be recovered,” Londero said.
Spain’s Albert Ramos-Vinolas held off countryman Pablo Andujar 6-3, 6-7(4), 6-4 to make his second quarter-final of 2020 (Adelaide). Ramos-Vinolas, a two-time ATP Tour clay-court titlist, broke Andujar at 4-4 in the third after a 20-minute rain delay.
Play resumed with Andujar serving at 4-4, 0/30. The 34-year-old recovered to deuce, but Ramos-Vinolas converted his third break point of the game and served it out. The left-hander broke eight times from 21 opportunities.
He will next meet the winner of top seed Diego Schwartzman of Argentina and Spain’s Jaume Munar, who are playing the final match of the day.
Top seed Gael Monfils navigated a tough match-up against fellow Frenchman Adrian Mannarino 4-6, 6-1, 6-4 on Thursday to reach the quarter-finals of the Open Sud de France in Montpellier for the fifth time in his seventh appearance.
The two-time champion earned 14 break points against the unorthodox lefty, converting five of his chances to advance after two hours and one minute. Monfils, the World No. 9, will face Slovakian Norbert Gombos for a spot in the semi-finals.
Mannarino has proven a tough opponent for Monfils, as they split their four previous ATP Head2Head meetings. But Monfils has now won two in a row, also defeating the 31-year-old World No. 45 last year at Roland Garros.
Monfils is off to a good start in 2020, having reached the fourth round of the Australian Open. Last November, he returned to the Top 10 of the FedEx ATP Rankings for the first time since February 2017, finishing inside the year-end Top 10 for the second time (2016).
The Frenchman has reached a tour-level final in 15 straight years, and he is now just two victories from extending that streak to 16 consecutive seasons. Monfils is trying to lift his first ATP Tour trophy on home soil since 2014, when he triumphed in Montpellier.
World No. 104 Gombos reached the last eight by defeating #NextGenATP Norwegian Emil Ruusuvuori 7-5, 6-4. Gombos converted all three of his break points to reach his first ATP Tour quarter-final since last year’s Citi Open in Washington, D.C.
Roberto Marcora arrived at the Tata Open Maharashtra without a tour-level win in his career. The 30-year-old Italian not only qualified in Pune without losing a set, but he defeated Lukas Rosol, who once conquered Rafael Nadal at Wimbledon, and then ousted top seed Benoit Paire to reach his first ATP Tour quarter-final.
“It’s wonderful, but at the bottom of my heart I always knew that I have the tennis to play against everyone. Maybe not Roger or Rafa or Djokovic, but if I play my best tennis, I’m not scared to play against Paire or against a Top 20 player, because it’s just tennis,” Marcora told ATPTour.com. “We are all guys, tennis players. Everyone has problems or weakest points. We are humans, so these kinds of matches give me a lot of belief because of course you always dream to win matches like this. But then after you win matches like this, you realise that you can do it another time and another time again.”
Ironically, the only Top 100 player Marcora had beaten before this tournament was Paire, whom he defeated in an ATP Challenger Tour event last April when the Frenchman was World No. 69. Paire is now World No. 19.
“It was a totally different situation. It was a Challenger,” Marcora said. “But I like to play against him because I like to play against his backhand. But today it was a different situation in front of the crowd in a stadium like this.”
Marcora on Tuesday became the oldest player to earn his first ATP Tour victory since 34-year-old Jan Mertl did so in Gstaad in 2016. The World No. 174 is already projected to crack his career-high FedEx ATP Ranking of No. 171 next Monday, but his run isn’t over yet. Marcora will face sixth seed James Duckworth for a spot in the semi-finals.
“This is amazing for the moment. Two days ago my first victory in an ATP main draw, today first victory against Top 20, also Top 50,” Marcora said. “Everything is new for me, so at the beginning I was a little bit nervous. But I think I played my best tennis and if I’m able to play my best tennis I can play against everyone. I’m very happy.”
The Italian turned professional when he was 20, which is later than most. Marcora first cracked the Top 500 at 24.
“Tennis for me is not really work. I became a professional very late at the age of 20 after school and one year of university. So I always liked to play tennis and at 20 I said to myself, ‘Why not play professional?’” Marcora said. “I took a lot of time because I started with Futures and then Challengers and then surgery in 2016 with my shoulder, was out for one year, then I came back. I don’t want to become No. 1 in the world or Top 10, of course, but I want to enjoy the moment. I like to play tennis, travel the world and discover what is my limit. That’s why I’m playing.
“I’m 30, but I feel better now than when I was 20.”
The same year he turned professional, Marcora also began studying law. The Italian has taken 12 of what he says are 22 exams he needs to pass to earn a three-year degree to become a ‘consulenza’, or a consultant.
“The last exam I did was two years ago. It’s a bit tough when you’re travelling around the world to do exams. My goal one day is to finish and get the degree,” Marcora said. “If you do the quick degree, three years, you cannot become a lawyer. You can become a consulenza, but you are not a lawyer. Only if you study five years you can be a lawyer. Who knows [what will happen]? At the moment, I am a tennis player, so when I stop playing I will reopen the book and I will [do] the 10 exams I have to do.”
For now, the future looks bright on the tennis court for Marcora, who is hitting his stride. He hopes that will continue in Pune.
“I am not changing my goals after this victory [against Paire]. Of course it’s just part of the process. I wanted to play more tournaments like this because every guy who starts to play tournaments like this dreams to play tournaments like this and not Challengers or Futures,” Marcora said. “Now that I tasted a little bit, I started to taste it at 30, it’s never too late. Now that I’ve tasted these kinds of emotions, I just want to stay in these kinds of situations as much as I can.”
Roberto Bautista Agut is slaying it on second serves to start 2020.
An Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers analysis of the Spaniard’s first month of the season identifies that he is leading the Tour in both second-serve points won and second-serve return points won.
Bautista Agut has played nine matches so far in 2020, going 8-1, including a perfect 6-0 at the inaugural ATP Cup.
Roberto Bautista Agut – January 2020
No. 1: Second-Serve Points Won = 60.66% (111/183)
No. 1: Second-Serve Return Points Won = 63.60% (152/239)
Impressively, Bautista Agut is the only player so far in 2020 to cross the 60 per cent threshold in either of the second-serve metrics.
Bautista Agut reached the third round at the Australian Open, defeating countryman Feliciano Lopez and American Michael Mmoh, before bowing out to Marin Cilic in a five-set thriller.
Performance around second serves was a key to all three of those matches. Combined, Bautista Agut won 57 per cent (57/100) of his second-serve points and 60 per cent (72/121) of his second-serve return points. Bautista Agut finished third highest in second-serve return points won at the Australian Open, and 15th best for second-serve points won.
In the final of the ATP Cup in Sydney, Bautista Agut defeated Dusan Lajovic 7-5, 6-1 to give Spain a 1-0 lead over Serbia. Bautista Agut won an extremely dominant 67 per cent (10/15) of his second-serve points and an even higher 73 per cent (16/22) of his second-serve return points for the match. Nothing mattered more to the final outcome than this specific battleground.
Bautista Agut was also in positive numbers in both metrics in the ATP Cup semi-final against Australia’s Nick Kyrgios, winning 54 per cent (7/13) of his second-serve points and 53 per cent (9/17) of his second-serve return points in the 6-1, 6-4 victory.
The following directional breakdown identifies where Bautista Agut served second serves during the ATP Cup, and his win percentages.
2020 ATP Cup: Bautista Agut Second-Serve Direction & Win Percentages
DEUCE COURT |
2nd Serves Hit |
2nd Serves Won |
Win Percentage |
Wide |
8 |
7 |
88% |
Body |
11 |
5 |
45% |
T |
26 |
19 |
73% |
Total |
45 |
31 |
69% |
AD COURT |
2nd Serves Hit |
2nd Serves Won |
Win Percentage |
Wide |
12 |
6 |
50% |
Body |
11 |
8 |
73% |
T |
11 |
8 |
73% |
Total |
34 |
22 |
65% |
In the Deuce court, Bautista Agut went primarily down the T with 26 second serves, winning 73 per cent (19). In the Ad court, he mixed far more, with 12 wide, 11 body and 11 down the T. Overall, Bautista Agut won 69 per cent (31/45) of his second serves in the Deuce court and 65 per cent (22/34) in the Ad court.
Bautista Agut is currently No. 12 in the FedEx ATP Rankings, with his career-high No. 9 coming last November.
In the next five months to Wimbledon, where he reached his first Grand Slam semi-final last year, he has only 695 points to defend, which represent just 29 per cent (695/2360) of his total ranking points. February through June represents a sweet spot in the Spaniard’s tournament calendar, where another push to a new career-high FedEx ATP Ranking is very likely.