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Britain's Watson claims biggest win in two years

  • Posted: Oct 10, 2019

Britain’s Heather Watson earned her biggest win in more than two years by thrashing China’s world number 22 Wang Qiang in the Tianjin Open second round.

Watson, ranked 103 places below Wang, won 6-3 6-0 against the number two seed in one hour 18 minutes in China.

The 27-year-old had not beaten an opponent ranked as high as Wang since victory over world number 19 Anastasija Sevastova at Wimbledon in 2017.

Victory was only Watson’s second in a WTA tournament this year.

She will play Poland’s Magda Linette in her first WTA quarter-final since reaching the Hobart Open semi-finals in January 2018.

Wang, 27, was ranked as high as 12th earlier this year, after losing in the US Open quarter-finals to Serena Williams.

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Andres Gimeno: 1937-2019

  • Posted: Oct 10, 2019

Andres Gimeno: 1937-2019

Pioneer of Spanish tennis was one of the sport’s nicest guys

Andres Gimeno, who played much of his best tennis on the pro tour of the 1960s and captured the 1972 Roland Garros title, passed away aged 82 on Tuesday after a long illness.

“He was a gentleman on court and had an enormous talent,” said Manuel Santana, his long-time friend, to Agencia EFE. “He was a great friend and a champion in life. Andres, friend of his friends, you’ll be in my life until my last breath. Rest in peace.”

Amiable, polite and pleasant off the court, Gimeno is remembered as one of the nicest guys on tour. At 6’1”, he was lean, lithe and extremely consistent, particularly on his favoured clay courts. He possessed a good serve and a game centred on a powerful forehand, slice backhand, and a willingness to chip and charge to the net. Pancho Segura, one of the leading players of the 1940s and 1950s, helped Gimeno develop his net game and cross-court forehand volley.

Cliff Drysdale, the first president of the Association of Tennis Professionals when it was formed in September 1972, told ATPTour.com, “Andres was always looking for a reason to laugh. To enjoy. He lived on his own terms and you did not need to feed your friendship. It was what it was. After a break on tour, you just took up where you left off. He was easy-going and looking for the next fun thing to happen. I loved Andresito.

“On court, his anticipation was uncanny. He had a simple game plan: chip and charge. I used to goad him in to trying to hit a topspin backhand like Ken Rosewall, but it was impossible. I remember when we used to play golf, he said with a smile, “Irone Sinko Dreesdale idiota” (Five iron, you idiot!)”

Stan Smith, the 1971 US Open and 1972 Wimbledon champion, who is currently the President of the International Tennis Hall of Fame, told ATPTour.com, “He was a gentleman, liked by all and a really nice guy, who I played plenty of big matches against, including at 1972 Roland Garros. He was a strategic player, who sometimes suffered from nerves, but had a good serve and net play. I still smile at the day in Washington, D.C., when Andres was playing when Cliff Richey pulled up a line on the court and 30 nails came flying out. Andres had no idea what to do, let alone anyone else!”

Encouraged by his father, Esteban, who later became one of Spain’s first professional tennis trainers, as a youth Gimeno trained at the Real Club de Tennis Barcelona, venue of the ATP 500-level Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell. By the age of 17, he won the 1954 national doubles championships with Juan Couder and soon the international amateur circuit beckoned.

As a pioneer of Spanish tennis, which is today led by Rafael Nadal, Gimeno’s best year as an amateur came in 1960 when he clinched titles at Monte-Carlo (the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters), Barcelona and also at The Queen’s Club in London (at the Fever-Tree Championships), where he beat Ramesh Krishnan, Rod Laver and Roy Emerson. That year, he also partered Jose Luis Arilla to the Roland Garros doubles final (l. to Emerson/Fraser).

When a vote for Open Tennis failed by only five votes —134 of the 209 votes to reach the two-thirds majority (139) required for a major rule change — at the International Lawn Tennis Federation (ILTF) A.G.M. in the summer of 1960s, to “end the distinction between amateurs and professionals”, several of the leading amateur players were recruited to the pro tour. ATP founder Jack Kramer, who had turned pro himself in 1947 only to lead the tour by 1954, signed up 23-year-old Gimeno to a three-year contract — paying $16,000 per year, plus bonuses and travel expenses — in July 1960.

Gimeno won his first pro-tour match against Alex Olmedo in Deauville, northern France, in August 1960 and by the middle of the decade, the Spaniard was considered to be the third best pro after Laver and Rosewall. Strong off both sides, his forehand return was considered on a par with Laver, Segura and Earl Butch Buchholz in the pro game.

Gimeno played in the London Pro Championships (1927-1967) at Wembley on seven occasions, losing to Laver 6-2, 6-3, 6-4 in the September 1965 final. He was also runner-up in the French Pro Championships of 1962 (l. to Rosewall) and 1967 (l. to Laver) and at the 1967 US Pro Championships (l. to Laver). In August 1967, at the invitation of the All England Club, he was one of eight players that contested the three-day Wimbledon World Lawn Tennis Professional Championships on Centre Court. He lost 6-3, 6-4 in the semi-finals to Laver, but secured the doubles title with Richard Pancho Gonzales over Laver and Fred Stolle 6-4, 14-12.

Closing in on his 32nd birthday upon the advent of Open tennis in April 1968, Gimeno’s peak performance days were limited, but he managed to reached the 1968 US Open doubles final with Arthur Ashe, losing to Bob Lutz and Smith 11-9, 6-1, 7-5 and, four months later, he beat Ken Rosewall en route to the 1969 Australian Open final in Brisbane, where he lost to Laver 6-3, 6-4, 7-5. In 1970, the year he reached the Wimbledon semi-finals (l. to Newcombe), he joined the World Champions Tennis tour as a contract pro from the National Tennis League.

Aged 34 years and 10 months, sixth seed Gimeno became the oldest men’s singles champion at Roland Garros with a 4-6, 6-3, 6-1, 6-1 victory over ninth-seeded Frenchman Patrick Proisy. Only Clark Graebner and Alex Metreveli took Gimeno to five sets during his historic run, which saw him follow in the footsteps of fellow Spaniard Manuel Santana, the 1961 and 1964 champion.

Twelve months later, Gimeno had retired from the sport due to a meniscus injury. He purchased 20,000 square metres of land in 1972, with the intention of forming the Andres Gimeno Tennis Club and by September 1974, Juan Antonio Samaranch, Spain’s then Minister of Culture and Sports (1973-77) and the future President of the International Olympic Committee (1980-2001), was on hand at the inauguration. Soon, the club had 17 clay courts, an outdoor pool and a 1,720 square metre clubhouse. By the end of the decade, there were 25 courts and 1,600 members.

In his playing retirement, Gimeno became a tennis coach, a television commentator, wrote columns for Marca, the Spanish daily sports newspaper, and was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 2009. By the late 2000s, at the height of the global economic crisis, Gimeno was forced to sell property. In 2011, Nadal, David Ferrer, Tommy Robredo, Marcel Granollers, Albert Montanes, Oscar Hernandez and former WTA World No. 1 Arantxa Sanchez Vicario took part in an exhibition at the Palau Blaugrana to raise funds.

Gimeno, who fought hard in his two-year battle with pancreatic cancer, is survived by his wife, Cristina, who he married in 1962. The couple had thee children, Alejo, Andres Jr. and Cristina.

Andres Gimeno Tolaguera, tennis player and commentator, born 3 August 1937; died 9 October 2019.

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Preview: Federer & Goffin Renew Their Rivalry In Shanghai

  • Posted: Oct 10, 2019

Preview: Federer & Goffin Renew Their Rivalry In Shanghai

Djokovic faces Isner in third-round action on Thursday

Second-seeded Swiss Roger Federer continues his quest for a third Rolex Shanghai Masters title against a familiar foe in No. 13 seed David Goffin of Belgium. All third-round matches will take place in a stacked schedule featuring all of the top eight seeds in action, including top seed and defending champion Novak Djokovic.

Federer leads their FedEx ATP Head2Head series 9-1 and won both of their matches this year at the US Open and the Halle final. With a 22-5 record at this event, he also has plenty of positive memories to draw from. Federer had the fans firmly in his corner during his second-round win on Tuesday against Spaniard Albert Ramos-Vinolas and believes their support can help fuel him to another title run.

”The fans get together [and] really make a conscious effort to show me how excited and happy they are. It means a lot to me,” Federer said at his pre-tournament press conference on Sunday. “You don’t get fans grouping together like this anywhere else in the world.”

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Goffin is enjoying a career resurgence in the second half of this year that has pushed him back inside the Top 15 of the ATP Rankings. He’s gone 22-9 since the start of the grass-court season, with highlights including his first ATP Masters 1000 final in Cincinnati (l. to Gasquet), a runner-up finish in Halle (l. to Federer) and his first Wimbledon quarter-final.

However, the Belgian endured one of the most lopsided losses of his career to Federer at the US Open, winning just four games in a 79-minute defeat. Although Goffin beat him at the 2017 Nitto ATP Finals and has the tools to defeat anyone when he’s playing well, he isn’t shy to acknowledge the challenges that Federer poses.

”He’s playing so fast. He’s serving on the line all the time. You don’t have a lot of rhythm. You don’t have a lot of rallies,” Goffin said after their match in New York. “As soon as you have a chance, you miss the forehand or you miss the backhand or an easy pass. Then it gives him a lot of confidence for the next service game. He doesn’t give you the time to play.”

Another long-standing rivalry will get a new chapter when Djokovic meets big-serving American John Isner, the No. 16 seed. The Serbian holds a convincing 9-2 lead in their FedEx ATP Head2Head rivalry and has won their past five matches, but both of Isner’s victories came on hard courts.

Djokovic is filed with confidence after taking the title last week in Tokyo (d. Millman) and his second-round win over #NextGenATP Canadian Denis Shapovalov made it clear that he’s eager for a fifth title in Shanghai. Meanwhile, Isner’s potent serve has been in top form this week and he’s two big serves away from reaching 1,000 aces in a season for the seventh time in his career.

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Third-seeded Russian Daniil Medvedev looks to continue his winning ways against Canadian qualifier Vasek Pospisil. Medvedev has earned 55 victories this season, more than any other player on tour, and has reached the final or won his past five events. Fourth-seeded Dominic Thiem aims to continue riding the momentum from last week’s triumph in Beijing (d. Tsitsipas) when he meets No. 15 seed Nikoloz Basilashvili of Georgia.

Other notable matches on Thursday include fifth-seeded German Alexander Zverev taking on Russian Andrey Rublev and sixth-seeded #NextGenATP Greek Stefanos Tsitsipas squaring off with Pole Hubert Hurkacz.

SCHEDULE – THURSDAY 10 OCTOBER 2019
CENTRE COURT 1 start 12:30 pm
[3] Daniil Medvedev (RUS) vs [Q] Vasek Pospisil (CAN)
[1] Novak Djokovic (SRB) vs [16] John Isner (USA)
Not Before 6:30 pm
[2] Roger Federer vs [13] David Goffin (BEL)
[5] Alexander Zverev (GER) vs Andrey Rublev (RUS)

SHOW COURT 3 start 12:30 pm
[7] Karen Khachanov (RUS) vs [10] Fabio Fognini
[8] Roberto Bautista Agut vs [11] Matteo Berrettini (ITA)
[6] Stefanos Tsitsipas vs Hubert Hurkacz (POL)
Not Before 5:30 pm
[4] Dominic Thiem (AUT) vs [15] Nikoloz Basilashvili (GEO)

View The Remainder Of Thursday’s Schedule

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Kevin & Kelsey Anderson Welcome Baby Daughter Keira

  • Posted: Oct 09, 2019

Kevin & Kelsey Anderson Welcome Baby Daughter Keira

Keira O’Neal Anderson born 27 September

Kevin Anderson and wife Kelsey have welcomed a new addition to their family, a baby girl Keira. Anderson announced the birth on social media today, sharing, “We are so happy to say that Keira O’Neal Anderson joined us on Sept 27th. @KelseyOAnderson, you are amazing. I love you.”

Congratulatory messages rolled in from the tennis community, with Bob Bryan, Pierre-Hugues Herbert, Sergiy Stakhovsky, Magnus Norman, Max Mirnyi, Billie Jean King, Judy Murray and ATP tournaments among those wishing the Andersons well.

Anderson, who reached a career-high ATP Ranking of No. 5 following a runner-up finish at Wimbledon in 2018, announced earlier in September that he had undergone knee surgery and would be sidelined the remainder of 2019. He won the Pune title in the opening week of the season.

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Read & Watch: After Mishap, Zverev Retrieves Racquet From Fourth Row

  • Posted: Oct 09, 2019

Read & Watch: After Mishap, Zverev Retrieves Racquet From Fourth Row

German will face Rublev for place in Shanghai QF

It was just like any other point between Alexander Zverev and Jeremy Chardy on Wednesday at the Rolex Shanghai Masters, until Zverev’s racquet flew out of his hands.

Chardy was serving down 1/4 in the second-set tie-break, when Zverev, on the fourth shot of the rally, hit a forehand and accidentally launched his racquet into the stands. The German was immediately surprised and apologetic about his racquet toss, which landed in an empty seat and, thankfully, did not hurt anyone.

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The fifth seed retrieved his most important piece of equipment and advanced 7-6(13), 7-6(3). Zverev, who’s currently in eighth place in the ATP Race To London, will next meet Russian Andrey Rublev for a place in the Shanghai quarter-finals.

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Coco Gauff to break into top 100 after reaching first WTA quarter-final

  • Posted: Oct 09, 2019

American teenager Coco Gauff is set to break into the world’s top 100 for the first time after reaching her maiden WTA Tour quarter-final.

The 15-year-old, who made a memorable run to the Wimbledon last 16 in July, reached the Linz Open last eight when opponent Kateryna Kozlova retired.

Gauff has provisionally climbed to 94th in the rankings, closer to automatic qualification for the Australian Open.

She lost in Linz qualifying but entered the main draw as a lucky loser.

Following Greek Maria Sakkari’s withdrawal, Gauff beat Swiss Stefanie Vogele on Tuesday and progressed again when Ukrainian Kozlova quit while trailing 6-4 4-6 0-2.

Gauff, who does not turn 16 until March, is the youngest player to reach a WTA quarter-final since Bulgarian Sesil Karatantcheva in January 2005.

The Austrian tournament is Gauff’s first appearance since suffering a comprehensive defeat, which left her in tears, by Naomi Osaka at the US Open last month.

Gauff became the youngest player in the Open era to reach the Wimbledon main draw and was given a wildcard to play at her home Grand Slam in New York.

Although most would expect her to receive a wildcard for the Australian Open, she is on course to qualify automatically with the top 100-ranked players going straight into the main draw in Melbourne.

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Thiem Posts Career-Best Result In Shanghai

  • Posted: Oct 09, 2019

Thiem Posts Career-Best Result In Shanghai

Thiem to next face Basilashvili

Dominic Thiem keeps building momentum ahead of his fourth appearance at the Nitto ATP Finals in London.

Last week’s China Open champion (d. Tsitsipas) won his sixth consecutive match on Wednesday, beating Spain’s Pablo Carreno Busta 7-6(3), 6-3 to make the third round at the Rolex Shanghai Masters for the first time.

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The Austrian had fallen in the second round of the ATP Masters 1000 event the past four years, but the World No. 5 fought off inspired tennis from the Chengdu Open champion to advance.

Carreno Busta had three set points on Thiem’s serve at 4-5, including two consecutively from 15/40. But the Austrian tightened his game to hold and carried the momentum into the tie-break.

In the second set, Thiem secured the lone break of the match during the fifth game when Carreno Busta lifted a backhand long off a skidding backhand slice from Thiem, who finished with 36 winners to 20 unforced errors.

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Thiem qualified for the Nitto ATP Finals, to be held 10-17 November at The O2 in London, by reaching the China Open final in Beijing last week. He will face Georgian Nikoloz Basilashvili for a place in the Shanghai quarter-finals. Basilashvili beat Benoit Paire on Tuesday.

The three-time ATP 500 titlist beat Thiem during their only FedEx ATP Head2Head matchup at the 2017 Sofia Open.

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Impressive Djokovic sees off Shapovalov in Shanghai

  • Posted: Oct 09, 2019

World number one Novak Djokovic continued his fine form with a straight-set win over Canadian Denis Shapovalov in the Shanghai Masters.

Serbia’s 16-time Grand Slam champion, who won the Japan Open last week without dropping a set, cruised to a 6-3 6-3 second-round victory.

Defending champion Djokovic, 32, will play American John Isner next.

Isner, 34, hit 19 aces and lost only six points on his first serve in a 7-5 6-3 win over France’s Lucas Pouille.

Greek sixth seed Stefanos Tsitsipas, 21, edged out Canadian 19-year-old Felix-Auger Aliassime in a match between two of the most exciting talents on the men’s tour.

Tsitsipas, who had never beaten his 19-year-old opponent, even on the junior circuit, had to be patient before securing a 7-6 (7-3) 7-6 (7-3) win.

Victory moved Tsitsipas closer to qualifying for the ATP Finals in London next month, while German fifth seed Alexander Zverev – another still hoping to qualify and have the chance to defend his title – also needed two tie-breaks to overcome French veteran Jeremy Chardy in a 7-6 (15-13) 7-6 (7-3) win.

Russian seventh seed Karen Khachanov, Spanish eighth seed Roberto Bautista Agut, Italian 11th seed Matteo Berrettini and Belgian 13th seed David Goffin progressed to boost their chances of reaching the season-ending finals.

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Read & Watch: Djokovic Stays Unbeaten Against Shapo

  • Posted: Oct 09, 2019

Read & Watch: Djokovic Stays Unbeaten Against Shapo

Serbian improves to 3-0 against 20-year-old left-hander

Novak Djokovic began his title defence at the Rolex Shanghai Masters by pushing his set winning streak in Asia to 22 on Wednesday. The World No. 1 and top seed rolled past #NextGenATP Canadian Denis Shapovalov 6-3, 6-3 at the ATP Masters 1000 event.

“It’s nice to be back. And also, it feels very good to play as well as I did today,” Djokovic said. “I knew that Denis is very dangerous player. If he has time, if he’s feeling the ball well, it can be a tough match.

“He was serving really well, high percentage also first serves, and just really difficult to return in the first set, so it took me a little bit of time to really adjust, start reading his serve a little bit better.

“But I thought I served really well. I used angles. I was very solid from back of the court. I had no problems with the shoulder pain… So no concerns there. Everything is feeling and looking good.”

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Djokovic, locked in as ever, upped the pressure at 4-3 in the opener with Shapovalov serving. The Serbian mixed up the pace against the 20-year-old and brought him forward, breaking when a Shapovalov backhand approach clipped the net and landed out.

The pressure was amplified in the second, and a loose service game from Shapovalov at 2-2 all but sealed it for the 33-time Masters 1000 titlist. Djokovic won all 10 sets he played last year in Shanghai and did the same last week when he won the Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships in Tokyo.

“Because of the history that I had in this tournament and in general in the Asian Swing and lots of success and lots of matches won in my career, I actually feel less pressure because I’m more confident that I can perform at my best,” Djokovic said.

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The Serbian will face 16th seed John Isner for a place in the quarter-finals. Isner hit 19 aces and never faced a break point during a 7-5, 6-3 dismissal of Australian Open semi-finalist Lucas Pouille.

Djokovic is looking to make up ground in the battle for year-end No. 1 against Spain’s Rafael Nadal in Shanghai. The Serbian added 90 points with the second-round win to push his ATP Race To London tally to 7,855. But he still trails Nadal (9,225 points), who is recovering from a left hand injury, by 1,370 points.

 

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Cabal & Farah Clinch Year-End No. 1 ATP Doubles Team Ranking

  • Posted: Oct 09, 2019

Cabal & Farah Clinch Year-End No. 1 ATP Doubles Team Ranking

First South American team to finish in top spot since 1986

Colombians Juan Sebastian Cabal and Robert Farah have clinched the year-end No. 1 ATP Doubles Team Ranking for the first time as a result of beating Americans John Isner and Sam Querrey on Wednesday at the Rolex Shanghai Masters.

They are the second all-South American team to finish year-end No. 1 (in the history of the ATP Doubles Team Rankings since 1984), following in the footsteps of Chile’s Hans Gildemeister and Andres Gomez of Ecuador in 1986. Brazil’s Bruno Soares was the 2016 year-end No. 1 with Jamie Murray and Soares’ compatriot, Marcelo Melo, finished in top spot with Lukasz Kubot in 2017.

“It’s been amazing and a crazy run this year,” said Cabal. “It’s unreal, we’re really happy and proud about what we have achieved. We have kept things simple and kept the hunger to achieve this amazing achievement.”

Farah said: “It is a great achievement and I will be very happy and honoured to receive the year-end No. 1 doubles trophy. I’ve been dreaming about this forever, so to make it a reality is pretty cool.”

Cabal/Farah has been the standout team of the 2019 ATP Tour season, winning five doubles titles from seven finals. They captured their first Grand Slam championship crown at The Championships, with a five-hour victory over Nicolas Mahut and Edouard Roger-Vasselin in the Wimbledon final, which saw them rise to joint No. 1 in the ATP Rankings on 15 July 2019. Two months later, the pair clinched their second major trophy at the US Open (d. Granollers/Zeballos).

The players also captured the Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell title (d. Murray/Soares) in April, successfully defended the Internazionali BNL d’Italia in Rome (d. Klaasen/Venus) in May, which represented their second ATP Masters 1000 trophy, and won the Nature Valley International in Eastbourne (d. Gonzalez/Zeballos) in June. Cabal and Farah additionally finished runners-up at the Sydney International in January (l. to Murray/Soares) and the Western & Southern Open at Cincinnati (l. to Dodig/Polasek) in August.

Chris Kermode, ATP Executive Chairman & President, said: “The way that Cabal and Farah have stamped their authority on the doubles game this year has been incredibly impressive. To seal the year-end No.1 ranking at this stage in the season is a fitting recognition of the level of success that they’ve had. To finish the season as No.1 is the ultimate achievement in our sport, and they are truly deserving of their position at the top of the game.”

Cabal, 33, and 32-year-old Farah were the first pair to qualify for the 2019 Nitto ATP Finals, to be held at The O2 in London from 10-17 November, where they will be bidding to win the prestigious season-ending event for the first time. The Colombian duo will be presented with the year-end No.1 trophy at a special on-court ceremony at The O2.

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