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Djokovic, Federer Headline Thursday Action In Cincinnati; View Schedule

  • Posted: Aug 15, 2019

Djokovic, Federer Headline Thursday Action In Cincinnati; View Schedule

Round of 16 features four qualifiers

Defending champion Novak Djokovic and seven-time titlist Roger Federer respectively take on qualifiers Pablo Carreno Busta and Andrey Rublev on Round of 16 day at the Western & Southern Open in Cincinnati. Djokovic takes a 2-0 FedEx Head2Head record into his match against former World No. 10 Carreno Busta, while Federer faces 21-year-old Rublev for the first time.

In total, four qualifiers — Carreno Busta, Rublev, Miomir Kecmanovic and Yoshihito Nishioka — are through to the Round of 16 at an ATP Masters 1000 event for the third time in series history (since 1990).

You May Also Like: Federer, Djokovic & Wawrinka Reveal Their Favourite Practice Partners

Opportunities await the players in the bottom half of the draw. Following the exits of Kei Nishikori and Alexander Zverev on Wednesday, only two seeds remain: No. 11 Roberto Bautista Agut and No. 16 David Goffin. Bautista Agut, along with Frenchman Richard Gasquet, are also the only two players remaining in the bottom half who have reached an ATP Masters 1000 final.

Bautista Agut will face Kecmanovic, who’s trying to reach his second Masters 1000 quarter-final of the season (Indian Wells), and Gasquet will meet Argentina’s Diego Schwartzman in the first match of the day on Centre Court.

On the top half, top-ranked Russian Daniil Medvedev, last week’s Coupe Rogers finalist (l. to Nadal), will try to reach back-to-back Masters 1000 quarter-finals against Germany’s Jan-Lennard Struff, who upset No. 7 Stefanos Tsitsipas on Wednesday. Struff, No. 36 in the ATP Rankings, is looking to make his first Masters 1000 quarter-final.

See Where To Watch The Western & Southern Open

SCHEDULE – THURSDAY, 15 AUGUST 2019

CENTER COURT start 11:00 am
D. Schwartzman (ARG) vs [PR] R. Gasquet (FRA) 
Not Before 1:00 pm
WTA match
[3] R. Federer (SUI) vs [Q] A. Rublev (RUS) 
Not Before 7:00 pm
[1] N. Djokovic (SRB) vs [Q] P. Carreno Busta (ESP) 
Not Before 9:00 pm
WTA match

GRANDSTAND start 11:00 am
WTA match
Not Before 1:00 pm
[9] D. Medvedev (RUS) vs J. Struff (GER) 
[Q] M. Kecmanovic (SRB) vs [11] R. Bautista Agut (ESP) 
L. Pouille (FRA) vs [8] K. Khachanov (RUS) 
Not Before 7:00 pm
WTA match

More From #CincyTennis
See Where To Watch The Western & Southern Open
* Can You Pass Our Quiz?
* Kecmanovic Notches First Top 10 Win
* Struff Hangs Tough To Upset Tsitsipas
* Rublev Dispatches Wawrinka, Now For Federer
* Nishioka Fulfills Dream, Beats Nishikori

STADIUM 3 start 11:00 am
[Q] Y. Nishioka (JPN) vs A. de Minaur (AUS) 
[16] D. Goffin (BEL) vs A. Mannarino (FRA) 
2 WTA matches
[WC] R. Harrison (USA) / J. Sock (USA) vs [PR] F. Lopez (ESP) / A. Murray (GBR) 

COURT 4 start 12:00 
C. Garin (CHI) / B. Paire (FRA) vs [2] L. Kubot (POL) / M. Melo (BRA) 
After Suitable Rest – D. Schwartzman (ARG) / H. Zeballos (ARG) vs [7] H. Kontinen (FIN) / J. Peers (AUS) 
After Suitable Rest – M. Demoliner (BRA) / D. Medvedev (RUS) vs [6] M. Pavic (CRO) / B. Soares (BRA) 
Not Before 5:00 pm
[1] J. Cabal (COL) / R. Farah (COL) vs [Alt] R. Bopanna (IND) / D. Shapovalov (CAN)

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Murray/Skupski March On In Cincinnati

  • Posted: Aug 15, 2019

Murray/Skupski March On In Cincinnati

Klaasen/Venus advance on Wednesday

Jamie Murray and Neal Skupski scored the doubles upset of the day on Wednesday at the Western & Southern Open, breaking serve five times to reach the quarter-finals over fifth seeds Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut 6-3, 6-3.

See where to watch the Western & Southern Open

Third seeds Raven Klaasen and Michael Venus also advanced to the last eight by defeating Austin Krajicek and Edouard Roger-Vasselin 6-4, 6-4. Venus reached the semi-finals at this event in 2017 (w/Harrison).

In first-round doubles action, Marcelo Demoliner and Daniil Medvedev defeated Coupe Rogers finalists Robin Haase and Wesley Koolhof 7-5, 1-6, 10-6. Demoliner/Medvedev will next play sixth seeds Mate Pavic and Bruno Soares. Rohan Bopanna and Denis Shapovalov beat Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury 7-6(6), 7-5, setting up a meeting with top seeds Juan Sebastian Cabal and Robert Farah.

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Kecmanovic, After 20 Zverev Double Faults, Notches First Top 10 Win

  • Posted: Aug 15, 2019

Kecmanovic, After 20 Zverev Double Faults, Notches First Top 10 Win

Serbian will face Tiafoe or RBA in third round

#NextGenATP Serbian Miomir Kecmanovic kept World No. 6 Alexander Zverev winless at the Western & Southern Open in Cincinnati, advancing 6-7(4), 6-2, 6-4 to earn his first Top 10 win on Wednesday.

The 19-year-old Serbian continued his breakout season on the ATP Tour, benefitting from 20 double faults – a personal career-high – from the German, who fell to 0-5 at the season’s seventh ATP Masters 1000 event.

More From #CincyTennis
Secrets To Kecmanovic’s 2019 Rise
Nishioka Ready For The Spotlight After Beating ‘Hero’ Nishikori
Federer, Wawrinka, Djokovic Reveal Favourite Practice Partners
Struff Hangs Tough To Upset Tsitsipas In Cincy
Struff Has An Opinion, And Because Of That, Is Having His Best Season Yet

Kecmanovic reached his first Masters 1000 quarter-final at the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells and made his maiden ATP Tour final in June at the grass-court Turkish Airlines Open Antalya (l. to Sonego). The Serbian, No. 58 in the ATP Rankings, is expected to crack the Top 50 on Monday when the new standings are released.

“It means a lot because I also broke into the Top 50 today. So it’s a really special moment for me. I’m really happy that I was able to play the way I did. I worked a lot, I practised a lot. To see everything come together and happen, it’s really special,” Kecmanovic said. “I definitely just tried to go for everything. As I said, I had nothing to lose, really. He was the favourite, and it obviously helped me that he didn’t serve as well as he does usually.

“I tried to stay calm. I tried to just use my chances and thankfully it paid off.”

Kecmanovic bolstered his chances of qualifying for the Next Gen ATP Finals in Milan as well. The teenager currently holds the seventh and final qualification spot in the ATP Race To Milan. Eight players will compete at the 21-and-under event, to be held 5-9 November in Milan, with the eighth position reserved for an Italian wild card.

Follow the ATP Race To Milan

He will next meet the winner between #NextGenATP American Frances Tiafoe and 11th seed Roberto Bautista Agut, who made his first Grand Slam semi-final last month at Wimbledon.

In other action, Frenchman Richard Gasquet, who beat former World No. 1 Andy Murray on Monday, remained perfect in Cincy, dismissing Argentina’s Federico Delbonis in straight sets 7-5, 7-6(1). The 33-year-old Gasquet will next meet another Argentine in Diego Schwartzman, who saved all five break points and beat Moldova’s Radu Albot 6-4, 6-2.

Did You Know?
Four qualifiers, including Kecmanovic, are in the Round of 16 at an ATP Masters 1000 event for only the third time in series history (since 1990). The other three qualifiers are Spain’s Pablo Carreno Busta, Japan’s Yoshihito Nishioka and Russian Andrey Rublev. The other two times were at 2005 Hamburg and 2001 Monte-Carlo.

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Nishioka Ready For The Spotlight After Beating 'Hero' Nishikori

  • Posted: Aug 14, 2019

Nishioka Ready For The Spotlight After Beating ‘Hero’ Nishikori

Qualifier beats Nishikori on Wednesday in Cincinnati

Kei Nishikori has achieved celebrity status in Japan with his career on the ATP Tour. But after scoring his first Top 10 win by defeating the man he described as his “hero” on Wednesday at the Western & Southern Open, Yoshihito Nishioka is ready for his own closeup.

“I want to check the morning news tomorrow to see what they’re going to say. Hopefully many spotlight on me,” said Nishioka, cracking a smile. “In Japanese tennis, the only famous players are Kei and Naomi [Osaka]. I want to change that. Hopefully [fans] are going to maybe watch me after the match today.”

In a battle between the two highest-ranked Japanese players on the ATP Tour, it was Nishioka who played like a seasoned veteran. He racked up 12 break points and converted three, hammered serves that clocked in at more than 120 miles per hour and came up with clutch shots at crucial moments.

You May Also Like: Nishikori Leads Strong Japanese Force On ATP World Tour

The 23-year-old Nishioka may not have looked nervous, but that didn’t reflect how he felt. He admitted to intense nerves and the dream of facing his idol led to a sleepless night before the match.

“I was so excited to play with him because he’s the hero of Japanese tennis. I couldn’t sleep yesterday,” said Nishioka. “I was watching him when I was a junior and learning many things from him. I just was trying my best against my hero. I’m very happy today, but most happy about playing with him.” 

Nishikori isn’t a total stranger to him, though. Nishioka used to train during his junior days at the IMG Academy in Florida, where Nishikori is still based, and shared the court with him for practice sessions.

“We played with each other many times in practice. The first time was maybe six or seven years ago. But it’s a very different feeling playing a match,” said Nishioka. “I was always nervous practising with him, but even more nervous today.”

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With the pressure of facing his hero off the table, Nishioka can get the night of rest he’ll need as he next faces #NextGenATP Aussie Alex de Minaur. Having come through qualifying this week, their showdown will be Nishioka’s fifth match in six days. But with a chance to reach his first ATP Masters 1000 quarter-final, he’s ready to make another push.

“Right now I’m feeling very good,” said Nishioka. “I got the chance to go as far as I can. I want a higher [ATP Ranking]. My body’s a little bit tired, but I can’t say that. I’ll just try my best.”

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Vancouver Receives 2018 'Challenger Of The Year' Award

  • Posted: Aug 14, 2019

Vancouver Receives 2018 ‘Challenger Of The Year’ Award

The Odlum Brown VanOpen celebrates in front of the home fans in Vancouver

Canada has never had it so good. The months of July and August are a grand celebration of tennis, as the summer kicks into high gear with a bevy of professional tournaments.

Consecutive ATP Challenger Tour stops in Winnipeg, Gatineau and Granby are followed by the Rogers Cup – an ATP Masters 1000 event – and it all culminates with the award-winning Odlum Brown VanOpen in Vancouver. These tournaments have become a breeding ground for Canadian talent and Vancouver is fast gaining the recognition it deserves as one of the elite events on the pro scene.

On Tuesday, all eyes were on the Challenger 100 event as it was honoured for a second straight year. It is not an easy feat to earn ‘Tournament of the Year’ honours on the circuit. It takes years of hard work, dedication and commitment to growing the game and providing a world-class experience for the players and fans.

That said, to take home the award on multiple occasions is an extraordinary accomplishment. The Odlum Brown VanOpen did just that in 2017 and 2018, culminating with a special celebration on Tuesday evening at Hollyburn Country Club.

In front of a packed crowd on Center Court, ahead of the Day 2 night session, the tournament was presented with the 2018 Challenger of the Year award. Tournament director and former champion Rik de Voest and tournament chair Carlota Lee received the crystal trophy.

Vancouver

“In early 2005, [club CEO] Ed Laughlin walked into a senior leadership meeting and announced that Hollyburn would be hosting a professional tennis event on the ATP Challenger Tour,” De Voest said during the ceremony. “Little did anyone realize just how many lives this tournament would impact, including my own.

“We are honoured and humbled to be receiving this award from the ATP for the second year in a row. It’s a testament to our dream of bringing professional tennis to Vancouver. And finally, to the tenacity and hard work of Carlota Lee, who executes ideas at a whole other level.

“Carlota and I are so proud of the example this tournament sets in the tennis world and to future tennis generations. For the last 17 years, this tournament has been bringing people together in a meaningful way that has resulted in many memorable moments and life-changing stories.”

Vancouver

Thanasi Kokkinakis and Ruben Bemelmans were also on court during the ceremony. Bemelmans is making his seventh straight appearance in Vancouver, while Kokkinakis returned for a third season. It’s easy to see why players keep coming back year after year. Surrounded by the Howe Sound and Coast Mountains, players visiting Hollyburn have not only been treated to a world-class and opulent facility, but a relaxing retreat during the hectic summer hard-court season.

And perhaps the tournament’s greatest feature is the housing it offers its players. Traveling throughout the season can take its toll both physically and emotionally. A slice of home life on the road is always welcomed and with Hollyburn members opening their doors – and fast cars – players are treated to some of the finest hospitality the tour has to offer. Million-dollar mansions are the norm at this Challenger stop and both Kokkinakis and Bemelmans made sure to acknowledge their host families during the award presentation.

Watch their speeches below…

The Challenger Awards are a recognition of excellence, selected by players from the global Challenger Tour of 160 events staged in 40 different countries. In its 14th edition, the Odlum Brown VanOpen was once again recognised as being outstanding in terms of facilities, organisation, imagination, promotion and player welcome.

The commitment and hard work of the tournament team, the support of the municipality, local authorities, sponsors, the press and the public produced a wonderful week of professional tennis. Moreover, the tournament joined the NECKARCUP in Heilbronn, Sparkassen Open in Braunschweig, Germany, as well as the former Ethias Trophy in Mons, Belgium in winning the award on multiple occasions.

In 2018, three tournaments were recognised with the Challenger of the Year award, with Vancouver accompanying Heilbronn and the Puerto Vallarta Open in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico in the winners’ circle.

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Struff Has An Opinion, And Is Having His Best Season

  • Posted: Aug 14, 2019

Struff Has An Opinion, And Is Having His Best Season

German upset Stefanos Tsitsipas on Wednesday in Cincinnati

Editor’s Note: This story was originally published 2 June 2019.

To many, it might seem like a forgettable moment, a request typical of a player to a coach. But to coach Carsten Arriens, what Jan-Lennard Struff said to him during his first-round match at Roland Garros explains everything about why his player has a chance to upset No. 1 Novak Djokovic on Monday and reach the Roland Garros quarter-finals.

Struff was down 0-3 against #NextGenATP Canadian Denis Shapovalov. But more importantly, the German couldn’t see his coach during changeovers.

Arriens and Struff’s physio, Uwe Liedtke, were seated in a corner behind a baseline, and, during sitdowns, the chair umpire was blocking Struff’s view of them.

For years, Arriens had asked Struff if he minded where he sat. “Oh, no. I don’t care,” the soft-spoken Struff would say, waving off the question.

But lately, in between and away from the tramlines, Struff has been speaking up more often and showing that he’s not OK just going along with the flow – a pattern that’s extended to his tennis.

After the first changeover, Struff rose from his chair, walked over to his coach and, before play resumed, instructed Arriens in the way only a self-described “quiet guy, enjoying life” could.

“Hey,” Struff said, “Can you sit somewhere else, please?”

To Arriens, it was a moment to celebrate. “Yes! Yes!” he said, pumping his fist as he recalled the story in the players’ restaurant beneath Court Philippe Chatrier.

Struff was taking control of the situation, which is why his coach says he’s into the fourth round of a Grand Slam for the first time and, as Arriens predicted last December, is having the best season of his career at 29 years old.

“He’s becoming a person with an opinion and telling the opinion and I can see that on the court,” Arriens told ATPTour.com.

You May Also Like: Five Things To Know About Struff

Struff had reached two Grand Slam third rounds (2018 Wimbledon, 2018 US Open) before making the Round of 16 this fortnight, beating 17th seed Shapovalov, Delray Beach champion Radu Albot and 13th seed Borna Coric. He’ll face 2016 champion Djokovic for a place in his first Grand Slam quarter-final.

From 2014-2018, Struff went 2-13 against Top 10 opponents. But this year, he’s 3-2, including victories earlier this clay-court season against Stefanos Tsitsipas and Marin Cilic.

“I like the game on clay. You have a little bit more time. I have hard groundstrokes, and I have time to set them up,” Struff told ATPTour.com.

But the German, despite growing up on the surface, never had the results he’s had this year, which, Arriens said, is because he’s never been as intentional as he is now.

In the past four years, it didn’t matter the topic, Struff would often waffle or defer to his natural politeness.

Practising? He’d groove the ball nice and easy down the middle so the other player could have a good session. Hungry? “Oh, you choose the restaurant, you choose the restaurant,” Struff would say. If he played against fellow Germans, Arriens said, Struff always felt like he needed to be friendly while playing.

Arriens would encourage him to be more decisive. He’d warn him that not choosing a restaurant might also lead to not following his forehand to the net.

Listen, this is exactly the pattern on the court when you don’t know what to do and you’re just following whatever,” Arriens remembers telling him. “I want you to be consciously following a pattern on the court and a game plan, but in order to do that, you have to decide and you have to choose.”

More From #RG19:
Tsitsipas Reflects On Five-Hour Fourth-Round Loss To Wawrinka
After Five Hours, Wawrinka Escapes Tsitsipas To Make QF
Fognini On Fatherhood & Fantastic Form

Struff would waver during matches: Sometimes he’d hang back, other times he’d go forward. But lately, and especially the past eight months, Struff has been intentional on the court.

He’s attacking – at Roland Garros, he’s gone to net 129 times, winning 66 per cent of those attempts (86/129) – and he’s questioning Arriens every day about how they work.

Before he was just following, not asking. Now it’s, ‘Why do we do this exercise, and what is it for? We should do it this way,’” Arriens said.

Struff gives his input on match game plans as well. “Maybe we should do 1, 2 and 4 and not 3,” Arriens said. “When it’s clear, he’s coming back to it all the time. If he’s losing [the plan] for a game or two, he’s coming back to it.”

The plan has been working: come forward as often as possible, stay out of the corners, and keep the points short. Let his emotions, and the crowd, help him as well.

In the first game of Struff’s third-round match against Coric, which the German won 4-6, 6-1, 4-6, 7-6(1), 11-9, Struff was following his plan to be more vocal, shouting, “Come on!” and clenching his fist.

Infosys powers real-time insights for every point

Two years ago, three years ago, he wouldn’t do that once in a match,” Arriens said. “He’s 29, but he’s still developing a lot.”

His peers have noticed. Shapovalov, who went 1-1 against Struff during the clay-court season, called him a “dark horse”.

He’s a guy you don’t want to see in the draw,” Shapovalov, No. 24 in the ATP Rankings, said of Struff, No. 45.

Coric, after his four-hour and 22-minute match with the German, added: “He’s not afraid.”

The praise matters to Struff, but not as much as a win against Djokovic and a place in the last eight would.

With the quotes from Shapo I realise, OK, they have a high opinion of me as well,” Struff told ATPTour.com. “It feels good to hear that but I try to work on that, to get my ranking higher and higher so that the opinion gets even better.”

If Struff shocks Djokovic, the world’s opinion – and his coach’s of him – would jump to its highest level yet, and his coach would, no question, have another moment to celebrate.

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Rublev Dispatches Of Wawrinka, Now For Federer

  • Posted: Aug 14, 2019

Rublev Dispatches Of Wawrinka, Now For Federer

Russian to face the World No. 3 for the first time

Russian Andrey Rublev is slowly making his way back into the form that saw him reach the US Open quarter-finals two years ago and back-to-back Next Gen ATP Finals appearances in Milan.

The 21-year-old Rublev saved all five break points against World No. 23 Stan Wawrinka on Wednesday to advance 6-4, 6-4 and reach the third round of the Western & Southern Open in Cincinnati. It’s the third time Rublev has made the third round at an ATP Masters 1000 event (Indian Wells, Miami) this year and comes on the heels of his best tournament of the season, the Hamburg European Open last month.

“I’m just trying to work every day, trying to do my best every day,” Rublev said.

More From #CincyTennis
Nishioka Fulfulls Dream, Earns First Top 10 Win
Why Federer Felt Bad In Juniors
Djokovic Reveals How Losses Fueled His Wins
Struff Hangs Tough To Upset Tsitsipas

There, Rublev gained his first Top 5 win (1-6) against No. 4 Dominic Thiem, made his first ATP Tour final since January 2018 (Doha, l. to Monfils) and his first ATP 500 final. The Russian fell to Georgian Nikoloz Basilashvili in the final but avenged that loss in his Cincinnati opener before breezing past Wawrinka, who landed only 48 per cent of his first serves.

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Rublev has long been one to watch on the ATP Tour. He reached the final of 2017 Next Gen ATP Finals (l. to Chung) and made the semi-finals in Milan in 2018. But a lower back stress fracture forced him to miss three months last season and a wrist injury kept him out of Roland Garros and the start of the grass-court season this year.

Rublev will next meet seven-time Cincy champion Roger Federer in their first FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting. Federer beat Juan Ignacio Londero 6-3, 6-4 on Tuesday night. The Swiss is playing in his first tournament since falling to Novak Djokovic in the Wimbledon final on 14 July.

“I always wanted to meet him,” Rublev said of playing Federer. “Finally, we meet and we’ll see tomorrow. I will do my best. I will fight until the end.”

Watch Rublev’s Off-season Training

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Murray brothers could meet in men's doubles quarter-finals in Cincinnati

  • Posted: Aug 14, 2019

Jamie Murray could face brother Andy in the men’s doubles quarter-finals at the Cincinnati Masters after he and Neal Skupski defeated French pair Nicolas Mahut and Pierre-Hugues Herbert.

British duo Murray and Skupski beat the fifth-seeded Australian Open champions 6-3 6-3 in the second-round match.

Andy and Feliciano Lopez must defeat Americans Ryan Harrison and Jack Sock on Thursday to reach the last eight.

The Murray brothers played together at the Washington Open earlier in August.

  • Murray has second thoughts over US Open decision
  • Williams pulls out of Cincinnati with injury

Three-time Grand Slam winner Andy, 32, and Spanish partner Lopez were crowned champions at Queen’s Club in June and beat fourth seeds Jean-Julien Rojer and Horia Tecau in the first round.

The two-time Wimbledon champion made his singles comeback from hip surgery in Cincinnati on Monday, losing to Richard Gasquet.

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Nishioka Fulfills Dream, Beats Nishikori In Cincinnati

  • Posted: Aug 14, 2019

Nishioka Fulfills Dream, Beats Nishikori In Cincinnati

Qualifier records first Top 10 win

Yoshihito Nishioka dreamt of this moment for years. When the Western & Southern Open draw came out, Nishioka knew with one win his hopes of playing the Japanese flagbearer, his practice partner and friend, would be realised.

Shortly after match point on Wednesday, you couldn’t take the smile from Nishioka’s face after the 23-year-old qualifier recorded the first Top 10 win of his career with a 7-6(2), 6-4 victory over Nishikori in one hour and 40 minutes. Nishikori left Grandstand stadium to the sound of ‘There goes my hero’, by the American rock group Foo Fighters.

The World No. 77, who committed only 13 unforced errors in the baseline dual, will next face Australia’s Alex de Minaur, who was a 7-6(3), 6-4 victor over American wild card Reilly Opelka in one hour and 34 minutes. De Minaur is through to the third round of an ATP Masters 1000 tournament for the second time (also 2018 Rolex Shanghai Masters).

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Nishioka didn’t allow sixth seed Nishikori to build up any rhythm in recording his 13th match of the year. He first broke serve in the third game and came within two points of the 54-minute first set at 5-4, but tightened up on serve. Nishioka took a 6/0 lead in the tie-break, which eventually ended when Nishikori struck a double fault.

Nishikori, who called for on-court treatment on two occasions, gained a 4-3 advantage in the second set, but groundstroke errors cost the Nitto ATP Finals contender, who is currently in eighth position in the 2019 ATP Race To London. The match ended when Nishikori struck a backhand wide — his 33rd unforced error.

“It was a tough match for me,” said Nishikori. “I think he played good tennis. Served well… [It is] good to see he’s getting stronger, growing up… [The] past two weeks, I’m having [a] tough [time] to breathe, some reason. I’ve got to go check.”

The 29-year-old Nishikori, winner of the Brisbane International (d. Medvedev) in January, is now 27-13 on the season.

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Williams pulls out of Cincinnati with back injury

  • Posted: Aug 14, 2019

Serena Williams has withdrawn from the Cincinnati Masters with a recurring back injury, just days after pulling out of the Rogers Cup final.

Williams, 37, was set to face Zarina Diyas in the first round on Tuesday.

“I am so sad to withdraw as it is truly one of the tournaments I most love to play,” the 23-time Grand Slam champion said.

The American has had to retire or withdraw from all five of her non-Grand Slam events this year.

During last weekend’s Rogers Cup final she was left in tears because of back spasms and retired in the first set to hand the title to Canadian Bianca Andreescu.

“I came to Mason [Ohio] on Sunday and have tried everything to be ready to play tonight, and was still hopeful after my practice this morning,” Williams said in a statement. “But unfortunately my back is still not right.”

Her latest withdrawal comes less than two weeks before the start of the US Open, where she will be chasing a record-equalling 24th Grand Slam title.

Meanwhile, sister Venus Williams beat defending champion and fifth seed Kiki Bertens 6-3 3-6 7-6 (7-4) in a second-round battle in Ohio that lasted two hours and 17 minutes.

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