ATP Tour Stars Marvel At NHL Players’ Skills In Montreal
Aug042019
Current and former hockey pros beat ATP players 4-2 in ball hockey
When ATP Tour players ‘lace them up’, that is usually in reference to their sneakers before a match. But on Saturday, several stars put on shin guards, hockey jerseys, and grabbed sticks to try their hand at a different sport ahead of the Coupe Rogers in Montreal.
Hubert Hurkacz, Kevin Krawietz, Oliver Marach, Jurgen Melzer, Andreas Mies, Brayden Schnur partnered with members of the Montreal Canadiennes women’s hockey team against current and former NHL players in an exciting game of ball hockey.
“It was fun. Honestly the skills they have, it’s just amazing to see what they could do with a stick and a ball. You feel very untalented next to them. It was a fun experience,” Melzer said. “It wasn’t my first time. I haven’t improved since the last time, unfortunately, but I would do it again.”
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The ATP Tour players tried their best to position themselves in front of the net in hopes of scoring on former Montreal Canadien centre Steve Begin, who was playing goalkeeper. But they could not overcome an early deficit, with the NHL stars winning the game 4-2.
“It was crazy. Those guys were amazing. It was really amazing. It was really tough because when we were close to the ball, the guys would just put their stick [and knock it away]. It wasn’t easy, but it was fun,” Hurkacz said. “It’s something different. It’s a lot of fun to do something different apart from tennis.”
Even though the game didn’t go the way of the tennis players, they all wore wide smiles across their faces throughout. Not only did they enjoy competing, but they took time to get to know players from the other team afterwards, learning about their own lives as professional athletes.
“They scored four goals very quickly, so we were happy to score two,” Melzer said. “In the end it’s not about winning, it’s about having fun.”
Third seed Diego Schwartzman stepped up when it counted most on Saturday at the Abierto de Tenis Mifel presentado por Cinemex in Los Cabos. The Argentine saved three set points en route to clinching his first title of the year over fifth-seeded American Taylor Fritz 7-6(6), 6-3.
Schwartzman earned the third ATP Tour title of his career and his first on hard courts. The 26-year-old’s other highlights this season include a runner-up finish in Buenos Aires (l. to Cecchinato) and his first ATP Masters 1000 semi-final at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia. Schwartzman now leads 2-1 in his FedEx ATP Head2Head rivalry with Fritz.
Despite the loss, the 21-year-old Fritz can be pleased with another strong result. He’s won 13 of his past 16 matches, including his first ATP Tour title in June at the Nature Valley International (d. Querrey) and a runner-up finish last week at the BB&T Atlanta Open (l. to De Minaur). Fritz sits at a career-high ATP Ranking of No. 28, but is projected to crack the Top 25 when the newest standings are released on Monday.
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It appeared that Fritz would dominate in the opening stages of the match. A baseline error from Schwartzman gifted the American an early break to lead 3-1 in the first set, but the Argentine settled down and increased his margins in the rallies to earn the break back. Serving at 5-6, 0/40, Schwartzman bravely saved three set points with a barrage of big serves and forehands to force a tie-break.
A double fault from Fritz gave Schwartzman a 6/3 advantage in the tie-break, but Fritz launched his own comeback to even the score. At 6/6, Fritz’s serve let him down again with another double fault and Schwartzman made good on his fourth opportunity to close out the set.
Schwartzman grabbed an early break in the second set due to Fritz receiving a point penalty and led 3-1, but the magnitude of the occasion appeared to get to the Argentine. Schwartzman began to decelerate on his forehand and allowed Fritz to get the break back at 4-2, but regrouped brilliantly in the next game and broke Fritz for a 5-3 advantage. The third seed fell to the ground in elation after a forehand sent wide from Fritz wrapped up the match after one hour and 43 minutes.
Schwartzman picked up 250 ATP Rankings points and $131,430. Fritz walked away with 150 ATP Rankings points and $71,065.
Felix On Budding Canadian Rivalries: ‘We’re Not At War Here’
Aug042019
The teen could face a fellow Canadian in each of the first two rounds in Montreal
#NextGenATP Canadian star Felix Auger-Aliassime arrived on site for his first practice at this year’s Coupe Rogers on Friday evening. The 18-year-old did not expect any fans to be there with qualifying yet to begin.
“It was full, and everybody was happy to come watch me practise. That’s a different feeling. I’d be lying if I said that I’m going on the court and it just feels like any other tournament,” Auger-Aliassime said. “It feels special. Hopefully I can use that energy and that support in a good way.”
This will be the World No. 22’s first time competing at the Canadian ATP Masters 1000 tournament when it’s been held in his birthplace: Montreal. Auger-Aliassime debuted in the main draw last year in Toronto.
But Felix is not the same player he was then. At 17, he was a wild card ranked World No. 133. Auger-Aliassime lost in a final-set tie-break in the second round against current Top 10 star Daniil Medvedev.
This year, Auger-Aliassime could potentially become the Canadian No. 1 with a strong performance at his home Masters 1000 tournament. Prior to this season, he owned just six tour-level wins. He has 29 already in 2019, including trips to his first three ATP Tour finals and the semi-finals of the Miami Open presented by Itau. Auger-Aliassime was already a hot commodity in Toronto last year, and that’s only increased over the past 52 weeks.
“For sure the trap is that there’s a lot of attention and I’m going to put maybe more pressure on myself,” Auger-Aliassime said. “I think you have to put that aside and like every other tournament, try and focus as much as I can on what I have to do prior to my first round and then the rest of the week.”
There will always be an electric crowd in Canada whenever Auger-Aliassime competes on home soil. But that will be the case even moreso when he faces countryman Vasek Pospisil, a former Montreal semi-finalist, in the first round. Auger-Aliassime leads their FedEx ATP Head2Head series 2-0, including a victory at Wimbledon this year.
“I just laughed. I saw it coming. I was talking with my physio earlier that day and I was like, ‘I think something’s going to happen. I’m going to play Denis or Vasek.’ I felt like something was going to happen and it did,” Auger-Aliassime said. “Honestly, no big reaction. That’s just how it is. We’re good friends, we get along well, but once we step on court we’re going to compete at our best like we did at Wimbledon and we’ll see who the winner is. But I think we’re good competitors and we’re good people, so we’re able to put our friendship aside for the time of the match and just compete at our best.”
Another #NextGenATP Canadian who will be under the spotlight is Denis Shapovalov, who went on a magical run in Montreal two years ago, defeating Juan Martin del Potro and Rafael Nadal en route to his first Masters 1000 semi-final. A reporter asked Auger-Aliassime if the nature of this event will alter the pair’s friendship at all this week, and the teen said there was no chance of that happening.
“I’m going to ignore him. No, come on, it’s not like that. We’re not at war here. It’s cool. We talk normally. Even with Vasek, I texted him yesterday. When we saw the draw, we just laughed, like how crazy was that? But once we step on court, then we forget friendship, we just play our match,” Auger-Aliassime said. “But my friendship with Denis hasn’t changed and it’s not going to change because of this week, because of any week. I think that’s two completely different things. There’s the friendship outside the court and there’s the competition. That’s for sure not going to change anything.”
Auger-Aliassime is adamant that he does not want to look too far ahead. But if he defeats Pospisil, he could potentially face former World No. 3 and Montreal finalist Milos Raonic, who faces Lucas Pouille, in the second round.
“For sure that’s crazy. If Vasek wins, it’s going to be the same thing. He’s going to play another Canadian in the second round,” Auger-Aliassime said. “That’s like Indian Wells last year. It’s pretty crazy that it has to happen here in Montreal.”
After Auger-Aliassime ousted Pospisil at last year’s BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells, he fell in straight sets against Raonic. But the veteran has seen Felix develop in the past year, watching his game develop as his countryman’s ATP Ranking has ballooned as high as No. 21.
“I think it’s just consistency. Last year when we practised, he’d always be able to play at a really high level and then there’d be a game each set… where he’d just sort of spray a few balls and lose the handles of it a little bit for a moment. I think that’s the biggest thing that’s changed, he doesn’t really have those little spurts anymore,” Raonic said. “Obviously physically, he’s incredibly developed for a guy of his age. I think he’s really mature in that way and the way he approaches his tennis. But I think it’s just those spurts, that he minimised them. And when they do happen, I think they happen for much shorter periods of time.
“I think when you play the way he does, aggressively, he does a lot of things well, you just keep constantly putting pressure on your opponent and that creates some openings for himself.”
Arneodo/Nys Save 2 M.P., Celebrate First Title In Los Cabos
Aug042019
30-point Match Tie-break decides ATP 250 final
Romain Arneodo and Hugo Nys clinched their first ATP Tour doubles title in dramatic fashion on Saturday at the Abierto de Tenis Mifel presentado por Cinemex in Los Cabos. The unseeded duo saved two championship points to topple top seeds Dominic Inglot and Austin Krajicek 7-5, 5-7, 16-14.
“We’ve been working a lot so now we can just enjoy. I think we deserved it. It was a tough week, and we ended up with the trophy so we’re very happy,” Nys said.
Arneodo/Nys fought back from 2-5 down in the opening set, but Inglot/Krajicek rallied from being an early break down in the second set to force a Match Tie-break. Five championship points came and went for Arneodo/Nys in the Match Tie-break before they saved two against them at 11/12 and 12/13. The unseeded pair couldn’t convert a sixth opportunity at 14/13, but closed out the match on their seventh try after one hour and 58 minutes.
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“Finals are always tough. We have to be ready also for the tension. The emotional part is very big in this kind of match, and we have to deal with it. We’re also very proud of what we’ve done mentally because we lost a few match points and came back. It feels even better, because mentally we were strong,” Arneodo said.
The duo from Monaco needed a Match Tie-break in all four of their victories this week. They have primarily played on the ATP Challenger Tour this season, with both Arneodo and Nys picking up three titles.
Inglot/Krajicek were seeking their second consecutive ATP Tour doubles title after saving two championship points to prevail last week at the BB&T Atlanta Open (d. Bryan/Bryan). They won their first tour-level title as a team this June in ’s-Hertogenbosch (d. Daniell/Koolhof).
Arneodo/Nys picked up 250 ATP Doubles Rankings points and split $43,120. Inglot/Krajicek earned 150 ATP Doubles Rankings points and split $22,100.
Match Point Teamwork: Kyrgios Asks D.C. Fans, Where Should I Serve?
Aug042019
Aussie asks a fan where to serve on match point for second consecutive night
Guests on the hit game show “Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?” could “phone a friend” if a question stumped them. Nick Kyrgios, when serving on match point, uses “ask a fan”.
For the second match in a row on Saturday night, Kyrgios, before stepping to the line to serve on match point, asked a fan where he should direct his serve.
And for the second consecutive match, the strategy worked as Kyrgios belted a first serve out wide to Stefanos Tsitsipas and then smacked a forehand winner to move into the Citi Open final in Washington, D.C, his second ATP 500 title match of the season (Acapulco, d. Zverev).
Kyrgios and his clutch adviser celebrated with a strong handshake on Saturday night, which was a more muted celebration than the one Kyrgios and his female coach shared on Friday evening.
Before serving on match point against Slovakian Norbert Gombos, Kyrgios asked a fan, “Where should I serve this one?” He followed her advice, sliding an ace out wide on the Deuce Court as Gombos was leaning toward the T.
Kyrgios jogged back to his coach, who kissed the Aussie on the cheek and hugged him.
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“I feel like it’s very easy when someone just tells you where to serve. I feel like you just go all in on that spot and try to hit the spot. That’s all you’re focusing on,” Kyrgios told ATPTour.com on Saturday night. “It’s worked two days in a row. Hopefully I get the chance to do it tomorrow. “
Kyrgios also sought some fan support earlier in his semi-final against Tsitsipas. The 24-year-old cooly sliced a backhand volley to go up 4-2 in the opening set, and the Aussie shared fist bumps with fans as he walked to the back of the court.
Kyrgios will face Russian Daniil Medvedev in Sunday’s final as the Aussie goes for his first Citi Open title. Fans in the front row will want to pay extra attention should the match rest on Kyrgios’ racquet, although it’s not as if the Aussie has needed any extra help this week in the U.S. capital. Through five matches, he has hit 93 aces and dropped only one set.
Kyrgios Puts On Show, Beats Tsitsipas In Washington
Aug042019
Aussie will play for second ATP 500 title of 2019
Fifty-one players are ranked higher than Nick Kyrgios in the ATP Rankings, but against the best in the world, there’s no one better than the talented Aussie.
Kyrgios improved to 4-1 against Top 10 players this season on Saturday, saving one match point and beating No. 6 Stefanos Tsitsipas 6-4, 3-6, 7-6(7) to make the Citi Open final in Washington, D.C.
After an up and down opening two sets, Kyrgios brought his best in the third-set tie-break, serving and volleying and ripping forehands to make his second ATP Tour final of the season. Kyrgios saved a match point with a service winner at 5/6 in the tie-break and clinched the semi-final with a 1-2 serve-forehand combination.
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The 24-year-old won the Abierto Mexicano Telcel presentado por HSBC, an ATP 500 tournament in Acapulco, in March (d. Zverev), and will next face the winner between four-time ATP Tour titlist Daniil Medvedev of Russia and German lucky loser Peter Gojowczyk.
The Aussie’s 80 per cent success rate (4/5) against the Top 10 this year is best on the ATP Tour. World No. 1 Novak Djokovic, second in the category, has won seven of his nine matches (7/9, 78%) against the elite group.
See Who’s Chasing Kyrgios, Djokovic In FedEx ATP Win/Loss Section
Kyrgios had everything working for him at the start of his first FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting against the 20-year-old Greek. He was demolishing forehand winners, smacking one-handed backhands and, to go ahead 4-2, he cut a nonchalant backhand volley, handing out fist bumps to the crowd to celebrate.
The Aussie won 87 per cent of his service points, and after a break in the opening game of the second, his place in the ATP 500 final looked all but secure. But Tsitsipas pounced on Kyrgios’ second serve to break twice and force a decider.
There, Kyrgios saved two break points early in the third set and saw a match point come and go at 7/6 in the tie-break. But some crafty play while Tsitsipas was at net brought up Kyrgios’ first match point on serve.
Five years after reaching his maiden ATP Tour final at the Generali Open, Dominic Thiem defeated Albert Ramos-Vinolas 7-6(0), 6-1 to lift his first title on home soil at the ATP 250 event.
The World No. 4, who fell in three sets to David Goffin in the 2014 championship match, saved all six break points he faced to overcome the Gstaad champion after one hour and 38 minutes. Thiem is only the second Austrian player to lift the title in Kitzbühel, following in the footsteps of former World No. 1 and 1993 champion Thomas Muster.
Thiem also joins his coach, Nicolas Massu, as a champion at the clay-court tournament. Massu beat Gaston Gaudio of Argentina to lift the trophy in 2004.
The 25-year-old, who improves to 28-11 this season, has claimed three titles from four tour-level championship matches in 2019. Thiem lifted his maiden ATP Masters 1000 trophy at the BNP Paribas Open (d. Federer) and also triumphed at the Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell (d. Medvedev), before falling to Rafael Nadal in his second straight final at Roland Garros in June.
In a marathon first set, which featured an extended rain delay at 4-5, Thiem was forced to save five break points en route to a tie-break. From there, the World No. 4 raised his level to extract crucial errors from his opponent and earn a 6/0 lead. Thiem wrapped up the set after 68 minutes by firing a forehand winner down the line.
The 14-time tour-level titlist rode the momentum into the second set, dropping just two of the opening 14 points to establish a 3-0 lead. Thiem returned with height and depth from behind the baseline to neutralise rallies, before stepping in to dictate play as Ramos-Vinolas committed forehand errors.
A second break followed for Thiem and the Austrian captured the title on his first championship point to the delight of the home crowd. The top seed collapsed to the clay as Ramos-Vinolas fired a forehand return beyond the baseline.
Ramos-Vinolas was aiming to win his second title in as many weeks on the ATP Tour. Last week, the Spaniard did not drop a set en route to his second tour-level crown at the J. Safra Sarasin Swiss Open Gstaad.
Thiem receives 250 ATP Ranking points and collects €90,390 in prize money. Ramos-Vinolas gains 150 ATP Ranking points and earns €48,870.
Oswald/Polasek Turn The Tables To Lift Kitzbühel Trophy
Aug032019
Second seeds deny Gille/Vliegen third title in as many weeks
Just six days after falling to Sander Gille and Joran Vliegen in the J. Safra Sarasin Swiss Open Gstaad final, Philipp Oswald and Filip Polasek defeated the Belgian duo 6-4, 6-4 on Saturday to claim their maiden ATP Tour team title at the Generali Open in Kitzbühel.
The second seeds, playing in just their second tour-level event as a team, were dominant on serve throughout the 69-minute championship match to take the trophy. Oswald and Polasek dropped just four points on serve (40/44) and did not face a break point to end Gille and Vliegen’s 11-match winning streak.
“This is a really special moment in my career,” said Oswald. “I played a junior tournament here in Kitzbuhel 20 years ago and I have always been dreaming about this moment. Today, it finally came true. The crowd was unbelievable and the atmosphere was unbelievable. It is one of the greatest matches I have ever played.”
Oswald now owns 10 tour-level doubles trophies, adding to his most recent title at last month’s Plava Laguna Crotia Open Umag (w/Haase). The 33-year-old is the first Austrian to lift the doubles title in Kitzbühel since Julian Knowle in 2012 (w/Cermak).
”[Gille and Vliegen] played a really clean final last week in Gstaad,” said Oswald. “They were much better than us. We made some adjustments today and also the conditions were a bit quicker today. That suited us more and we executed our game plan quite well.”
This is Polasek’s 12th ATP Tour doubles trophy. The 34-year-old, who took an extended break from the game in 2013, ends a six-year wait for a tour-level crown. Polasek’s last ATP Tour title came at 2013 Casablanca (w/Knowle).
”It is a dream come true. I was fighting hard since my comeback last year in July and I was hoping that I can, at least one more time in my life, hang the trophy over my head and it happened. It couldn’t be any better,” said Polasek.
“I had an issue in 2013 and I had to pretty much retire… For three years, I was coaching. I was a head coach in an academy, coaching kids from 8 to 14 and then it got a bit better and I decided to come back… I wouldn’t have expected [the comeback] to have been as good as it has been. [It is] beyond the limit. With everything that has happened in the past six weeks, it is just more than I can ask for.”
Gille and Vliegen were bidding to claim their third tour-level title in three weeks. The Belgian tandem picked up trophies last month at the Swedish Open and the J. Safra Sarasin Swiss Open Gstaad.
Oswald and Polasek earn 250 ATP Doubles Ranking points and split €29,650 in prize money. Gille and Vliegen receive 150 points and share €15,200.
Andy and Jamie Murray lost in three sets to Raven Klaasen and Michael Venus in the quarter-finals of the Washington Open.
The British pair took the first set on a tie-break but lost a second as all 24 games followed serve.
South African Klaasen and New Zealand’s Venus, seeded third, trailed 5-7 in the final tie-break but won five points in a row to win 6-7 (3-7) 7-6 (8-6) 10-7.
Andy Murray, 32, is playing his fourth event since hip surgery in January.
The former world number one feared his career might be over before having the hip resurfacing operation, but returned to the doubles court five months later when he won the Queen’s title alongside Spain’s Feliciano Lopez.
The three-time Grand Slam winner says he could make a singles return at the Cincinnati Masters later this month – two weeks before the start of the US Open in New York – and has been practising singles play this week.
“I feel fine, just disappointed,” Murray said of his fitness after the defeat. “Practices have been fine.
“Just keep pressing next 10 days. If I feel ready, I’ll give it [singles in Cincinnati] a go. If not, I’ll probably wait until after New York.”
The Murray brothers, who were playing in doubles competition together for the first time since 2016, reached the Washington quarters after a gutsy three-set win over experienced French pair Nicolas Mahut and Edouard Roger-Vasselin in their opening match.
Third seed Diego Schwartzman booked his place in the final of the Abierto de Tenis Mifel presentado por Cinemex in Los Cabos, but it came at the expense of a close friend. The 26-year-old defeated second seed and fellow Argentine Guido Pella 6-3, 3-6, 6-1 in an entertaining semi-final on Friday.
It was clear that Schwartzman and Pella’s match would be competitive after 45 minutes were needed to complete the first six games, but the third seed grabbed the first break of the match at 3-2 in the opening set. The slight advantage was all Schwartzman needed. Pella saved four set points on his serve at 2-5, but Schwartzman held in the next game and took the early advantage.
Pella was far from discouraged. The second seed responded brilliantly as he raced to a 4-0 lead in the second set and ultimately levelled the match. But in another drastic momentum shift, it was Schwartzman who jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the decider.
The third seed continued to apply pressure in his return games, racking up 18 break points on the night and converting four. A forehand sent long by Pella on Schwartzman’s first match point wrapped up play after two hours and 18 minutes. Schwartzman’s win evened his FedEx ATP Head2Head rivalry with Pella at 2-2.
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Schwartzman seeks his first ATP Tour title of the year after finishing runner-up in February in Buenos Aires (l. to Cecchinato). He also defeated Kei Nishikori to reach his first ATP Masters 1000 semi-final in May at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia.
Awaiting him in the championship match is fifth-seeded American Taylor Fritz or seventh-seeded Moldovan Radu Albot. Schwartzman has never played Albot, but is even in his FedEx ATP Head2Head series with Fritz at 1-1. The American won their most recent match this May at the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters.
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