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Atlanta Open: Cameron Norrie and Dan Evans reach quarter-finals

  • Posted: Jul 25, 2019

British pair Cameron Norrie and Dan Evans both won at the Atlanta Open on Wednesday to reach the quarter-finals.

Norrie, 23, enjoyed a straight-sets victory over South Korea’s Kwon Soon-woo, with the British number two beating the world number 117 6-3 6-4.

Evans, ranked one place below Norrie at 55, then triumphed in a hard-fought match with world number 42 Radu Albot.

The 29-year-old, who reached the third round at Wimbledon this month, beat the Moldovan 7-6 (7-5) 5-7 6-2.

  • Dan Evans beats Jason Jung to reach round two

Norrie will now face Alexei Popyrin for a place in the last four after the 19-year-old Australian upset world number 39 Pierre-Hugues Herbert, beating the Frenchman 7-5 6-3.

Evans will play the winner of the last-16 match between Reilly Opelka and American number one John Isner, who won last year’s Atlanta Open.

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Déjà Vu For Ramos-Vinolas In Gstaad

  • Posted: Jul 24, 2019

Déjà Vu For Ramos-Vinolas In Gstaad

Fabbiano defeats fourth seed Sonego

At last week’s Swedish Open, Albert Ramos-Vinolas defeated Fernando Verdasco and Roberto Carballes Baena in back-to-back matches to reach the semi-finals.

The 31-year-old is half way to repeating that feat at the J. Safra Sarasin Swiss Open Gstaad after beating Fernando Verdasco 6-4, 7-6(4) on Wednesday to book another meeting with Carballes Baena.

Ramos-Vinolas recorded his 19th victory in 36 tour-level matches this year after one hour and 42 minutes, winning 72 per cent of service points en route to victory (48/67). The World No. 85 has now claimed four victories from nine FedEx ATP Head2Head clashes against the 2011 runner-up. Carballes Baena advanced to his second quarter-final in as many weeks after overcoming Stefano Travaglia 6-2, 6-4 in 80 minutes.

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Thomas Fabbiano produced a solid service performance to beat fellow Italian and fourth seed Lorenzo Sonego 7-6(2), 3-6, 6-1 in two hours and five minutes for a place in the quarter-finals.

“It is never easy to play against a close friend,” said Fabbiano. “Today was a tough match. Clay and altitude are not my favourite conditions and I’m very happy that I managed to win today. You have to adjust to the conditions every week and I hope that I can go a step further this week.”

You May Also Like: Read & Watch: Five Things To Know About Thomas Fabbiano

Germany’s Cedrik-Marcel Stebe, who is on the comeback trail from another wrist injury and came into the ATP 250 tournament with a 0-4 tour-level record in 2019, booked a place in his first ATP Tour quarter-final for more than two years (2017 Geneva). Stebe kept his nerve to beat Jiri Vesely of the Czech Republic 7-6(3), 4-6, 6-3 in two hours and 14 minutes.

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Thiem Returns To Hamburg Quarter-finals

  • Posted: Jul 24, 2019

Thiem Returns To Hamburg Quarter-finals

Austrian to meet Rublev for semi-final spot

Dominic Thiem made it through to the Hamburg European Open quarter-finals for the second straight year on Wednesday, beating Marton Fucsovics 7-5, 6-1.

On a hot Wednesday afternoon, the top seed fired 20 winners and dropped just two points behind his first serve (26/28) to claim victory in one hour and 36 minutes. Thiem claimed eight of nine games from 5-5 in the first set to triumph in the pair’s first FedEx ATP Head2Head encounter.

Thiem improves to 25-10 this season after reaching the last eight in Hamburg. The World No. 4 has lifted two ATP Tour trophies in 2019, capturing his maiden ATP Masters 1000 crown at the BNP Paribas Open (d. Federer) and the ATP 500 title at the Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell (d. Medvedev).

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Thiem quickly found his range on return in front of the Center Court crowd, earning break points in four of Fucsovics’ opening five service games. But the Hungarian remained calm under pressure to reach 5-5.

But, from that point, Thiem reduced his error count and motored to victory. With relentless aggression and depth, the World No. 4 dictated rallies with his forehand and extracted regular errors from his opponent to book a quarter-final clash against Andrey Rublev.

In the opening match on Center Court, Rublev rallied from a set down to defeat #NextGenATP Norwegian Casper Ruud 3-6, 7-5, 6-3. The 21-year-old is through to his first tour-level quarter-final since the Open 13 Provence in February.

Thiem will aim to extend his 2-0 FedEx ATP Head2Head series record against Rublev. The Austrian defeated Rublev in Vienna in 2017 and at last year’s Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters.

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Andy & Jamie Murray To Team Up In Washington Doubles

  • Posted: Jul 24, 2019

Andy & Jamie Murray To Team Up In Washington Doubles

Cabal/Farah, Bryans will also appear at ATP 500 event

Andy Murray and Jamie Murray will join forces for the first time since September 2016 in the doubles draw at next week’s Citi Open.

Andy and Jamie’s most recent appearance as a doubles team came in the 2016 David Cup World Group semi-finals, where they defeated Juan Martin del Potro and Leonardo Mayer in four sets. The Murray brothers own two ATP Tour doubles trophies as a team, following title runs at Valencia in 2010 and Tokyo in 2011.

“I am going to be competing in Washington next week in the doubles with my brother Jamie,” said Murray on Twitter. “[I am] obviously very excited to be on the court with him and also to go back to Washington. It is a city I have always enjoyed visiting, so it should be fun. [I am] hoping to have a good summer over in the States, keep progressing physically and hopefully get back on the singles court soon.”

The 32-year-old’s fourth men’s doubles appearance of the 2019 season is the latest step in his recovery from a second right hip surgery on 28 January. The former singles World No. 1 missed five months of the season before returning to action at the Fever-Tree Championships, where he lifted the doubles trophy alongside Feliciano Lopez. Murray also appeared at the Nature Valley International with Marcelo Melo and Wimbledon with Pierre-Hugues Herbert in men’s doubles and Serena Williams in mixed doubles.

Jamie Murray is bidding to lift his second straight title in the American capital. The 23-time tour-level titlist claimed the 2018 crown alongside Bruno Soares of Brazil. Soares also returns to the tournament alongside Mate Pavic of Croatia.

Joining the Murray brothers in the draw will be the first-time pairing of Stefanos Tsitsipas and Nick Kyrgios. World No. 6 Tsitsipas and five-time tour-level titlist Kyrgios have never met in singles action, but are scheduled to share the same side of the court in Monday’s evening session, pending the doubles draw on 26 July.

Also competing for the trophy will be Wimbledon champions Juan Sebastian Cabal and Robert Farah. The Colombian duo, which leads the ATP Doubles Race to London, has lifted four tour-level trophies this season. Four-time champions Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan will be aiming to capture the trophy for the first time since 2015.

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Andy Murray and Jamie Murray to play doubles together at Citi Open in Washington

  • Posted: Jul 24, 2019

Andy Murray will team up with brother Jamie in the doubles at the Citi Open in Washington next week.

The tournament is Murray’s fourth since undergoing hip resurfacing surgery in January and his first on a hard court.

The brothers, 32 and 33 respectively, played together to help Great Britain win the Davis Cup in 2015.

“They called us and said Andy really wanted to come back to DC and wanted to play doubles with his brother,” said Mark Ein, Citi Open manager.

“We’re putting a real focus on doubles at the event – it’s a terrific piece of the competition and entertainment value for fans so we were thrilled he wanted to return.”

The brothers played with different partners in the men’s doubles at Wimbledon, with Jamie and Neal Skupski exiting in the first round while Andy and Pierre-Hugues Herbert reached the second round.

Andy Murray played singles in Washington last year and was reduced to tears after finishing his last-16 win at 03:02 local time.

He withdrew from his quarter-final against Australian Alex de Minaur set to take place later that day, saying it was “unreasonable”.

Earlier this year, Murray said on Instagram he would “probably not” return to Washington after tournament director Keely O’Brien “rinsed him” by saying that as a “global role model” he should show it is “not ok to just give up”.

Jamie Murray won the Citi Open doubles title last year with former partner Bruno Soares – a pairing that also won Australian and US Open titles.

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Five Things To Know About Soonwoo Kwon

  • Posted: Jul 24, 2019

Five Things To Know About Soonwoo Kwon

Kwon will face Norrie for a spot in his first ATP Tour quarter-final

Qualifier Soonwoo Kwon earned his first ATP Tour win on Tuesday at the BB&T Atlanta Open, battling past Indian Prajnesh Gunneswaran 6-7(4), 7-5, 6-0 in two hours and 31 minutes to reach the second round.

“I am really, really happy to win for the first time at an ATP tournament,” Kwon said. “I had lost three times in a row against Gunneswaran, but today I won for the first time against him, so I’m really happy for that.”

Although the pair had never played at tour-level before, Gunneswaran won six of the seven professional sets they had played. Kwon saved all three break points he faced in this meeting.

After the match, ATPTour.com caught up with the Korean — who next plays Cameron Norrie — to learn more about the 21-year-old.

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1. The Korean Is Closing On The Top 100, But Is In No Rush
After qualifying in Atlanta and winning his first ATP Tour main draw match, Kwon is projected to reach a career-high ATP Ranking on Monday. His current best is No. 115, which he reached earlier this month.

“I know that I’m really close to the Top 100, but I’m thinking about it step by step,” Kwon said. “It’s no rush. I’m really happy that I’m close to the Top 100, though.”

2. A Loss Against Khachanov At Wimbledon Was A Great Learning Experience
At The Championships, Russian star Karen Khachanov dispatched Kwon 7-6(6), 6-4, 4-6, 7-5 in three hours and seven minutes. Although the Korean did not secure his first Grand Slam main draw triumph, he took a lot out of that defeat, and he believes the experience will help him greatly in the months to come.

“I was losing, but I never gave up in sets and kept trying to fight and come back,” Kwon said. “I learned a lot from that, never giving up on any single point.”

In fact, the 21-year-old wants fans to know one thing about him, it’s that he will always give everything he has every single point.

“I never give up against opponents. I always fight until we have to shake hands,” Kwon said.

3. Kwon Idolises Roger & Rafa
Kwon has not yet gotten to practise with either Roger Federer or Rafael Nadal, but they were his idols growing up. The Korean hopes to play qualifying at the upcoming Coupe Rogers, where he would be ecstatic to work his way into the main draw and compete against Nadal. Federer is not playing that ATP Masters 1000 tournament.

“I’m really close to playing in the same tournaments as them, so I’m really preparing for that,” Kwon said.

4. The 21-Year-Old Is A Video Game Afficionado
Kwon says that he enjoys Playstation, and playing video games after dinner. If he’s not doing that, he added that you can likely find him watching tape of his next day’s opponent.

5. Kwon’s Inspired By Countrymen, Aiming For The Top 10
When Kwon was a junior growing up in Korea, he was not as well-known as some of his countrymen, like Hyeon Chung or Duckhee Lee, who he grew up with. He says they were always more popular, which has motivated him.

“I always try to think about beating them, fighting to get better and better,” Kwon said. “It’s motivation, it gives me a goal to catch up to them.”

Beyond that, Kwon says his ultimate goal is to one day crack the Top 10 of the ATP Rankings.

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World No. 405 King Stuns Dimitrov In Atlanta For First ATP Tour Win

  • Posted: Jul 24, 2019

World No. 405 King Stuns Dimitrov In Atlanta For First ATP Tour Win

Former Georgia Tech standout to face Fritz next

Former Georgia Tech standout Kevin King walked on Stadium Court Tuesday evening in Atlanta without a tour-level victory. The 28-year-old World No. 405 walked off with not just a win, but a victory against 2017 Nitto ATP Finals champion and former World No. 3 Grigor Dimitrov, whom he defeated 7-5, 6-4 to reach the second round of the BB&T Atlanta Open.

“It’s fantastic. Wouldn’t have rather done it at any other place,” King said. “It was a great crowd out there, great energy, so I’m just thrilled to have won that.”

The week has been extra emotional for King, who received a wild card into qualifying before advancing to the main draw. The lefty’s father, William, had not seed him play for two years before qualifying on Saturday due to a stroke.

“It’s very special,” King said. “It’s been a couple years since he’s seen me play, so just happy that he’s able to come out and support me.”

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Before this match, King’s best win came against then-World No. 81 Ernesto Escobedo at an ATP Challenger Tour event in September 2017. Against Dimitrov, an eight-time ATP Tour champion, King earned 23 break points, converting seven of them. The Atlanta resident did well to keep his number of unforced errors down throughout the match.

“It was incredible. It seemed he wasn’t quite at 100 per cent, so it definitely gave me some looks in his service games,” King said. “But I was glad to be able to close it out at the end.”

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For a moment, it appeared the Bulgarian may steal the momentum with his back against the wall. In Dimitrov’s final service game, the World No. 53 struck a backhand volley crosscourt that he thought was wide, and he even shook the chair umpire’s hand. But a challenge revealed that it clipped the line, giving Dimitrov new hope.

“I actually thought it was in when he hit it. I was shocked that he was walking to the bench, so I had a little hope that it might’ve been out,” King said. “I was actually surprised it was that close.”

If Dimitrov held that game to even the second set, it could have gotten sticky for King, who has won just six of 21 Challenger matches this season. But the home favourite forced the Bulgarian to beat him, which Dimitrov did not.

“[I] really was just trying to focus on making the return, not trying to get caught up in the score or the moment,” King said. “Just trying to get started in each point and try to make him work.”

It won’t get any easier for King, who will next face second seed Taylor Fritz. The Americans have never met at tour-level, but Fritz defeated King in three sets at an ATP Challenger Tour event last season. As excited as he is to earn the biggest victory of his career, King knows his tournament is not over yet.

“It’s great to celebrate it a little bit now with my friends and family out there, but I’ll go back, do a little recovery and start focussing on the next match.”

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Why Isner Is Not Feeling Pressure In Atlanta

  • Posted: Jul 24, 2019

Why Isner Is Not Feeling Pressure In Atlanta

The American is a five-time champion at this ATP 250 tournament

Few players have dominated a tournament like John Isner has the BB&T Atlanta Open. The American has won five titles at the ATP 250 tournament and reached the final in eight of nine appearances. But he doesn’t feel any pressure to keep that up this year.

“I think I felt more pressure if maybe I won the tournament two or three times, maybe trying to win it four. And I think now, I’ve won it five times, but that’s a lot, so winning six would be awesome, but if I don’t win it a sixth time this year, that’s okay, too,” Isner said. “I’ve still won the tournament five times… after maybe I won it the first time, or after I lost in the finals the first two years, then maybe I’ll feel some pressure to win it. But not so much right now.”

Isner advanced to the Miami Open presented by Itau final in March after lifting his first ATP Masters 1000 at that event last year. But while playing Roger Federer in that championship match, the American hurt his left foot, ultimately learning that he broke it.

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The 34-year-old returned at Wimbledon, where he made the second round. He took a wild card into the Hall of Fame Open in Newport, where he claimed his fourth title. It was even more special because it was Isner’s first title with his daughter, Hunter Grace, in the crowd.

“That was cool. That was actually something I wasn’t even thinking about at all during the course of the match. Thankfully I wasn’t getting ahead of myself, but then when it came time to do the ceremony, I looked at where my wife was sitting. She wasn’t there,” Isner said. “She had gone and got Hunter Grace and brought her over to the side of the court. She was smart enough to go get her and knew that would be a good moment to capture. So that was the highlight of the week, no doubt.”

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Three of Isner’s victories came in three sets, with hot and humid conditions making it tough for the players on the grass throughout the week. But having his daughter there made the hard work well worth it.

“After being able to sit down for five minutes straight with an ice towel, I put the ice towel on even after the match was over, so I was very happy the match was over and at that point I was just ecstatic that she got to come out,” Isner said. “She has no idea what was going of course, but in a few years, she’ll be able to look over those pictures and smile.”

Isner celebrates with his family at Newport 2019
Photo Credit: Kate Lucey/International Tennis Hall of Fame
In Newport, the ball bounces low on the grass, whereas players have said the Atlanta courts are bouncy. But Isner is not concerned with the quick surface change as he looks to do the Newport-Atlanta title double for the second time.

“I actually don’t think it’s that big of a transition at all. I think if anything it can help. You go from grass where you can occasionally get some tricky bounces to a very pure hard court. I think it makes it pretty easy,” Isner said. “I’m not going to be spending my offseason practising up there or anything, but… I don’t think the transition is that difficult at all.”

Isner will begin his campaign against reigning New York Open champion Reilly Opelka, who owns a 2-1 lead in their budding FedEx ATP Head2Head rivalry. In the 10 sets the Americans have played, eight have gone to tie-breaks.

“It’s going to be very tough,” Isner said. “It could be an actual coin flip… we both serve really well and we both like surfaces like this. So I’m fully aware that I have an extremely tough first match here in my second round.”

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Opelka-Isner, Round Four Awaits In Atlanta

  • Posted: Jul 24, 2019

Opelka-Isner, Round Four Awaits In Atlanta

Two big servers will meet for the third time this season

American Reilly Opelka set up a tall second-round meeting against top seed and five-time champion John Isner on Tuesday at the BB&T Atlanta Open. Opelka beat Alexander Bublik of Kazakhstan, who fell to Isner in the Hall of Fame Open final on Sunday, 6-3, 7-6(1), behind 17 aces.

“I thought I played really clean,” Opelka said. “I played a really good tie-break, I made all my first serves.”

The 6’11” Opelka and the 6’10” Isner have faced off three times in their FedEx ATP Head2Head series, including three years ago in the Atlanta semi-finals, when Isner won in three sets.

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But the 21-year-old Opelka beat Isner twice this year, including in the first round of the Australian Open and in February en route to his maiden ATP Tour title at the New York Open. Eight of their 10 sets have been decided by tie-breaks.

“Coin flip” was how both Isner and Opelka have described their second-round match. “This one probably a little more favoured for John, just because he’s won it so many times,” Opelka said. “Obviously I’m the underdog again playing him, and there’s a good chance there are going to be a lot of tie-breaks.”

Aussie Bernard Tomic knocked out fifth seed Frances Tiafoe of the U.S. 4-6, 6-3, 7-6(4) and will meet countryman Matthew Ebden, who beat Poland’s Kamil Majchrzak 7-6(5), 6-3.

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Tiafoe sprinted to a 4-0 lead, but Tomic rallied and saved all three break points in the third set, including two consecutively from 3-4, 15/40.

South Korea’s Soonwoo Kwon, No. 117 in the ATP Rankings, fought back to beat Indian Prajnesh Gunneswaran 6-7(4), 7-5, 6-0, and Brit Daniel Evans breezed past Jason Jung 6-1, 6-1. The 21-year-old Kwon will next meet Brit Cameron Norrie. Evans will face the winner between American Tennys Sandgren and sixth seed Radu Albot of Moldova.

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For Federer, 0/40 Is Often Just The Beginning

  • Posted: Jul 24, 2019

For Federer, 0/40 Is Often Just The Beginning

Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers shows Federer rallies the best on serve

It’s time for a “hot take” on point score to see how good your tennis intuition really is. Here’s a fun quiz that is focused on winning the game in two specific serve and return scenarios.

Scenario 1: Serving at 0/40
You are in the deepest serve hole there is. You need at least five points to hold serve, and for the first three points your opponent is salivating over break points. One slip and you are done.

Scenario 2: Returning at 30/15
Now you need only three points to break serve, while the server needs two. You are much closer to the finish line than the first scenario, but you don’t have the benefit of serving.

Have a think about it… Which scenario offers the highest percentage chance of winning the game?

An Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers analysis of the current Top 10 from the 2015 season to this week identifies that, on average, they have a higher percentage of winning the game when serving from 0/40. The data set comes from ATP Masters 1000 events and the Nitto ATP Finals.

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Current Top 10 Average: Winning The Game
Serving from 0/40 = 19.0% (236/1240).
Breaking from 30/15 = 15.8% (2008/12715)

Eight of the current Top 10 adhered to this pattern, while only No. 9 Daniil Medvedev and No. 10 Fabio Fognini performed better breaking from 30/15.

Current Top 10: Holding from 0/40 – 2015 to Current Week

Ranking

Player

Holding from 0/40

Total 0/40 Points

Hold %

3

R. Federer

24

79

30.4%

2

R. Nadal

32

138

23.2%

4

D. Thiem

38

171

22.2%

1

N. Djokovic

25

119

21.0%

7

K. Nishikori

25

137

18.2%

8

K. Khachanov

16

93

17.2%

6

S. Tsitsipas

12

70

17.1%

5

A. Zverev

28

177

15.8%

10

F. Fognini

25

162

15.4%

9

D. Medvedev

11

94

11.7%

TOTAL / AVERAGE

236

1240

19.0%

Roger Federer leads the Top 10 in holding from 0/40 since the beginning of the 2015 season, at 30.4 per cent (24/79). Federer’s gap over second-placed Rafael Nadal is a substantial seven percentage points, or almost a 25 per cent increase. The other two players who were above the Top 10 average of 19 per cent were Dominic Thiem (22.2%) and Novak Djokovic (21%).

Current Top 10: Breaking from 30/15 – 2015 to Current Week

Ranking

Player

Breaking from 30/15

Total 30/15 Points

Break Percentage

2

R. Nadal

280

1417

19.8%

1

N. Djokovic

300

1538

19.5%

7

K. Nishikori

247

1429

17.3%

3

R. Federer

227

1396

16.3%

10

F. Fognini

198

1231

16.1%

5

A. Zverev

226

1525

14.8%

4

D. Thiem

245

1721

14.2%

9

D. Medvedev

101

779

13.0%

6

S. Tsitsipas

85

725

11.7%

8

K. Khachanov

99

954

10.4%

TOTAL / AVERAGE

2008

12715

15.8%

Nadal leads the current Top 10 in breaking from a 30/15 scoreline at 19.8 per cent (280/1417). Djokovic is hot on his heels, breaking 19.5 per cent (300/1528) from this specific scoreline. The other three players above the Top 10 average of 15.8 per cent are Kei Nishikori (17.3%), Roger Federer (16.3%) and Fabio Fognini (16.1%).

Your first instinct was probably to go with the 30/15 point score when returning, as it’s a fairly even battleground and you need only three points to break. But this analysis uncovers just how dominant the serve is. The biggest hole serving is actually not as deep as what you must encounter on the returning side of the equation.

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