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Flashback: Stars of Tomorrow – Duckhee Lee

  • Posted: Aug 20, 2019

Flashback: Stars of Tomorrow – Duckhee Lee

Hearing and speech-impaired Lee makes steady climb up the Rankings

Editor’s Note: This feature was originally published on 18 July 2015. Duckhee Lee is making his ATP Tour main draw debut this week at the Winston-Salem Open.

Duckhee Lee is in Tegal, Indonesia, and is comfortably winning the first set 3-1 of an ITF Futures quarter-final match against Indonesia’s No. 1, Christopher Rungkat. Lee slaps a passing shot winner to the open court to break Rungkat’s serve. He pumps his fist to his team and trots over to change sides of the court. There is just one problem; while the chair umpire signaled Lee’s ball good, he announced the score as deuce, not game. The 17 year old from South Korea does not understand why the umpire and Rungkat are both staring at him. It would take a few minutes to unwind the knot.

If you did not know Lee, saw him in his hot pink shirt, lime green tennis shoes, hair with K-Pop highlight streaks, and watched him waving his arms at the chair umpire; you might think that here is another hot headed tennis player. And you would be correct, except there is one other thing that many have not picked up on yet. Lee is both hearing and speech impaired.

On the ITF Futures circuit where officiating standards are much lower than the ATP World Tour, Duckhee Lee thinks that he has just been robbed by either a linesmen or the chair umpire who are all from Indonesia. It is easy to understand why. Lee cannot hear overrules from the chair umpire or the umpire calling the score. Many ITF Futures scoreboards only indicate the set score, and not the game score. 

What follows next is a chain reaction of lost in translation. Due to his speech impediment the umpire cannot understand what Lee is trying to say and because of his hearing impediment he cannot hear what the umpire is saying. Lee uses sign language to his translator all the while waving his hands and arms at both the translator and chair umpire. Locals down in Central Java do not get to see that much tennis and do not know about Lee’s disability. They begin to laugh at Lee’s grunts and mimic his arm movements. Tension mounts and his extreme frustration takes over. In a matter of seconds he has lost the game and the momentum. On the change-over, the crowd continues to mock Lee’s outburst and seeing this, he hides his tears under a towel.

“I sometime have trouble hearing the umpire’s call,” admits Lee. “When the match hasn’t gone smoothly due to my lack of hearing of an umpire’s call it is difficult for me to control my mind and emotions. I try to express myself when the call seems not correct or fair. I try to communicate with them via body language or facial expression.”

In Korea there is a word, gibun, which basically means to hurt someone’s pride or cause loss of dignity. South Koreans are a fiercely proud people and the men learn to behave macho at an early age. Traditional music which is loaded with heavy bass drumbeats and patriotic lyrics and even the national dish, bimbimbap, hot stone bowl full of meat, vegetables and spicy cabbage is man food at its best. Competing in professional tennis is how Lee earns dignity.

Now, with wounded pride, Lee lets his racquet do the talking for him. He wins nine of the next eleven games and the match. Lee would carry that energy all the way to winning the tournament. And to add insult to injury, he would do the same the next week when he defeated Rungkat again, this time in the final. 

Lee’s Rise
Duckhee Lee was born in Jecheon, a little town tucked in the mountains where rivers and streams flow down to fill reservoirs and lakes. Despite having only one main street and one five star hotel, Jecheon attracts Koreans seeking a bit of rest and relax destination away from the bustle of Seoul. Jecheon is the kind of place where grandparents live and old school Korean values are practiced daily.

There is not much that Doug MacCurdy has not seen or done in the role of tennis development around the world. Former ITF Director of Development, MacCurdy has headed development operations in the USA, China, India and most recently, Korea. MacCurdy was based in Korea when Lee came through the pipeline.

“I remember Duckhee Lee very well,” begins MacCurdy. “He was always one of the kids who demonstrated an advanced level of tennis in our identification and training camps. He was also very lively and social with all the other kids. I think where Lee’s team was smart was with his scheduling. In the beginning of his junior tournaments he would go faraway and come back with a bundle of points. I see he has done the same with his professional scheduling.”

MacCurdy brings up an argument as old as professional tennis coaching; which comes first ability or ranking? One side says if you are good you should be able to compete with the best starting out, and the other side feels that for some players going to the outer banks of tennis where the draw is considered weaker and wins more frequent while developing game and confidence is another option. Jimmy Connors early days as a professional is an excellent example of the latter.

If you trace Lee’s Emirates ATP Rankings history the line on your paper would like just like the takeoff of a jet airplane; a slow, steady rise. Currently, Lee is No. 305, but thanks to another Futures title last week in Japan he will enter the top 300 next week. This makes Duckhee Lee the youngest player ranked inside the Top 300.

Consider Duckhee Lee’s results since he first started playing professional about a year and half ago. To date, Lee has participated in 36 ITF Futures, made the finals of seven and won five. This means that he made the finals about once for every five tournaments and then won a little more than two out of three of those finals. On the ATP Challenger Tour, Lee has played in six events and only lost once to a lower ranked opponent. What is most obvious is about Lee’s player activity is that his bottom line is rock solid. Say what you want about what he needs to do to get better; Duckhee Lee rarely has a bad day at the office.

Speaking of game, here is what Duckhee Lee looks like during a point. Lee has a weak first serve and a really weak second serve, but he has compensated with a lethal return. Once the ball is in play, he employs a flat-line style of tennis that requires precision guided strokes and near perfect ball striking to be effective. The plus side is that balls struck flat travel faster than balls loaded with spin so if Lee is on song, he can cut his opponent’s legs out from underneath him waxing him side to side. The drawback is when conditions are less than ideal and a greater margin of error is needed for the job. On the forehand side, Lee has an excessive left shoulder rotation which allows him to hold his shot till his opponent commits. And similarly, the backhand is best described having an extreme shoulder rotation. The obvious advantage for Lee to using so much trunk in his swing is that he can generate plenty of power with his large muscle group rather than depending on his arms and equally effective is that he can disguise his intended target to the absolute last millisecond before firing off.

Former ATP player, Danai Udomchoke, has played and lost to Duckhee Lee. Most recently in Indonesia.

“His serve needs a lot of work, but he is young,” says Udomchoke. “However, considering that he has not learned to volley yet, it is remarkable how well he plays with the tools that he already has for his age. It is if not being able to win points with his serve or by approaching the net has helped him master the baseline. I was surprised at how fast he read where I was going to hit the ball.”

Christopher Rungkat agrees with Udomchoke on the last bit.

“He always seems to know where I am going to hit the ball,” begins Rungkat. “I don’t think he is guessing, it is more like he is reading my mind. Yes, he is fast, but so are a lot of players. If I had to pick one word to sum up his game, I would say- anticipation. How he knows where the ball is going off my racquet so early is most impressive.”

Overcoming Obstacles
Ryan Hodierne is a sport biomechanist at the Singapore Sports Institute and has studied the subject of deaf athletes. His research seems to collaborate with what Rungkat feels about Lee.

“He would have to use his sight, at a heightened sense, to compensate as a result of not being able to hear the ball being struck by the racket,” claims Hodierne. “It is known that with the removal of one sense, the remaining four senses are heightened.”

Anyone who has ever watched a tennis match has most likely observed a player pausing at the baseline between points while delaying his serve till a low flying airplane passes overhead. Or the chair umpire asking for the crowd to please be quiet. So, what happens to a player who cannot hear at all? How does he adjust?

Brian Ehlers is considered an expert on deaf athletes. Ehlers was the first deaf volleyball player to play for the USA Volleyball program and participated in the 1980 and 1984 Olympics.

“It’s very true that an athlete with a sensory condition[s] loss will gain advantages, if they use them; however, the athlete’s other mental and physical [eye and touch] senses do come into play, as the body finds other ways to compensate for a sensory loss elsewhere,” states Ehlers. “Is it possible to have tunnel vision with a hearing impairment? Yes, the athletes mind becomes more focused and analytical and creative, as it finds way to utilize the other senses to better coordinate his actions in unison with the projected contact point, velocity and trajectory of the ball.”

Though Duckhee Lee has never met Brian Elhers, he seems to agree.

“My hearing difficulty does help me to focus on my own play and match,” Lee admits.

Yong-Il Yoon, former Korean tennis national player and coach of another Korean teen standout, Hyeon Chung, knows Lee very well.

“Lee is constantly communicating with Chung and other Korean players on the circuit via text messaging, and social media,” says Yoon. “Lee already has many fans that follow him and his progress at home.”

“Throughout my tours I have met a lot of fans and supporters and especially Korean fans,” says Lee.

“Any athlete wants to make their parents proud,” claims Ehlers. “Yet for those athletes who have a condition, we know how emotional it is for our parents to see and experience their own kid having something others kids don’t have. Having a condition makes us deaf athletes try extra hard to show our appreciation to our parents; whom have dedicated all their extra work and time in their lives into helping us.

“A deaf athlete can become more driven and excited about proving himself to others that he belongs and can be or is like everybody else without condition,” continues Ehlers.  “A deaf athlete wants to make a mark in the world via acceptance and respect by others for what they accomplish, but far more importantly, for whom they are and what they can offer to others.”

Duckhee Lee may not be able to hear the umpire call the ball out or tell his opponent good shot. But he sure will be able to see the cheers from the crowd as he continues to win tennis matches and collect trophies. And by doing so, he will make his parents, country and all athletes with hearing and speech impairments very proud. 

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'I wanted to go a different way' – Evans splits with coach over 'differences'

  • Posted: Aug 19, 2019

Dan Evans says his surprise decision to split with coach David Felgate was because the pair started to see “a few things differently”.

The British number two informed Felgate of his decision at the start of August, a few days after losing in the first round of the ATP event in Washington.

Evans enjoyed an excellent grass-court season, culminating in a third-round defeat to Joao Sousa at Wimbledon.

In February he reached his second ATP final in Delray Beach.

“I saw a few things different, I think, to the way he saw it,” Evans told BBC Sport at the Winston-Salem Open.

“At the end of the day I’m on the court, and it’s how I felt.

“It was amicable, no hard feelings. I sat down and said it was going to come to an end, and that was that.

“I wanted to go a different way and try something new. I’ve never had to do that before. It was not an easy conversation but it was better for me to say it there and then than carry on until the end of this trip, and waste this trip.

“I sort of felt that way as soon as I came back and we started again after Wimbledon. Maybe I lost my spark with him, but it just didn’t feel right, and I thought it needed to change.”

Evans and Felgate started working together after last year’s Wimbledon. The British Davis Cup player was outside the top 300 at the time, as he fought his way back from a doping ban, but now stands at 58 in the world.

Evans says he wants to play more aggressively in future, and will try to come forward towards the net, a little more.

“I thought, over the grass, I was pretty defensive and not really putting my game out there. I felt it was time for a new start – to make that change, and to play that way,” the 29 year old added.

The former British player Joshua Milton, who now coaches in San Diego, is assisting Evans in Winston-Salem this week. As the fifth seed, Evans was given a first-round bye and will play his second-round match on Tuesday.

Evans said he does not yet know who he will work with in future, but says Britain’s Davis Cup captain Leon Smith has agreed to help out where he can during the US Open, which begins on Monday.

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US Open 2019: British number four Naiktha Bains loses in first round of qualifying

  • Posted: Aug 19, 2019

British number four Naiktha Bains has lost in the first round of qualifying for the US Open.

Bains, 21, was well beaten 6-3 6-1 by Slovakia’s Jana Cepelova in New York as she tried to reach the main draw of a Grand Slam for the first time.

The Briton struggled to get any power on her serve, leaving her open to breaks and the Slovak capitalised.

World number 237 Bains is a dual British and Australian citizen and changed her allegiance this year.

On Tuesday, former British number one Heather Watson will be in action against Georgia’s Mariam Bolkvadze and James Ward will take on China’s Zhe Li as they get their US Open qualifying campaign under way.

The tournament itself begins at Flushing Meadows on 26 August.

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Medvedev Breaks Into Top 5, Mover Of The Week

  • Posted: Aug 19, 2019

Medvedev Breaks Into Top 5, Mover Of The Week

ATPTour.com looks at the top Movers of the Week in the ATP Rankings, as of Monday, 19 August 2019

No. 5 (Career High) Daniil Medvedev, +3
Competing in his third final in as many weeks, the 23-year-old claimed his first ATP Masters 1000 title at the Western & Southern Open. Medvedev, who finished as runner-up at the Citi Open and Coupe Rogers, dropped one set en route to the trophy with wins against Kyle Edmund, Benoit Paire, Jan-Lennard Struff, Andrey Rublev, World No. 1 Novak Djokovic and David Goffin.

The Russian now leads the ATP Tour with 44 victories this season, three wins ahead of Coupe Rogers champion and ATP Race To London leader Rafael Nadal. After becoming the fifth player from his country to lift a Masters 1000 trophy, Medvedev jumps to a career-high No. 5 in the ATP Rankings. Read More and Watch Highlights.

No. 10 (Career High) Roberto Bautista Agut, +1
The Spaniard advanced to his third Masters 1000 quarter-final of the year in Cincinnati. Bautista Agut defeated Hubert Hurkacz and Next Gen ATP Finals contenders Frances Tiafoe and Miomir Kecmanovic to reach the last eight in Ohio, before falling to Richard Gasquet in three sets. Bautista Agut becomes the 19th Spaniard to reach the Top 10 in ATP Rankings history (since 1973).

You May Also Like: Bautista Agut Makes Top 10 Debut

Spaniards To Reach The Top 10 Of The ATP Rankings

Player Career-High ATP Ranking Date Achieved
Carlos Moya 1 15 March 1999
Juan Carlos Ferrero 1 8 September 2003
Rafael Nadal 1 18 August 2008
Manuel Orantes 2 23 August 1973
Alex Corretja 2 1 February 1999
Sergi Bruguera 3 1 August 1994
David Ferrer 3 8 July 2013
Tommy Robredo 5 28 August 2006
Jose Higueras 6 13 June 1983
Albert Costa 6 22 July 2002
Juan Aguilera 7 17 September 1984
Emilio Sanchez 7 30 April 1990
Alberto Berasategui 7 14 November 1994
Fernando Verdasco 7 20 April 2009
Nicolas Almagro 9 2 May 2011
Carlos Costa 10 18 May 1992
Felix Mantilla 10 8 June 1998
Pablo Carreno Busta 10 11 September 2017
Roberto Bautista Agut 10 19 August 2019

No. 15 David Goffin, +4
The 2017 Nitto ATP Finals runner-up advanced to his first Masters 1000 championship match in Cincinnati. After beating Taylor Fritz, Guido Pella and Adrian Mannarino to reach his fifth Masters 1000 semi-final, the Belgian overcame Gasquet to break through to his first final at the level. Despite his loss to Medvedev, Goffin climbs four positions to No. 15 in the ATP Rankings.

No. 34 Richard Gasquet, +22
Gasquet reached his first Masters 1000 semi-final in more than six years in Cincinnati. The Frenchman, whose last final-four appearance at the level came at the 2013 Miami Open presented by Itau, beat Andy Murray, Federico Delbonis, Diego Schwartzman and Bautista Agut to claim his place in the semi-finals, where he fell to Goffin in straight sets. Gasquet soars 22 places to No. 34 in the ATP Rankings.

Other Notable Movers
No. 47 Andrey Rublev, +23
No. 49 (Career High) Miomir Kecmanovic, +9
No. 58 Daniel Evans, -14
No. 59 Yoshihito Nishioka, +18
No. 64 Pablo Carreno Busta, -11
No. 80 Aljaz Bedene, +10
No. 93 Leonardo Mayer, -11
No. 96 Marius Copil, -11

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Bautista Agut Makes Top 10 Debut

  • Posted: Aug 19, 2019

Bautista Agut Makes Top 10 Debut

Spaniard enjoying career-best season

Good things come to those who wait. After 14 years on the ATP Tour, Roberto Bautista Agut has fulfilled his childhood dream by debuting in the Top 10 of the ATP Rankings on Monday.

“It’s great to be there. There’s a lot of work behind that,” said Bautista Agut. “I’ve been dreaming of this since I was young, so I’m very happy.”

Bautista Agut has reached the highest levels of the sport by being consistently consistent, advancing to at least the quarter-finals in 11 of his 17 ATP Tour events this season. With those results as a base, the Spaniard also piled on outstanding results that include his maiden Grand Slam semi-final at Wimbledon, defeating Novak Djokovic en route to the title in Doha (d. Berdych) and a quarter-final finish at the Australian Open.

“I’ve been close to the Top 10 for a few years now, but sometimes you need just one or two more good results than you had in the past years,” said Bautista Agut. “I fought really hard to get the Top 10 with every tournament.”

You May Also Like: How Roberto Bautista Agut Is Reaching New Heights

The 32-year-old’s tenacity has earned him the respect of his peers on Tour. Many of them celebrated the news of his Top 10 status as a testament to hard work paying off.

“I’m really happy for him. He’s such a nice guy and deserves to be in the Top 10 this year,” said David Goffin. “He’s played unbelievably in all of the big events this year. He’s a great fighter, is really strong physically and continues to improve his tennis.”

“He doesn’t miss, runs well and has no weakness in his game. He’s a tough competitor,” added Richard Gasquet. “It’s always a battle when you play against him. You need to play your best tennis to win against a guy like him.”

But typical to his character, Bautista Agut is already focused on knocking down his next goal. He now looks to make his debut at the season-ending Nitto ATP Finals, held at The 02 in London from 10-17 November. The Spaniard is currently in seventh place in the ATP Race to London.

“It would be good news for me to have the opportunity to play the [year-end] Masters,” Bautista Agut told ATPTour.com in July. “But now, it’s still far. It’s still three or four months of the season [left] and I have to win a lot of matches and to play very good tennis if I want to be there.”

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Berdych, Harris Advance On Day One In Winston-Salem

  • Posted: Aug 19, 2019

Berdych, Harris Advance On Day One In Winston-Salem

Czech made the 2012 WInston-Salem final

Tomas Berdych won his first tour-level match since February on Sunday at the Winston-Salem Open, beating Italy’s Andreas Seppi 6-1, 3-6, 6-3. The former World No. 4, a wild-card entry into the ATP 250 tournament, last won at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships.

“It was a tough match. It was a great start for me but then I still knew that it’s not going to go like that all the way,” Berdych said. “When you don’t play for a long time, it’s not easy. You really have to battle out for every single point, which I did today.”

You May Also Like: Berdych: ‘It’s Been A Very Tough Time For Me’

The Czech started the year 10-3, reaching the Qatar ExxonMobil Open final and the fourth round of the Australian Open. But injury woes have kept the 33-year-old from regular action. He’s played only one match – a first-round loss to American Taylor Fritz at Wimbledon – since March. Berdych will next meet eighth seed Filip Krajinovic of Serbia.

Indian Prajnesh Gunneswaran will meet top seed Benoit Paire after beating Gstaad finalist Cedrik Marcel-Stebe 6-3, 6-4. In other action, Romanian Marius Copil fought past Slovakian Martin Klizan 6-4, 3-6, 6-3 and will next face 11th seed Pablo Carreno Busta.

Dutchman Robin Haase swept American Denis Kudla 6-4, 7-6(3) and will meet fourth seed Joao Sousa in the second round. South African Lloyd Harris ran away with his first-round match against Spain’s Jaume Munar 7-6(5), 4-6, 6-1, and 12th seed Casper Ruud of Norway awaits Harris in the second round.

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Tiafoe Inspires Young Essay Winners In Winston-Salem

  • Posted: Aug 19, 2019

Tiafoe Inspires Young Essay Winners In Winston-Salem

American leads Q&A and autograph session on Sunday 

Frances Tiafoe is all about giving back. The #NextGenATP American regularly puts his hands up for kids’ clinics and autograph sessions whenever he competes at ATP Tour events.

He did just that on Sunday at the Winston-Salem Open, holding a Q&A and autograph session with several kids ages 11-17. The children were all part of National Junior Tennis and Learning (NJTL) chapters throughout the Southern section of the United States Tennis Association and were selected to meet Tiafoe by winning an essay contest.

You May Also Like: Tiafoe Lives For The Biggest Moment

Tiafoe told the participants he has “a ton of big of aspirations after tennis” that involve working with kids, including starting his own foundation.

”To know that what I’m doing is helping not only myself and my family, but also you guys coming up… everyone has somebody that they aspire to be like and I want to be that guy for you all,” said Tiafoe.

The 21-year-old Tiafoe, seeded No. 10 in Winston-Salem, starts his week on Tuesday against Frenchman Jeremy Chardy or American qualifier Raymond Sarmiento.

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Berankis Claims Tour-Leading Fourth Title In 2019

  • Posted: Aug 19, 2019

Berankis Claims Tour-Leading Fourth Title In 2019

Revisit the week that was on the ATP Challenger Tour as we applaud the achievements of those on the rise and look ahead to the week to come

A LOOK BACK
Odlum Brown VanOpen (Vancouver, Canada): The hottest player on the ATP Challenger Tour added another piece of silverware to his trophy case. Ricardas Berankis claimed the title at the award-winning VanOpen, his tour-leading fourth trophy on the circuit this year.

This week, Vancouver celebrated back-to-back Tournament of the Year awards, receiving its trophy in front of a packed crowd on Tuesday evening at Hollyburn Country Club. And on Sunday, they crowned their 14th champion. Berankis defeated Jason Jung 6-3, 5-7, 6-4 to earn a hard-fought championship in the Canadian city.

On Wednesday, the Lithuanian trailed qualifier Michail Pervolarakis 4-1 in the third set and on Friday he was forced to rally from a set down once again, ousting Thanasi Kokkinakis. The top seed would eventually claim his 13th Challenger title, rising to No. 70 in the ATP Rankings.

You May Also Like: Vancouver Receives 2018 ‘Challenger Of The Year’ Award

“This match wasn’t as controlled as some of my previous matches. In the semis and the second round, I felt like from the first point I was in control. Today in the first set, it was control, but in the second one it was so-so which I lost 5-7,” said Berankis. “I needed to leave everything that I had on the court to win the match. It was a really tough match. Jason played really well.”

Berankis is on fire this year, boasting a 4-0 record in Challenger finals and a 24-3 (.889) mark overall – the second-best win percentage on tour. He also owns titles on the indoor hard courts of Rennes, France and Drummondville, Canada, as well as the outdoor hard courts of Busan, South Korea.

Challenger Title Leaders In 2019

Player 2019 Titles
Tournaments Won
Ricardas Berankis
4 Rennes, Drummondville, Busan, Vancouver
Pablo Andujar 3 Marbella, Alicante, Prostejov
Alexander Bublik 3 Budapest, Pau, Monterrey
Andrej Martin 3 Nanchang, Shymkent, Shymkent-2

Zavarovalnica Sava Slovenia Open (Portoroz, Slovenia): When Aljaz Bedene reaches an ATP Challenger Tour final, there’s a good chance he’ll lift the trophy. The Slovenian never wastes an opportunity to seize a title. Well, almost never.

On Sunday, Bedene improved to an impressive 16-2 in Challenger finals with his victory on home soil in Portoroz. That’s 16 wins in 18 championship matches, a staggering conversion rate that has seen him triumph in seven of the past eight seasons.

Portoroz

But, for all of Bedene’s success, he had not won in front of the home fans. Until now. A 7-5, 6-3 win over Viktor Durasovic gave the Ljubljana native his first  title in Slovenia. He joins Grega Zemlja (2013) and Blaz Kavcic (2014) as the only Slovenians to triumph at the country’s lone professional tournament.

Bedene rises 10 spots to No. 80 in the ATP Rankings, having also reached the semi-finals of the ATP 500 event in Rio de Janeiro in February and the quarter-finals in Umag a month ago.

“I’m really excited about winning in front of the home fans,” said Bedene. “Thanks to all who came and encouraged me in the final. Thanks also to the President of Slovenia. I was a little nervous because Borut Pahor was among the viewers. I have a good record in Challengers, but there is still a long way to go.”

Portoroz

Acqua Dolomia Serena Wines Tennis Cup (Cordenons, Italy): On Sunday, the ATP Challenger Tour crowned its 24th first-time champion of the year, as Christopher O’Connell reigned on the clay of Cordenons. At the age of 25, the Aussie celebrated his maiden moment with a 7-5, 6-2 victory over Jeremy Jahn.

After dropping his opening set of the tournament 6-1 to Chun-hsin Tseng, he would reel off 12 of the next 13 frames, dominating on the Italian clay. O’Connell is finding his form in his comeback from an elbow injury that sidlined him for much of the 2018 season. He rises 93 spots in the ATP Rankings to No. 220, just one place off his career-high from February 2017.

Tennis Open Stadtwerke Meerbusch (Meerbusch, Germany): Top seed Pedro Sousa was made to work for his second Challenger title of the year. The Portuguese fought off Pedja Krstin 7-6(4), 4-6, 6-3 in two hours and 19 minutes on Sunday, marking his third straight deciding-set victory of the week.

The 31-year-old Sousa, who cracked the Top 100 for the first time in February, is up to No. 125 following his second title in three months. In June, he lifted the trophy in Blois, France after qualifying for his second ATP 500 event of the year in Barcelona.

A LOOK AHEAD
With the majority of today’s Challenger stars competing at US Open qualifying, there is one tournament on the calendar in L’Aquila, Italy. Andrej Martin is the top seed, with Alejandro Tabilo second and Dmitry Popko third.

ATP Challenger Tour 

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Berdych: 'It's Been A Very Tough Time For Me'

  • Posted: Aug 19, 2019

Berdych: ‘It’s Been A Very Tough Time For Me’

Former World No. 4 returns with a win in Winston-Salem

Tomas Berdych’s first-round win over Andreas Seppi on Sunday night at the Winston-Salem Open was a positive first step in his return from a back injury that has sidelined him for most of the past 14 months. But the joy on his face after match point didn’t show how much the Czech had been silently suffering during his time away from competition.

“It’s been a very tough time for me. I’ve been really up and down,” admitted Berdych. “Because of the love of the sport, I was giving myself one more try to come back, give myself a good shot to prepare, play some matches here and the US Open and see what happens… It was probably not the nicest win, but it [only] counts that you win.”

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The 33-year-old missed the last five months of the 2018 season due to his back injury before returning in January. After six ATP Tour events to start the year, the injury flared up again in March. His only tournament since the BNP Paribas Open was Wimbledon, which he admitted only playing “just for the reason that it’s Wimbledon. I was not fit and not at the level that I wanted to be.”

But Berdych is now fit again. When he’s healthy, the Czech is still capable of great tennis. In his first three tournaments of this season, the former World No. 4 finished runner-up in Doha (l. to Bautista Agut), reached the fourth round of the Australian Open and advanced to the semi-finals in Montpellier. Berdych admitted those early highlights are largely what fueled his latest comeback.

“If I had prepared like I did before this season, not had good results and then had the injuries come a couple of months later, I probably would be thinking very differently. I probably wouldn’t be standing here right now,” he said. “I know I can still play some good tennis when I’m fit and healthy.”

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After a 17-year career that has seen him win 13 ATP Tour titles, finish runner-up at 2010 Wimbledon and clear more than $29 million in prize money, Berdych has nothing left to prove. He’s looking to finish the final chapter of his career on his terms and embracing what might be his biggest challenge yet.

“If this was happening early in my career, it would be very frustrating. It’s easier to deal with when you have all the experience,” said Berdych. “I’m just enjoying new situations that I’ve never had my career, trying to find a way through it and take it as a new challenge.”

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Medvedev & Goffin Surge In ATP Race To London

  • Posted: Aug 19, 2019

Medvedev & Goffin Surge In ATP Race To London

Bautista Agut also helps his chances of reaching The O2

Champion Daniil Medvedev and finalist David Goffin met in the championship match of the Western & Southern Open on Sunday. And although the Russian was the only one able to leave Cincinnati with a winner’s trophy, both players boosted their hopes of securing a spot at the Nitto ATP Finals in London.

This time one year ago, Medvedev was placed 38th in the ATP Race To London, far from contention for the eight-man event held at The O2 from 10-17 November. But the Russian has put himself in prime position to book his maiden trip this season, moving into fifth place thanks to the 1,000 points he earned with the title.

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Medvedev now has an ATP Tour-leading 44 wins in 2019, which has helped his rise. The only players he trails are Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer and Dominic Thiem. Medvedev is trying to become the first Russian singles player to compete at the season finale since Nikolay Davydenko won the event in 2009.

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The Cincinnati trophy was the culmination of a strong month for the Russian No. 1, who made the final in Washington and Montreal in the two weeks before arriving in Ohio.

“I have to say even if I wouldn’t have finished with the trophy, [these weeks] were amazing and the best in my life. But of course I think with the trophy it’s better. Especially if I would have lost three finals in a row, I would have not doubted myself but started asking myself, ‘How is it possible, three finals, lost all of them? What should I do differently in the final’?” Medvedev said. “I don’t have to ask myself these questions because I won the final. It’s been the best weeks in my life.”

And while Medvedev has been a strong contender throughout the year, Goffin’s performance brought him within striking range to compete at The O2 for the third time. The 2017 Nitto ATP Finals runner-up surges from 18th place in the Race to 11th, just 190 points behind eighth-placed Kei Nishikori.

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Entering Wimbledon, Goffin was not inside the Top 20 in the Race. But advancing to the quarter-finals at The Championships and becoming the first Belgian singles player to make an ATP Masters 1000 final have helped his cause.

Another player whose Cincinnati efforts were crucial in the push for a spot at the Nitto ATP Finals was Spaniard Roberto Bautista Agut. The 31-year-old has previously served as an alternate for the season finale, but he has moved into seventh place in the Race, 250 points ahead of Nishikori.

Bautista Agut advanced to the quarter-finals, where he fell to in-form Frenchman Richard Gasquet in three sets. It was the second consecutive Masters 1000 event in which Bautista Agut made the last eight.

By making the semi-finals, top seed Novak Djokovic clawed closer to Rafael Nadal in the battle for the year-end No. 1 ATP Ranking. With 360 points from Cincinnati, Djokovic now trails Nadal by only 140 points in the ATP Race To London. Both players have already secured their spots in London in November.

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