Rafael Nadal vs Stan Wawrinka Madrid Masters 2019 Preview and Prediction
Rafael Nadal can move one step closer to his first title of the year with a victory in the quarter finals against Stan…
Rafael Nadal can move one step closer to his first title of the year with a victory in the quarter finals against Stan…
Serbian star advances to his 62nd ATP Masters 1000 semi-final
Novak Djokovic advanced to the Mutua Madrid Open semi-finals for a sixth time on Friday without hitting a ball after Marin Cilic withdrew ahead of their match at the Caja Magica.
The 30-year-old Cilic announced his withdrawal – ahead of their 20th FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting – via Twitter, admitting he had food poisoning.
Dear fans, @mutuamadridopen organizers, @DjokerNole I am sorry to announce that I must withdraw from today’s match. I have had a terrible night dealing with a case of food poisoning. I am extremely disappointed to have my time in Madrid end in this way. Thank you for the support.
— Marin Cilic (@cilic_marin) May 10, 2019
“Marin is a top player and he’s a good friend of mine and he did text me saying he got some food poisoning,” said Djokovic. “So I really hope he’s going to recover for [next week’s Internazionali BNL d’Italia in] Rome. On my side, I tried to warm up and prepare for the match and then I went back on the court, trained for another hour and got a good sweat in. [I’m] happy that I’m going to be fresh for my semi-final match-up tomorrow.”
Ninth seed Cilic had won three three-set matches en route to the Madrid quarter-finals this week, saving four match points against Martin Klizan in the opening round; followed by victories over Jan-Lennard Struff and Laslo Djere.
Djokovic, the 2011 and 2016 champion in Madrid, will contest his 62nd ATP Masters 1000 semi-final against fourth-seeded Swiss Roger Federer, the three-time former titlist, who secured the 1,200th win of his career on Thursday, our fifth-seeded Austrian Dominic Thiem, a runner-up here for the past two years.
Roger Federer will face the toughest test of his clay return so far, taking on Dominic Thiem for a spot in the semi finals…
Simona Halep can now become World No.1 if she wins Madrid this week after Naomi Osaka lost in the quarter-finals of the…
Roger Federer was on the verge of defeat on Thursday against Gael Monfils at the Mutua Madrid Open. But the Swiss saved two match points to stay alive, before ultimately prevailing in a final-set tie-break.
The 37-year-old showed little apprehension on either match point. He snuffed out Monfils’ first opportunity by serving and volleying behind his second serve. Federer later dismissed the Frenchman’s second chance by punishing a short forehand into the backhand corner to elicit an error.
“I just felt not so confident to win the point from the baseline, so I said panic mode is switched on and we are coming in,” said a smiling Federer about the first match point he saved. “Regardless of how and what and when, there were no more tactics except to serve it to the forehand to mix it up and you go to the net as quick as possible so you are as close as possible and I framed the first volley, which ended up being perfect.”
Federer will next face this year’s Indian Wells and Barcelona champion Dominic Thiem. The Austrian leads their FedEx ATP Head2Head series 3-2, including a three-set victory in the BNP Paribas Open final.
Did You Know?
Federer is 87-0 in matches when he wins a set 6-0. This is the first time any of those matches has gone to a final-set tie-break.
If only it could have been so easy for Roger Federer on Thursday against Gael Monfils at the Mutua Madrid Open. The fourth seed breezed through the opening set of their third-round match 6-0 in only 19 minutes. Another half hour, and Federer would be through to the quarter-finals, right?
Not exactly. The experience of 1,199 match wins told the Swiss not to expect a double bagel at the ATP Masters 1000 event.
“It cannot go on like this. You can dream about 6-Love, 6-Love but they never happen,” Federer said with a smirk. “I think that’s the beauty of the scoring system that if you win the first set, everything’s back to scratch in the second set.
“And I don’t remember the break in the first game, but I think Gael showed great intensity in the beginning of the second set to make sure that he somehow got a rhythm going, and he started playing better and he did.”
Before this week, it had been nearly three years since Federer played on clay. But the 11-time clay-court champion isn’t expecting anyone to underestimate his clay-court skills during his return to the surface in Madrid.
Monfils certainly didn’t. The Frenchman had two match points against Federer before the Swiss recovered 6-4, 6-4, 7-6(3) to advance to the quarter-finals.
“I don’t think anybody’s really underestimating me because I’m not coming back from an injury. I’ve had a good start to the season this year. And it is pretty fast here in Madrid and I’ve won here in the past, so I guess players maybe know I don’t have that much clay-court tennis in me in the last few years, but that doesn’t make me less dangerous to be quite honest,” Federer said.
The Swiss won the ATP Masters 1000 in Madrid in 2006, 2009 and 2012, the latter two being after the tournament transitioned to clay. In March, Federer added his 28th ATP Masters 1000 title at the Miami Open presented by Itau, the last tournament he played before returning this week in Spain.
“Anything is sort of possible. The very good, the very bad, you know. But it’s tough to just come out and play fantastic tennis. I also have to come to terms with how to play on clay again, what’s normal, which points to lose and which points to win again,” Federer said.
“There’s always these natural things that you go through for weeks on the clay usually, so I don’t have that much time, so I have to accept errors that maybe I wouldn’t do normally and just move on with it.”
The 37-year-old has been playing as if he’s on a hard court at times. Federer has been his usual aggressive self, coming to net often and even serving and volleying in the high-altitude conditions.
“I think it is an option to be used on a hot and sunny day in Paris, too. I always thought that serve and volleying on a hot day on clay almost has more reward than on a grass court sometimes because the ball jumps out of the strike zone a little bit more and it’s harder to press it down again into the feet of the attacking net player” Federer said. “So I think serve and volley can work very well on the clay.”
The Internazionali BNL d’Italia is the third and final stop of the three-tournament Clay Masters swing. Italian Fabio Fognini won the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters and a champion will be crowned Sunday at the Mutua Madrid Open.
Rafael Nadal is an eight-time champion in Rome, and claimed the title last year for the first time since 2013 with victory over defending champion Alexander Zverev. Nadal and Zverev are set to return in 2019, and will be joined in the field by four-time titlist Novak Djokovic, four-time finalist Roger Federer and Barcelona champion Dominic Thiem.
Read & Watch: Rafa vs Roger, The Match That Cemented Their Rivalry
Here’s all you need to know about Rome tennis tournament: when is the draw, what is the schedule, where to watch, who won and more.
Established: 1930
Tournament Dates: 12-19 May 2019
Tournament Director: Sergio Palmieri
Draw Ceremony: Friday, 10 May at 6:30pm on Court Pietrangeli
Are You In? Subscribe To Get Tournament Updates In Your Inbox
Schedule (View On Official Website)
* Qualifying: Saturday and Sunday from 10:00am
* Main draw: Sunday from 12:00pm, Monday – Friday from 11:00am and 7:30pm
* Singles semi-final: not before 4:00pm & 8:00pm
* Doubles final: Sunday, 19 May TBC
* Singles final: Sunday, 19 May not before 4:00pm
How To Watch
Watch Live On Tennis TV | View TV Schedule
Venue: Foro Italico
Main Court Seating: 10,500
Prize Money: € 5,207,405 (Total Financial Commitment: € 5,791,280)
Tickets On Sale: Buy Now
View Who Is Playing, Past Champions, Seeds, Points & Prize Money Breakdown
Honour Roll (Open Era)
Most Titles, Singles: Rafael Nadal (8)
Most Titles, Doubles: Bob Bryan, Mike Bryan, Brian Gottfried, Raul Ramirez (4)
Oldest Champion: Rod Laver, 32, in 1971
Youngest Champion: Bjorn Borg, 17, in 1974
Lowest-Ranked Champion (since 1979): No. 47 Felix Mantilla in 2003
Most Match Wins: Rafael Nadal (56)
2018 Finals
Singles: [1] Rafael Nadal (ESP) d [2] Alexander Zverev (GER) 61 16 63 Read & Watch
Doubles: [6] Juan Sebastian Cabal (COL) / Robert Farah (COL) d [Alt] Pablo Carreno Busta (ESP) / Joao Sousa (POR) 36 64 10-4 Read More
Social
Hashtag: #ibi19
Facebook: @internazionalibnlditalia
Twitter: @InteBNLdItalia
Instagram: @internazionalibnlditalia
Did You Know… It’s a tradition for players to attend mass at the Vatican during the Internazionali BNL d’Italia. In 2013, Juan Martin del Potro met His Holiness Pope Francis, the first Pope from South America and a fellow Argentine. Del Potro presented the Pope with a racquet used during his 2009 US Open final victory over Roger Federer. Read More
Rafael Nadal taught Frances Tiafoe another lesson on Thursday, beating the #NextGenATP American for the second time this year 6-3, 6-4 to reach the quarter-finals of the Mutua Madrid Open.
Nadal moved into his third consecutive quarter-final on clay this year, and looks to be gaining belief with every victory at his home ATP Masters 1000 event.
The second seed has yet to win a title this year, after falling in the semi-finals in Monte-Carlo and Barcelona. The last time he entered Madrid without winning either of the two prior clay-court tournaments was 2015.
“I’m very happy. It’s an important result against a tough opponent. As I said yesterday, he already won against Basilashvili and Kohlschreiber, so he came to this match with good confidence and winning against two great players on clay. It was a tough match. I think I did a lot of things well tonight, so I’m happy with the performance and excited to be through,” Nadal said.
The Spaniard will face a familiar foe for a place in the semi-finals when he meets Swiss Stan Wawrinka. The 34-year-old beat Kei Nishikori 6-3, 7-6(3) in a slugfest between former finalists.
Nadal leads their FedEx ATP Head2Head series 17-3, although Wawrinka does have a clay-court win against the Spaniard, in Rome 2015.
“It’s a tough one. He’s one of the best players in the world. He likes to play in these conditions, fast, altitude, big serve, big shots. It’s in this kind of match that I need to play my best. I need to add something else, and I hope to be ready to make that happen,” Nadal said.
Wawrinka broke in the second game against Nishikori and the two were trading punishing rallies in the second. But the Swiss, growing increasingly vocal, pulled away in the tie-break. After he brought up three consecutive match points, Wawrinka shouted, “Come on!”
Before this week, Wawrinka had been 1-4 in Madrid since reaching the 2013 final. But he has yet to drop a set this week.
“Rafa, it’s a challenge to play him on the clay court. I have played him many times. It’s always difficult to play him,” Wawrinka said. “I’m happy with the way I’m playing so far. I’m happy to be in the quarter-finals again, gaining confidence little by little. I know I’m playing well. I know I’m physically good, so we will see.”
Tiafoe and Nadal met in the Australian Open quarter-finals in January, when Nadal, en route to the final, breezed past the 2018 Next Gen ATP Finals qualifier in straight sets.
During their first clay-court meeting, Tiafoe hung with Nadal early, showing off his speed by defending from corner to corner. But a break in the fourth game was all the Spaniard needed as he served out the set without facing a break point.
Tiafoe had an opportunity in the second set as Nadal served 1-2, but the Spaniard erased the break point and broke the next game with an inside-out forehand winner. He dug himself out of trouble once again while serving for the match at 5-4, 0/30.
Roger Federer and Dominic Thiem will face off in an ATP Masters 1000 rematch on Friday in the Mutua Madrid Open quarter-finals. Thiem prevailed against Federer in the BNP Paribas Open final in March to claim his first Masters 1000 title. Federer went on to win the Miami Open presented by Itau two weeks later.
Also in quarter-final action, World No. 1 Novak Djokovic will continue his bid for a record-tying 33rd Masters 1000 title when he faces ninth seed Marin Cilic. Stan Wawrinka, the 2013 Madrid finalist, awaits the winner between five-time champion Rafael Nadal and American Frances Tiafoe.
ORDER OF PLAY – FRIDAY, MAY 10, 2019
MANOLO SANTANA start 12:00 noon
ATP – [1] Novak Djokovic (SRB) vs [9] Marin Cilic (CRO)
Not Before 2:30 pm
WTA match
Not Before 5:00 pm
ATP – [4] Roger Federer (SUI) vs [5] Dominic Thiem (AUT)
Not Before 8:00 pm
WTA match
Not Before 9:30 pm
ATP – Possible court change – Stan Wawrinka (SUI) vs Frances Tiafoe (USA) or [2] Rafael Nadal (ESP)
ARANTXA SANCHEZ start 12:30 pm
2 WTA matches
Not Before 5:00 pm
ATP – Marcelo Demoliner (BRA) / Daniil Medvedev (RUS) vs Jean-Julien Rojer (NED) / Horia Tecau (ROU)
Not Before 7:30 pm
ATP – Possible court change – [8] Stefanos Tsitsipas (GRE) or Fernando Verdasco (ESP) vs [Q] Hubert Hurkacz (POL) or [3] Alexander Zverev (GER)
Defending champ battles past Hurkacz in three sets
Defending Mutua Madrid Open champion Alexander Zverev is showing no intentions of letting slip his trophy.
The 22-year-old German battled hard on Thursday to defeat 2018 Next Gen ATP Finals qualifier Hubert Hurkacz 3-6, 6-4, 6-4 in two hours and 10 minutes, advancing to the last eight. Zverev has now made the quarter-finals in Madrid on all three of his appearances (2017-19).
The reigning Nitto ATP Finals champion arrived at the Caja Magica without having won multiple matches at the same event since Acapulco, where he reached the final. But Zverev is growing in confidence, defeating former World No. 3 David Ferrer in straight sets in the Spaniard’s final match and now clawing his way past an ever-improving Hurkacz.
“It’s a place where I always have had good memories, I always played well, and it is nice to come back here and to show that I’m still one of the best players in the world and be able to play my best and always find a way,” Zverev said.
The Pole led by a break early in the decider, and won one more point than Zverev in the match. But the third seed did especially well with his backhand, and played his best tennis in the biggest moments to advance. It appeared the two 22-year-olds were heading for a final-set tie-break, but from 4-5, 30/30, Hurkacz launched an approach shot long and then double faulted to lose his chance at matching his career-best victory (defeated World No. 4 Thiem in Miami).
“I needed that win for sure because the last two matches, I lost where I had match points, and I lost 7-5 in the third and 7-6 in the third. So a match like this I really need. And I was down a break in the second, down a break in the third, and I always try to find a way,” Zverev said.
Zverev’s quarter-final opponent, Stefanos Tsitsipas, extended his winning streak to six matches by advancing to the quarter-finals of an ATP Masters 1000 tournament for the second time on Thursday evening. The eighth-seeded Greek knocked out local resident Fernando Verdasco 6-3, 6-4 in 88 minutes.
“I played pretty good, didn’t give him lots of chances,” Tsitsipas said. “I really wanted this match badly and I think my serve and my forehand today worked very well and gave me this consistency and flexibility to do a lot of things on the court.”
Last week’s Millennium Estoril Open champion — adding to his title run at the Open 13 Provence in February — won 81 per cent of his first-service points against Verdasco to draw level with Russia’s Daniil Medvedev on 25 match wins for most victories on the ATP Tour in 2019. Last year, Tsitsipas reached his first Masters 1000 final at the Rogers Cup final (l. to Nadal).
It was at that tournament that Tsitsipas saved two match points against Zverev to reach the quarter-finals. In the next round, the Greek became the youngest player to beat four Top 10 opponents at a single tournament since the ATP Tour was established in 1990 by ousting Kevin Anderson.
On Thursday in Madrid, Tsitsipas experienced little resistance from Verdasco and led by a set and 4-1 — which included three service breaks — before a momentary lapse in concentration in the sixth game of the second set. This was the pair’s first FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting.
“It wasn’t easy, I can tell you. I walked on the court and it felt like everybody was supporting Fernando. I understand that he comes from Madrid. People here love him, so I had to deal with this. It wasn’t easy,” Tsitsipas said. “I had a few people from Greece who came to cheer for me, so that was pretty good as well.”