Swiss legend is the tournament’s defending champion
Roger Federer and Juan Martin del Potro have been drawn in the same half of the Rolex Shanghai Masters, raising the prospect of a rematch of their gripping semi-final battle one year ago at the Qizhong Tennis Centre.
Federer last year rallied from a set down to beat the Argentine in the semis before taking out Rafael Nadal in the final to claim his 27th ATP World Tour Masters 1000 title.
View Singles Draw
The Federer-Del Potro rivalry has been overshadowed over the years by the triangular battles between Federer, Nadal and Novak Djokovic. But their 25-match FedEx ATP Head2Head series – which Federer leads 18-7 – has produced some epic contests.
In 12 meetings since 2012 Roland Garros, 10 have gone the distance and only one has been decided in straight sets. Federer backed up his Shanghai semi-final win last year with a three-set win over the Tower of Tandil just weeks later in the Basel final. But Delpo took out Federer 7-6 in the third in the BNP Paribas Open final in March this year in their most recent meeting.
Federer and Del Potro, along with Nadal and Djokovic, are the players to have so far qualified for the Nitto ATP Finals, to be held in London 11-18 November. Federer is a six-time champion; Del Potro is chasing his first title and will be making his first appearance since 2013.
In Shanghai, two-time tournament champion Federer will begin his title defense against the winner of Russian Daniil Medvedev and China’s Ze Zhang. The Swiss is seeded to meet Canadian Milos Raonic in the third round, Kei Nishikori or Diego Schwartzman in the quarter-finals and Del Potro in the semis.
In his most recent appearance at the Masters 1000 level, Federer lost in the Cincinnati final to Djokovic. He has not played a tour-level match since a shock fourth-round loss to Australian John Millman at the US Open.
Del Potro opens against the winner of Argentine Leonardo Mayer and in-form Frenchman Richard Gasquet before a tough third-round match against one of Nick Kyrgios, a qualifier, Stan Wawrinka, or 13th seed Borna Coric.
Del Potro is seeded to meet No. 6 seed Dominic Thiem in the quarter-finals.
Photos courtesy Rolex Shanghai Masters
In the bottom half of the draw, second seed Novak Djokovic will put his 13-match winning streak on the line in his opener against the winner of German Maximilian Marterer and French veteran Jeremy Chardy. He could get his chance to avenge his shock Roland Garros quarter-final loss to Italian Marco Cecchinato in the third round. He is seeded to meet his vanquished Wimbledon final opponent Kevin Anderson in the quarter-finals.
Djokovic owns a tournament-record three titles in Shanghai, winning crowns in 2012-13 and in 2015, when he dropped just 25 games en route to the title, beating Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 6-2, 6-4 in the final.
Djokovic is returning to tour-level play for the first time since winning his 14th major at the US Open. Earlier in the US summer the Serb became the first man to win a ninth different Masters 1000 singles title at Cincinnati to complete the Career Golden Masters.
Three-time Masters 1000 champion Alexander Zverev, who is next in line to qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals, will open against the winner of Canadian Denis Shapovalov and Georgian Nikoloz Basilashvili, who find themselves in respective semi-finals in Tokyo and Beijing Saturday. Fifth seed Marin Cilic may await in the quarter-finals.
Play begins Sunday.
Did You Know? Nikolay Davydenko won the inaugural Rolex Shanghai Masters in 2009 and later that year won the Nitto ATP Finals in London.
Nishikori Leads Strong Japanese Force On ATP World Tour
Oct062018
Seven Japanese players in the Top 200 of ATP Rankings
When Kei Nishikori made his ATP World Tour debut in April 2007, there were zero Japanese players in the Top 200 of the ATP Rankings. Only one player – Shuzo Matsuoka – had ever won a title on the ATP World Tour (1992 Seoul).
When Matsuoka retired from professional tennis in 1998, he immediately turned his attention to the future of the sport. “The moment I retired, I set up tennis camps for children aged 10-18 with the objective of helping young Asians to attain a Top 100 ranking,” he told ATPWorldTour.com in 2008.
Today, there are seven Japanese players in the Top 200:
Rank
Player
Age
Career-High ATP Rank
Titles
12
Kei Nishikori 錦織 圭
28
No. 4 (March 2015)
11
72
Taro Daniel ダニエル 太郎
25
No. 64 (August 2018)
1
95
Yoshihito Nishioka 西岡 良仁
23
No. 58 (March 2017)
1
110
Yuichi Sugita 杉田 祐一
30
No. 36 (October 2017)
1
179
Tatsuma Ito 伊藤 竜馬
30
No. 60 (October 2012)
–
190
Hiroki Moriya 守屋 宏紀
27
No. 143 (January 2015)
–
191
Go Soeda 添田 豪
34
No. 47 (July 2012)
–
Additionally, over the past year-and-a-half, three Japanese players have joined Matsuoka and Kei Nishikori in the winners’ circle on the ATP World Tour.
As a child, Nishikori attended tennis camps led by Matsuoka and set a goal of breaking his countryman’s career-high ranking of No. 46. Nishikori left Shimane at the age of 13 to train at Nick Bollettieri’s academy in Florida, and a mere five years later in Delray Beach, became the youngest ATP titlist since Lleyton Hewitt. “I can see he is a better player than I ever was, already,” said Matsuoka in 2008.
Nishikori matched Matsuoka’s mark in August 2011, but it wasn’t until his semi-final run at the Rolex Shanghai Masters later that year that he achieved ‘Project 45’ as he rose to No. 30. He continued to lead the way for Japan – and Asia – in the ensuing years, winning an additional 10 titles, reaching a career-high World No. 4, contesting a Grand Slam final, thrice qualifying for the Nitto ATP Finals, finishing a season as the highest-ranked Asian in ATP World Tour history and more.
“I’m happy to hear all the new record or whatever, but my goal is not to make new records in Asia, it’s to be one of the best players in the world,” said Nishikori in 2015. “There’s more things to do, but I am having fun on this journey.”
This season, Nishikori saw his ranking fall to as low as World No. 39 – his lowest placement since October 2011 – after starting the year on the comeback trail, but he returned to Tokyo this week at No. 12 in the ATP Rankings. “I think I’m back at a great level again. I just have to keep 100 per cent every tournament, every match, and just keep being positive, keep my confidence there, and just enjoy playing the matches,” he said.
My First Title: Nishikori Remembers 2008 Delray Beach (October 2014) The Kei Effect: Nishikori’s Impact On Asian Tennis (May 2014) From ‘Project 45’ To Top 10 (Nov 2008) Nishikori: Project 45 No Longer A Secret
Taro Daniel ダニエル 太郎 Age 25, Career-High No. 64 (August 2018), 1 Title
Daniel grabbed headlines this past March, when he overcame nerves and a winless record against Top 20 opposition to stun five-time BNP Paribas Open champion Novak Djokovic in front of a packed house on Stadium 1.
While that victory came on hard courts, Daniel’s other milestones have been on clay. In 2014, he made his tour-level debut as a qualifier in Vina del Mar, and proceeded to beat former champion Thomaz Bellucci in the first round. This past May, Daniel claimed his first ATP World Tour title at the TEB BNP Paribas Istanbul Open, beginning his climb towards a career-high No. 64 ATP Ranking by August.
Daniel, who began playing tennis with his father on clay courts in Japan, explained that his international upbringing contributed to his affinity for the surface. “I was born in the U.S., my father is American and has a job that made us travel around the world,” he said. “We had the chance to go to Spain and that was great for me to practise at a higher level. That’s when I got to play more on clay-courts and the reason why I play better on that surface than most of the other Japanese players.”
Daniel Does It! Taro Lifts Maiden Trophy First-Time Winner Spotlight Determined Daniel Downs Djokovic
Yoshihito Nishioka 西岡 良仁 Age 23, Career-High No. 58 (March 2017), 1 Title
Nishioka became the newest Japanese champion on the ATP World Tour, when he won seven matches in eight days to triumph at last week’s Shenzhen Open as a qualifier. The 5’8” Mie native, who began playing tennis with his father at the age of four, enjoyed a breakthrough in 2017; Nishioka moved up to a career-high No. 58 in the ATP Rankings in March after qualifying and reaching the fourth round of the BNP Paribas Open. But only a week later, he tore his ACL in the second round of the Miami Open and was sidelined for the remainder of the season.
Nishioka, who saw Yuichi Sugita and Taro Daniel lift trophies during his injury layoff and comeback, shared that their success gave him extra motivation. “If they are doing well, my own mental belief is pumping up and I need to do more. I go harder in training and practice and I want to get a trophy as well. If they are doing well, I want to do more… I think it is really good for Japanese tennis right now.”
Read & Watch: Nishioka Lifts Maiden Trophy In Shenzhen First-Time Winner Spotlight
Yuichi Sugita 杉田 祐一 Age 30, Career-High No. 36 (October 2017), 1 Title
Last April, Sugita joined an exclusive club that had previously only included Matsuoka and Nishikori. “Before the final, I heard that if I win the tournament, I will be the third Japanese player to win on the ATP World Tour,” he said at the time. “This was amazing. I made my first semi-final here, then the final and the title. I just played my best tennis and I’m really proud of the way I played.”
With his triumph on grass at the inaugural Antalya Open, Sugita broke into the Top 50 – 11 years after he first turned pro, and 21 years after he started playing tennis with mother. He continued his rise by reaching his first ATP World Tour Masters 1000 quarter-final in Cincinnati. From a No. 136 ATP Ranking in February 2017, he climbed 100 spots to No. 36 by October.
Back on his favourite surface this past June, Sugita played what he called “the best match of my career” to upset then-World No. 7 Dominic Thiem. It marked his second Top 10 win this season, including his win over No. 9 Jack Sock at the Australian Open.
Sugita Surges To First ATP World Tour Title First-Time Winner Spotlight Sublime Sugita Stuns Thiem In Halle
Struff Bounces Back From Tokyo Singles Heartbreak In Doubles With McLachlan
Oct052018
Marach and Pavic save two match points in Beijing quarter-finals
Jan-Lennard Struff suffered a devastating defeat in singles on Friday, failing to convert match point before ultimately losing to #NextGenATP Canadian Denis Shapovalov. But the German kept his head up on the doubles court later in the day and he was rewarded.
Struff and Ben McLachlan, half of last year’s winning team (w/ Uchiyama) in Tokyo, beat Dutchmen Robin Haase and Matwe Middelkoop 6-1, 6-4 to reach the final of the Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships 2018.
“I’m very happy. We played a great match. It was very tough after losing the singles today,” Struff said. “I’m very happy that we played decent and with energy from the beginning, and now really looking forward to the final.”
It is the pair’s fifth tour-level semi-final of the season as a pair, including a trip to the last four at the Australian Open and in Miami. McLachlan and Struff also reached the Wimbledon quarter-finals.
“I’m pretty happy that we got into the final. It’s been a good week so far,” Struff said. “Let’s see what the final brings. It will be a new match and we will give everything to win the title.”
On paper, it appeared the semi-final would be a nail-biter. Haase and Middelkoop have won three ATP World Tour titles in Pune, Sofia and Umag this year. But the winners saved all four break points they faced to come out victorious.
“We played really well. They’re a very tough team,” McLachlan said. “I’ve played Robin a couple of times and played with Matwe before, they’re both tough players, so really happy to get through that in straight sets.”
In the final, McLachlan and Struff will face No. 3 seeds Raven Klaasen and Michael Venus or Joe Salisbury and Yasutaka Uchiyama. Salisbury triumphed with McLachlan in Shenzhen last week and McLachlan partnered Uchiyama to the title in Tokyo last year.
“For me, it doesn’t really matter who we play,” Struff said. “We’ll try to win.”
At the China Open in Beijing, top seeds Oliver Marach and Mate Pavic saved two match points to edge past Marcus Daniell and Wesley Koolhof 5-7, 7-6(4), 14-12 in just under two hours. Marach and Pavic, who have already qualified for the Nitto ATP Finals at London in November, saved match points at 9/10 and 12/11 in the Match tie-break.
Read & Watch: King Of Tokyo Tie-breaks Gasquet Ousts Anderson
Oct052018
The 2007 finalist will next challenge home favourite Nishikori
Richard Gasquet is showing form reminiscent of his time in the Top 10 of the ATP Rankings this week in Tokyo, with no performance more impressive than his 7-6(6), 7-6(4) victory over No. 2 seed Kevin Anderson on Friday to reach the semi-finals of the Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships 2018.
“It was a great match, I played well. It was really intense, every single point. I played my best level. You need to play very good when you are facing Kevin,” Gasquet said. “I played two incredible tie-breaks, that’s why I think I won the match. I’m very happy with the way I played.”
There was plenty on the line for Anderson, who began the week in eighth in the ATP Race To London, as the South African is trying to qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals for the first time. But Gasquet was strong on his first serve — winning 80 per cent of those points — and was aggressive under pressure in the tie-breaks to seal his one-hour, 56-minute victory.
Gasquet has now won five of his six sets this week in Tokyo in tie-breaks to reach the last four at the event for the first time since 2008.
“I don’t know exactly why. Sometimes it just happens,” Gasquet said of his tie-break prowess so far this tournament. “Of course I’m playing well, I’m serving well. I played five great tie-breaks, that’s why I’ve won the matches. The court is very fast, of course you have to be ready for it. Four tie-breaks in a row, it’s crazy.”
The Frenchman has already captured one title this season at ‘s-Hertogenbosch. And if he should go on to lift the trophy here for the first time, Gasquet is projected to reenter the Top 20 for the first time since March 2017.
“I’m playing well. I’m free of injuries. I can play well, I can practise, that’s why I’m playing this level. Of course I’m winning tough tie-breaks this week. That’s great for me. Of course i’m serving well. I’m not making bad mistakes and I was offensive at the end of the match to close it.”
You May Also Like: Read & Watch: Nishikori Impressive In Win Over #NextGenATP Star Tsitsipas
Next up for Gasquet is home favourite Kei Nishikori, who is pursuing his third triumph in Tokyo. While the Japanese has been in strong form, advancing to the semi-finals at the US Open and the Moselle Open as well, Gasquet has won seven of their nine FedEx ATP Head2Head meetings.
“He’s one of the best players in the world, no doubt about it,” Gasquet said. “I know him. I know he’s playing great. I have nothing to lose, it will be a great match for me. I’ll have to play at my best level.”
We use technology such as cookies on our website, to provide functions and analysis of our visitor data. Click Accept to confirm that you agree to its use.
This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.