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Dan Evans loses in Surbiton Trophy semi-finals

  • Posted: Jun 09, 2018

Former British number two Dan Evans, on a comeback from a year’s ban for using cocaine, lost in the Surbiton Trophy semi-finals to top seed Jeremy Chardy.

The 28-year-old was beaten 6-4 7-6 (7-3) by the Frenchman, who is a former Australian Open quarter-finalist and was once ranked 25th in the world.

Evans has won 12 of his 15 matches since his return in April.

Ranked 858th in the world, Evans is likely to require a wildcard to make the main draw of Wimbledon this summer.

He reached a career-high ranking of 41 in March 2017, a month before he tested positive for cocaine at an event in Barcelona.

He reached the third round of Wimbledon in 2016, losing to Roger Federer in straight sets on Centre Court.

In the women’s semi-finals in Surbiton, 21-year-old Briton Harriet Dart was beaten 3-6 6-2 7-6 (7-5) by Switzerland’s Conny Perrin.

  • Halep beats Stephens to win French Open title
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Halep wins French Open for first Grand Slam title

  • Posted: Jun 09, 2018
French Open 2018
Venue: Roland Garros, Paris Dates: 27 May-10 June
Coverage: Daily live radio and text commentaries on BBC Radio 5 live, the BBC Sport website and app.

World number one Simona Halep finally won her first Grand Slam title with a gutsy comeback victory over American 10th seed Sloane Stephens in the French Open final.

Halep, who had lost her three previous major finals, went a set and a break down at Roland Garros.

But the 26-year-old Romanian battled back to take a see-saw second set against the US Open champion.

She then raced away with the third to win 3-6 6-4 6-1.

  • Reaction: Halep thought chance had ‘gone’ again
  • Relive Halep’s victory over Stephens
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“I did everything I could. It is amazing what is happening now,” Halep said.

“I have been dreaming for this moment since I started playing tennis.”

Halep clinched victory with her first match point, Stephens unable to return a powerful first serve.

The top seed dropped her racquet in celebration, covering her face with both hands before Stephens walked around the net to warmly hug the champion.

Given a standing ovation by the Court Philippe Chatrier crowd, a tearful Halep climbed into the stand behind the baseline to celebrate with her family and coaching team.

Focused Halep achieves Grand Slam dream

Halep had lost in two previous French Open finals – to Maria Sharapova in 2014 and Jelena Ostapenko in 2017 – and against Caroline Wozniacki in this year’s Australian Open showpiece.

The world number one said in the build-up to this match that she felt relaxed and would not be fazed by the pressure of winning her first Slam.

And so it proved as she delivered in front of an expectant crowd.

Halep was the favourite to finally land her first major title against an opponent who is better known for her success on hard courts rather than clay.

But she was beaten by Stephens’ brilliance, not herself, in the opening set.

After that Halep took control, winning four games in a row early in the second as momentum turned.

An early break in the third set, with Stephens appearing to tire, put the Romanian in command.

Backed by plenty of noisy Romanian support, Halep broke again for 4-0 after an astonishing point in which she wore Stephens down with her relentless returning.

She raced through a hold to love and, after taking Stephens to deuce, served out to win her first Grand Slam at the 33rd attempt.

Stephens fades after strong start

Stephens’ run to her second Grand Slam final came as a surprise to many, given she had never previously made it past the fourth round at Roland Garros.

The 25-year-old American had won all but one of her six Tour titles – including last year’s US Open victory – on a hard court.

But her performances here are further proof she is ready to challenge regularly for more honours.

She will now rise to fourth in the world rankings after dropping to 957th just six weeks before her Flushing Meadows victory, following a foot injury which kept her out for almost a year.

Stephens breezed through the French Open draw, dropping only one set, though she did not face anybody seeded higher until she met Halep.

Many experts predicted a baseline battle in the final – and that is how it turned out.

In the opening set, Stephens’ sharp movement across the baseline enabled her to return everything Halep threw at her, while forcing the Romanian into errors and hitting some wonderful winners herself.

However, she could not replicate the same intensity in the second.

Stephens coughed up the first double fault of the match for 0-30 in the fourth game, in the middle of that momentum shift towards Halep, and from there the signs were ominous.

“It’s not the trophy I wanted but it is still beautiful,” Stephens said.

“Congratulations to Simona. There is no-one else I’d rather lose to than the number one in the world.”

Halep follows in the footsteps of greats – the key stats

  • Halep is the fourth woman to win a Grand Slam after losing at least three previous finals – following Kim Clijsters, Chris Evert and Jana Novotna
  • She is the second Romanian woman to win a Grand Slam title, after Virginia Ruzici’s victory at Roland Garros in 1978
  • Halep is the 27th different woman in the Open era to win the Roland Garros title
  • Only seven women have taken longer than Halep (33 attempts) to win their maiden Grand Slam title
  • Halep won the Roland Garros girls’ singles in 2008 and is only the sixth player to do so, then win the women’s title
  • Halep has 24 career wins and nine defeats at Roland Garros. Only Serena Williams, Maria Sharapova and Svetlana Kuznetsova have a higher winning percentage.

‘An unstoppable head of steam’ – analysis

BBC tennis correspondent Russell Fuller

Stephens played a first set of staggering quality, and not even the world number one, on her favourite court, could find the answers.

There was no warning of the change of momentum two games into the second set, but Halep started serving more consistently and after edging a tight second set, built up an unstoppable head of steam.

The Romanian says she is more relaxed, and more fatalistic, this year – and it certainly showed on court. Halep refused to panic, and slowly and surely Stephens started to lose heart.

Three narrow misses in Grand Slam finals – and her response to the setbacks – have endeared Halep to fans all around the world.

In victory she has emulated Chris Evert, who also lost her first three Grand Slam finals before breaking her duck here at Roland Garros.

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Serena Williams should be ready for Wimbledon, says her coach

  • Posted: Jun 09, 2018
French Open 2018
Venue: Roland Garros, Paris Dates: 27 May-10 June
Coverage: Daily live radio and text commentaries on BBC Radio 5 live, the BBC Sport website and app.

Former world number one Serena Williams should be fit for Wimbledon, according to her coach Patrick Mouratoglou.

The 23-time Grand Slam champion pulled out of Monday’s last-16 match at the French Open against Maria Sharapova with an injury that affected her serve.

“Within two weeks she should recover and will be able to hit again,” Mouratoglou told BBC Radio 5 live.

“Then she has 15 days to do a lot of fitness and improve her speed on court. She should be ready for Wimbledon.”

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Roland Garros was the first Grand Slam event Williams had entered since she returned to tennis after giving birth to her first child in September 2017.

The 36-year-old had looked in good form in her opening matches before an injury to her right pectoral muscle forced her to pull out of the highly anticipated encounter with long-time rival Sharapova.

“It was a great idea to not play that match against Maria because she couldn’t serve and it would have been difficult to win without serving,” Mouratoglou added.

“Also because it would take an incredible risk to tear the muscle that was very close to being torn.”

Asked whether seven-time Wimbledon singles champion Williams had enough match practice to go deep into this year’s tournament, which begins on 2 July, her coach replied: “I think so.

“On that level, Roland Garros was fantastic because she started not competing great because she had not competed for so long.

“But after the first set of second match the real Serena popped out.”

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Williams beat Kristyna Pliskova and 11th seed Julia Gorges in straight sets in her French Open first and third-round matches. In round two, she fought back from a set down to win against Australian 17th seed Ashleigh Barty.

“I think she is competitive, her level and fitness is back,” Mouratoglou said.

“Plus at Wimbledon she will have the small advantage because she has the serve, which can take her out of bad situations.”

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Nadal vs. Thiem, Round 10: Previewing Sunday's Roland Garros Final

  • Posted: Jun 09, 2018

Nadal vs. Thiem, Round 10: Previewing Sunday’s Roland Garros Final

Nadal goes for Roland Garros title No. 11; Thiem his first

At some point, with so many mind-boggling stats and so much history having been accomplished, you almost just have to shake your head and shrug your shoulders at what Rafael Nadal has done at Roland Garros since 2005, when, as an enthusiastic 19-year-old, the Spaniard held his first Coupe des Mousquetaires. But wait, there’s more, as there always is with Nadal, who is still improving at 32.

View FedEx ATP Head2Head for the Roland Garros final & vote for who you think will win! 
Nadal vs Thiem

 

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When he meets Dominic Thiem – the only man to beat him on clay the past two seasons – in Sunday’s Roland Garros final, Nadal will try to mark a few more historical boxes on his Hall of Fame application. The 10-time Roland Garros champion can become only the second player to win 11 singles titles at one Grand Slam. Margaret Court won 11 Australian women’s singles titles before 1974.

Most singles titles at the same Grand Slam tournament (men and women)

Player

Grand Slam

Titles

Years

Margaret Court

Australian Open*

11

1960-66, 1969-71, 1973

Rafael Nadal

Roland Garros

10

2005-08, 2010-2014, 2017

Martina Navratilova

Wimbledon

9

1978-79, 1982-87, 1990

* Known as Australian Championships before 1969

Nadal also will attempt to become the first player in the Open Era (since April 1968) to win 11 titles at three different tour-level events, having won his 11th titles at the Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell and Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters earlier this year.

You May Also Like: Terror Battue: Rafa Into 11th Roland Garros Final

But Thiem, the 24-year-old Austrian making his Grand Slam final debut, should stride onto Court Philippe-Chatrier with his chest out and head nodding. The seventh seed beat Nadal last year in Rome and earlier this year in Madrid, accounting for 100 per cent of Nadal’s two clay-court losses in 2017 and 2018 (49-2). Their Madrid quarter-final on 11 May was their ninth and most recent FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting (Nadal leads 6-3).

On Sunday I have a very difficult match against a player that is playing great. I know I have to play my best if I want to have chances. Good thing is I played a lot of good matches this clay-court season,” Nadal said. “So Sunday is the day to give my best, is the day to increase even a little bit more the level.”

Thiem will try to become only the second Austrian player – man or woman – to win a Grand Slam title when he and Nadal, 2018’s clay-court match-wins leaders, face off for the third time this year. Thiem’s countryman Thomas Muster won the 1995 Roland Garros title.

“He’s a role model for every Austrian tennis player. He’s the biggest in our sport in Austria,” Thiem said.

2018 Tour-level match wins on clay

Player

Win-loss

Dominic Thiem

26-5

Rafael Nadal

25-1

Alexander Zverev

21-4

Fabio Fognini

17-9

Diego Schwartzman

17-7

No man has won his maiden Grand Slam final since Marin Cilic at the 2014 US Open (d. Nishikori). Thiem (24 years, 3 days) can also become the youngest Grand Slam champion since Novak Djokovic (24 years, 252 days) at the 2012 Australian Open.

“I know how to play against him. I have a plan,” Thiem said of facing Nadal. “If I want to beat him, I have to play that way like I did in Rome and in Madrid. But I’m also aware that here it’s tougher. He likes the conditions more here than in Madrid, for sure. Best of five is also different story.”

Read More: How Uncle Toni’s Tough Love Shaped Rafa

Two of their nine FedEx ATP Head2Head matchups have come at Roland Garros, and Nadal has won both of them, including a straight-sets defeat during last year’s semi-finals. The Spaniard will need to improve to 3-0 against Thiem at Roland Garros if he wants to stay No. 1 in the ATP Rankings. Lose, and Roger Federer will overtake the top spot. Thiem will rise to No. 7 regardless of Sunday’s final, which the Austrian is trying to approach pressure-free and relaxed.

Of course there is pressure, especially in Grand Slam finals, because I went a very long way now and I don’t want to lose the finals,” Thiem said. “But on the other hand… I’m facing Rafa, I’m not the one who has the pressure.”

Did You Know?
Thiem, who beat second seed Alexander Zverev in the quarter-finals, could become just the ninth man in the Open Era to beat the top two seeds at a Grand Slam.

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Nadal On Record Roland Garros Final: 'Not A Routine'

  • Posted: Jun 08, 2018

Nadal On Record Roland Garros Final: ‘Not A Routine’

The Spaniard plays Thiem for an 11th title in Paris on Sunday

Rafael Nadal and Roland Garros go together like thunder and lightning. Any time the Spaniard competes on the Parisian terre battue, you know something special will happen. The evidence is clear: a record 11 finals (10-0), an 85-2 record and more shouts of ‘Vamos!’ than one can count.

But just because Nadal has won on the red dirt at Roland Garros an unprecedented 97.8 per cent of the time does not mean that the World No. 1 takes his appearance in Sunday’s final for granted.

“Being in a final here is something I should rejoice about and be happy about. It may sound easy and logical, but I don’t want it to be. It’s not a routine. I don’t want anyone to think that it’s a routine,” Nadal said. “It’s a day that I should rejoice about, enjoy. And from tomorrow on, I will do what I have to do to get ready for Sunday.”

So even though winning another Roland Garros semi-final is nothing new for Nadal, he is enjoying it just the same. He maintains the same mentality that helped him lift his first Coupe des Mousquetaires as a 19-year-old in 2005.

You May Also Like: Terror Battue: Rafa Into 11th Roland Garros Final

“The motivation to play here always is high, [as] high as possible,” Nadal said. “But for me, every tournament… there [are] limited chances in your career. So when I had the chances, I just tried to convert. Then [if] you lose, you lose, but I’m going to play with my highest passion and love for the game and for the sport to try to have success.”

Sure, Nadal has been dominant this clay-court season, going 25-1 thus far, with his only loss coming in the Mutua Madrid Open quarter-finals against his opponent in the championship match, Dominic Thiem. But it’s easy to forget that Nadal had to withdraw from Acapulco, Indian Wells and Miami just a few months ago due to a right hip injury.

“I lost a lot of opportunities for injuries, and I know the years are going quickly,” Nadal said with a smile. “There are not 10 more chances to keep playing here. So I’m just enjoying the fact that I am here again.”

Nadal has long been credited for his fight on the court, and his relentless pursuit of every point. The Spaniard ‘takes a point off’ as often as the sun fails to rise in the morning — it simply does not happen. And the reason why is clear.

“I love what I am doing. I love the competition. I love the sport,” Nadal said. “If it’s not that way, it’s sure that I will not be here… It’s a lot of years of playing and doing the same things every year. But the only way to keep doing that and keep going on court every morning with the motivation to improve something [is] because you feel the game. You feel the sport and you appreciate [it].”  

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