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Bautista Agut Growing In Confidence In Dubai

  • Posted: Mar 01, 2018

Bautista Agut Growing In Confidence In Dubai

Pouille, Krajinovic play during the night session

Spain’s Roberto Bautista Agut moved to within one victory of a place in his 14th ATP World Tour final (7-6 record) on Thursday at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships. The 29-year-old edged past Borna Coric of Croatia 7-6(4), 6-4 in one hour and 43 minutes for a place in the semi-finals, where he will meet a wild card, Tunisia’s Malek Jaziri or Stefanos Tsitsipas of Greece.

Third seed Bautista Agut, who beat Juan Martin del Potro for his second ASB Classic trophy in January, recovered from a 1-3 deficit in the first set. He broke Coric to love at 4-4 in the second set. “I think I played very good tennis,” said Bautista Agut. “[It] was not easy to beat Borna [as] he’s very solid. He was hitting very good serves and playing very aggressively… I didn’t rest all match.”

Second-seeded Frenchman Lucas Pouille, this year’s Open Sud de France titlist (d. Gasquet), will challenge eighth seed Yuichi Sugita of Japan later today. Meanwhile, seventh-seeded Serbian Filip Krajinovic meets Evgeny Donskoy of Russia.

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Challenger Success Sees Fritz Earn Indian Wells Wild Card

  • Posted: Mar 01, 2018

Challenger Success Sees Fritz Earn Indian Wells Wild Card

American #NextGenATP claims main draw berth at the BNP Paribas Open

Taylor Fritz will never forget his 2017 run at the BNP Paribas Open. Just one year ago, the California native turned in the performance of his young career to stun sixth seed Marin Cilic in three gripping sets and reach the third round. It was his first victory over a Top 10 opponent.

Now, Fritz will have the opportunity to go one step further in 2018. On the heels of a dominant stretch on the ATP Challenger Tour, the #NextGenATP star earned a main draw wild card into the first ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event of the year in Indian Wells.

“It feels really good knowing that I’ll be playing in the main draw,” said Fritz. “We’re close to home here, so it’s very special. I’m just happy to know I’m in.”

The top two Americans at the inaugural Oracle Challenger Series – tournaments in Newport Beach and Indian Wells – are awarded berths into the BNP Paribas Open. In January, Fritz claimed the title in the Los Angeles suburb of Newport Beach, his first Challenger victory in two years. He has followed that up with a quarter-final run at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden this week, defeating both Noah Rubin and Norbert Gombos in straight sets.

“Coming into this week, I wasn’t too worried about it,” Fritz added. “I’m just approaching each tournament in the same way. Winning in Newport Beach and doing well here, I managed to pick up the wild card and I’m happy to have that opportunity.”

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Fritz, who is up to No. 77 in the ATP Rankings, is rediscovering the top form that saw him climb to the doorstep of the Top 50 in 2016. He has posted a combined 16-4 record thus far this year, also finishing runner-up at the Challenger stop in Noumea and reaching the quarter-finals at last week’s ATP World Tour event in Delray Beach.

Fritz continues his quest for a fifth ATP Challenger Tour title against Dudi Sela in Friday’s quarters.

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Zverev Finds A Way To First QF Of 2018

  • Posted: Mar 01, 2018

Zverev Finds A Way To First QF Of 2018

German will next meet Harrison

He might have preferred a tidier match, but Alexander Zverev will definitely be happy with his result from the Abierto Mexicano Telcel in Acapulco on Wednesday. The second seed saved three set points in the first set and eventually overcame countryman Peter Gojowczyk 7-6(6), 6-3 to move into the quarter-finals in Mexico.

Zverev was serving at 5-6 in the first set but fell behind 15/40 only to save both set points, and in the tie-break, he erased another set point at 5/6. A break at 4-3 in the second set sealed the match.

The World No. 4 converted both of his break-point chances while erasing eight of the nine break points he faced. Gojowczyk had been playing well, too, having reached his second ATP World Tour final at the Delray Beach Open on Sunday (l. to #NextGenATP Tiafoe).

Zverev, in his first quarter-final of the season, will meet Ryan Harrison of the U.S., who handed Argentina’s Diego Schwartzman his first loss in six matches 6-3, 5-7, 6-4. Harrison, who reached the semi-finals at 2015 Acapulco, won nearly 60 per cent of Schwartzman’s second-serve points.

DID YOU KNOW?
During his breakout 2017, Zverev reached 12 quarter-finals and won five ATP World Tour titles.

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Thiem 'Almost Perfect' In Acapulco

  • Posted: Mar 01, 2018

Thiem ‘Almost Perfect’ In Acapulco

Austrian will meet either Ferrer or Del Potro in QF

Former champion Dominic Thiem looked like a hard-court king on Wednesday. The 2016 Abierto Mexicano Telcel champion dismissed #NextGenATP Canadian Denis Shapovalov 6-2, 6-3 in just 75 minutes.

The third seed won 77 per cent of his service points and didn’t face a break point. Thiem also benefitted from 20 unforced errors from the left-handed Shapovalov.

“I’m very happy because… everybody knows how good he can play and how dangerous he is, but I kept him kind of down from the first point on, and it was really good,” Thiem said. “I was really on from the first point… Today was almost perfect.”

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The Austrian has won nine ATP World Tour titles – seven of which have come on clay. He will next meet Spain’s David Ferrer or Juan Martin del Potro of Argentina, who play the final evening match on Cancha Central in Mexico.

Reigning Next Gen ATP Finals champion Hyeon Chung kept winning. The South Korean dropped only four games and didn’t face a break point against 21-year-old American Ernesto Escobedo, moving into the quarter-finals 6-3, 6-1. It’s already Chung’s fourth quarter-final of the season – ASB Classic, Australian Open, Delray Beach Open.

Chung will next face France’s Adrian Mannarino or Kevin Anderson of South Africa, the fifth seed who’s playing at a career-high ATP Ranking of No. 8.

American Jared Donaldson, who also played at the inaugural Next Gen ATP Finals last November in Milan, also dropped only four games against Aussie Matthew Ebden 6-3, 6-1. Donaldson reaches his first quarter-final of the year, and will next meet either Aussie Thanasi Kokkinakis or Feliciano Lopez of Spain.

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Murray could return before grass-court season

  • Posted: Mar 01, 2018

Britain’s Andy Murray is planning to return to the practice court towards the end of March and could be back in action before the grass-court season.

The 30-year-old, who had hip surgery on 8 January, has not played a competitive match since Wimbledon last year.

The early stages of his rehabilitation are going well, according to those close to the former world number one.

The grass-court season starts at the beginning of June, before Wimbledon begins on 2 July.

“I’m certainly not going to rush anything,” Murray said immediately after his operation in Melbourne.

The Scot, Wimbledon champion in 2013 and 2016, has not played competitively since losing in five sets to American Sam Querrey in the SW19 quarter-finals last year.

He played exhibition fixtures against Roger Federer and Roberto Bautista Agut before pulling out of the Australian Open in January and then deciding to have surgery.

  • Will surgery give Murray new lease of life?

Murray is back in the gym, where he is using weights and working out on the exercise bike and a vertical climber.

Pilates – which can aid flexibility, and is considered a useful tool in injury prevention – remains an important part of his routine, as it has been since Murray experienced back problems in the run up to his 2013 surgery.

In the immediate aftermath of his operation in Melbourne, the three-time Grand Slam champion suggested he might be back on the practice court about now.

But as he stressed in January, in a conference call with a group of British journalists from his hospital bed, he does not want to set himself rigid deadlines.

“I’m not going to try to get back as quickly as I can,” said Murray.

“And I’m going to take my time to make sure that the rehab is done properly, and make sure that the surgery is as successful as it can be.

“A lot of what the surgeons will tell you, a lot of it is down to your determination and your work ethic and how well you rehab, how much you listen and do all the correct things.”

Some warm-weather training will be on the agenda – perhaps in early April – and if everything goes very smoothly, it remains possible Murray could be back in action before the summer.

May would seem a best-case scenario, even though Murray has referred to a typical 14-week recovery period from this type of surgery (which, in his case, would be mid-April).

“I’m not interested in coming back for a specific tournament,” he said in January.

“I want to come back when I’m fit and ready to play, not to get into a situation like in Brisbane or New York, where I’m unsure when I turn up at a tournament how fit I am.

“I want to know when I come back that I’m ready.”

It will be fascinating to see whether he feels ready to put his body through any part of the clay-court season. The French Open, where he reached the semi-finals last year, begins at Roland Garros on 27 May.

But if he prefers to wait for the grass, then his first opportunity would come a week later in south-west London when the Surbiton Trophy is staged on the ATP Challenger Tour.

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