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Cilic and Dimitrov to join Nadal at Queen's

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2018

Three of the top four players in the world rankings will compete at the Queen’s Club Championships after Marin Cilic and Grigor Dimitrov joined world number two Rafael Nadal in the line-up.

World number three Cilic and fourth-ranked Dimitrov will also compete against British number two Andy Murray.

The five-time champion has not played a competitive match since Wimbledon and had hip surgery in January.

But the 30-year-old Scot has declared his intention to play from 18-24 June.

Croat Cilic, who won the title in 2012, was beaten by unseeded Feliciano Lopez of Spain in last year’s final.

“I am proud to have won it and I want to win it again,” said the 29-year-old.

“It’s one of the best tournaments that we play. I have been playing the event since I was very young, so it has always been a special place for me.”

  • Roger Federer beats Robin Haase to become oldest world number one

Dimitrov, who won the ATP Finals on his debut appearance in November, also has a good record on the grass courts of Queen’s having been crowned champion in 2014.

The 26-year-old Bulgarian was beaten by eventual winner Lopez in last year’s semi-finals, but says winning the ATP event at London’s O2 Arena last year has spurred him on.

“Now that I have the O2 title, I am motivated to do even better at Queen’s and Wimbledon this year,” he said.

Tournament director Stephen Farrow added: “Marin and Grigor were both given wild cards in their formative years and they have repaid that faith handsomely by returning year after year, winning the title and going on to have fantastic careers.”

The Queen’s Club Championships will be live on BBC television, radio and online from 18-24 June.

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'Doctors aren't listening' – Williams on 'heartbreaking' childbirth statistics

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2018

It is “heartbreaking” black women in the United States are more likely than white women to die from complications in pregnancy or childbirth, says tennis great Serena Williams.

The 23-time Grand Slam singles winner is returning to the WTA Tour six months after she “almost died” giving birth.

Williams, 36, suffered a pulmonary embolism after her first child was delivered by Caesarean section.

The American says it may be time for women to “to get feisty and stand up”.

  • Serena Williams ‘ready’ for Indian Wells
  • What can Williams expect on her return?

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, black women in the United States are more than three times as likely as white women to die during pregnancy or childbirth.

“Doctors aren’t listening to us, just to be quite frank,” Williams told the BBC as she competed in the Tiebreak Tens event in New York.

“It may be time for women to be comfortable with having uncomfortable conversations.

“I was in a really fortunate situation where I know my body well, and I am who I am, and I told the doctor: ‘I don’t feel right, something’s wrong.’ She immediately listened.

“She was great. I had a wonderful, wonderful doctor. Unfortunately a lot of African Americans and black people don’t have the same experience that I’ve had.

“Also there are some things we are genetically pre-disposed to that some people aren’t. So knowing that going in, or some doctors not caring as much for us, is heartbreaking.

“Because of what I went through, it would be really difficult if I didn’t have the healthcare that I have – and to imagine all the other women that do go through that without the same healthcare, without the same response, it’s upsetting.”

Williams was acutely aware of the danger she was in after giving birth, as she had previously suffered a pulmonary embolism in 2011. But does she put this disparity in mortality rates down to prejudice, or to a lack of access to healthcare?

“I don’t know,” she said. “I think there’s a lot of pre-judging absolutely that definitely goes on. And it needs to be addressed.”

In recent years, as the pre-eminent sportswoman of her generation and one of the world’s most influential figures, Williams has begun to speak more freely about issues which concern her.

Whether it is to address a lack of diversity, the gender pay gap or sexual harassment, she argues it is time to have “conversations that really in 2018 we shouldn’t have to have”.

“I can’t say that’s it not time to get feisty. I think maybe it is,” the former world number one said.

“You have to stand up and, I heard someone say, have conversations that aren’t comfortable. Be comfortable with having uncomfortable conversations like we deserve to be paid what a guy does; we deserve to be treated fairly, the same way.

“I think it’s important to speak up loud and clear and say: ‘No, this isn’t right. Treat me the same way that you’re treating…’ How am I going to explain to my son that he is getting more? How am I going to explain to my daughter that she is getting less than my son? To me it’s impossible to explain this.”

‘Bumps, boobs and bouncing back’

An athlete’s path through pregnancy

The Serena Williams Fund aims to try to bring about equality through education. Williams has helped build three schools: two in Kenya, and one in Jamaica. Having “literally put nails in the school” in Jamaica, Williams says she faced more of a political challenge in Kenya.

“We had to fight really hard for equal education rights,” she said.

“We ended up on 60%-40% either way, because usually they send only boys to school in this area. And we were really excited with that because usually if there’s 10 kids, there would be like nine boys to one girl.”

In conjunction with her sister Venus, Serena has also developed an organisation to help the victims of what she describes as “senseless violence”. Their half-sister, Yetunde Price, was shot dead in Compton in California in 2003.

The goal is to help people deal with traumatic and sudden loss, but does Williams also feel she can bring any influence to bear on the gun law debate in the United States?

“Oh, I wish. We’re trying, everyone’s trying,” she says.

“We’ve got teenagers speaking up on it now, so that’s really been great. We keep raising awareness, we keep raising money: obviously it’s affected me personally, so it’s been really really trying.

“A lot of my partners donate to our centre to raise awareness in terms of helping these people after the fact, because you go though something so traumatic and you have no place to go.”

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Qureshi’s Stop War Start Tennis Spotlights Cambodia

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2018

Qureshi’s Stop War Start Tennis Spotlights Cambodia

Stop War Start Tennis, a 2018 ATP ACES For Charity grant recipient, is on a mission to spotlight existing projects around the world through official visits, while assessing the needs of local partners and also verifying that donations are being used transparently

Ten-year-old Teck Toy should have been in school instead of foraging through the forest. But when hunger is extreme and your family is in danger of dying due to starvation, education takes a backseat. In remote villages of northwest Cambodia, hunger is staved off by boiling brackish water and making soup. Snakes, frogs, rats, lizards and anything else caught that can provide a bit of protein gets tossed into the pot and flavoured with forest plants and starchy roots. Toy reached down into the dense forest undergrowth full of vines to pick up what he thought to be a wild mushroom. Instead, he picked up a ‘bomblet’, a small-sized fragmentation bomb that is packed with hundreds of others into a larger cluster bomb, which is then dropped from the air or launched from the ground.

In a flash, Toy lost his left leg and joined Cambodia’s vast legion of amputees due to unexploded ordinance from decades-old fighting. Today, thanks to a Catholic mission established in the Battambang prefecture by a Spanish priest and his devoted volunteers, the 10-year-old no longer goes hungry or misses school. And he spends his free time not in the forest, but on a new tennis court playing wheelchair tennis with other amputees.

In February, I visited Cambodia on behalf of Stop War Start Tennis, the foundation that Aisam-Ul-Haq Qureshi founded to promote peace through tennis and to help communities ravaged by war to rebuild through our great sport. The foundation received a grant through the ATP ACES For Charity programme this year, as it did in 2013.

Robert Davis

The funds are meant to help kids like Lisa Sokor, who wants to be a tennis star. The 11-year-old comes from the province of Siem Reap, home of the temples of Angkor Wat, which are considered one of the wonders of the world. Sokor grew up slightly more than a stone’s throw away from those magnificent Khmer structures in another village lying in ruins, Derc Sun Cang T’boung, quite possibly one of the poorest squatter villages in all of Cambodia. In Sokor’s village, homes are built on top of black slime mud; a sewage mix of gray water and black water spit out of thatched-palm huts through PVC pipes into a rain-soaked ground. Among the stench and filth, naked children run amok through a melting pot of malaria, cholera and dysentery.

It was Scott Windus who discovered a then seven-year-old Lisa Sokor. Windus is a former Tennis Australia Senior Club Coach, who has been introducing tennis to disadvantaged kids in Cambodia’s northwest territory for five years. Project Empower, which Windus spearheads, is funded by Australia’s Baptist Mission Agency.

“Lisa caught hold of the tail end of tennis, knowing that it would be her ticket out of this situation and to a bigger, brighter future,” said Windus. “At the age of 11, Lisa inspires all of us on a daily basis, as we are in awe of her self-motivated, never-say-die training and match attitude.”

Windus sets up shop and recruits players from the poorest villages in Siem Reap. For him, the challenges in Cambodia are not just providing opportunities for the poor, but also eradicating hatred and racial prejudices. Windus’ success stories range from a tuk-tuk driver turned tennis coach, to a half-dozen boys who have made it to the top of the national rankings. But his most impressive victory is a bit more subtle.

“The civil war of the 1980s dragged on in the northwestern region of the country for 19 years after hostilities stopped in the capital, Phnom Penh, in some areas not ceasing until as late as 1999,” stated Windus. “One of the enduring consequences is the tension that still exists between the Khmer national and the local Khmer/Vietnamese citizens, fathered by Vietnamese soldiers during the Vietnamese occupation.

“One success story is the village of Da Pol in Siem Reap City, home to a large number of the Khmer/Vietnamese families. Through the sport of tennis, the village is experiencing a unity like never before.

Stop War Start Tennis

“Getting permission to use makeshift nets on the local Vietnamese dirt volleyball court, we were able to host a large number of Khmer and Vietnamese youth coming each week to learn tennis. Tennis gave them a chance to run around together and have fun, while forgetting about their existing prejudice towards the other. As these players grow in their tennis abilities, gain new experiences through travelling and meeting people from all over the world, their character and attitudes also mature to encompass expanded horizons and a vision of a world that is much bigger than the one they come from.”

In November 2017, some of Windus’ students joined Tennis Cambodia’s national junior team for a trip to Vietnam.

“Interaction through tennis helps people form a more encompassing worldview and it also has the power to break down generational fears and prejudice across racial lines,” said Windus. “For the first time, they were able to witness the truth about their Vietnamese hosts being friendly, welcoming and encouraging. On the other side of this new experience and having met, played with and shared a meal with many of the Vietnamese team players and officials, the Cambodian children now have tools and a voice with which to challenge the status-quo within their communities and schools that want to continue the feud with their close neighbours.”

By the national road, it takes less than three hours to reach the city of Battambang from Siem Reap. While Siem Reap is on the map for its rich world heritage sites, Battambang has been a flaming arrow on the map for another reason — warfare. Invaders, rebels, bandits and deserting soldiers have all struck camp in and around Battambang. Even the name, Battambang sounds like it’s about to explode. The effects of anti-tank mines, cluster bombs and cheap homemade land mines are visible everywhere you go. Every year, just like clockwork, as the rainy season washes away thin layers of laterite soil thus bringing hidden explosives a little bit closer to the surface, a new batch of amputees appear on the scene.

Father Enrique Figueroda first came to Cambodia in the mid 1980s and was immediately struck by the amount of agony and misery he saw everywhere. Later, he was drawn to Battambang by the stories of how a small band of local Christians defied the Khmer Rouge genocidal mandate forbidding Christianity. It was here in Battambang that the soft-hearted father saw the maimed and disabled suffering while literally crying out for help. Soon, Figueroda became known as the wheelchair priest. Today, at his Arrupe Center, which is dedicated to helping teach and train locals, tennis wheelchairs are scattered about a cement slab that has a net strung across. Tennis is just one of the wheelchair activities that they sponsor. The Arrupe Center is staffed by young Spanish volunteers and local adults. Most of the Spanish staff live about 25 kilometres away in the village of Ta Hen at the sister school commune. The expression, “off the beaten track”, could have been talking about Ta Hen, but that is where the land was granted and a school and agriculture center were built. And it is also the least likely place that you will ever see two brand new lighted tennis courts constructed, complete with a practice wall — a gift from tennis-loving Spanish donors.

Stop War Start Tennis

On the day I visited Ta Hen, both disabled and disadvantaged kids, many from parents who gifted them to the church because they were too poor to care for them, were trying to play tennis. I say trying, because there were not enough racquets and balls available for everyone to use at once. None of the kids had tennis shoes. I suppose that quite a few would rather have prosthetic legs first. Through previous Stop War Start Tennis visits in hard hit areas around the world, Aisam-Ul-Haq Qureshi and I have seen similar scenes. But here was something different. I looked around the tennis courts at kids as poor as church mice — some were missing limbs, others had birth defects, a few were stricken with incurable diseases and one child had never grown. There they all were running, limping, rolling and hobbling all over the place, as a constant roar of laughter seemed to shake the very hard-court surface.

“I am so happy to support and recommend these two projects in Siem Reap and Battambang,” Qureshi told me. “What they have done for these children with so little is a testament to the dedication to improving lives through tennis. On the ATP World Tour, we have the best of everything. We often don’t realise the value of used balls, racquets and shoes. Equipment we tend to discard could be used to bring joy to those less fortunate.”

Later, I was allowed to visit the dorm rooms where kids slept three or four to a bed, watch other children tending to their assigned plots in the garden, and see others completing their daily tasks. Everywhere I went kids were smiling, singing, laughing and those that could; skipping and dancing around the commune. Then it dawned on me why these kids, who had every reason to be angry, sad or bitter seemed so happy. Here in a remote village — where remote takes on a new meaning — surrounded by rice paddies and corn fields, coconut palms and banana trees, lies a little haven where kids that nobody wants feel loved no matter what condition, shape or size they come in. During my visit, I quit counting the amount of times that I observed the Spanish volunteers hugging, holding hands or carrying these little children. Maybe that is why they are all volunteers — you cannot pay people to love in those unfortunate conditions. Over two days, I got to know a few of the volunteers: Ivan, Martia, Juan and Borja. Though they are not trained professional tennis coaches, there is nothing these young people would not do to encourage the kids to play tennis.

Afterwards, Qureshi asked me what I learned from this visit that we might share with other people who are considering creating similar projects around the world.

I could think of no easy answer. What I observed with Windus in Siem Reap and Figueroda’s team in Battambang — to whom Qureshi donated five wheelchairs last year — is just how amazing the amount of joy and hope that tennis can make in the lives of those who are afflicted in one way or the other. Against some pretty incredible odds, these two men and their teams have succeeded where lesser-determined people would have given up long ago.

View Qureshi’s Charity Profile

Learn More About ATP ACES For Charity

If interested in communicating or supporting either project in Siem Reap or Battambang, Cambodia, please contact Robert Davis at editor@elitetennis.org for further details.

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It's been hard, but I'm ready to return – Williams

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2018

Serena Williams says she frequently wondered how she would keep going after returning to the practice courts following the birth of her first child.

The 23-time Grand Slam singles champion will return to the WTA Tour at Indian Wells in California this week.

In an interview with BBC Sport, the 36-year-old American said she is motivated by the thought of playing long enough for her six-month-old daughter to have memories of watching her.

“It’s been hard,” she said.

“There have been so many days, even still, when I’m like, ‘how am I going to keep going?’

“It’s been really, really difficult but I keep going and I know that I might not be at my best yet, but I’m getting there and every day is a new day and every day I should be getting better.

“As long as I’m moving forward, even if it’s at a turtle’s pace, then I’m OK with that.”

  • Rattles, rackets and two-room hotel suites: What might face Serena on return?

Williams was speaking before competing at the Tiebreak Tens event at New York’s Madison Square Garden.

In an article for CNN last month, she wrote she feels “lucky to have survived” Alexis Olympia’s birth, having suffered a pulmonary embolism after an emergency Caesarean section.

But now, having played an exhibition match in Abu Dhabi in late December and a doubles rubber for the US Fed Cup team against the Netherlands last month, she says the time is right for her to return.

“I’m ready, or else I wouldn’t be here,” she said.

“If I’m not ready now, I’m just never going to be ready. I feel in two months I’ll be way better than I am now, but you have to start somewhere. I don’t want to keep sitting on the sidelines and thinking about it.”

Williams can take encouragement from her performance in New York on Monday. Her serve looked threatening and she hit some menacing winners as she beat another returning player – Marion Bartoli – before losing to Zhang Shuai in the semi-finals.

Williams last appeared in a Grand Slam at the 2017 Australian Open. Victory over sister Venus in the final left her just one behind Margaret Court’s all-time record of 24 Grand Slam singles titles.

She has made no secret of the fact she is motivated by the thought of winning 25. And also by giving her daughter a meaningful chance to watch her play.

“I don’t need any more motivation,” Williams said.

“I have the best thing I could ever want right now. I’ve always been an extremely motivated person, but my main thing is that I would love for my daughter to be around with me doing great, and playing amazing, so that definitely gives me some motivation.

“I would have thought I would have retired six years ago, but I’m still here and I’m playing great, and I think I’ll still be playing good.”

She added it was “impossible” to say how long she would continue to play for.

Williams, who is unranked as she has spent more than 12 months away from the tour, has been drawn to play Zarina Diyas of Kazakhstan in the first round in Indian Wells. The match is likely to be played on Thursday evening, Californian time.

She could play her sister Venus in the third round, but has understandably sounded a note of caution.

After all, the former world number one only gave birth six months ago, and six weeks of that time was spent in bed as she recovered from emergency surgery.

“My expectations, I don’t know what they are,” said Williams.

“I can’t go and say I expect to lose because that is something I will never say. It’s just a little different. I’m just expecting to see where I am more than anything.

“This is a good time to start for the summer. If I want to play in those Grand Slams [the French Open, Wimbledon and the US Open] and play well, I think now is the perfect time to start.”

The only mother to have won the Wimbledon singles title since World War One was Australia’s Evonne Cawley (nee Goolagong) in 1980.

Another motivating factor, should Williams ever need one.

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Tennis TV To Stream Every March Masters Match

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2018

Tennis TV To Stream Every March Masters Match

Every singles and doubles match from BNP Paribas Open and Miami Open presented by Itaú available live and on demand

After a frantic start to the 2018 season, the ATP World Tour turns its attention to the first Masters 1000 events of the season – the BNP Paribas Open and the Miami Open presented by Itaú.

With the world’s best players heading to North America for the ‘Sunshine Double’, fans can follow every singles and doubles match on the ATP’s official streaming service, TennisTV.com.

Subscribe to either a monthly or annual subscription to Tennis TV today!

With live streaming from up to eight courts at once, you can enjoy the option of Tennis TV’s multi-screen player to make sure you keep up with all the action. Watch live and on-demand coverage of 252 matches from Indian Wells and Miami, on a range of devices including Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV, Roku and Xbox One.

Last year saw Roger Federer win memorable back-to-back titles to complete the ‘Sunshine Double’ for the third time. Will the new World No. 1 repeat the feat this year, or will the likes of Rafael Nadal, Alexander Zverev, Grigor Dimitrov, Marin Cilic or perhaps a dark horse triumph in either the Californian desert or the Florida Keys?

Federer will play his first event since becoming the oldest man in history to hold the World No. 1 spot in the ATP Rankings. Nadal will be hot on his heels as he bids to regain the top position at the first Masters 1000 event of the year.

The action will then roll over to the east coast in Miami, beginning 21 March, with the tournament being held at Crandon Park for the last time before moving to Hard Rock Stadium for 2019.

Not yet subscribed?
Sign up to Tennis TV today to watch up to 2,000 matches from all 64 ATP World Tour tournaments in 2018 including live streaming from ATP World Tour Masters 1000, ATP 500* and 250* events.

*Geo-restrictions may apply. Click here for more information.

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Federer's Hard-Court Numbers Are Hard To Beat

  • Posted: Mar 06, 2018

Federer’s Hard-Court Numbers Are Hard To Beat

A look at Federer’s performance on hard courts since the start of 2017

Roger Federer has been one of the premier hard-court performers on the ATP World Tour throughout his career. But since the beginning of 2017, when the Swiss was as low as No. 17 in the ATP Rankings, he has far exceeded his already-impressive average win-rate on the surface.

In fact, Federer has led the Tour with a 52-4 record (92.9 per cent) on hard courts during that span, winning seven of his nine tour-level titles on the surface since the start of last year. Five of those seven triumphs came at either an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event (2017 Indian Wells, 2017 Miami, 2017 Shanghai) or a Grand Slam (2017 & 2018 Australian Open).

But perhaps what is most impressive is that the 97-time tour-level champion has far exceeded the best win-loss rates on the surface in the history of the sport. According to the FedEx ATP Performance Zone, Novak Djokovic has the highest all-time winning percentage on hard courts, triumphing an impressive 84.2 per cent of the time, with Federer right behind at 83.4 per cent.

Best Career Records On Hard Courts

 Player W-L Rate Career W-L Tour-Level Hard-Court Titles
 Novak Djokovic 84.2 % 511-96  51 
 Roger Federer 83.4 % 720-143  67 
 Jimmy Connors 82.8 % 547-114  49 
 Ivan Lendl 82.1 %  395-86  31 
 Rod Laver 81.3 %  156-36  18 

Then, you can compare that stretch to the best career records on other surfaces. Rafael Nadal is undeniably the greatest clay-court performer in history, winning 91.7 per cent of his matches (389-35). Don Budge leads the way on grass with a 52-5 record (91.2 per cent).

Sure, Federer’s run of success has lasted just more than a year at this point, but 56 matches is not a small sample size. And when you take a look at the rest of the Swiss’ career, it shows that Federer’s recent win-loss record on hard courts is not a fluke. In 2005, the right-hander won 50 of 51 hard-court matches (98 per cent) on the surface and followed that up the next year by winning 59 of 61 (96.7 per cent) matches. In total, he has exceeded a 90 per cent win-rate on hard courts for an entire season four times. This year, he is off to a 12-0 start.

Federer’s Best Years On Hard Courts

 Year W-L Rate Year W-L Tour-Level Hard-Court Titles
 2005 98.0 % 50-1 8
 2006 96.7 %  59-2
 2004 92.0 %  46-4 
 2017 90.9 %  40-4 
 2014 88.7 %  55-7 

One of the leading factors spurring this recent run is that in 14 of his 56 matches since the beginning of last year, Federer has not faced a break point, and in nine more, he saved each break opportunity held against him.

So, how has he been so successful on hard courts recently? Former World No. 1 Jim Courier says that one shot in particular has improved dramatically.

“Roger’s addition of backhand aggression from the start of 2017 has had a massive impact on his results,” Courier told ATPWorldTour.com. “To go 4-0 [all on hard courts] versus Nadal last year was awfully impressive and due in large part to the backhand wing.”

And while this hard-court run has been magnificent, Courier says that it’s not just about the surface.

“Roger is impressive on all surfaces, including hard courts, due to his all court acumen and fantastic technique,” Courier said.

Federer now enters a critical stretch of events at the BNP Paribas Open and the Miami Open presented by Itau — the first two ATP World Tour Masters 1000 events of the season — where he defends 2,000 ATP Rankings points from last season’s victories. Federer will have to be at his best, as he must advance to at least the semi-finals in Indian Wells to maintain his spot atop the ATP Rankings. 

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LTA president Corrie steps down temporarily during assault investigation

  • Posted: Mar 05, 2018

Lawn Tennis Association president Martin Corrie has “stepped aside” amid an investigation into the way a committee he was on dealt with a sexual assault allegation.

Corrie has been replaced temporarily by deputy president David Rawlinson.

In a statement the LTA acknowledged it had commissioned an investigation following a complaint made in December relating to an allegation from 2004.

Corrie had served on the committee that addressed the original complaint.

He said: “This case concerns a coach who worked at Hertfordshire County LTA when I was a member of the executive committee, who was investigated and sanctioned by the LTA disciplinary committee at the time.

“Therefore in agreement with the board of the LTA, I believe it is right for me to step aside from my presidency during the course of this investigation.”

LTA chairman David Gregson added: “It’s essential that we move quickly as an organisation if or when a safeguarding issue is raised. The LTA has robust governance processes in place today to ensure that impartial investigations are undertaken into all such cases.”

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