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Australian Open: Jamie Murray and Latisha Chan progress in mixed doubles

  • Posted: Jan 21, 2018

Britain’s Jamie Murray earned a narrow victory with partner Latisha Chan in the opening round of the Australian Open mixed doubles competition.

The top seeds took the match 4-6 7-5 11-9 on a championship tie-break against Andreja Klepac and Rajeev Ram.

They will play Australians Storm Sanders and Marc Polmans in round two.

Murray is bidding for his third Grand Slam mixed title in a row after he won Wimbledon and the US Open in 2017 with Martina Hingis who has since retired.

The victory comes a day after Murray was knocked out of the second round of the men’s doubles competition with partner Bruno Soares.

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Roger Picks His 5 Greatest Aussie Open Moments

  • Posted: Jan 20, 2018

Roger Picks His 5 Greatest Aussie Open Moments

Swiss looks back on his time in Melbourne

Another milestone victory for Roger Federer… Where have we heard that before? On Saturday, the Swiss added to his Australian Open legacy, notching an unprecedented 90th match win with a straight-set triumph over Richard Gasquet. 

The defending champion’s success Down Under is astounding. For the 16th time in his career, Federer will make an appearance in the Round of 16 at Melbourne Park. In fact, the World No. 2 has not dropped a set through the first three rounds for the first time since 2014.

Federer’s love affair with the Australian Open began nearly two decades ago, when a precocious 18-year-old with a dazzling one-handed backhand stepped on Rod Laver Arena for the first time. It was the year 2000 and the Basel native would go on to amass a glittering resume, rarely putting a wrong foot in 19 consecutive appearances. 

With so many memorable wins and epic matches, what are Federer’s fondest memories at Melbourne Park? Needless to say, the 36-year-old has plenty to choose from.

First match win on debut against Michael Chang
“My first round here in 2000 against Chang was cool,” said Federer following his victory on Saturday. “Clearly it was my first win here.”

Clinching World No. 1 for the first time
“[In 2004], the semi-final match against Ferrero and a couple days later winning my first Australian Open against Safin. Securing World No. 1 the following Monday was big for me.”

The 13 five-setters
“I had a lot of five-setters, too. Never really had a bad tournament, to be honest. Even in the year I lost to Seppi, I thought I was actually playing alright. Even the Safin match I ended up losing in 2005 was epic.”

Two epic finals vs. Rafa
“Of course, the two finals with Rafa here in 2009, which was the best we ever played against each other, I believe, then last year’s.”

Winning his first major as a father
“2010 also, I think it was my first major with the girls. That was nice.”

You May Also Like: Federer Flashes Into The Fourth Round

 

Federer is now one win from matching his Wimbledon mark of 91 victories. Moreover, his current 10-match win streak in Melbourne is his longest at a Grand Slam in seven years. He will face one of the breakout stars of the first week in World No. 80 Marton Fucsovics. It will be their first encounter and remarkably just Federer’s second against a Hungarian opponent in his career. His first? A straight-set win over Fucsovics’ coach Attila Savolt at the 2002 Australian Open.

“I’m very happy that I was able to rise to a level that I needed to beat Richard,” Federer said, assessing his third-round win. “It was tough. The score shows it, as well. I could have done it maybe a bit faster. At the same time, I’m happy to have done it the way it happened. I was pleased. I think I had some good shots. I was happy the way I played. I also thought we both played a good level again, so it was fun.”

Victory over Fucsovics would put Federer in his 14th quarter-final at Melbourne Park, where he owns a perfect 13-0 record. It won’t be long before the Swiss needs a Top 10 list for his Aussie Open memories.

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Major Showdown: Can Dimitrov Oust In-Form Kyrgios?

  • Posted: Jan 20, 2018

Major Showdown: Can Dimitrov Oust In-Form Kyrgios?

Kyrgios enters the match with a win over Dimitrov in Brisbane this year

In the years to come, Grigor Dimitrov and Nick Kyrgios may meet for Grand Slam titles. But on Sunday, two of the most talented players on the ATP World Tour will face off for a spot in the quarter-finals at the Australian Open.

Dimitrov won what was at the time the biggest title of his career at last August’s Western & Southern Open by defeating Kyrgios — claiming his first ATP World Tour Masters 1000 title. However, Kyrgios has arguably seized momentum in the rivalry — despite trailing in their FedEx ATP Head2Head series 1-2 — ahead of their enticing encounter.

Just two weeks ago, Kyrgios won his first ATP World Tour title in his home country, Australia, at the Brisbane International presented by Suncorp. And in the semi-finals, he came back from a set down to defeat the in-form 2017 Nitto ATP Finals champion, Dimitrov.

“He played a pretty solid first set. I played a pretty loose game to get broken,” Kyrgios said at the time. “Pretty much from then on, I felt pretty in control of the match.”

FedExATP Head2Head: Grigor Dimitrov vs. Nick Kyrgios

Year  Event Winner Round  Score
 2018  Brisbane International presented by Suncorp  Nick Kyrgios  SF  3-6, 6-1, 6-4
 2017  Western & Southern Open  Grigor Dimitov  F  6-3, 7-5
 2015  BNP Paribas Open  Grigor Dimitov  R64  7-6(2), 3-6, 7-6(4)

The Canberra native struck 19 aces and claimed 82 percent of his first-serve points, playing with a clear aggression that took the match off of Dimitrov’s racquet.

“Sometimes when there’s no way out, you try to change up the game and break the rhythm of a player. And today just everything, whatever I thought he tried, it was just great,” Dimitrov said. “He deserved to win today.”

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Now, the World No. 3 is the player who has to find an answer for Kyrgios’ game, which has thrilled the Australian crowd in the tournament’s first week. The 22-year-old defeated his idol and fan favourite, 2008 Australian Open finalist Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, in four sets Friday evening to gather plenty of momentum heading into the showdown.

“I feel like my level is there,” Kyrgios said. “He’s had a couple great wins this week. I know it’s going to be tough. He loves the five-set format. He loves playing marathons. He’s played well here in the past. I know it’s going to be incredibly tough, but I’m not going to think about it right now.”

It is hard to imagine the third seed bringing anything but his best. After getting pushed to 8-6 in a fifth set against Mackenzie McDonald in the second round, Dimitrov improved in a four-set third-round victory over #NextGenATP Russian Andrey Rublev. The dynamic right-hander is prepared for his opponent and Kyrgios’ home crowd.

“I’ve played against the local, so to speak, all that. That’s part of the game,” Dimitrov said. “I’m very excited to just play, to go out there and compete. I appreciate my wins now. To get to play another day, I mean, this itself should get you already in a different mindset coming into whoever you [have] got to play.

Dimitrov has proven his prowess in the big moments on Rod Laver Arena, where the fourth-round match will be played. The Bulgarian pushed current World No. 1 Rafael Nadal to five sets in a four-hour, 56-minute semi-final last year that Eurosport commentator John McEnroe called the “match of his life”.

“It’s for sure one of the best matches I ever played,” Dimitrov said on Friday. “Absolutely.”

Will he be able to conjure such an effort again when he faces the in-form home favourite?

The world will soon find out.

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Federer Advises Zverev After Slam Disappointment

  • Posted: Jan 20, 2018

Federer Advises Zverev After Slam Disappointment

Defending champion offers words of encouragement

Alexander Zverev has proven his talent, soaring into the Top 5 of the ATP Rankings with five ATP World Tour titles last year, but once again fell short at a Grand Slam.

After a tough five-set loss to Hyeon Chung on Saturday, the World No. 4, still waiting to reach his first Grand Slam quarter-final, received some valuable advice from 19-time Grand Slam champion Roger Federer.

Remembering his own struggles early in his career, Federer reflected that it is not always easy to progress to the latter stages of a major for the first time. The Swiss did not advance past the quarter-finals stage at that level before breaking through and winning his first Grand Slam title, at the 17th time of asking, at Wimbledon in 2003.

“Give yourself time, maybe set the bar a bit lower,” Federer told the press he advised Zverev. “First let’s maybe try to look for a quarter-final or a semi-final, not just right away coming to the Australian Open or US Open thinking, ‘I have to win this thing’.

“Be patient about it. Don’t put yourself under unnecessary pressure. Learn from these mistakes. Whatever happened happened. Unfortunately you have to believe in the process you’re in right now. You had a good off-season. You’re working hard. You’re doing the right things. It’s maybe not paying off at the Grand Slam level, but just stay calm, don’t dig yourself into a hole. There’s no reason for that right now.”

You May Also Like: Chung Upsets Zverev To Reach Last 16

Explaining why he wanted to help his younger rival, who beat him to win the Rogers Cup in Montreal last year, the defending Australian Open champion added, “I just thought some nice words would maybe cheer him up, get him over the loss a few more hours earlier than it normally would.

“It’s supposed to hurt. I’m sure it did. He looked crushed when I saw him. I gave him a tap on the shoulder and said, ‘Come on, it’s not too bad. It could be worse’,” said Federer.

Zverev will perhaps look to use this advice in future Grand Slam championships, which he has admittedly struggled in.

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“I have some figuring out to do with what happens to me in deciding moments in Grand Slams. It happened at Wimbledon. It happened in New York. It happened here,” said Zverev.

The Internazionali BNL d’Italia and Rogers Cup champion, disappointed after losing from two-sets-to-one up, summarised his thoughts on his level and his Grand Slam troubles in his press conference.

“I think game-wise my level was good,” reflected Zverev. “I think I should have won in four sets but I think for four sets, as I said, the match was [at a] very, very high level and very intense. I’m still young, so I have got time. I definitely have some figuring out to do for myself.”

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Australian Open: Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic into fourth round

  • Posted: Jan 20, 2018
2018 Australian Open
Dates: 15-28 January Venue: Melbourne Park
Coverage: Watch highlights on BBC Two, the BBC Sport website and app. Live commentary on the best matches on BBC Radio 5 live, sports extra and online.

Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic both reached round four of the Australian Open with straight-set wins – although the Serb suffered an injury scare.

Switzerland’s five-time champion Federer beat Richard Gasquet 6-2 7-5 6-4 to progress to the last 16.

Six-time winner Djokovic had treatment on his lower back and leg but saw off Albert Ramos-Vinolas 6-2 6-3 6-3.

“It’s nothing major to be concerned about. It’s things that surface every day. I guess it’s normal,” he said.

Djokovic, 30, is playing in his first event since Wimbledon last year after a six-month lay-off with an elbow injury.

  • Fourth seed Zverev falls to shock defeat
  • Bolder Edmund seeks quarter-final spot
  • Murray would give back ranking just to play again

Despite the convincing scoreline he was not at his best on Margaret Court Arena and was often frustrated on court.

However, he closed out the match in two hours, 23 minutes and progresses to face 21-year-old South Korean Hyeon Chung, who is making his first appearance in the last 16 of a Grand Slam.

There were early opportunities on the Djokovic serve for Ramos-Vinolas, but the Spaniard was the first to be broken, in the fourth game, as the Serb took the first set.

At points it looked like a regulation match for Djokovic but concerns for his chances were raised when he called for the trainer with the score 2-1 in the second set.

He continued to hobble and stretch his left leg following the treatment but fought off four break points for Vinolas-Ramos at 4-2 in the second set to maintain his advantage, after which the match always looked to be going in Djokovic’s favour.

“These kind of circumstances in which I’m in at the moment are quite different,” added Djokovic.

“I’ve never faced a situation where I didn’t compete six months.

“That’s why I’m kind of forced to be very cautious of what happens day-to-day, be dedicated to my body and training.”

Gasquet fails to halt losing streak

Federer, 36, comfortably extended his record over Gasquet to 17-2, with the Frenchman only ever having beaten the 19-time Grand Slam champion on clay.

Gasquet, 31, was behind almost immediately in Saturday’s night session and failed to muster a single break point until late in the third set, when he clawed his way back to 4-4.

Federer slammed the door shut on any sustained comeback, however, clinching victory with a brilliant return game after one hour and 59 minutes with two backhand winners.

“I was able to maybe stay a little more on the offensive than he was,” said the Swiss.

“The second set was tight, the match was close and the end could have gone to a tie-break.”

The defending champion will face Hungarian world number 80 Marton Fucsovics in the last 16.

  • Impressive Kerber thrashes Sharapova
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  • Murray and Soares suffer early exit

Click to see content: most_aussie_mens_titles

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Fourth seed Zverev falls to shock defeat to unseeded Chung

  • Posted: Jan 20, 2018

Fourth seed Alexander Zverev was knocked out of the Australian Open with a five-set defeat by world number 59 Hyeon Chung in the third round.

Zverev, 20, led by two sets to one but crumbled to a 5-7 7-6 (7-3) 2-6 6-3 6-0 loss against his 21-year-old opponent.

The German, tipped as one of the future stars of men’s tennis, won just five points in the decider.

Chung becomes the first South Korean man to reach the last 16 of the Australian Open.

  • Bolder Edmund targets quarter-finals
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  • Halep saves match points to win epic
  • Murray & Soares out of doubles

He will face six-time champion Novak Djokovic next in his first Grand Slam fourth-round match.

“He’s 50-whatever in the world but this was a top-10 level match from the start till the end of the fourth set, and for him until the end,” Zverev said.

“When he plays like that, there are very, very few people who will beat him.”

Zverev, meanwhile, is still yet to reach a Grand Slam quarter-final despite being ranked number four in the world.

“I have some figuring out to do, what happens to me in deciding moments in Grand Slams,” he added. “It happened at Wimbledon, it happened in New York. It happened here. But I’m still young, so I’ve got time.”

The German became distracted in the fourth set, complaining to the umpire that the court’s floodlights should be switched on.

He then received a warning from the umpire at the start of the fifth set when he smashed his racquet after Chung broke serve.

Berdych overpowers Del Potro

Big-hitting Czech Tomas Berdych fired 20 aces and struck 52 winners in a 6-3 6-3 6-2 victory over Argentine 12th seed Juan Martin del Potro.

Berdych, the 19th seed, goes on to face Italian 25th seed Fabio Fognini, who beat France’s Julien Benneteau 3-6 6-2 6-1 4-6 6-3.

“He was just better than me,” said Del Potro. “He hit very hard, served very well and played a smart game. He deserved to win. No excuses.”

Austrian fifth seed Dominic Thiem cruised through in straight sets against Frenchman Adrian Mannarino.

Thiem will play Tennys Sandgren after the American followed up his victory against Stan Wawrinka in round two with a four-set win over Maximilian Marterer of Germany.

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