Novak Djokovic vs Gael Monfils Australian Open 2018 Preview and Prediction
Given the Australian Open’s usual preference for giving night show court matches to potential interesting matches…
Given the Australian Open’s usual preference for giving night show court matches to potential interesting matches…
A one time Australian Open champ (2008), Maria Sharapova will open play on Day 4 on Rod Laver Arena when she takes on Anastasija…
Watch the moment Viktor Troicki hits the umpire in the head with his return from a Nick Kyrgios serve at the Australian Open.
Fifteen-year-old Marta Kostyuk becomes the youngest player since 1997 to reach the third round of a Grand Slam by beating Olivia Rogowska in the Australian Open.
Croatian veteran sends 110 winners past Sugita
Ivo Karlovic fired down aces – as only he can – on Wednesday to become the oldest player to reach the Australian Open third round in 40 years.
Karlovic, who turns 39 next month, came through the longest match of the tournament so far with 53 aces in a 7-6(3), 6-7(3), 7-5, 4-6, 12-10 victory over Japan’s Yuichi Sugita in four hours and 33 minutes.
“I‘m happy, but also very tired,” said 6’11” Karlovic, who towered over 5’9” Sugita. “I was already feeling it at the beginning of the third set, but I just focused on my serve.”
The Croatian, who will now take on Italian Andreas Seppi, will be the oldest player to compete in the third round since Australian great Ken Rosewall, aged 44, in 1978, when the draw was 64 players. Karlovic is the oldest player in the Australian Open third round since the advent of a 128-player draw in 1982.
Karlovic saved four break points in the second game of the deciding set, then broke in the 21st game of the set after Sugita made a forehand error. He finished the match with a backhand volley, his 110th winner.
Looking ahead to playing Seppi, Karlovic said, “It’s going to be very tough because he returns unbelievably. I will try to play my game and we will see. It’s going to be very hot and that will make my serve a little faster. But it will not be easy.”
Last year, at Melbourne Park, Karlovic sent down 75 aces in a 22-20 fifth-set first-round victory over Horacio Zeballos of Argentina. Read More
2018 Australian Open |
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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, 5 live sports extra and online. |
Third seed Grigor Dimitrov was pushed to the limit before scraping past American qualifier Mackenzie McDonald in the Australian Open second round.
The Bulgarian, whose recent form has made him one of the favourites for the title, eventually came through 4-6 6-2 6-4 0-6 8-6.
Dimitrov struggled from the start as world number 186 McDonald played the match of his career.
But he fought back to win in three hours and 25 minutes.
“He deserves a lot of credit. He played an unbelievable game,” said Dimitrov. “I had to fight so much and in the end I think my experience helped me.”
McDonald only recorded his first Tour-level victory in the first round.
Top seed Rafael Nadal earlier progressed to the last 32 with a straight-set victory over Argentina’s Leonardo Mayer.
The Spaniard, 31, beat world number 52 Mayer 6-3 6-4 7-6 (7-4) in two hours 38 minutes on Rod Laver Arena.
Mayer responded to a Nadal break in the final set with one of his own, before the 2009 champion took the tie-break.
“I’m happy to be in the third round and a second victory in a row is very important news for me,” said Nadal.
“Leonardo is a player with big potential, he hits the ball so strong. He is a very dangerous opponent.
“This tournament is my favourite of the year, so I want to stay here as long as possible.”
Nadal will face Bosnia and Herzegovina’s Damir Dzumhur in the next round after the world number 30 beat John Millman 7-5 3-6 6-4 6-1.
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World No. 3 reaches third round for fifth consecutive year
Grigor Dimitrov survived a huge test at the Australian Open to defeat qualifier Mackenzie McDonald 4-6, 6-2, 6-4, 0-6, 8-6 on Wednesday. Dimitrov found himself in serious danger against McDonald, who had never previously faced a player ranked higher than No. 69 in the ATP Rankings, but came through in three hours and 26 minutes.
Dimitrov, who reached the semi-finals last year, bounced back from losing the fourth set 0-6, and, as the pressure increased, the Bulgarian used his big-match experience to convert the lone break point opportunity of the fifth set for a memorable win over the World No. 186.
“I fought through the match. I had to find a way to win. It was simple as that,” said Dimitrov. “The game wasn’t there today. I wasn’t feeling well on the court. My movement was a little bit out of sorts…but I won with what I had. That was my fighting spirit, the experience. When it got to those tight moments, I thought I just played well.”
The reigning Nitto ATP Finals champion struggled to win points behind his second serve (13/46) and hit nine double faults in the match, but found a way, with the help of 48 winners to write his name in the last 32 of the draw. Dimitrov has now reached the third round for the fifth consecutive year, after avoiding a loss to a player ranked outside of the Top 100 for the first time at a Grand Slam.
Escaping the fate of consecutive second-round losses at a Grand Slam, Dimitrov moves on to the third round where he will meet Andrey Rublev, the player responsible for his round of 64 loss at the 2017 US Open. The #NextGenATP star won, after the Russian battled past 2006 finalist Marcos Baghdatis 6-4, 6-7(5), 6-4, 6-2.
McDonald was quick off the mark in set one, converting what would be his only break point in the third game. Losing just three points behind his first serve and playing without fear, the young American saved two break points in the eighth game before converting his third set point to lead the 2017 semi-finalist.
“I have to give him credit. He came out there and started swinging. Played an unbelievable first set. There was honestly not much I could have done. He was serving well, close to the lines, swinging freely, coming to the net, trying to play a different game. In a way, he knew that was the only way he could actually give me a trouble,” said Dimitrov.
Order was soon to be restored in the second set however, as Dimitrov limited his opponent to just two winners, six times less than he had conceded in the opening set. The reigning Nitto ATP Finals champion broke in consecutive McDonald service games to close out the set and even the scoreboard.
The third set would once again see 22-year-old McDonald take an early lead. Dimitrov saved two break points with phenomenal defensive and attacking forehands at 2-2, but could not save a third, as his forehand was confirmed by Hawk Eye to have fired wide. The third seed battled back immediately in the next game with a stunning forehand passing shot to level the set once again at 3-3. In the tenth game, Dimitrov would capitalise on forehand errors before taking a two-sets-to-one lead with a forehand winner.
For the third time in four sets, Dimitrov would relinquish the initiative early. Double faults and forehand errors from Dimitrov would help McDonald, who won his first tour-level match on Monday, earn a stunning 6-0 fourth set to force a decider.
“I played a very sloppy game, the first game,” admitted Dimitrov. “I drifted away on that set. I just felt if I could have had maybe another look or break back, things would have been different. After that, the set just kind of run away from me.
“A lot of the shots that he was hitting on the run, especially on the run on the forehand, they were passing sometimes millimetres over the net. Honestly, there’s not much more I could have done in that particular set.”
The fifth set would see both men produce incredible levels of serving and composure, with none of the first 11 games going to deuce. McDonald passed the first real test of the set, serving to stay in the match for a second time at 5-6, but held his nerve when two points from defeat at 0/30 and deuce.
Dimitrov however, would not be denied two games later. The pressure began to tell on McDonald, who dropped to 0/30 and, although he won three straight points, Dimitrov raised his game with a stunning backhand winner. A double fault and forehand into the net from McDonald followed, bringing the blockbuster to an end with Dimitrov roaring in celebration in front a capacity crowd just before midnight local time.
Addressing concerns over how his body will react to such a tough match early in the event, Dimitrov was confident about his ability to recover and focussed, philosophically, on the positive aspects of such a hard-fought win.
“The body feels well, so that’s a good sign,” assessed Dimitrov. “I don’t feel I wasted that much energy, even though I stayed over three hours on the court.
“That’s the beauty of tennis, you always get another day. Every day is different. It’s a two-week tournament. Anything can happen. Right now I’m just positive, happy with the situation. To win ugly.”
Australian to challenge 2008 finalist Tsonga on Friday
Twelve months ago, on Hisense Arena, Nick Kyrgios lost a two-sets-to-love lead to succumb 10-8 in the fifth set to Andreas Seppi in the second round. On Wednesday, there was to be no repeat of that bitter disappointment at the Australian Open.
Kyrgios overcame Serbia’s Viktor Troicki, on the same stadium court, in a performance typical of the Australian’s great start to the 2018 season, which includes his fourth ATP World Tour crown at the Brisbane International presented by Suncorp (d. Harrison).
The 22-year-old Kyrgios failed to serve out the match at 5-4 in the third set, but came through a big-hitting encounter 7-5, 6-4, 7-6(2) in two hours and 12 minutes.
Kyrgios sets up a third-round test against 2008 finalist and No. 15 seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga of France, who earlier in the day rallied from a 2-5 deficit in the fifth set to defeat #NextGenATP Canadian Denis Shapovalov. Tsonga beat Kyrgios in their lone FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting at the 2017 Open 13 Marseille.
Kyrgios, the No. 17 seed, overcame nerves at the end when he failed to convert one match point at 5-4, with Troicki serving at 30/40 in the third set. Subsequently broken in the next game, Kyrgios managed to re-group in the tie-break to win six of the first seven points.
At 1/4 in the tie-break, Troicki mis-hit a return which struck chair umpire James Keothavong in the head. Drawing a smile from Keothavong, the umpire, much to the delight of the capacity crowd, announced, “It’s not my day, is it?”
Kyrgios finished with a backhand, one of 38 winners – including 17 aces – to remain unbeaten this year (6-0 record). Troicki had been attempting to record his 50th match win at a Grand Slam championship.
2018 Australian Open |
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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, 5 live sports extra and online. |
Laura Robson and Coco Vandeweghe were knocked out of the Australian Open women’s doubles in the first round by Hao-Ching Chan and Katarina Srebotnik.
Briton Robson and American Vandeweghe lost 7-6 (7-3) 6-4 to the Taiwanese-Slovenian pair.
British pair Naomi Broady and Anna Smith also lost – 6-2 6-1 to Czechs Lucie Safarova and Barbora Strycova.
Robson, at 227 in the world, was not ranked high enough to enter qualifying for the singles at Melbourne Park.
Following her defeat, Robson spoke for the first time about being at a music festival in Las Vegas in October, when a mass shooting left 58 people dead.
“It was a crazy, crazy thing to happen and I got really, really lucky,” said Robson, who initially did not realise what was happening. “My friends got really, really lucky. I don’t really like to think about it.
“I thought it was something on the stage. My friend, one of the girls I was with, she is from North Carolina so she was the first one to be like, ‘hang on here, that is definitely bullets’.”
On the tennis court, the 23-year-old has reunited with Dutch coach Martijn Bok, who guided her to the Wimbledon junior title in 2008.
Robson was ranked in the world’s top 30 as a teenager, but fell down the rankings because of long-term wrist problems that required surgery.
Asked if retirement entered her mind while she struggled to improve her ranking last year, she told BBC Sport: “When you’re a couple of weeks into a trip by yourself in China, it definitely does enter your thoughts.
“When I started to feel that way I just had to change my mindset and change the people I had around me a little bit. I got my old coach back and we had some great weeks at the end of the year, training really hard, and he’s here with me now and I feel a lot better.”
Robson, who turns 24 on Sunday, added: “I actually feel good. I feel very happy on court for the first time in a long time.
“My goal for the end of the year is to be back in the top 100 but really, for me, I want to feel the best possible version of myself again on court.
“That’s something that’s just not been there the last few years.”
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