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5 Things We Learned From US Open

  • Posted: Sep 11, 2017

5 Things We Learned From US Open

We look into storylines that emerged during the final Grand Slam of the season

1) Nadal Sends Uncle Toni Out On A Winning Note
Having cemented his southpaw grip on the Emirates ATP No. 1 Ranking with his 16th Grand Slam title, Rafael Nadal also extended his lead atop the Emirates Race to London over his great rival Roger Federer. But for all the ticker-tape on-court celebrations, trophy biting and talk of year-end No. 1s, this US Open was also very much about the man in the stands, his coach who has been there every step of the way – Uncle Toni Nadal.

Early in the season, Toni announced the US Open would be his last Grand Slam as his nephew’s coach having travelled the globe for the best part of 15 years. His Spanish charge is in great hands with fellow Majorcan and former World No. 1 Carlos Moya taking the reins. 

“He’s someone that was pushing me all along, he was great motivation to practise as a kid,” Nadal said at the trophy presentation. “Thank you very much to him because he’s for sure one of the most important people in my life.”

You May Also Like: Nadal Sprints To Third US Open Crown

2) Del Potro A Force On The Biggest Stages Once More
Since his 2009 US Open breakthrough, the big Argentine has been to hell and back with a long list of wrist surgeries and subsequent lengthy rehabilitation stints on the sidelines. With a steady climb back into the Top 30 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, his season had been solid without taking the world by storm – until his US Open run.

Seeded 24th, he saw off No. 11 seed Roberto Bautista Agut and then fought back from two sets down, saving match points to deny No. 6 seed Dominic Thiem. It was his four-set triumph over No. 3 seed Roger Federer that catapulted him into his first Grand Slam semi-final since 2013 Wimbledon and despite coming up short against eventual champion Nadal in the semi-finals, this was the surest sign yet the 28 year old could once again be a Top 10 fixture.

3) Rublev Leads NextGen Charge
An open bottom half of the draw had many pundits pencilling in runaway #NextGenATP Emirates Race to Milan leader Alexander Zverev to reach his maiden Grand Slam final in New York, but fellow 20 year old, Borna Coric, had other ideas, taking down the German in the second round. Still searching for his first Slam quarter-final, the German will only have added motivation after 19 year old Andrey Rublev pipped him to the post.

The wiry Russian dismissed No. 7 seed Grigor Dimitrov and No. 9 seed David Goffin, both in straight sets, to reach the last eight before Nadal ended his run. Another teenager of Russian heritage was making big waves with Canada’s Denis Shapovalov backing up his surprise run to the Coupe Rogers semi-finals with a maiden fourth-round appearance at a Grand Slam. Cap backwards, fist-pumping and swinging from the hips, the 18 year old qualifier felled eighth seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga en route before Pablo Carreno Busta had his number.

4) Perseverance Pays For Anderson
An injury-ravaged 2016 saw Kevin Anderson enter the season at No. 80 in the Emirates ATP Rankings. Few could have predicted the 31 year old South African powering through to his first Grand Slam final at Flushing Meadows just eight months later.

Hip, leg and right elbow injuries had plagued his season, while last year, ankle surgery, groin, left knee and right shoulders problems derailed him. The ever-affable Anderson’s greatest hope out of his surprise run was not of rankings boosts or future titles but of the spin-off effect back home.

“We definitely face a lot of challenges when it comes to producing tennis players,” he said of South Africa. “I have said this all along, my biggest hope is I’m able to inspire the kids to get out and play, because it can definitely feel like it’s a long road being so far from everything.”

5) Rojer/Tecau The Team To Beat
The Dutch-Romanian duo found it tough going last season trying to replicate a breakthrough run from the year prior. Their 2015 included a maiden Grand Slam title at Wimbledon and the year-end Emirates ATP No. 1 Doubles Team Ranking, having claimed the Nitto ATP Finals in London.

A 10-match winning streak now has seen them capture back-to-back titles at the Winston-Salem Open and US Open and puts them in a strong position to again qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals in November. They are set to move up to third in the Emirates ATP Doubles Race To London. 

Rojer/Tecau took down a string of  established pairings to bag their second Grand Slam title – No. 6 seeds Marcel Granollers and Ivan Dodig, defending champions and No. 4 seeds Bruno Soares and Jamie Murray, top seeds Henri Kontinen and John Peers and No. 11 seeds Feliciano Lopez and Marc Lopez in a straight-sets final.

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Felix Joins Elite Company With Top 200 Breakthrough

  • Posted: Sep 11, 2017

Felix Joins Elite Company With Top 200 Breakthrough

Canadian teen one of the youngest to break into Top 200 of the Emirates ATP Rankings

The Canadian conquest of the Emirates ATP Rankings has begun. Four weeks ago, the nation staked claim to the youngest player in the Top 100, as 18-year-old Denis Shapovalov continued his stunning ascent. On Monday, it will also have the youngest player in the Top 200.

Felix Auger-Aliassime continues to make history as he soars up the Emirates ATP Rankings, rising to a career-high No. 168 with his second ATP Challenger Tour title. The teen stormed back from a set and a break down to defeat Inigo Cervantes in Sevilla, Spain, on Saturday. With the victory, at 17 years and one month, he becomes the youngest to break into the Top 200 since Rafael Nadal in 2002.

“It’s quite special,” said Auger-Aliassime about the achievement. “It just proves that I’m doing the right things. But I’m aiming for much more than that. There’s still a lot of work to do and hopefully I’ll keep going like this.”

Over the past 20 years, only three players younger than the Canadian have made their Top 200 debut: Nadal, Lleyton Hewitt and Richard Gasquet.

Youngest To Make Top 200 Debut In Past 20 Years

Player Year Age
Richard Gasquet 2002 16 years, 1 month
Rafael Nadal 2002 16 years, 6 months
Lleyton Hewitt 1998 16 years, 10 months
Felix Auger-Aliassime 2017 17 years, 1 month, 5 days
Juan Martin del Potro 2005 17 years, 1 month, 8 days

The history-making week did not stop there. Auger-Aliassime also cemented himself in the ATP Challenger Tour record books, becoming the second-youngest player to win multiple titles. He stands behind only Gasquet, who was 16 years and eight months old when he claimed his second crown in Sarajevo in 2003.

Auger-Aliassime and Gasquet are two of only 10 players to win multiple Challenger titles at age 17 & under, also including Nadal, Novak Djokovic, Juan Martin del Potro, Tomas Berdych, and most recently Taylor Fritz. He lifted his maiden trophy in Lyon in June.

The Copa Sevilla celebrated its 20th edition with the Canadian’s victory, but also claimed a slice of history itself. The €64,000 event is the first tournament on the ATP Challenger Tour to boast consecutive 17 year old champions, with Casper Ruud lifting the trophy in 2016.

Auger-Aliassime is no stranger to etching his name in the record books, having become the first player born in the 2000s to earn an Emirates ATP Rankings point, when he qualified for the Drummondville Challenger in 2015. He is also the youngest player to win a match on the ATP Challenger Tour, at 14 years, 11 months, later that year in Granby, Canada.

In Other Action
#NextGenATP star Stefanos Tsitsipas became just the third player from Greece to win an ATP Challenger Tour title, defeating Guillermo Garcia-Lopez 7-5, 7-6(2) in Genova, Italy. He joins Konstantinos Economidis and Vasilis Mazarakis as Greek winners. He rises to a career-high No. 120 in the Emirates ATP Rankings.

Qualifier Jurgen Zopp continued his dominant return to action after dropping out of the Top 500 due to injury. The Estonian won his first Challenger title since 2014 with a 6-3, 6-2 victory over Tommy Robredo in Alphen, Netherlands. He has won 26 of 27 matches since mid-July, including three Futures titles and the victory in Alphen.

Marcelo Arevalo made history for El Salvador, becoming the first player from his country to win a Challenger title. Arevalo defeated Daniel Elahi Galan 7-5, 6-4 in the Bogota, Colombia final. Also, Jason Jung claimed his second title and first of the 2017 season, defeating Ze Zhang 6-4, 2-6, 6-4 in Zhangjiagang, China.

 

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Nadal Sprints To Third US Open Crown

  • Posted: Sep 11, 2017

Nadal Sprints To Third US Open Crown

Spaniard claims 16th Grand Slam title

Mission accomplished. Rafael Nadal completed a dominant run to his 16th Grand Slam championship, notching a third US Open title at Flushing Meadows. The top seed defeated Kevin Anderson 6-3, 6-3, 6-4 in Sunday’s final.

In 2013, Nadal entered the US Open at No. 1 in the Emirates ATP Rankings and would emerge with the trophy. Four years later, history repeated itself. The top-ranked Spaniard prevailed in two hours and 27 minutes over the South African, adding to titles won in 2010 and ’13.

Nadal, who extends his growing lead in the Emirates ATP Race To London to 1,860 points, caps an impressive Grand Slam campaign with his second major victory of 2017 (Roland Garros). The win gives him the upper hand in the fight for year-end No. 1 in the Emirates ATP Rankings with Roger Federer.

“It’s been a very special two weeks for me,” Nadal told ESPN in his post-match interview. “But before I talk about me, I want to say congrats to Kevin. He’s a great example for a lot of kids and the rest of the tour to come back better than ever.

“For me, personally it’s unbelievable. After a couple of years with some injury problems, it has been very emotional since the beginning of the season. Since the Australian Open, I’ve been playing a very high level of tennis. Winning here in New York gives me great energy, because the crowd is unbelievable. They make me feel so happy.”

“Rafa is one of the greatest ambassadors in our sport, so congrats to him,” Anderson said in his post-match interview with ESPN. “It’s been an amazing two weeks for me. To make my first final of a Grand Slam has really been special. I can take a lot of positive from this summer. A lot of emotions to deal with. I was up against a pretty good opponent today. I’ll continue working hard to give myself more opportunities. I’ll take it a day at a time and I’m really pleased with how things turned out here.”

Open Era US Open Title Leaders

Player Titles
Years Won
Jimmy Connors 5 1974, 1976, 1978, 1982-83
Roger Federer 5 2004-08
Pete Sampras 5 1990, 1993, 1995-96, 2002
John McEnroe 4 1979-81, 1984
Ivan Lendl 3 1985-87
Rafael Nadal 3 2010, 2013, 2017

In total, the resurgent Spaniard has won five tour-level titles this year, the most for him since 2013 when he captured 10. It was also his first hard-court victory since the Qatar ExxonMobil Open in Doha in 2014.

Nadal turned in a ruthless race to the finish against Juan Martin del Potro on Friday and he would carry the momentum on Sunday. Relying on his superior agility from the back of the court and biding his time before attacking with great depth, the Spaniard employed an efficient and clinical gameplan on Arthur Ashe Stadium.

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With celebrities Rupert Murdoch, Jerry Seinfeld, Hilary Swank, Tony Bennett, Bill Gates and Tiger Woods in attendance, Nadal broke for 4-3 in the first and never looked back, striking a backhand winner to close out the opener. He would continue to press forward in the second set, slamming aside a volley winner to move ahead 4-2, and opened the third with yet another break.

Nadal raised his arms in triumph on his second match point, moving forward for a serve-and-volley winner. He prevailed after two hours and 27 minutes, firing 30 winners to just 11 unforced errors. He won 16 of 16 net points in total, while not facing a break point.

All-Time Grand Slam Title Leaders

Player Titles
Roger Federer 19
Rafael Nadal 16
Pete Sampras 14
Novak Djokovic 12
Roy Emerson 12

“It has been a great two weeks,” Nadal told the assembled media. “Increasing level of tennis and increasing confidence during that two weeks. I have this trophy with me again here in New York. It means a lot to me. There is no better way to finish the Grand Slam season for me after a very emotional season in all aspects.

“So I’m very happy the way that I played, happy the way that I managed the pressure and the way that I was competing during the whole event. Playing better or worse, the competitive spirit has been there in a very positive way all the time.” 

The victory marks the first time in Nadal’s career in which he has rallied from a set down in three matches en route to a title. He battled hard throughout the two weeks in the Big Apple, coming back to overcome Taro Daniel in the second round, Leonardo Mayer in the third round and del Potro in the semi-finals.

Nadal and Federer have turned back the clock in 2017, combining to divide and conquer the four Grand Slam championships. It marks the fourth time it has happened, in addition to 2006, 2007 and 2010.

Anderson, meanwhile, caps a dream fortnight in reaching his first major final. He became the first South African to reach a Grand Slam title match since Kevin Curren at the 1984 Australian Open. The 31 year old is also the oldest first-time finalist since Nikola Pilic at Roland Garros in 1973.

Anderson is projected to rise to No. 15 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, behind victories over home hope Sam Querrey in the quarter-finals and 12th seed Pablo Carreno Busta in the semis. It was his second final of the American hard-court summer, adding to a runner-up result at the Citi Open in Washington.

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Rafael Nadal wins US Open with straight-set win over Kevin Anderson

  • Posted: Sep 11, 2017

Rafael Nadal won his third US Open and 16th Grand Slam title with a one-sided victory over South Africa’s Kevin Anderson in New York.

The world number one powered to a 6-3 6-3 6-4 victory in Sunday’s final at Flushing Meadows.

The Spaniard, 31, has now won two Slams in the same year for the first time since 2013, having won the French Open in June.

“It’s just unbelievable what happened this year,” said Nadal.

“After a couple of years with some troubles, injuries, sometimes playing not good – since the beginning of the season it has been very, very emotional.”

The US Open was the last Grand Slam where he was working alongside his uncle Toni, with Carlos Moya taking sole charge of coaching from 2018.

“I can’t thank him enough for all the things he did for me,” Nadal said of his uncle.

“Probably without him I would never be playing tennis and it’s great I had somebody like him pushing me all the time.”

The result means this year’s major titles are shared between Nadal, at the French and US Opens, and Roger Federer, at the Australian Open and Wimbledon.

Federer remains at the top of the men’s all-time Grand Slam list with 19 titles, three ahead of Nadal, who has now won 10 French titles, three US, two Wimbledon and one Australian.

  • Reaction: Nadal v Anderson text & radio

Nadal wins battle of serves

Nadal went into the final with a 4-0 head-to-head record against Anderson, and he dominated once again.

The 2010 and 2013 champion lost just 15 points on serve in the entire match, did not face a break point and won all 16 points he finished at the net.

It was a ruthless demolition job by a man playing his 23rd Grand Slam final, up against an opponent in his first.

Anderson, 31, was the tallest player ever to feature in a Grand Slam final at 6ft 8in, and with a tournament-leading 114 aces was always going to rely on his serve to get a foothold in the match.

The signs were not good, therefore, when he had to fight through six deuces in his second and third service games as Nadal pressed hard.

Anderson clearly felt the need to play to his limits from the outset, attacking the net more than normal to try to keep the points short, but it brought mixed results at best.

The pressure told in game seven when the South African pulled a forehand into the tramlines facing a sixth break point.

Nadal would break again to seal the set with a wonderful backhand drop volley, and Anderson ended the set with just eight winners from 19 trips to the net.

The second set followed a similar pattern, with Nadal again untroubled on serve and this time making the breakthrough in game six with some sharp volleying.

By the time he whipped a forehand cross-court winner to take a two-set lead, Nadal had lost just seven points in nine service games.

A wild Anderson forehand on break point at the start of the third hastened the end of the contest, and Nadal would clinch the title on his second match point with a clinical serve-volley.

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Hewett loses US Open wheelchair singles final

  • Posted: Sep 10, 2017

Britain’s Alfie Hewett was beaten 6-2 4-6 6-3 by France’s Stephane Houdet in the US Open wheelchair singles final.

Hewett had hoped to add the title to the doubles trophy he won on Saturday.

But Hewett, who won his maiden Grand Slam singles trophy at the French Open this summer, succumbed to fatigue.

Hewett, 19, beat compatriot Gordon Reid in a three-hour semi-final on Saturday before teaming up with the Scot to defeat 46-year-old Houdet and Nicolas Peifer in the doubles final later on.

Fellow Briton Andy Lapthorne lost 7-5 3-6 6-4 to his American doubles partner David Wagner in the quad singles final.

It was a repeat of Wagner’s victory over Lapthorne in August’s British Open final.

“Not to be for me today in the singles,” Lapthorne tweeted.

“Fair play to Wags, he was brilliant at the end. I’ll be back.”

Hewett was also gracious in defeat.

“Congratulations to Steph for a great final,” he said. “I just didn’t have enough in the tank after such an exhausting singles and doubles yesterday.

“But I’m proud to be in the final in my first time here. There’s a lot of positives to take and hopefully I can be back next year.”

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The teenager was outplayed by Houdet in the opening set but recovered from a break down in the second to level when the Frenchman double-faulted.

However, Hewitt failed to hold his serve once in the final set and Houdet clinched his first Grand Slam singles title in four years.

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LIVE: Nadal Takes Early Lead

  • Posted: Sep 10, 2017

LIVE: Nadal Takes Early Lead

Set-by-set analysis of the 2017 US Open final, as Rafael Nadal battles Kevin Anderson

Rafael Nadal and Kevin Anderson are battling for the US Open title on a brisk late Sunday afternoon in New York. The top-seeded Spaniard leads 6-3.

With the roof open on Arthur Ashe Stadium, two-time champion Nadal and Grand Slam final debutant Anderson are meeting for the fifth time in their FedEx ATP Head2Head. The Spaniard leads 4-0.

Nadal is bidding for his 16th major crown, while the big-hitting Anderson is eyeing his first. The South African is the first from his country in a major title match since Kevin Curren at the 1984 Australian Open.

FIRST SET – Nadal 6-3
Anderson had claimed just one set in four previous meetings against Nadal, but the 31 year old is a much different player than he was in those encounters. Playing more aggressive tennis throughout the fortnight, he looked to pummel his forehand through Nadal’s defences and maintain a high first-serve percentage.

Relying on his superior agility from the back of the court, Nadal conjured a pair of break points at 1-all. A backhand lob return winner landed just inside the baseline as Anderson attacked the net with a serve-and-volley approach. With celebrities Rupert Murdoch, Jerry Seinfeld, Hilary Swank, Tony Bennett and Bill Gates in attendance, Anderson earned a gritty 12-minute hold.

Both players looked to open the court with wide angles, but Nadal’s dogged defence and court coverage refused to allow his opponent to find consistent success from the baseline. Anderson struck 20 unforced errors to Nadal’s four through the first seven games of the match, as the World No. 1 broke for 4-3.

A second break would close out the set after 58 minutes, as a net-charging Nadal struck a backhand winner. He won seven of seven net points in the opener.

DID YOU KNOW?
• Sunday’s champion will be the fifth straight Grand Slam winner 30 & over going back to last year’s US Open where Stan Wawrinka (31) captured the title.

• This is the first US Open final to feature a pair of 30 & over players since 2002 when Pete Sampras (31) defeated Andre Agassi (32).

• The Big Four of Nadal, Federer, Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray has won 45 of the last 50 Grand Slam tournament titles. Anderson is trying to become only the fourth player to break through and join former US Open champions Juan Martin del Potro, Marin Cilic and Wawrinka during that stretch.

• Kevin Anderson uses the same sports psychologist – Alexis Castorri – as Andy Murray did when the Scot claimed his maiden US Open title in 2012.

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