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Madrid Open: Dan Evans beaten by Robin Haase in first round

  • Posted: May 08, 2017

British number four Dan Evans lost his Madrid Open first-round match in straight sets against Robin Haase.

The 26-year-old lost 7-5 6-2 against the Dutchman, who is ranked 13 places higher at 45th in the world.

Evans lost his serve in the opening game, breaking back for 5-5 but then failed to hold in the next game.

Haase raced into a 4-0 lead in the second set and, although Evans managed to get a couple of service games on the board, eased to victory in 80 minutes.

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Evans, who rates clay as his least favourite surface, did make his opponent work in what proved to be final game, spurning three break points before Haase, 30, took his fourth match point.

Britain’s world number one Andy Murray, who received a first-round bye, will play Marius Copil of Romania in his opening match.

The Scot, 29, finished runner-up in Madrid last year, losing to Novak Djokovic in the final.

Johanna Konta, Britain’s leading female player, continued her own struggles on clay with a final-set slump during her defeat by Laura Siegemund in the first round of the Madrid Open on Sunday.

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Dimitrov, Monfils, Kyrgios In Action Monday In Madrid

  • Posted: May 08, 2017

Dimitrov, Monfils, Kyrgios In Action Monday In Madrid

Dimitrov to face Kohlschreiber for first time in FedEx ATP Head2Head series

View FedEx ATP Head2Head for the following match-ups Monday at the Mutua Madrid Open & vote for who you think will win! 
Dimitrov v Kohlschreiber | Monfils v Simon | Kyrgios v Baghdatis

View Monday schedule and check back later for preview notes

You May Also Like: Scouting Report: Stars Align In Madrid

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Scouting Report: Stars Align In Madrid

  • Posted: May 08, 2017

Scouting Report: Stars Align In Madrid

An executive summary of what every fan should know about the coming week on the ATP World Tour

Clay-Court Circuit Moves To Madrid: The fourth ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event of the year is in Madrid, where 19 of the Top 20 players in the Emirates ATP Rankings will descend on the Spanish capital. The Mutua Madrid Open has been staged on clay since 2009 and is held at the Caja Magica, with Spaniards winning the title five times since the inaugural edition 15 years ago. Four-time champion Rafael Nadal leads the home charge and is joined by fellow former winners Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray. Murray is the top seed, with Djokovic seeded second, Stan Wawrinka third and Nadal fourth.

10 THINGS TO KNOW IN MADRID
1) Big 4 Domination: Andy Murray, Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer have won 59 of the last 64 ATP World Tour Masters 1000 tournaments, dating back to Nadal’s triumph at Monte-Carlo in 2010. The foursome has also accounted for nine straight titles at the Mutua Madrid Open since David Nalbandian defeated Federer in the 2007 final. Djokovic leads all players with 30 Masters 1000 titles, followed by Nadal (29), Federer (26), Andre Agassi (17) and Murray (14).

2) Andy Top Seed: Murray is the top seed in Madrid for the first time and comes in with a 15-5 record in 2017 (3-2 on clay). Last year, he was 13-4 with no titles entering Madrid. He went on to reach the Madrid final and end the season on a 65-5 run with an ATP World Tour-best nine titles.

3) Novak Reigning Champion: Djokovic, the defending champion, is looking to jump start his 2017 campaign. He enters with a 14-4 record and one title (Doha). One year ago, he came into Madrid with a 28-2 record and four titles. Djokovic lost before the final at the Australian Open, Acapulco, Indian Wells and Monte-Carlo, his longest drought without a final since 2010 (10 tournaments).

4) Nadal on a Roll: Nadal leads the ATP World Tour with 29 victories this season. He enters on a 10-match winning streak after capturing his 10th career title at ATP Masters 1000 events in Monte-Carlo and Barcelona. Nadal trails the Emirates ATP Race to London leader Federer by 310 points (4,045-3,735). If he reaches the semi-finals, the Spaniard will pass Federer for the most points in 2017.

5) Kyrgios Comes to Clay: Nick Kyrgios is 16-4 this season, but has yet to play on clay. The Aussie is 5-2 in Madrid and has posted Top 4 wins in each of his first two appearances, beating No. 4 Wawrinka en route to the 2016 quarter-finals and No. 2 Federer to reach the 2015 third round.

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6) Hometown Boys: Madrid natives Feliciano Lopez and Fernando Verdasco are playing at their hometown tournament for the 16th and 15th consecutive year, respectively. Six other players are appearing in Madrid for the 10th-or-more straight season: Nadal (15), David Ferrer (15), Wawrinka (11), Nicolas Almagro (11), Marcel Granollers (10) and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (10).

7) #NextGenATP Stars: There are five #NextGenATP stars making the trip to Madrid: Karen Khachanov, Alexander Zverev, qualifier Ernesto Escobedo and Lucky Losers Borna Coric and Jared Donaldson.

8) Milestone Watch: Three players are closing in on milestone wins: Ferrer (698), Tomas Berdych (596) and Gael Monfils (399). Marin Cilic reached 400 wins this past week in Istanbul.

9) Wild Cards: The Madrid wild cards are 2010 semi-finalist Almagro, 2004 quarter-finalist Tommy Robredo, Spanish veteran Guillermo Garcia-Lopez and Romanian Marius Copil.

10) Doubles Field: No. 2 seeds and 5-time champions Bob and Mike Bryan are without a title going into May for the first time in their careers. The defending champions are Jean-Julien Rojer and Horia Tecau. Overall, eight of the Top 10 in the Emirates ATP Doubles Team Rankings are in the draw.

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After Changes, Djokovic Embracing Transition In Madrid

  • Posted: May 08, 2017

After Changes, Djokovic Embracing Transition In Madrid

Second seed could meet Monfils in 3R

Novak Djokovic enters this week’s Mutua Madrid Open in a situation unlike any he has experienced during the past decade. The defending champion arrives at the Spanish capital after having severed ties with his long-time team of coach Marian Vajda, fitness coach Gebhard Phil Gritsch and physiotherapist Miljan Amanovic.

But Djokovic, who announced the split on his website last week, said he’s excited about this new phase of his career and is energised by the challenge of returning to the top of the ATP World Tour.

“It was not an easy decision, neither for my team nor for me… This team has been there with me ever since I started a professional career. So it’s been 10 fantastic, successful years,” Djokovic said during his pre-tournament press conference. “But we all felt like we needed a change. We all felt like we needed to enter a new chapter. It was a mutual decision… We just accepted it in a very good way… We move on, excited, all of us to see what the next chapter of our career and life brings.”

Djokovic said the group discussed their future together at the end of last season and agreed to continue as a team in 2017. But after the Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters last month, where Djokovic fell in the quarter-finals, the group came to an agreement that it was time for a new start.

“We tried to work things out another time, but we just needed to move on. It was all in good spirits. I cannot be grateful enough to them for the sacrifice that they have made and the professionalism, the commitment, the friendship,” Djokovic said.

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The decision comes after what has been an up-and-down 10 months for the Serbian. Last June, Djokovic completed his career Grand Slam by winning Roland Garros. He became just the third player to hold all four major crowns at the same time, joining Don Budge (1938) and Rod Laver (1962 & ’69).

But since his Paris breakthrough, Djokovic has failed to live up to his previous historic level of play. During the second half of 2016, the Belgrade native captured just one title after Roland Garros, his 30th ATP World Tour Masters 1000 crown in July at the Rogers Cup in Toronto (d. Nishikori).

He slipped to No. 2 in the Emirates ATP Rankings in November, and Andy Murray ascended to No. 1, where the Scot has remained. Following that uncharacteristic finish to the season, Djokovic made the first change to his team, splitting with Boris Becker, with whom he had been with since December 2013.

Now Djokovic’s team includes only a physiotherapist he’s been working with since October, his brother, Marko, and former Spanish tennis player Pepe Imaz, with whom Djokovic has worked with the past few years.

“In the last six months, I haven’t had too many great results. That’s why I’ve felt like I needed some changes and I needed to approach things a little bit differently,” Djokovic said. “I’m comfortable and excited and as motivated as ever, of course, to compete on a highest level and see where it takes me.”

Djokovic has positive memories to rely on in Madrid. The World No. 2 won the Masters 1000 tournament last year, beating Murray in the final, and in 2011, when Djokovic knocked off then-World No. 1 Rafael Nadal. The second-seeded Serbian will face a Spanish wild card in the second round, either Nicolas Almagro or Tommy Robredo.

“Life always throws new challenges at you. Instead of avoiding them and ducking them, I’m trying to confront them and trying to embrace them. In the process, I’m trying to get better as a person and as a tennis player,” Djokovic said. “How long this process is going to last before I get to the winning terms again, I don’t know. I’m just hoping I will get there again. That’s all I can say.”

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Murray Talks High Expectations For Madrid

  • Posted: May 08, 2017

Murray Talks High Expectations For Madrid

Top seed seeks second Madrid title

Although Rafael Nadal has been garnering the most attention so far this clay-court season, World No. 1 Andy Murray expects to generate headlines of his own at the Mutua Madrid Open.

The top seed will open his campaign against a wild card in Guillermo Garcia-Lopez or Marius Copil. After defeating Rafael Nadal to win the 2015 Madrid title and finishing runner-up last year to Novak Djokovic, he believes the environment at La Caja Mágica offers everything he needs to have another big week at this event.

“It’s a great city, beautiful city. The venue is great for the fans. You have some really good courts. There’s lots of fans watching the practices,” said Murray. “We have a lot of space in the gym, good food. They put on a really good event for all of the players. They’re always improving things each year and do a very good job.”

After being limited to one match in six weeks due to a right elbow injury, Murray is rounding into form on clay. The World No. 1 suffered a third-round loss to Albert Ramos-Vinolas at the Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters, but avenged the loss one week later at the Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell en route to a semi-final finish. Following a week of rest and training at home, he feels even stronger heading into Madrid.

“Barcelona went really well for me. I got three matches in three days. I had the long, three-hour match with Albert Ramos-Vinolas on the Friday. I actually felt pretty good coming out to play again the next day and played some decent stuff there,” said Murray. “Practice here the last few days has been very good. I’m happy with how I’m playing. I’m starting to move better and feel like I served well the last few days, which is an important part of my game.

I served well last year and my results improved a lot because of that. Obviously haven’t served so well in Barcelona and Monte-Carlo,” he added. “It’s not easy at this level to win matches if you’re getting broken a lot. Hopefully I serve a bit better this week.”

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Murray also acknowledged that second seed and defending champion Djokovic is in a similar situation returning from a right elbow injury. The Serbian surprised many fans by announcing he had split with his entire team, but the Brit said the decision was understandable.

“It’s difficult traveling with the same person or same people for 10, 11, 12 years. It’s very rare nowadays to see teams or coaching relationships last that long, just because of how intense it is. A lot of traveling, a lot of time away from families. You’re spending a lot of hours in the day together,” said Murray. “I haven’t to spoken to him about that, but maybe Novak just felt like it was time for a change.

“But rather than seeing it as a negative thing, it’s been obviously a very successful relationship he’s had with all of those guys. I’m sure they parted on very good terms,” said Murray. “We’ll see what Novak’s next moves are.”

For Murray, his next moves are solely centered around trying to win a second Madrid title. After an outstanding 2016 clay season that also included a title in Rome and runner-up finish at Roland Garros, he believes there’s no reason why those results can’t be matched or replicated.

“Expectations are high. I want to do well the next few weeks. In many ways, it’s the most important part of the year. There’s a lot of big tournaments that come very quickly, one after the other,” said Murray. “I’m motivated and looking forward to it.”

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Wheelchair tennis: Britain's quad team win fifth World Team Cup title

  • Posted: May 07, 2017

Great Britain’s quad wheelchair tennis team won their fifth World Team Cup after beating Israel 2-1 in the final.

James Shaw lost 6-2 6-1 to London 2012 gold medallist Noam Gershony before world number three Andy Lapthorne levelled the tie with a 6-3 6-1 victory over Shraga Weinberg.

Lapthorne and Antony Cotterill then beat Gershony and Weinberg 6-3 6-0 in the decider of the final in Sardinia.

GB missed out on a historic double as the men’s team lost 2-1 to France.

“It’s been a great week, the team spirit has been really high and we have had some really good performances,” Cotterill said.

“Everyone has played a part, including the crowd. We knew today would be tough against Israel but we played some great tennis to finish with a comfortable win in doubles.”

The GB men’s team had a dream start in their final, as world number seven Alfie Hewett beat France’s world number five Nicolas Peifer 6-3 6-3.

But world number one Stephane Houdet forced the deciding doubles rubber, beating world number two and five-time Grand Slam champion Gordon Reid 6-4 6-3.

Then, in a repeat of the Rio 2016 Paralympics final, Paralympic champions Houdet and Peifer beat silver medallists Hewett and Reid 6-3 6-0.

Paralympic singles champion Reid added: “It’s a disappointing end to a great week as we came into the final unbeaten in all our matches this week and were confident we could regain the title we won in 2015.

“However, Houdet and Peifer are not Paralympic champions for nothing and we will look to come back stronger.”

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Carreno Busta Caps Perfect Week With Estoril Title

  • Posted: May 07, 2017

Carreno Busta Caps Perfect Week With Estoril Title

Spaniard wins first title of 2017

Top seed Pablo Carreno Busta finished off a flawless week at the Millennium Estoril Open by taking the title with a 6-2, 7-6(5) victory over third seed Gilles Muller.

The Spaniard picks up his first ATP World Tour title of 2017 after finishing runner-up this February in Rio de Janeiro (l. Thiem). Carreno Busta didn’t drop a set in navigating through a difficult draw that included former Top 5 player Tommy Robredo, defending champion Nicolas Almagro, fourth seed David Ferrer and Muller. He earns 250 Emirates ATP Rankings points and a cheque for €85,945.

Despite the loss, Muller can be satisfied with reaching his first clay-court final. The 33-year-old Luxembourg native is enjoying his best year on tour, winning his first ATP World Tour title in Sydney and reaching a career-high Emirates ATP Ranking of No. 27 the following month. He picks up 150 Emirates ATP Rankings points and a cheque for €45,265.

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Carreno Busta and Muller traded service holds in the first two games of the match, but the Spaniard quickly found his footing while Muller struggled for form. The top seed went on a five-game run after Muller gave away a break at 2-2 with a backhand into the net and a double break at 2-4 after sending a forehand wide. Carreno Busta comfortably wrapped up the set on serve after the third seed sent another forehand wide. 

But Muller settled down in the second set and produced the high quality tennis he’d shown all week. Both players held serve throughout to force a tie-break. Carreno Busta raced to a 5/2 lead, but Muller leveled the score with a gorgeous drop shot winner. Carreno Busta earned a match point at 6/5 and converted when Muller sent a backhand volley long after one hour and 22 minutes.

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Both men are scheduled to compete this week at the Mutua Madrid Open. Muller takes on Tommy Haas, while Carreno Busta squares off against Benoit Paire. 

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