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Six Things To Know About Casper Ruud

  • Posted: Feb 22, 2017

Six Things To Know About Casper Ruud

Get to know the #NextGenATP player making waves in Rio

#NextGenATP player Casper Ruud has caused a stir at the Rio Open, where he defeated Rogerio Dutra Silva to claim his first ATP World Tour win. Ahead of his second-round contest with Roberto Carballes Baena, we present the need-to-know on the 18-year-old Norwegian.

1. Tennis Is In His DNA
His father, Christian Ruud, was a Top 50 professional tennis player. He reached his career-high No. 39 in the Emirates ATP Rankings on 9 October 1995, and finished his career with 115 tour-level victories.

“I have a great relationship with my father,” said Ruud. “Sometimes in the world of sport it isn’t easy to have such a strong relationship, but for us it’s marvellous.

“We are both very competitive and both love to win at everything. We do it with the greatest respect and it’s a healthy rivalry. He is an essential part of my team. I don’t feel any pressure that he was a professional player. In fact, it’s the opposite; it has helped me a lot.”

2. He Scored His First ATP Win At A 500 Tournament
His first victory came in his third ATP World Tour tournament. “It’s been great,” said Ruud. “Not just winning my first match, but having the chance to be here and playing in an ATP World Tour 500. I am the lowest-ranked player in the draw, so I’m the underdog in every match and that’s more comfortable for me. I’m trying to keep my feet on the ground and keep working hard.”

3. He Is Already A Rising Star In Norway
“Norwegians really like to see young, home-grown talent making progress,” said Ruud. “We have Martin Odegaard, who plays for Real Madrid, as well as one of the best skiers in the world, and now they are starting to enjoy tennis. It’s great for the Federation and for us. If people enjoy following me, then that’s great!”

4. He’s On A Rapid Rise
After turning professional in 2015, Ruud is a player who has got the most out of every experience in all levels of professional tennis. He won his first ITF Futures in Paguera, Spain, in February 2016. In his first ATP Challenger Tour event in Seville, also last year, he came through qualifying and ended up winning the title (d. Daniel).

In one year, the teenager jumped from outside the Top 1,000 to the verge of the Top 200 and also secured the prestigious No. 1 mantle on the junior circuit.

You May Also Like: Like Father, Like Son: Norway's Ruud, 17, Wins Sevilla Title In Challenger Debut

5. His Coach Is Spanish
Pedro Rico has been Ruud’s coach for two years. With the Spaniard, Ruud has made rapid progress. The partnership gels perfectly between the passionate Spaniard and the cool and calm Scandinavian. “The phrase I hear the most in Team Casper is ‘No Stress’,” said Rico.

“Pedro is great,” said Ruud. “He is helping me so much to get better, and together we have already gone from outside the Top 1,000 to be the No. 1 junior and close to the Top 200.”

6. Milan Is His Goal For The Season
“For the young players, the Next Gen ATP Finals is the biggest event we can win,” said the 18-year-old Ruud. “It is a big motivation.

“Everyone wants to qualify and that means it won’t be easy. It’s too soon to think about it at the moment, but for me it would be a huge honour to participate.”

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Haas Feels Good Despite Delray Beach Outcome

  • Posted: Feb 22, 2017

Haas Feels Good Despite Delray Beach Outcome

German could play next at the Miami Open in March

Tommy Haas didn’t miss that feeling.

The 38 year old, who’s embarking on his final comeback, led Georgian Nikoloz Basilashvili by a set and a break during their first-round match at the Delray Beach Open on Tuesday. But then Haas’ lack of recent match experience struck.

Leading 4-3 in the second set, Haas was broken and fell in the 18-point tie-break. Basilashvili cruised in the decider, breaking twice to move into the second round 6-7(4), 7-6(8), 6-2 and end Haas’ run in south Florida.

“Overall it was good,” Haas said. “It just sucks when you’re that close to possibly winning a match and you don’t win. I haven’t had that feeling in a long time… and it’s not a good feeling.”

It was Haas’ first complete singles match in 16 months, since October 2015, when he fell to Jo-Wilfried Tsonga at the Erste Bank Open 500 in Vienna. Haas played at the Australian Open last month but retired after two sets because of fatigue. He hasn’t won a tour-level singles contest since the 2015 Wimbledon.

You May Also Like: Del Potro Returns A Winner In Delray Beach

“I’m just trying to find my game, just trying to go out there and compete and possibly play the game to a level that I feel comfortable at. But it’s so tough when you were out for over a year and you come back and you play like eight events and you’re out for over a year and now it’s your second time back,” Haas said. “So it’s tough for me to see where I’m at, and practice is always different.”

His body mostly held up against Basilashvili, who reached his second tour-level final on Sunday at the Memphis Open (l. to Harrison). Haas had a brief scare during the second set when he felt a tendon in his right quadricep tug on him.

“For a few steps there, up until I got to the sideline, I couldn’t really lift my leg. So I was thinking, ‘Please don’t let it be something too serious’,” Haas said. “It really felt weird. It didn’t really feel like a pop, it just felt like a little stinger.”

He received treatment on it, though, and finished the match without a recurrence.

Tuesday night will most likely be the last time fans see Haas play a singles match at the Delray Beach Tennis Center. The 15-time ATP World Tour titlist underwent foot surgery in April. He has said this latest comeback – his ninth during his 21-year career – will be his final. He’s already working his after-tennis job as the BNP Paribas Open tournament director in Indian Wells.

“I really enjoyed the match against him. I respect him a lot,” said Basilashvili, who had never faced Haas before Tuesday. “Of course for him it’s difficult to come back… It’s sad, of course that he did not go through, but that’s tennis and sports. But I wish him good luck the rest of the season.”

Haas is sticking around Delray Beach. He’s scheduled to play his quarter-finals match with Canadian Vasek Pospisil on Wednesday afternoon.

Read More: Raonic Shines On Delray Beach Debut

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Del Potro Returns A Winner In Delray Beach

  • Posted: Feb 22, 2017

Del Potro Returns A Winner In Delray Beach

Argentine enjoys a straight-sets win in his first match of the season

Juan Martin del Potro made a tentative, but ultimately successful, 2017 ATP World Tour debut Tuesday night at the Delray Beach Open, posting a 6-4, 6-4 win over Kevin Anderson. In a battle of the former Delray Beach champions, del Potro hit cautiously off his backhand wing and survived a tumble in the first set that left him with a grazed right knee.

The former US Open champion, who has endured three left wrist surgeries (in addition to 2010 surgery on his right wrist), struggled to generate pace on his backhand and mixed in a number of one-handed slices. When Anderson approached the net, del Potro elected to either lob or stretch the South African with well-placed, medium-paced backhands.

But the Argentine’s powerful serve and flat, thumping forehand were enough to steer him to a sixth win in six career FedEx ATP Head2Head meetings with the 6’ 8” Anderson.

“It’s not easy in my first match to show good tennis but I think I did well,” del Potro said. “I survived in the first game of my serve, and then I started to serve much better. I started to feel the ball better and better. And I think for the conditions tonight, we made a good tennis match and always the most important thing is when you don’t feel 100 per cent is trying to win the match and I did.”

 Watch Full Match Replays

Assessing his backhand, del Potro said, “I think I did well with my slices but I could improve my two-handed backhand a lot. For being my first match of the season, I think it’s okay, but I need to keep working hard and start to find the way to make winners with my backhand as well.”

Of his forehand, he said, “It was effective but I can hit it even better. I made some easy mistakes with my forehand but fortunately not in the important moments. But when I have the confidence on the forehands I can hit it cross-court or down the line; I can play whatever I like, and that’s happened only with my forehand, not with my backhand yet and that’s what I have to work on.”

Del Potro, 28, also began his 2016 season in Delray Beach, reaching the semi-finals. He went on to win 32 matches to finish inside the Top 40 of the Emirates ATP Rankings and to be named ATP Comeback Player of the Year for the second time.

Del Potro required just one break in each set. He converted his fifth break chance of the match for a 4-3 lead in the first set and seized his first break chance for a 2-1 lead in the second set.  The Tandil native next plays the man who beat Anderson last week in Memphis, Damir Dzumhur.

Anderson, the 2012 champion, dropped to 0-2 on the season, following an opening-round loss last week in Memphis. “He made me play a couple of balls in the games I got broken on, and I played some loose points and that basically decided that match,” Anderson said.

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Bellucci Shocks Nishikori On Home Soil

  • Posted: Feb 22, 2017

Bellucci Shocks Nishikori On Home Soil

Buenos Aires champion Dolgopolov defeats sixth seed Ferrer

Home favourite Thomaz Bellucci received a standing ovation after dismissing Rio Open presented by Claro top seed Kei Nishikori 6-4, 6-3 on Tuesday.

Nishikori reached the Argentina Open final last week and won their only previous meeting on the clay at the 2015 Roland Garros in straight sets, but the top-ranked Brazilian put in a commanding display to defeat the World No. 5.

“Actually everything didn’t work well,” said Nishikori. “Probably the condition changed a lot from last week: bounce really high and the balls are really heavy. The ball is the most difficult to adjust. I couldn’t feel anything today. I think it wasn’t my day.”

Bellucci, quarter-finalist in 2014, earned a second-round encounter with countryman Thiago Monteiro. The World No. 85 defeated Gastao Elias 2-6, 7-6(4), 6-4.

 Watch Full Match Replays

World No. 8 Dominic Thiem made his way safely through his opening match, defeating former World No. 8 Janko Tipsarevic 6-4, 7-5. The second seed, a semi-finalist last year on his tournament debut, capitalised on three of his five break points en route to the one hour, 35-minute victory. Thiem next faces another Serbian, Dusan Lajovic, as he looks to reach his fourth quarter-final of 2017.

Alexandr Dolgopolov maintained his title-winning form from Buenos Aires last week with a 6-4, 6-4 victory over 2015 champion David Ferrer. Sixth seed Ferrer led their FedEx ATP Head2Head 9-3, however, Dolgopolov managed to repeat his 2014 win in Rio over the Spaniard to advance into the second round.

Two other Spanish seeds avoided the fate of their countryman. Fourth seed Pablo Carreno Busta ousted Brazilian wild card Joao Souza 6-3, 6-2, while fifth seed Albert Ramos-Vinolas beat Stephane Robert 6-2, 6-0. Carreno Busta goes on to face recent Quito champion Victor Estrella Burgos, a 6-2, 7-5 winner over 2016 Rio finalist Guido Pella. Ramos-Vinolas will take on Fabio Fognini, who defeated veteran Spaniard Tommy Robredo 6-2, 6-4 to avenge a straight-sets loss in Buenos Aires.

Argentine Federico Delbonis improved to a 4-0 FedEx Head2Head record against Italian Paolo Lorenzi as he rallied for a 4-6, 6-1, 6-4 win in two hours and 13 minutes.

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Mahut Stifles Zverev's Hopes In Marseille

  • Posted: Feb 22, 2017

Mahut Stifles Zverev's Hopes In Marseille

Frenchman upsets No. 6 seed to reach second round

Nicolas Mahut rode a wave of home-crowd support to upset fifth-seeded #NextGenATP star Alexander Zverev at the Open 13 Marseille on Tuesday. The 35-year-old Frenchman posted a 7-6(5), 7-6(5) result over the German in the pair’s first FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting.

Zverev, nearly 16 years his opponent’s junior, had claimed his second ATP World Tour title two weeks ago at the Open Sud de France in Montpellier. He fell short despite hitting six aces more and winning half of the 144 points played.

Mahut’s victory sets up a second-round meeting with Norbert Gombos. The Slovak posted a 6-1, 6-1 result over fellow-qualifier Evgeny Donskoy.

Richard Gasquet continued a good night session for the home contingent when he knocked out Robin Haase 6-7(5), 6-3, 6-2. The No. 6 seed, coming off a runner-up showing at the Open Sud de France in Montpellier two weeks ago, withstood 14 aces to extend his FedEx Head2Head series with the Dutchman to 4-1. It sets up a second-round showdown with Russian Mikhail Youzhny.

Other French players experienced mixed fortunes at the Open 13 Marseille on Tuesday. Julien Benneteau, the 2010 finalist, prevailed 7-5, 6-4 despite being aced 16 times by fellow wild card, 17-year-old Denis Shapovalov.

But his countrymen Jeremy Chardy and Paul-Henri Mathieu made early exits. Jan-Lennard Struff knocked out Chardy 6-3, 7-5, while Aljaz Bedene fired down 20 aces in a 3-6, 6-1, 6-4 win over 2008 semi-finalist Mathieu.

It was a good day for Ukrainians Sergiy Stakhovsky and Illya Marchenko. Qualifier Stakhovsky posted a 6-2, 6-4 result over Czech Jiri Vesely, while Marchenko saw off Russian Andrey Rublev 6-1, 7-6(6). Stakhovsky claimed 79 per cent of his first-serve points and broke three times to advance, while Marchenko broke four times on his way past the #NextGenATP player.

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