Tennis News

From around the world

Andy Murray primed for special year

  • Posted: Jan 02, 2016

This will be a landmark year for Andy Murray – I have no hesitation in predicting that whatsoever.

The world number two is due to become a father and will, I’m sure, cherish that above than anything he could ever achieve on a tennis court.

But I don’t think this new year will be notable in the Murray household simply for the addition of a welcome new member. There’s every indication major trophies will be celebrated too.

It’s only a few weeks since Murray completed the perfect Davis Cup year; unbeaten as he helped return the famous old trophy to these shores for the first time in nearly 80 years.

That was one of his main targets for 2015. Mission accomplished, and in some style, beating a fine player in Belgium’s David Goffin in his own back yard, on clay, in straight sets, with one of the best match-points – and winning shots – ever seen.

The feel-good factor from such an achievement can last months. When Novak Djokovic savoured success with Serbia in the Davis Cup at the end of 2010, he followed it up with one of the best years in the history of tennis. He didn’t lose a match until the semi-finals of the French Open, and won the other three grand slam titles.

Incredibly, the super Serb was even better last year, reaching all four major finals, and winning three, as well as six out of the eight Masters Series events he entered.

Could Andy do a Novak? That’s perhaps asking too much. But I certainly think 2016 will be the year Murray’s major count gets going again.

It’s three and a half years since he won the second of his two Slam titles. The game has moved on since then, and the Scot has had back surgery and switched coaches.

He was, however, much more like his old self in 2015, winning four titles, including his first two on clay, and competing well for three of the four main prizes.

Finishing the year ranked second in the world, for the first time in his career, will have done the confidence no harm either; nor will beating Roger Federer, albeit in the end-of-season IPTL exhibition.

He’ll go into 2016 with an extra spring in his step and as the second seed for the Australian Open, which gets under way in just over two weeks’ time in Melbourne, Murray knows he doesn’t have to worry about Novak Djokovic until the final, should both men get there.

So the Scot will reflect on 2015 as a year that ended much better than it began.

Ranked sixth in the world when the notes of Auld Lang Syne were fading away, he’d just been thrashed 6-0 6-1 by Federer at the World Tour Finals in London.

When Murray headed down under to Melbourne in January, the first Grand Slam of the season once again brought out the best in him as he reached his fourth Australian Open final.

It proved, however, to be the one that got away; from a break up in the third set against Djokovic, Murray lost 12 of the next 13 games in that final. But it was a collapse that didn’t affect his season, which turned out to be his most consistent yet on the tour.

By the time the French Open came around in May, Murray was being touted – tongue-in-cheek perhaps – as the new king of clay, having won two titles on the surface, including the Madrid Masters, where he beat Rafael Nadal in his own back yard.

Only a superb five-set display from Djokovic stopped Murray at Roland Garros, this time in the semi-final.

After opening the grass court season by claiming a fourth Queens Club title, it was then on to Wimbledon. Again Murray looked strong as he progressed to the semi-finals, where a rejuvenated Roger Federer lay in wait.

A stunning Swiss serving display dealt desperate disappointment once again for the Scot, ending his hopes of a second Wimbledon crown. But there was no time to dwell. There was a Davis Cup quarter-final against France to be won, following on from the fine win against the USA in Glasgow in March.

After winning the doubles with big brother Jamie, Andy dug deep once again to see off Gilles Simon and book Britain’s place in the semi-finals against Australia. That meant another trip back to Scotland, and another noisy win in Glasgow’s Emirates Arena.

Being the driving force behind Britain’s first Davis Cup final appearance since the late 1970s meant Murray had probably played too much tennis by the time the US Open came around. He did win another Masters Series event, beating Djokovic in the final in Montreal.

He couldn’t get past the giant South African Kevin Anderson in New York, however, and so failed to make a Grand Slam quarter-final for the first time in five years.

Murray’s champagne moment of 2015 was still to come.

At the end of November, the pride of Dunblane collapsed in tears on the red clay of Ghent. He was instantly mobbed by his brother Jamie and the rest of his team-mates in celebration of Britain’s finest hour in the Davis Cup since Fred Perry et al in 1936.

It was an achievement that made Murray – and the British team – winners at the BBC Sports Personality of the Year awards. You know it’s been a good year when Andy Murray starts cracking jokes in front of a huge audience of his sporting peers, and millions watching on TV.

If he wins another Slam – or defends his Olympic title – there’s no chance Murray’s 2016 will be duller than a weekend in Worthing.

Source link

Murray to coach Watson in Australia

  • Posted: Jan 02, 2016

Great Britain’s Fed Cup captain Judy Murray has taken up a short-term position coaching Heather Watson in Australia this month.

The British number two is without a permanent coach after parting company with Diego Veronelli in December.

The 23-year-old will team up with Andy Murray to represent Great Britain in the Hopman Cup, which begins on Sunday.

Watson will then defend her WTA title in Hobart, before heading to Melbourne for the Australian Open.

Argentine Veronelli, 36, left his role as coach of the world number 55 in December after deciding that he was no longer able to commit to spending up to 40 weeks a year on the road.

Source link

Sharapova On Halep, Brisbane & More

Sharapova On Halep, Brisbane & More

  • Posted: Jan 02, 2016

BRISBANE, Australia – Just ahead of her title defense at the Brisbane International, Maria Sharapova met the press at the Premier-level tournament on Friday and discussed everything from her off-season, a tricky first round draw and a tantalizing potential semifinal showdown against Simona Halep.

But first things first, her first round draw – and it’s a doozy. Sharapova drew fellow Russian Ekaterina Makarova, who isn’t just a former Top 10 player, but a two-time Grand Slam semifinalist.

“The last time we played was in the semifinals of a Grand Slam, last year in Australia, and I don’t think we’ve played since,” Sharapova said. “She was injured at the end of last year and I haven’t seen her play much because of that, but that’s a pretty high quality first match against a tough opponent.”

Should the No.3-seeded Sharapova escape Makarova and eventually emerge out of her quarter of the draw, which includes No.7 seed Belinda Bencic, she could play No.1 seed Halep in the semifinals.

Though she’s never lost to Halep, the World No.4 isn’t taking anything for granted.

“It’s a long road ahead. A semifinal isn’t something I’m focused on before the tournament even begins – we still have many matches to play, and many matches to win. If we get there, I’ll think about it.

“But Simona and I have played many times, and even though I have a good record against her, she’s No.2 in the world for a reason, and you always want to play the best going into the Australian Open.

“That’s one of the big reasons I’m here in Brisbane this week.”

Another reason Sharapova’s in Brisbane? She’s done very, very well here before.

“I’ve had three days of practice here and I’m feeling pretty solid,” Sharapova, who edged Ana Ivanovic for last year’s title, said. “It’s been nice to get back on that court and get a good feel for it.”

And though she missed almost four months of action in the second half of 2015 due to leg and arm injuries, she came back at the very end and finished very strong – she reached the semifinals of the WTA Finals in her first tournament back and then won both of her matches in the Fed Cup final.

“Those injuries took a little bit longer to heal than I’d wanted to, but once they did I felt pretty good about where I was physically. I was able to perform and compete well at the end of the year, and withstand some really physical matches. That gives me a lot of confidence going into this year.

“My off-season was a bit shorter than I’m used to. I’ve had to put a few things together a bit quicker than usual. I didn’t take much time off – I’m kind of saving that a little bit for post-Australia, so I’ll have to work through my schedule a little bit and make some changes with the Olympics coming up.

“But it was nice to be with family and friends at Christmas, one of my favorite times of year.”

Source link

Victoria Azarenka: From The Players Box

Victoria Azarenka: From The Players Box

  • Posted: Jan 02, 2016

BRISBANE, Australia – Victoria Azarenka isn’t just one of the top women’s tennis players in the world – two Grand Slam titles, former World No.1, Olympic bronze – she’s also one of the sport’s most open and honest players, never hesitating to tell it like it is and give us a deeper glimpse into tennis life.

And a deeper glimpse is exactly what she’s going to bring us – monthly – in her new column on SI.com called From The Players Box by Victoria Azarenka. She’s written two pieces so far, the first coming after she had to prematurely wrap up her 2015 season due to injury in November and the second one coming on New Year’s Eve – in it she talks about how she’s rebounding from a nagging foot injury.

“I’ve had a problem in my foot for as long as I can remember. Because of this pain that the injury has given me over time, I changed the movement of my foot. I forgot how to plant and push off my foot the right way because I was always overcompensating for the pain. The correct way to change direction is to push off from your heel to the middle of your foot and then push off from there and through your toes. I didn’t have this movement in my repertoire any longer. So the challenge for the off-season was to learn this movement from scratch and try to re-program my body to do it properly going forward.”

And then, a declaration. “But here is the catch: I’m not trying to get back to where I used to be,” she writes. “I am here to push myself to become better, to get to where I have never been before.”

Coming from someone who has, according to most experts, been the closest challenger over the last three years to Serena Williams, who’s won eight of the last 14 majors and held No.1 for 150 weeks in a row, that resonates. Azarenka was also the last player other than Williams to top the WTA Rankings.

The two-time Australian Open champion’s quest for perfection has upsides and downsides, though.

“I am getting stronger every day and I am slowly starting to feel a little bit of satisfaction. I’m very happy with my effort of doing a lot of physical work off the court, but to be honest, I am still dissatisfied with the outcome on the tennis court so far. My effort is there every single day, at 100%. But I know it takes patience for the off-court work to transition into tennis results. After a while, I am starting to get that feeling I’ve missed for so long! That feeling of being in control on the court. That feeling of being in full control of myself, that’s what I long for. But by the time it all starts again down under, I will be ready!”

Read Azarenka’s full piece – and watch the very cool footwork videos that go along with it – here.

And keep an eye on wtatennis.com this week as she plays her first WTA event of the year, the Brisbane International. Unseeded in the draw, she’ll open against an as-of-yet unknown qualifier.

Source link

10 Questions For 2016: Part 2

  • Posted: Jan 02, 2016

10 Questions For 2016: Part 2

ATPWorldTour.com looks ahead at 10 burning questions for tennis in 2016

6. Will a Frenchman win Roland Garros?

It’s been more than three decades since a Frenchman last raised La Coupe des Mousquetaires on the burnt-orange terre battue of Roland Garros. Not since Yannick Noah, all dreadlocks and a smile as wide as the Seine, downed Mats Wilander 6-2, 7-5, 7-6(3) in 1983, has a Frenchman triumphed there. It’s mystifying, considering all the homegrown talent that has since come and gone (think: Pioline, Grosjean, Clement, Santoro, etc.). But as Jeremy Chardy recently said, “Roland Garros remains mythical for French players.” If ever there were a time to end that dry spell, it’s now. With Richard Gasquet, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, Gilles Simon, Benoit Paire, Gael Monfils, Adrian Mannarino and Chardy all inside the Top 50 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, there’s no time like the present.

“There are many positive things for the various French players,” said Cedric Pioline, a runner-up at the US Open in 1993 and Wimbledon in 1997. “Gilles has been very consistent. Maybe we would have expected a bit from Gael Monfils in terms of results. But we had good surprises, like the good results of Benoit, who started the year at No. 140. Chardy is very consistent. Globally, it is very positive.”

Whether or not they can perform under pressure in seven matches over two weeks in front of the French fans is another question. That big-stage pressure at home-country Slams is very real. No Aussie has won the Australian Open since 1976. When Andy Murray triumphed at the All England Club in 2013, it broke a lengthy dry spell of some 77 years for British men. An American hasn’t prevailed at the US Open since 2003. But wouldn’t it be magnifique to see France once again celebrate one of its own in the Bois de Boulogne?

7. Will we see more legends follow the likes of Becker, Edberg and Chang into the coaching ranks?

Ever since Jimmy Connors stepped out of retirement to coach Andy Roddick in 2006, it’s become downright de rigueur for former champions to share their expertise with today’s elite performers.  In 2012, Andy Murray took many of us by surprise when he hired Ivan Lendl. The Scot later aligned with Amelie Mauresmo and, until recently, Jonas Bjorkman. In 2013, German legend Boris Becker began a more-than-productive relationship with Novak Djokovic. As if in response, Roger Federer for two years hired one of Becker’s old foes, Swede Stefan Edberg, and this year adds former World No. 3 Ivan Ljubicic to his team. Kei Nishikori reached the 2014 US Open final under the guidance of Michael Chang.

“Let’s say it’s nothing that I thought that I ever would do,” said Edberg, who will step away from coaching duties this year.

As we saw in 2015, when 17 Grand Slams into a surefire Hall of Fame career Federer added a chip-and-charge attack to his arsenal (aka the “SABR,” as in Sneak Attack By Roger), it’s never too late to add to your game.

And while neither Federer nor Djokovic will become full-time serve-and-volleyers anytime soon, as they get older, who better to consult for ways to shorten points than champions like Edberg and Becker? The old guard still has something to say. All of which makes one wonder, when will John McEnroe begin a mentorship of his own?   

8. Will the Bryan Bros. return to their winning ways at the majors?

The most successful doubles team in the Open Era — Mike and Bob Bryan — saw its streak of 143 consecutive weeks at No. 1 come to an end in 2015, a year that saw the Bryans fail to win a Grand Slam title for the first time since 2004. All that being said, it was hardly an unproductive year for the twin terrors, who captured six ATP World Tour titles, including three at the Masters 1000 level. They also qualified for the Barclays ATP World Tour Finals for the 14th successive season, staying in the race for the year-end No. 1 in the Emirates ATP Doubles Team Rankings right up until the semi-finals. Bryan/Bryan is the only team in the Open Era to win at least five titles for 14 straight years.

“It was bound to happen at some point,” said Bob. “Unfortunately, the stars didn’t align at the majors this year.”

At the age of 37 and now 17 years into their pro careers, no one would fault the Bryans if they eased off the pedal a bit, marriage and (in Bob’s case) parenthood demanding more and more of their time. With 16 Slams and more than 950 wins, they certainly have nothing left to prove. But the former Stanford stars are talking like they’ve still got some unfinished business.

“We’re going to go back to the drawing board, work even harder,” said Mike at the year-end finale in London. “We’re going to work extra hard. Obviously, next year is an important year with the Olympics. We want to try to win another Slam, be here again trying to get No. 1.”

“I think doubles improves every year,” Mike asserted. “I think we had [6,770] points. To our standards, that is a pretty low point number, but there were a lot of teams around that. A lot of teams had a crack at No. 1. Next year, we would like to do what we’ve done in the past, put up 10,000 plus points and win some big majors and make it really tough for anyone to catch us. If they want to catch us, they’re going to have to hit the big number of titles and points…We’re going to come back next year stronger, healthier and hungrier to do this again because we know what the feeling feels like. It’s a great feeling. We’ll do all we can to get back on top.”

9. What impact will Juan Martin del Potro have on the Tour this year?

It’s hard to believe a half-dozen years have gone by since Juan Martin del Potro’s towering, 6-foot-6 presence stalked the hard courts of Flushing Meadows on the final Monday at the US Open, when the popular Argentine took down the seemingly unconquerable Roger Federer and his 41-match winning streak in five sets 3-6, 7-6(5), 4-6, 7-6(4), 6-2 for the lone Slam title of his career.

Now 27, the ‘Tower of Tandil’ has played only sparingly since. After reaching a career-high of No. 4 in the Emirates ATP Rankings and inserting himself in the conversation with Federer, Nadal and Djokovic, del Potro was limited to 10 matches or fewer in 2010, 2014 and 2015 due to injuries to both wrists. He underwent surgery on his left wrist in March 2014, missing the remainder of the year. But he wasn’t out of the woods just yet: Due to complications, he would undergo the knife again in both January and June of 2015, all the while never giving up hope of a return to the ATP World Tour.

If you follow del Potro on Twitter (@delpotrojuan) — and some two million fans do — you’re familiar with his eagerness to get back. He regularly posts selfies: in hospital beds, in casts, rehabbing, always with a thumbs up and usually accompanied by a motivational message.

“If you think I’m down and out, I want you to know I’m still fighting for it.”

“Here I am recovering after the surgery. I’m really thankful to you for being there.”

Perhaps the most encouraging Tweet came in late August just as the final Slam of the year was getting underway.

“The @usopen, my favourite tournament, just started. I’ll be there next year.”

There’s ample reason to believe del Potro will make good on his promise. In November, he took the courts for the first time in seven months in Florida, practising at the Tennis Center at Crandon Park, home to the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event in Miami. Although he said at first “I felt I was holding a hammer instead of a racquet,” the Argentine has gained confidence as the training sessions have progressed. “There’s no doubt I will play again,” he said.

The only question is when.

10. Can Roger Federer remain a Top-5 force at age 34?

In a word, yes. If 2015 were any indication, age doesn’t seem to apply to the tricenarian the way it does we mere mortals.

En route to the Brisbane title, Roger Federer crossed the 1,000-win mark, becoming one of only three players in the Open Era to do so (joining Jimmy Connors and Ivan Lendl). He defeated Andy Murray and Novak Djokovic en route to his seventh Cincinnati title and 24th ATP Masters 1000 crown overall, the first time he had ever defeated the Nos. 1-2 at the same event. At the US Open, he became the oldest Grand Slam finalist since 35-year-old Andre Agassi at Flushing Meadows in 2005. He also claimed titles in Dubai, Istanbul, Halle and Basel. Overall, he went 6-5 in finals, with all five losses coming to World No. 1 Djokovic, including Wimbledon, the US Open and the Barclays ATP World Tour Finals. But his greatest achievement might just have been staying injury-free, something he’s developed an uncanny knack for over his 17-year pro career.

These days, Federer often fields questions about retirement; about how long he can see himself playing this game. Unvaryingly, he tells us he can’t yet see the finish line, and that’s just fine with him.

“As long as I don’t know when the end is, that’s how you plan,” said Federer in November. “Into infinity, if you like.”

Though the 17-time Grand Slam champion has been shut out at the majors the past three years, a look at his records over the past five years reveals that his level remains an elite one.

Year  Record
 2015  63-11
 2014  73-12
 2013  45-17
 2012  71-12
 2011  64-12

He most definitely remains a Top-5 force, and should remain so through 2016.

“I’m playing good tennis,” he said. “I’m happy with where my level is at. I’m able to be very consistent. I’m able to beat the best players regularly. Cincinnati was a great feeling, beating the World No. 1 and World No. 2 in the same week. I don’t think I’ve done that before. Then, of course, there’s also disappointment. I lost too many times in finals. But at the same time, I’m just happy that the last one-and-a-half years I have been again very consistent. I’m playing the right way, and also in a way that’s fun for me. If I decide to have long rallies and stay back, I can do that. If I decide to move forward and step it up, I can do that, too.”

10 Questions For 2016: Part 1

Source link

10 Things To Know: Week One

10 Things To Know: Week One

  • Posted: Jan 02, 2016

Well, it’s here – the first week of the 2016 season! And what a week it is with almost every big name in action across three WTA events and one of the biggest exhibition events of the year on the menu.

So let’s get to it… here are 10 Things To Know about Brisbane, Shenzhen, Auckland and Hopman Cup!

1) Brisbane, the biggest tournament of Week 1, has four Top 10 players in the draw.
The Brisbane International, the only Premier-level event in Week 1, has an absolutely packed field headlined by Top 10ers Simona Halep, Garbiñe Muguruza, Maria Sharapova and Angelique Kerber.

2) Halep and Sharapova could play in the semifinals in Brisbane.
The World No.2 and World No.4 are the No.1 and No.3 seeds and both fell in the top half of the draw – we could have a blockbuster semifinal on our hands. Here are Sharapova’s thoughts on Halep.

3) Halep could face another future hall-of-famer right out of the gates.
Should she get past a qualifier in her first round match, Victoria Azarenka would be Halep’s very first opponent of the new season. And the former World No.1 is hoping to reach new heights in 2016.

4) The threats in Brisbane don’t end there…
The other four seeds are all ranked in the Top 15 – Timea Bacsinszky, Carla Suárez Navarro, Belinda Bencic and Roberta Vinci. A ton of other former Top 10 players are also in the draw – see it here.

5) We could have a repeat of the WTA Finals final in Shenzhen.
Agnieszka Radwanska and Petra Kvitova, who squared off in the final of the WTA Finals in Singapore, could set up a rematch should they make it through their halves of the draw at the Shenzhen Open.

6) But let’s not pencil that final in just yet…
A whole host of big-time challengers are hoping to thwart the Top 2 seeds at the International-level event, including Eugenie Bouchard, a former Top 5 player eyeing a rebound. See the draw here.

7) Three former World No.1s headline in Auckland.
Venus Williams, Ana Ivanovic and Caroline Wozniacki are the Top 3 seeds at the International-level ASB Classic. This is Venus’ first tournament as a Top 10 player since the 2011 Australian Open.

8) Two more Grand Slam champions also made the trip to New Zealand.
Svetlana Kuznetsova and Francesca Schiavone are also in the draw in Auckland, and if they make it by their first round opponents, they could play in the second round. Check out the full draw here.

9) The World No.1 is playing Hopman Cup this week.
Serena Williams, who’s on the verge of even more history in 2016, opens her season at Hopman Cup in Perth, partnering Jack Sock as part of the US team. Karolina Pliskova, who actually out-aced Serena in 2015, and other big names like Sabine Lisicki and Elina Svitolina have also made the trip to Perth.

10) Check out all the best live action this week on WTA Live powered by TennisTV.

Source link

Happy New Year From The WTA Stars

Happy New Year From The WTA Stars

  • Posted: Jan 01, 2016

Source link

Halep Chasing More Firsts In 2016

Halep Chasing More Firsts In 2016

  • Posted: Jan 01, 2016

She won the biggest title of her career at Indian Wells, reached her first US Open semifinal and got back to No.2 in the world. It was a very solid year for Simona Halep, and now the question is – how will she follow it up?

By winning her maiden Grand Slam? By snatching the No.1 ranking away from Serena Williams?

Sure, but it’s an Olympic year. So while Halep might be focused on winning matches at Melbourne, Paris, London or New York, Halep’s passionate Romanian fanbase have their sights set on Rio.

“I don’t know how I will be then physically, but if I will be healthy, I will compete,” she said last year about the 2016 Olympics. “I do all my best and I hope to bring Romania a medal, although it will not be easy.”

Halep knows a thing or two about managing her country’s heavy expectations – she’s far and away Romania’s brightest female tennis star, but she’s still only human.

“In our country everyone is telling me that I have to win all the matches,” said Romania’s No.1. “But I’m not a robot. I’m a normal girl and a normal player. I have ups and downs… I try not to think about what people are saying about my results or my tennis.

“I know Romanians want me to win every match, and it’s fine – I do everything I can to win them.”

Halep will be fine-tuning her preparations for the Australian Open at Brisbane and Sydney, where she joins several of the world’s Top 10 players. It’s going to be her first big test: she ended the year 3-5 overall against the Top 10, a figure she’s looking to improve in 2016 as she starts to mount her Grand Slam – and Olympic – challenge.

Source link

10 Questions For 2016: Part 1

  • Posted: Jan 01, 2016

10 Questions For 2016: Part 1

ATPWorldTour.com looks ahead at 10 burning questions for tennis in 2016

1. Will Nadal have a more Rafa-like 2016?

We’ve all seen the stats: fewest titles since 2011 (three), earliest exit at Roland Garros since 2009 (quarter-finals), no Slams or ATP Masters 1000 titles for the first time in more than a decade, lowest year-end Emirates ATP Ranking (No. 5) since 2004. But if you didn’t tune into Rafal Nadal’s post-US Open campaign, you’re not getting the full picture. The resurgent Spaniard would go 16-5 during the Asian and European swings with semi-final showings at the Shanghai Rolex Masters and Barclays ATP World Tour Finals, and finals in both Beijing and Basel. More importantly, the 29-year-old Mallorcan was already looking ahead to 2016 with a renewed sense of on-court calm and confidence.

“Victories are the best medicine possible,” he said.

“A lot of the time this year, I was not able to fight the way that I wanted to, and I was not able to try to find solutions on the court when things weren’t going well,” he continued. “So for me, the big improvement is when I’m able to find those solutions again; when I’m able to figure out how to change the dynamic and to fight the way that I want to fight again. That’s the most important thing.”

Perhaps most reassuring was Nadal’s run to the Basel final (l. to Roger Federer 6-3, 5-7, 6-3), which included consecutive three-set wins against Lukas Rosol, Grigor Dimitrov and Marin Cilic, the Spaniard showing that he indeed has plenty of fight left in him. All this, he says, will serve as ideal prep work for 2016.     

“I take everything like a practice,” explained Nadal, who with uncle/coach Toni Nadal has been sharpening his serve and ramping up his return game. “Every week for me is like a preparation for next year.  I try to spend as much time on court as possible working on the things that I need to work on. The more time that I can spend on the court is going to be important practice, trying to do the things I need to do to start strong next year.”

For anyone who might doubt Nadal’s ability to turn things around, all you have to do is look back to 2013. That’s the year he returned from a seven-month injury layoff to win 10 titles and reach a career-high 14 finals, becoming the first player to retake No. 1 in the Emirates ATP Rankings after a three-year absence.

“I understand that people are questioning his game now and where he’s going to be,” said Novak Djokovic. “But if you need a reminder of who he is, you just look at his career stats and Grand Slams that he won. I think that says enough about his quality as a player and as a champion.”

2. Can Novak Djokovic possibly top his stellar 2015 and win a calendar-year Slam?

Twice now Novak Djokovic has come within a Roland Garros of the calendar-year Grand Slam, first in 2011 (when he opened the season on the second longest winning streak in ATP World Tour history en route to a 70-6 finish) and then in 2015 (when he claimed a record six ATP Masters 1000 titles, the Barclays ATP Word Tour Finals and went 82-6). As we saw with Serena Williams’ quest for the final piece in her Grand Slam puzzle of 2015, it can be a taxing, pressure-filled journey. But the level-headed Djokovic is just 28 and playing better than ever. Even the Serb called this past season “the best year of my life.” So there’s little reason to doubt his ability to complete the task in 2016. It’s just a matter of how he deals with the pressure and the obstacles that will inevitably come his way: the injuries, the colds, the rising talent, the Stan Wawrinkas.

“He was so close this year,” said Rod Laver, the last man to pull off the Grand Slam, something he did not once but twice, in 1962 and 1969. “Going into the French final, I would have picked him nine out of 10 times against Wawrinka. But things happen. The pressures are there. It depends on how you deal with them. If you start off 2016 saying, ‘I’m going for a Grand Slam,’ those sorts of things can creep into your game. The more you talk about it you’re just adding pressure. But if you play your best tennis under pressure, which Djokovic certainly does, he’s got a good chance.”

Though Laver admits that the pressures, at least from a financial perspective, are weightier now than in his heyday, the Hall of Famer did deal with his own heavy expectations when he swept the majors at 24 and again at 31, a remarkable seven-year buffer between them.

“The biggest thing is how you perform under pressure,” Laver, 77, told ATPWorldTour.com. “I was fortunate. I think I played my best tennis under pressure. It wasn’t nerves that beat me in my time on the tennis court. I think Djokovic has a great chance at a Grand Slam. I hope I can be there to congratulate him if it happens.”

3. What will Australian tennis look like in a post-Hewitt world?

When his last ball is struck on home ground at the 2016 Australian Open, be it in the first round or during an inspirational second-week run, Lleyton Hewitt will walk away from his playing career for good. Sure, he’ll stick around to represent his nation as the newly elected Davis Cup captain, but his days as one of the ATP World Tour’s most dogged on-court competitors will be over. The two-time Grand Slam champion’s departure will surely be felt, but thanks to the rise of a talented crop of young talent Down Under, the void won’t be as ominous as we once might have thought.

Fittingly, Hewitt played his last US Open match against a player whom many Aussies hope can fill his shoes, Bernard Tomic. In their first-ever FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting, the 34-year-old Hewitt pushed his 23-year-old foe to five sets before falling 6-3, 6-2, 3-6, 5-7, 7-5 in the second round. The torch had officially been passed. At the Australian Open, the enigmatic Nick Kyrgios became the first teen to reach two Slam quarterfinals since Roger Federer in 2001. Nineteen-year-old Thanasi Kokkinakis became the first teen to reach the third round at Roland Garros since Ernests Gulbis in 2008. And fellow Aussies James Duckworth (23), Luke Saville (21) and Jordan Thompson (21) are showing promise, too.

“I will pass on stuff to the young guys,” said Hewitt, the year-end No. 1 in 2001 and 2002. “That’s my next role — to help those boys out. I was very fortunate that I came up in a group where there weren’t a lot of egos, especially the Woodies [Todd Woodbridge and Mark Woodforde], [Jason] Stoltenberg, [Richard] Fromberg, Wayne Arthurs, a lot of these guys. They helped me out with a lot of stuff. [Patrick] Rafter came up when I was playing Davis Cup with him. He took me under his wing. So I was really fortunate with that stuff. I think that’s just part of a really good Australian culture.”

4. Will Grigor Dimitrov finally emerge as a consistent elite power?

Though he’s just 24, its feels like Grigor Dimitrov has been under the microscope for eons. From the moment that, as an 18-year-old upstart, he shocked Tomas Berdych in Rotterdam in 2009 and the tennis cognoscenti — fairly or unfairly — began to pin the “Baby Federer” label upon his chest, it seems the balletic Bulgarian has been expected to live up to some impossible Swiss standards.

Since turning pro in 2008, Dimitrov has been on an upward trend in the Emirates ATP Rankings, going from No. 482 to a career-high of No 8 in 2014, a year in which he claimed three ATP World Tour titles and reached his first Grand Slam semi-final at Wimbledon. This April, he scalped Stan Wawrinka in reaching the quarter-finals at ATP World Tour Masters 1000 events in both Monte-Carlo and Madrid. But just when it began to look as if he might continue his climb, Dimitrov, who has struggled with shoulder issues, took a step backward in the rankings to close 2015 at No. 28.

“Last year was a pretty intense year for me,” he confided. “Everything was quite intense for me to get into those rounds, quarter-finals, semi-finals.  Every tournament that I was playing was just something new for me. To come back the following year, to repeat all that, it’s never easy because after you put quite a bit of pressure on yourself to do good and even better.  It’s been a lot of ups and downs. Last year was an eye‑opener for me. It showed me what I was capable of. I fell into a rhythm that I always wanted to. But I knew it was very hard to sustain.”

However, Dimitrov’s uber-athletic game has clearly made an impression on his colleagues, even that Swiss sensation to whom he is so often compared.

“He’s making improvements from the baseline and taking bigger cuts at the ball now,” noted Roger Federer of Dimtrov’s arsenal. “He’s not just waiting for mistakes from the opponents, like he did at the beginning of the his career more often. I’ve played him quite a few times now. He’s always a tough guy to play.”

If he can get himself fully healthy, 2016 might just be the year in which he breaks through in a big way.

5. Will more teens continue to populate the Top 100 in the Emirates ATP Rankings?

Don’t look now but there’s a youth movement afoot in men’s professional tennis. Croatia’s Borna Coric (18), Korea’s Hyeon Chung (19), Australia’s Thanasi Kokkinakis (19) and Emirates ATP Star of Tomorrow award winner Alexander Zverev of Germany (18) all infiltrated the year-end Top 100 in the Emirates ATP World Tour Rankings in 2015, proving that the top young guns can indeed play with the big boys.

Though in recent years the sport’s elite hasn’t been peaking until its late 20s (the average age of today’s Top 10 is 29.6), that doesn’t mean this new era of young talent can’t hold its own or even break though at the biggest events.

“It’s good to have some fresh faces, new faces, in the Top 100. A lot are pretty close to breaking through, as well,” said Kokkinakis, who grew up idolizing Russian Marat Safin. “It’s good to have that new young crop coming through.”

“There’s a couple of more guys coming in. I’m just happy that I’m one of them,” said Coric, who scalped a Top-5 win over Andy Murray in Dubai. “It’s nice to have someone else to keep pushing you, so I can work even harder.”

“We’re definitely a new generation,” added Zverev, who in 2014 became the first 17-year-old since Rafael Nadal and Richard Gasquet in 2003 to finish in Top 150 in the Emirates ATP Rankings. “We’re young and we play very aggressive — all of us.”

Source link