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Ruusuvuori Reveals His ATP Band, What Makes Finland So Happy & More

  • Posted: Mar 28, 2023

Ruusuvuori Reveals His ATP Band, What Makes Finland So Happy & More

Learn more about the Finn in exclusive Q&A

Emil Ruusuvuori has quickly established himself as a consistent performer on the ATP Tour. The Finnish star, who is No. 43 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings, has a powerful baseline game that has propelled him to success.

Off the court, he has plenty of interests, from hockey to music. ATPTour.com caught up with Ruusuvuori before his fourth-round match at the Miami Open presented by Itau against Botic van de Zandschulp.

If you could choose any three people to go to dinner with, who would they be and why?
Let’s put Michael Jordan. This one is pretty tough! Roger [Federer] I never really met. It’s a pity that he stopped too early, so I never got to practise with him or anything, I’ll take him. Then some artist, a big rock star.

How much are you into music?
I can listen to anything, but my dad is really into music and he was a young kid who was playing all the rock classics, Led Zeppelin, stuff like this. I used to listen to it, too.

Which is your favourite band?
Probably Red Hot Chili Peppers is one. I remember the first CD that I ever had was from them. I wish I would [play drums] more because I don’t have them any more. We actually have one set at the summer house, so if I have the chance in the summer to go there maybe once a summer [I enjoy it]. Too little. I should find a way.

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Who would be in your ATP band?
For the singer I would take my country fellow Harri Heliovaara. He’s a very good singer, actually. He is. He actually did a crazy thing. In his first Davis Cup [tie] as a rookie he sang the national anthem of Finland alone without any guitar, piano, anything, in front of a couple hundred people on court.

Maybe I’ll take Frances Tiafoe to be the hype man. I don’t know who else is pretty musical. We need maybe a bassist. For bass we will take some big fellow with a beard, but there are not too many!

How well do you remember meeting fellow Finn Teemu Selanne, the NHL legend?
I met him I think in Finland a couple of times… it must have been in Finland. Then in the States we spent a couple of nights at his house and at his restaurant. I think they actually just got a Michelin star, the restaurant.

How much do you still follow hockey?
I’ve been even following the Finnish league. A friend of mine came [to] the States, he went back to Finland for this season, so I’ve been following that. He plays for the club where the stadium is right next to where I live, so I’ve been following.

There are actually playoffs going on, so that’s what I’m going to do tonight, watch the game. Here with the time change you just put the TV on, watch the game and it’s fine. When you’re in Europe it’s tough with the times.

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What is something interesting fans might not know about you?
I’ve been getting into watch collecting a little bit. I’ve been following watches a lot and that’s something that traveling, you can always have them with you so it’s easier to do.

And then I think everybody should experience the endless summer nights somewhere in Finland at the summer house. That’s the best place to relax in the world.

What makes Finland so happy?
I have to say if you ask people at the moment with this weather, they’re probably struggling! Things just work so well there. Everything from the schools, medical care and everything like this, it just works perfectly. Can’t complain about any of those things, so it’s just a very good place to live, except for the weather [right now]!

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Gonzalez/Roger-Vasselin Reach Miami QFs

  • Posted: Mar 28, 2023

Gonzalez/Roger-Vasselin Reach Miami QFs

Glasspool/Heliovaara advance

Santiago Gonzalez and Edouard Roger-Vasselin continued their impressive season on Monday when they moved past Juan Sebastian Cabal and Robert Farah 6-3, 6-4 to reach the quarter-finals at the Miami Open presented by Itau.

In a dominant serving performance, the Mexican-French team won 92 per cent (33/36) of points behind their first delivery and did not face a break point to advance after 69 minutes.

Gonzalez and Roger-Vasselin now hold a 13-6 record as a team this season, highlighted by their run to the title in Marseille and the semi-finals in Indian Wells. They will continue the quest for their second trophy of the year against top seeds Wesley Koolhof and Neal Skupski or Mackenzie McDonald and Botic van de Zandschulp.


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Fifth seeds Lloyd Glasspool and Harri Heliovaara also advanced, moving past Alexander Bublik and Miomir Kecmanovic 6-2, 6-2. The British-Finnish pair, who are now 15-4 on the year, will next meet Nathaniel Lammons and Jackson Withrow.

Glasspool and Heliovaara have won three tour-level titles as a team but are seeking their maiden ATP Masters 1000 crown in South Florida.

Maximo Gonzalez and Andres Molteni swept into their sixth quarter-final of the season, clawing past Marcelo Melo and John Peers 6-4, 6-7(5), 10-6 in one hour and 53 minutes. They will next play Austin Krajicek and Nicolas Mahut.

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Ferrero On Paul Clash: 'Carlos Will Have To Go Out On Full Alert'

  • Posted: Mar 27, 2023

Ferrero On Paul Clash: ‘Carlos Will Have To Go Out On Full Alert’

Alcaraz meets Paul in fourth round in Miami

Editor’s note: This story was translated from ATPTour.com/es

Simply seeing Tommy Paul on the other side of the net on Tuesday at the Miami Open presented by Itau will be a reminder to Carlos Alcaraz of the meteoric rise he has enjoyed since his loss to the American last August in Montreal.

After that tournament, where Alcaraz was one of the top seeds for the first time at an ATP Masters 1000 event, the Spaniard admitted that he had never felt pressure like that day on court against Paul. “I have to be ready to deal with that pressure, to have these kinds of moments and learn to handle them,” he said at the time. But Alcaraz has always been a quick learner.

Despite the fact that only seven months have passed since then, this bump in the road seems to be well behind him. His coach Juan Carlos Ferrero can attest to that.

“I don’t think that Carlos being No. 1 or No. 2 influences him too much in terms of how he approaches matches,” the Spanish coach explained before Tuesday’s tie in Miami. If one person has helped him get to that point, it is the former World No. 1 and 16-time ATP Tour champion.

“It’s true that as you get higher, you often feel the pressure around you, of being a favourite, that you have to win almost all your matches. But if Carlos has his mind on that all the time, his tennis won’t flow. That’s why we’ve tried to focus on this aspect of his growth so that everything goes well in terms of flowing on court,” Ferrero added.


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His progress in dealing with being one of the favourites is clear. The 19-year-old Spaniard is now in the midst of his second spell as No. 1 in the Pepperstone ATP Ranking, and he has won his past eight matches without dropping a set. Although he must now mount a successful defence of his Miami title if he is to stay at the top, so far he has played fearless, nerveless tennis in the Hard Rock Stadium.

In fact, he has won a 6-0 set in each of his two victories this fortnight. “I think he has learned his lesson about his approach in Montreal, with the added pressure, especially after what happened at the US Open,” added Ferrero. “Now Carlos is playing much more freely, and concentrating more on his game than things that are going on around him. And I think that will make him play better than he did last time against Paul.”

However, the 25-year-old American Paul has also taken giant strides since his only previous encounter with Alcaraz. Last August he was yet to break into the Top 30, now he has a place in the Top 20 and is enjoying a great season that includes a semi-final at the Australian Open and a final in Acapulco.

“He’s working well and he’s focused, and he looks more mature on court. That’s making him play better. He’s gained quite a lot of confidence in his game,” says Ferrero. “And apart from serving and returning well, for me his mobility is among the best on tour at the moment. That means he covers the court very well and makes him difficult to beat.”

Paul’s current rich vein of form has allowed him to win his past 12 matches against Spaniards, a streak that includes victories over Rafael Nadal, Roberto Bautista Agut, Pablo Carreno Busta and Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, whom he beat on Sunday in the third round in Miami.

“I know he plays at a very high level against Spaniards, but I’m here to try and end that run,” explains Alcaraz. The top seed is well aware of the magnitude of the challenge he is facing. “Paul is doing everything well. He moves well, he’s fast, he hits great shots. He makes it all look easy. I’ve seen many of his matches and I enjoy watching him play. He’s very talented, so it’ll be a very tough match.”

Ferrero agrees with his understudy. “It’s going to be a match in which Carlos will have to go out on full alert and, from there, create a good match and make the most of his speed on the baseline to try and undo Paul.”

The last Spaniard to do that? Rafael Nadal in the quarter-finals in Acapulco in 2022. An inspired Alcaraz will be looking to replicate the feat this Tuesday in the Hard Rock Stadium to earn himself a place in the quarter-finals in Miami.

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Cerundolo Conjures His Miami Magic To Stun Auger-Aliassime

  • Posted: Mar 27, 2023

Cerundolo Conjures His Miami Magic To Stun Auger-Aliassime

Halys downs McDonald, faces Medvedev next

A surprise semi-finalist in 2022, Francisco Cerundolo is once again bringing his best to the Miami Open presented by Itau.

The 25th-seeded Argentine powered to a 6-2, 7-5 third-round victory against Felix Auger-Aliassime on Monday at the ATP Masters 1000 event in Florida. Cerundolo took control early with some blistering baseline play against the World No. 6 and dug deep in the face of a late Auger-Aliassime resurgence to wrap a one-hour, 44-minute win on Grandstand.

“I’m very happy to be back again in the round of 16 here, in a Masters 1000, here in Miami,” said Cerundolo after his 10th tour-level win of the year. “I’m super happy that I’m playing as well as last year, super happy with my level, and [hope] to keep going.”

The pair had last clashed just two weeks ago in the third round at Indian Wells, where Auger-Aliassime ran out a straight-sets winner. On Monday, Cerundolo expertly used the faster Miami conditions to engineer his revenge, constantly pressuring the fifth seed with a barrage of fizzing forehands.

Even after Auger-Aliassme reclaimed a break to level at 4-4 in the second set, the 24-year-old continued to strike the ball confidently. Cerundolo ended with 12 winners to Auger-Aliassime’s seven and converted four of six break points he earned for his third Top 10 career victory. The Argentine now holds an 8-1 record in Miami, and he will look to improve that further on Tuesday when he takes on 12th seed Frances Tiafoe or Lorenzo Sonego in the fourth round.

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“One key was that I read his serve better,” said Cerundolo, reflecting on how different Monday’s match had been to his losses against Auger-Aliassime at January’s Australian Open and in Indian Wells. “I think I played much better than the other two matches.

“I had more confidence today than the previous months, so probably that was another key. My level was super high today. I served well, only one game that I made two double-faults, and I only faced [one other] break point. So I’m super happy.”

As good as Cerundolo was, Auger-Aliassime will be disappointed with an error-strewn performance. The Canadian’s 19 unforced errors proved costly as he let slip the opportunity to play for a seventh straight Masters 1000 quarter-final.


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Cerundolo will next meet 27-year-old Italian Lorenzo Sonego, who advanced to the Miami Open fourth round for the second time in three years with a 6-3, 6-4 upset of American Frances Tiafoe. Sonego is up 12 places to No. 47 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings.

Sonego dropped just five points on serve during the match and fired eight aces.

Another player enjoying a dream run in Miami this year is Quentin Halys. The Frenchman had not won a Masters 1000 main-draw match prior to this year’s tournament, but on Monday he downed Mackenzie McDonald 7-6(2), 6-3 to reach the fourth round at Hard Rock Stadium.

Halys’s serve was integral to his one-hour, 41-minute win in his maiden tour-level meeting with McDonald. The 26-year-old sent down 15 aces and won 81 per cent (38/47) of points behind his first delivery en route to victory, and he has now won four sets via a tie-break across his three matches in Florida.

Now 8-8 for the 2023 season, Halys next takes on Daniil Medvedev on Tuesday. The fourth-seeded Medvedev advanced to the fourth round without stepping on court in Miami after his opponent Alex Molcan withdrew (right hip).

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Heart-stopping Finals Aplenty In Week 12 Of ATP Challenger Tour

  • Posted: Mar 27, 2023

Heart-stopping Finals Aplenty In Week 12 Of ATP Challenger Tour

Rodionov wins Challenger 100 event in Biel

It was a weekend of comebacks and thrilling championship matches on the ATP Challenger Tour, three of four tournaments were decided in final-set tie-breaks.

Ricardas Berankis and Hugo Grenier survived three-set finals to claim Challenger titles while Alessandro Giannessi fended off a championship point in Zadar, Croatia to win his fourth Challenger crown. In Switzerland, Jurij Rodionov successfully defended his title at the Biel Challenger.

Berankis survived home hope Dan Added in the St. Brieuc Challenger final to win his 14th Challenger title. Despite having two match points in the second set, Berankis was pushed to a decider but ultimately prevailed 6-3, 6-7(3), 7-6(5) to win the Open Saint-Brieuc Armor Agglomeration.

ATP Challenger Tour 

En route to his first Challenger title since August 2019 (Vancouver), the 32-year-old Berankis ousted top seed Antoine Escoffier in the quarter-finals.

In Las Franquesas Del Valles, Spain, second seed Grenier rallied from a set down in each of his final three matches to claim his fourth Challenger title.

In the championship match, the Frenchman completed a comeback from 2-5 in the deciding set to defeat British qualifier Billy Harris 3-6, 6-1, 7-6(3) and win the Challenger Club Els Gorchs.

<a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/hugo-grenier/gf95/overview'>Hugo Grenier</a> (left) and <a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/billy-harris/hd68/overview'>Billy Harris</a> at the Las Franquesas del Valles Challenger trophy presentation.
Hugo Grenier (left) and Billy Harris at the Las Franquesas del Valles Challenger trophy presentation. Credit: Jordi Ramos

“This week was amazing for me because the beginning of the season hasn’t been easy for me,” Grenier said. “I won [the semi-final and final] in a third-set tie-break so for me it’s an amazing week. It’s always good to win those long matches.”

Harris was competing in his first Challenger final after upsetting top seed Max Purcell in the final four to end the Aussie’s 18-match win streak.

On the clay courts of Croatia, Giannessi saved a championship point at 5/6 in the third-set tie-break to escape Sebastian Ofner 6-4, 5-7, 7-6(6) and win the Falkensteiner Punta Skala Zadar Open.

Despite holding a 4-0, 40/0 lead in the deciding set against Ofner, the 32-year-old Italian was forced to a tie-break before scoring his fourth Challenger title and first since May 2019 (Vicenza).

At the FlowBank Challenger Biel in Switzerland, fans were treated to a final between the 2021 champion Liam Broady and the reigning titlist Rodionov, who dropped just one set en route to defending his title. The Austrian Rodionov led Broady 6-3 before the Brit retired with a wrist injury.

<a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/jurij-rodionov/r09x/overview'>Jurij Rodionov</a> in action Sunday at the Biel Challenger.
Jurij Rodionov in action Sunday at the Biel Challenger. Credit: Meierhans Fotografie

The 23-year-old Rodionov, who is No. 126 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings, earned his sixth Challenger title and first of this season.

“[Biel] is like home to me,” Rodionov said. “I haven’t lost a match on this soil, it just feels great. I hope I can continue my momentum into the next few weeks and gain a lot of points before Roland Garros and Wimbledon to hopefully get into the main draw.

“Unfortunately [Sunday’s] final didn’t end the way I wanted it to. I wish Liam a quick recovery.”

 

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Tsitsipas Claws Past Garin

  • Posted: Mar 27, 2023

Tsitsipas Claws Past Garin

Greek next plays Khachanov

Stefanos Tsitsipas is up and running at the Miami Open presented by Itau.

Competing for the first time this fortnight, the Greek overcame a tough opening test against Chilean qualifier Cristian Garin, prevailing 6-3, 4-6, 6-4 to reach the fourth round in Miami for the fourth consecutive year.

The Greek was playing for just the third time in the past month after he withdrew from Acapulco due to a shoulder injury and lost in the opening round in Indian Wells. He then received a first-round bye and a second-round walkover from Richard Gasquet in Miami.

“I was waiting for a very long time to get out and play,” Tsitsipas said. “It has almost felt like a vacation this past week, staying in Miami. I glad I got started. It was a difficult match against an opponent who has played good tennis against good opponents in the past.

“I am happy with the way things turned around and my confidence towards the end. I had an eye-on-the-prize attitude and it was effective with how I played in the last game when he was serving.”

Tsitsipas’ lack of match sharpness showed at times inside Hard Rock Stadium, with the second seed committing 21 unforced errors as an inform Garin chased his sixth win in seven matches. However, the World No. 3 dug deep and found a way, looking the fresher of the pair at the end of the third set to earn his 14th win of the season after two hours and four minutes.

Tsitsipas, who fired 30 winners and earned the crucial break at 4-4 in the deciding set, will next meet Karen Khachanov. The Greek hopes his fitness continues to improve throughout the hard-court event.

“I am just going to enjoy this victory,” Tsitsipas said when asked about his shoulder. “It has been a difficult road to healing in the past few weeks, but I am happy that things are getting better.”

Tsitsipas now leads Garin 3-0 in their ATP Head2Head series. The World No. 3, who reached the quarter-finals in Miami in 2021, is chasing his third ATP Masters 1000 title this week.

Earlier, the 14th seed Khachanov dispatched Czech Jiri Lehecka 6-2, 6-4 to reach the fourth round in Miami for the first time.

Khachanov struck 21 winners during his first meeting against Lehecka and is up one spot to No. 15 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings. The 26-year-old’s best result this season came at the Australian Open, where he lost to Tsitsipas in the semi-finals.

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Botic Bounces Casper In Miami Thriller

  • Posted: Mar 27, 2023

Botic Bounces Casper In Miami Thriller

Norwegian yet to win consecutive matches in 2023

Botic van de Zandschulp claimed the first Top 5 win of his career and extended Casper Ruud’s disappointing 2022 season when he rallied from the brink of a double break in the final set to oust the 2022 finalist 3-6, 6-4, 6-4 at the Miami Open presented by Itau.

In a scrappy match in which both players made more than 30 unforced errors, World No. 4 Ruud ultimately paid the price for converting just two of 15 break point opportunities, including one of eight in the final set.


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“It was an unbelievable tough match,” said van de Zandschulp, the 26th seed. “He had so many chances in the third set. When I broke back for 3-2 I was holding and had a feeling that I had a chance in his service games. At 5-4 I had one opportunity and I took it.”

Ruud, who reached Grand Slam finals in Paris and New York last year and the title match of the Nitto ATP Finals, has not won consecutive matches this year. In the final set he led 2-0 and had two break points for a double break. When he handed back the break for 3-all, the Norwegian made two volleying errors.

In the final game a van de Zandschulp dead net cord off a Ruud second serve at deuce brought up match point. Ruud failed to put away a smash and then dumped a high routine forehand volley into the net – perhaps a sign of his low confidence – to seal his own fate.

Van de Zandschulp fired 12 aces and saved three of six break points faced. The Dutchman is up one place to No. 31 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings. Van de Zandschulp improved to 3-1 in ATP Head2Head meetings with Ruud and next meets Finn Emil Ruusuvuori. The pair has split their two prior meetings.

Ruud will now head to his beloved clay in the hope that his favourite surface will turn around his 5-6 start to the year. The 24-year-old surged to the title match of the Nitto ATP Finals last year but currently finds himself 81st in the Pepperstone ATP Race To Turin.

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No Spicy Food & Dream Dinner With Michael Jordan: Meet Jiri Lehecka

  • Posted: Mar 27, 2023

No Spicy Food & Dream Dinner With Michael Jordan: Meet Jiri Lehecka

Czech star dishes on off-court topics in exclusive Q&A

Jiri Lehecka has taken the ATP Tour by storm over the past four months. After reaching the championship match at the Next Gen ATP Finals, the Czech has sprinted forward with his momentum.

The 21-year-old defeated former World No. 2 Alexander Zverev at the season-opening United Cup and gained momentum from there. Lehecka battled to the quarter-finals of the Australian Open, where he upset three current or former Top 10 stars: Felix Auger-Aliassime, Cameron Norrie and Borna Coric.

The son of former professional athletes — father Jiri was a professional swimmer and mother Romana a track-and-field athlete — has the firepower to go blow for blow with some of the best players on Tour.

ATPTour.com caught up with Lehecka in Miami to learn more about his personality off the court.

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If you could choose any three people to go to dinner with, who would they be and why?
Michael Jordan, Conor McGregor and Elon Musk. I think that these three guys are on the top of the game at what they do. They know how to do it, they’ve proven it. I think they’ve fulfilled their dreams.

If you could switch places with one person in the world who would it be and why?
That’s a tricky question! I would say I would love to be Rafa for a day when he plays a match on Court Philippe Chatrier in Paris. Of course it’s a Grand Slam, so it’s a great tournament to win. For sure it’s one of the dreams. But I think that for him, he is one of these guys where it just feels like he can’t lose there.

What is your favourite non-tennis memory?
Probably for now jet-skiing with my fitness coach in Dubai. First time. I enjoyed it a lot. I would be able to do it all day.

What is something interesting fans might not know about you?
I don’t know, honestly. I think that I’m just your typical man. I hate spicy foods. I can’t, I just can’t. I love pasta, Italian food. All the entrees, appetizers. I can eat it all day, all week, all month, maybe all year.


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What’s your favourite pasta?
Penne for sure and tortellini with tomato sauce all the time. Tomato sauce [on pasta] by itself is quite a good one, I like that.

If you can achieve one thing in your career, what would it be?
To win a Grand Slam and to win every Grand Slam at least once.

What’s the coolest thing you’ve gotten to do because you’re a tennis player?
I think it would have been in Kitzbühel last year, we had a chance to go paragliding. But I was too scared to do that, so I chose not to do it. I don’t really know if there is something really crazy for me to do because I’m a tennis player.

I had a chance to see the Burj Khalifa. Stuff where for example I wouldn’t be able to go there if it wouldn’t be for tennis. Tennis opened for me the path to see things: the Empire State Building in New York, the Miami Heat game yesterday.

How much do you like basketball?
I’m not the biggest fan. It was my first time being at an NBA game, but it was quite an experience. I liked it.

What was your pinch-me moment on the ATP Tour?
Last year when I achieved my win against Lorenzo [Musetti] in Rotterdam, which meant that I would be in the Top 100.

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