Tennis News

From around the world

Backhand abundance: Medvedev's knuckleball in an era of fastballs

  • Posted: Sep 24, 2024

Nobody loves their backhand more than Daniil Medvedev.

An Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers groundstroke analysis from the 2024 season identifies Medvedev as the only player in the Top 20 who hits more backhands than forehands. The data set is from ATP matches on Hawk-Eye courts. Medvedev is the king of the “backhand cage” strategy, where he locks opponents into a sharp-angle backhand ad-court exchange, daring them to take on more risk by attempting to escape his clutches down the line.

It’s a damned if you do, and damned if you don’t predicament for Medvedev’s opponents. They have little chance of outlasting him backhand to backhand, while at the same time hitting down the line to escape the backhand lockdown pattern also comes with elevated risk.

The six players in the Top 20 of the PIF ATP Rankings who hit the highest percentage of backhands are:

1) Daniil Medvedev 53.1%
2) Alex de Minaur 49.4%
3) Taylor Fritz 49%
4) Sebastian Korda 48.9%
5) Novak Djokovic 48.9%
6) Frances Tiafoe 48.2%

What is fascinating is that Medvedev is also the leader in the Top 20 putting the most backhands in the court. He was the only player in the data set who put north of 90 per cent of his backhands in play.

The six players who put at least 87 per cent of their backhands in the court are:

1) Daniil Medvedev 90.2%
2) Novak Djokovic 88.3%
3) Jack Draper 88%
4) Casper Ruud 87.8%
5) Alexander Zverev 87.3%
6) Alex de Minaur 87%

[ATP APP]

Medvedev hit 3,253 backhands in the data set. He only missed 319. The ATP Tour average for backhand speed is 68 mph. Medvedev’s backhand is precisely that. He is not over-cooking this shot by trying to play through opponents, but he is also not just pushing it in either.

Medvedev rarely uses slice off his backhand wing. The Tour average is 21 per cent backhand slice in 2024. Medvedev is only at nine percent. He would much rather contort his body into an unorthodox position to shovel the ball back flat and deep, almost always giving his opponents nothing to work with.

Medvedev hits his backhand flatter than most. The Tour average for backhand topspin is 1,775 rpm. Medvedev averages just 1,496 rpm. Flatter equals lower. The Tour average for backhand height over the net is 0.73 metres. Medvedev is at 0.69 metres. Opponents are used to a higher ball with topspin. All Medvedev cares about is making his opponents uncomfortable.

Medvedev’s backhand is simply a different animal.

There is absolutely nothing about Medvedev’s backhand that opponents look forward to. He puts a ridiculous amount of backhands in play. It comes at you almost dead flat at the bottom of your strike zone. Opponents don’t know what to do with it except shovel it back cross court. That’s the first mistake. Trying to attack Medvedev’s backhand encourages overhitting. That’s the second mistake.

Medvedev is a throwback in an age of more forehands and more raw groundstroke power. His backhand confuses and disorientates. It’s a knuckleball in an era of fastballs. As the Tour migrates back to outdoor hard courts in Asia and indoor hard courts in Europe to finish the year, Medvedev will be right at home on his favourite surface doing Medvedev things that completely confound opponents.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Source link

First-Time Winner Spotlight: Shang dishes on teddy bears & tiramisu

  • Posted: Sep 24, 2024

#NextGenATP star Shang Juncheng made history on Tuesday by becoming the first Chinese player to win an ATP Tour title on home soil at the Chengdu Open.

The 19-year-old also became the first player born in 2005 or later to triumph on the ATP Tour. Entering the week, he had not made a tour-level championship match.

ATPTour.com caught up with Shang to discuss his maiden moment, an important mindset change, his lucky charms and more.

What does it mean to win your first ATP Tour title?
It’s been a tough week, tough matches, tough opponents, and I think it’s special to overcome that, and I feel very grateful to play in [front of] my my home crowd, and they were amazing this week. All the energies were great. My team, they helped me so much. My family that’s supporting me all the way throughout the week. Just super, super happy.

This is a historic moment not only winning your first title, but making more history for Chinese tennis. How much more special does that make this and what should people know about your friendship with the rest of the Chinese stars?
It’s always special to play at home, not mentioning to win a title. I’ve never thought that I would do it this early in my career, but I’m grateful for this one. Just a super special week. I was going match by match, not knowing what will happen in the next one.

All of [the other Chinese players], they support me, and we support each other. We’re kind of competing against each other, the Chinese players. I play one next week in Beijing, actually, and I think it’s going to be a good tournament, good battle, and super excited for what’s coming next.

What have been the key moments of your career that helped you get to this point?
To be honest there are a lot of key moments, but I think what changed is the attitude towards tennis. I think I’ve been trying to place tennis in the number two spot. It’s not the most important thing. It doesn’t matter how many titles you win. At the end, it [is about] the people, the people around you and the family around you. That’s more important. So I think I’ve been focusing on myself, my friends, family, a little bit more than tennis. So when I’m on court, I enjoy it. When I’m off the court, it’s not always about tennis.

Could you take a moment to acknowledge some of the key figures in your life and career who have helped you to reach this milestone?
My parents, they’ve always been supporting me since day one. My grandparents, they’re always really helpful, really supporting me all the time. And my coach, Martin and the IMG Academy family, they’ve been so helpful in my career. When I was 14, practising with all the professionals, it’s really an amazing place to practise, at IMG, and I’m grateful for all the people around me.

Both of your parents are athletes. What is one lesson in particular you have learned from each of them?
I think to not show emotions and to be grateful for what you have because when you’re successful, it doesn’t mean that you really deserve it, maybe because you’re lucky. And when others fail, it doesn’t mean that they’re just bad at something. Maybe they’re unlucky.

You don’t judge people by what you see in the first place. So I think that’s something really, really important in our family, that we try to not judge, to always appreciate and to always learn to become our better selves.

You are only 19 years old, and you are here as an ATP Tour champion. What is the most important lesson you’ve learned in the past couple of years since you’ve started this journey as a professional?
Some people say that one career can be really, really long, but I think the past two years, they went by like a flash. And I think you don’t get to play that many years. All of a sudden, maybe I’ll be 30, 35, years old. So you have to enjoy what you have, and you never know what’s going to happen tomorrow. So enjoy, enjoy the moment. Whatever you have, try to live 100 per cent, try to enjoy it.

[ATP APP]

You have long collected teddy bears and they have become your lucky charms. Would you mind telling fans about your current lucky charm(s), where you got it/them and why it’s important to you?
I think to have the bear sitting on the court, you really can’t get mad at a teddy bear. If you get mad at a teddy bear, there’s something wrong with you. So I try to keep calm. Whenever he falls down, I pick him up so [it] can have a good positioning watching the match. It’s really a mental thing. There’s not really any secrets to it, just to have a good attitude.

How would you describe yourself as a player, and how would you describe yourself off the court?
I think I’m really transparent. On and off the court. I’m about the same. Maybe a little crazier off. On court, I’m a little more calm, I’m more focused, and I think overall, I’m a really positive guy, always happy.

What do you consider to be your biggest passion outside of tennis and can you tell us a little bit about that interest?
I would say golf. I think that that’s helped me a lot with my patience. It’s a four-hour sport. You need basically the whole day to play through. And sometimes the conditions are tough, windy, kind of just like tennis. So if you’re patient in that, something off the court, I believe it’s a little like training, you have fun at the same time.

This is a milestone moment in your career. How will you celebrate this victory?
I think by eating tiramisu!

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Source link

Alcaraz qualifies for Nitto ATP Finals

  • Posted: Sep 24, 2024

Carlos Alcaraz is the third player to qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals, which will be held at Inalpi Arena in Turin from 10-17 November.

The Spaniard joins Jannik Sinner and Alexander Zverev in the field, leaving five singles spots remaining at the prestigious season finale. The 21-year-old has earned his place at the event for the third consecutive year. He did not compete in 2022, the year he claimed ATP Year-End No. 1 presented by PIF honours, due to injury.

Alcaraz doubled his major titles count this season, emerging victorious at Roland Garros and Wimbledon. The Spaniard became just the sixth man in the Open Era to win the Roland Garros-Wimbledon double in the same year, joining Rod Laver, Bjorn Borg, Rafael Nadal, Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic.

Alcaraz also lifted the fifth ATP Masters 1000 trophy of his career at Indian Wells and earned a silver medal in singles at the Paris Olympics. He owns a 43-9 record for the season.

Last year, Alcaraz made his Nitto ATP Finals debut by reaching the semi-finals. He defeated Daniil Medvedev and Andrey Rublev in group play to advance to the last four, where he fell to eventual champion Djokovic.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Source link

Cilic becomes lowest-ranked champion in ATP Tour history, triumphs in Hangzhou

  • Posted: Sep 24, 2024

Marin Cilic is an ATP Tour champion once again. The Croatian overcame Chinese star Zhang Zhizhen 7-6(5), 7-6(5) on Tuesday at the Hangzhou Open to clinch his first tour-level title since 2021.

The 35-year-old wild card was competing in his first tour-level event since Buenos Aires in February and arrived in Chengdu at No. 777 in the PIF ATP Rankings. However, Cilic looked sharp throughout his run at the ATP 250, dropping just two sets to become the lowest-ranked champion in the ATP Tour history (since 1990).

“Thank you to my family, my boys, my wife. Everyone who has been with me in this difficult period,” Cilic said during the trophy ceremony. “Working with me day by day, pushing me and giving me strength and spirit. I am so happy and proud to make this victory not only for me but for them too.”

In the pair’s first Lexus ATP Head2Head meeting, there was little to separate Cilic and home favourite Zhang, with both players saving both break points they faced, according to Infosys ATP Stats. The former World No. 3 Cilic played more aggressively in the two tie-breaks and fired 34 winners in the match compared to 26 from Zhang to triumph on the ATP Tour for the first time since he won St. Petersburg in 2021.

Cilic, who missed several months of 2024 due to a knee injury, has now won 21 tour-level crowns and enjoyed title success in 13 different seasons. He is up to No. 212 in the PIF ATP Rankings following his 16th hard-court title.

“It has been a difficult period for me in the past few months. I lost my ranking and I didn’t play too much,” Cilic said. “So a big thank you to the organising team for giving me the opportunity [with the wild card].”

Lowest-ranked champions in ATP Tour history (since 1990)

Ranking  Player  Event
No. 777 Marin Cilic Hangzhou 2024
No. 550 Lleyton Hewitt Adelaide 1998
No. 355 Pablo Andujar Marrakech 2018 
No. 352 Fernando Gonzalez Orlando 2000
No. 349 Tommy Haas Houston 2004
No. 335 Juan Manuel Cerundolo Cordoba 2021

Zhang was competing in his first tour-level final and was trying to become just the third Chinese man to win an ATP Tour title. Wu Yibing lifted the trophy in Dallas last year and Shang Juncheng won in Chengdu on Tuesday.

“It was a great week for you Zhizhen,” Cilic said, praising Zhang. “I hope you continue to play great tennis in China, in Beijing and Shanghai.”

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Source link

Musetti boosts Turin hopes with Chengdu final, Mover of Week

  • Posted: Sep 24, 2024

The Asian swing commenced on the ATP Tour in Chengdu and Hangzhou, where Shang Juncheng and Marin Cilic won ATP 250 events, respectively.

Nitto ATP Finals hopefuls Lorenzo Musetti and Holger Rune were also in action, with the pair experiencing different fortunes in China. ATPTour.com looks at the movers of the week in the PIF ATP Live Race To Turin as of Tuesday, 24 September.

[ATP APP]

Lorenzo Musetti – 15th (2,365 points)
The Italian remains in 15th in the PIF ATP Live Race To Turin but closed the gap on eighth-placed Alex de Minaur after reaching his second tour-level final of the season at the Chengdu Open. Musetti earned three wins at the ATP 250 event, gaining 165 points.

The 22-year-old is still 940 points behind De Minaur, who currently occupies the final qualification position for the Nitto ATP Finals. Musetti next heads to the ATP 500 in Beijing, where he will need a deep run to boost his faint Turin hopes.

View PIF ATP Live Race To Turin

Holger Rune – 16th (2,185 points)
Rune was the only other player inside the Top 20 in the PIF ATP Live Race To Turin who was in action last week. The 21-year-old Dane suffered a disappointing opening-round exit to Yasutaka Uchiyama in Hangzhou and is 1,120 points behind De Minaur.

Jannik Sinner, Alexander Zverev and Carlos Alcaraz have already qualified for the Nitto ATP Finals, scheduled to take place from 10-17 November.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Source link

#NextGenATP Shang downs Musetti, wins maiden ATP Tour title in Chengdu

  • Posted: Sep 24, 2024

If Shang Juncheng was feeling the weight of home expectation on Tuesday at the Chengdu Open, the 19-year-old certainly did not show it.

The #NextGenATP star produced a stunning championship-match performance to overwhelm top seed Lorenzo Musetti and lift his maiden ATP Tour title at the hard-court ATP 250. Shang prevailed 7-6(4), 6-1 after 99 minutes to become the first player born in 2005 or later to win an ATP Tour title.

By lifting the trophy on his event debut in Chengdu, Shang became just the second Chinese man to win an ATP Tour singles title after Wu Yibing triumphed in Dallas in 2023. Zhang Zhizhen could become the third player on that list later on Tuesday if he can defeat Marin Cilic in the final at the Hangzhou Open.

The key to Shang’s victory against Musetti was how quickly he recovered from the disappointment of being broken when serving for the first set at 6-5. He held firm in the subsequent tie-break to move ahead and then unleashed a series of stunning winners across the second set to accelerate to an ultimately commanding victory.

Shang finished the match having converted three of five break points he earned, according to Infosys ATP Stats. His victory was greeted with ecstasy by the crowd, who roared the home favourite on throughout his maiden Lexus ATP Head2Head clash with Musetti.

Shang has also boosted his bid to qualify for the Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF for the first time with his title run on home soil. The Chinese lefty has leapfrogged Alex Michelsen into second in the PIF ATP Live Race To Jeddah.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Source link

Brouwer, Munar save MPs en route to Challenger title runs

  • Posted: Sep 24, 2024

Gijs Brouwer and Jaume Munar saved match points en route to lifting trophies this past week on the ATP Challenger Tour.

While the 28-year-old Brouwer advanced through qualifying and went all the way to claim his maiden Challenger title, Munar triumphed at that level for a record-extending eighth consecutive season.

The Dutchman Brouwer downed home favourite and former World No. 10 Lucas Pouille 6-4, 7-6(2) in Sunday’s Saint-Tropez Open final. Brouwer saved two match points in the quarter-finals against Benjamin Bonzi, who was the only player all week to take a set off the lefty.

“It feels unbelievable. I was really trying for years to get [a Challenger title] and now I finally have one. I’m super happy,” Brouwer said. “The key this week was the mentality, being good in my head, always staying positive throughout the week. I just kept playing and didn’t think too much of the score. Just with a clean head every point and fight for every point.”

Munar, 27, won his 10th Challenger trophy at the Bad Waltersdorf Trophy in Austria. The top seed defeated Thiago Seyboth Wild 6-2, 6-1 in the final, a day after Munar fended off three match points to outlast American Nicolas Moreno De Alboran in the last four.

<img alt=”Jaume Munar is crowned champion at the Bad Waltersdorf Challenger.” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/09/24/14/34/munar-badwaltersdorfch-2024.jpg” />
Jaume Munar is crowned champion at the Bad Waltersdorf Challenger. Credit: Bad Waltersdorf Trophy

In other Challenger action, Naoki Nakagawa survived an all-Japanese marathon final to be crowned champion at the Columbus Challenger. After three hours and 16 minutes, Nakagawa overcame James Trotter 7-6(8), 5-7, 7-6(5) to secure his maiden Challenger title.

Nakagawa, who upset top seed Christopher Eubanks in the quarter-finals, entered the week with a career 4-29 record in Challenger main-draw matches and had not won a main-draw match at that level since October 2023. Following his title run, the 27-year-old is up 94 spots in the PIF ATP Rankings to World No. 335, one spot shy of tying his career high.

[ATP APP]

Frenchman Valentin Royer won the BCR Sibiu Open in Romania, where he defeated countryman Luka Pavlovic 6-4, 6-0 in the final. The 23-year-old Royer, who was competing in his second Challenger final of the year, is up to a career-high World No. 182.

Argentine Juan Pablo Ficovich returned to the winners’ circle at the KIA Open in Cali, Colombia. The 27-year-old needed a deciding set in his first four matches before cruising past #NextGenATP Gonzalo Bueno 6-0, 6-4 in the title match. Ficovich avenged this past April’s Concepcion Challenger final loss to the 20-year-old.

Source link

Doumbia/Reboul win Chengdu to boost Turin hopes

  • Posted: Sep 24, 2024

Competing at the Chengdu Open seems to bring out the best in Sadio Doumbia and Fabien Reboul.

The top seeds on Tuesday clinched their second consecutive title at the Chinese hard-court ATP 250 with a 6-4, 4-6, 10-4 triumph against Yuki Bhambri and Albano Olivetti. Doumbia and Reboul won the first seven points of the Match Tie-break en route to claiming their third tour-level title of the season.

With their 96-minute win, Doumbia and Reboul also avenged their defeat to Bhambri and Olivetti in the teams’ only previous Lexus ATP Head2Head meeting earlier this season in Lyon. The French pair, which this week in Chengdu was competing together for the first time since Wimbledon, is now 31-15 for 2024.

Doumbia and Reboul’s latest title run has boosted their chances of qualifying for the Nitto ATP Finals for the first time. The duo has risen one spot to 14th in the PIF ATP Live Doubles Teams Rankings as a result of its triumph in Chengdu.

[ATP APP]

Nedunchezhiyan/Prashanth Triumph In Hangzhou
At the Hangzhou Open, Jeevan Nedunchezhiyan and Vijay Sundar Prashanth rallied to their first ATP Tour title as a team with a 4-6, 7-6(5), 10-7 championship-match win against Constantin Frantzen and Hendrik Jebens.

Nedunchezhiyan and Prashanth won 80 per cent (39/49) of points behind their first serves, according to Infosys ATP Stats, in their one-hour, 49-minute victory. The Indian duo had played just one tour-level match together prior to Hangzhou, but went on to clinch four Match Tie-break victories at the hard-court ATP 250.

It was a second ATP Tour doubles crown for the 35-year-old Nedunchezhiyan, who also triumphed on home soil in Chennai in 2017 (w/Rohan Bopanna). Tuesday’s triumph in Hangzhou was the 37-year-old Prashanth’s maiden tour-level title.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Source link

A typhoon, tears and a trophy! How Nishikori made Tokyo history in 2014

  • Posted: Sep 24, 2024

Sky-high expectations from home fans, lower back pain, a red-hot championship-match opponent with a near-untouchable serve, and an incoming typhoon playing havoc with the conditions. They were just some of the challenges faced by Kei Nishikori at the 2014 Kinoshita Group Japan Open Tennis Championships.

The Japanese star overcame them all.

By defeating Milos Raonic in three sets to lift the trophy at his hometown event, Nishikori not only sent a capacity Ariake Coloseum crowd home happy. The then-24-year-old, who had also won in 2012 to join 1972 titlist Toshiro Sakai as a home Tokyo champion, became the first Japanese two-time winner in event history and just the fourth multiple titlist overall after ATP greats Stefan Edberg, Pete Sampras and Jim Courier.

[ATP APP]

Nishikori was long established as a huge star in Japan, but his achievements in 2014 prior to Tokyo had arguably elevated his profile to unprecedented levels. Just three weeks prior to the hard-court ATP 500, he had become the first Asian man to reach a Grand Slam singles final at the US Open. He defeated three Top 10 opponents in Raonic, Stan Wawrinka and World No. 1 Novak Djokovic en route.

Despite a painful defeat to Marin Cilic in the New York championship match, Nishikori bounced back by winning his third ATP Tour crown of the year in Kuala Lumpur. By the time he arrived in Tokyo, he had won 10 of his past 11 matches and reached a then-career-high No. 7 in the PIF ATP Rankings.

Nishikori did not take long to show his home fans first-hand the recent step up in his game. He raced to straight-sets victories in his opening three matches against Ivan Dodig, Donald Young and Jeremy Chardy, before rallying to a 4-6, 6-0, 7-6(2) semi-final triumph against Benjamin Becker.

<img src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/09/13/13/02/nishikori-tokyo-2014-forehand.jpg?w=100%25&hash=F25812A29DEA85D691CEB9B1CE4BC608″ style=”width: 100%;” alt=”Kei Nishikori” />
Nishikori in second-round action against Donald Young during his 2014 Tokyo title run. Photo Credit: Koji Watanabe/Getty Images.

“This is an amazing feeling. This is my hometown, and I always feel a lot of support,” said Nishikori, whose lower back issue appeared to restrict his mobility at times against Becker.

Nishikori may have been well accustomed to competing in Tokyo, but so was his final opponent. The No. 8-ranked Raonic had not dropped a set all week en route to his third straight championship match in the Japanese capital. The Canadian was also looking to avenge his defeat to Nishikori in the first of those finals in 2012.

With Typhoon Phanfone forecast to bring heavy rains to Tokyo, Nishikori and Raonic’s final took place under a closed roof, but the change in conditions did not stop either player from competing well with the trophy on the line. Just as in the 2012 final, Nishikori clinched a tight first set in a tie-break before Raonic hit back to force a decider. Again it was Nishikori, roared on by his home fans, who found something extra at the death for a 7-6(5), 4-6, 6-4 victory.

<img src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/09/13/12/54/nishikori-raonic-tokyo-2014-final-handshake.jpg” style=”width: 100%;” alt=”Kei Nishikori/Milos Raonic” />

Nishikori and Milos Raonic embrace at the net after their 2014 Tokyo final clash. Photo Credit: Koji Watanabe/Getty Images

With his triumph, Nishikori sealed his fourth tour-level trophy of 2014, a tally that remains his personal best in a single ATP Tour season, and improved to 4-1 in his Lexus ATP Head2Head series with his Top 10 rival Raonic. After tearfully hugging his coach Michael Chang in the stands, an emotional Nishikori acknowledged how tough it had been to recover from his US Open disappointment.

“It has been incredible, and I think this is the first time I have won two weeks in a row,” he said. “After the US Open, it was hard to maintain the motivation. Being in the first final of a Grand Slam was my dream, so it was tough to change mentally.”

Nishikori’s Tokyo win contributed to him qualifying for the 2014 Nitto ATP Finals. Competing for the first time at the prestigious season finale in London, he defeated Andy Murray and David Ferrer before falling to Djokovic in the semi-finals. His career-best 54-14 season ultimately helped him reach his current career-high of No. 4 in the PIF ATP Rankings in March 2015.

This year, the 34-year-old Nishikori returns to Tokyo for his ninth appearance at the hard-court ATP 500, and his first since he reached his third final in 2018 (l. to Medvedev). The home favourite has played just 11 tournaments since 2021 due to injuries, but will no doubt seek to channel his trusty home support to improve on his 20-6 record at a tournament where his legacy has already been cemented.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Source link