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Djokovic ‘Motivated’ To Compete For Titles & ‘Challenge Young Guns’

  • Posted: Apr 10, 2022

Djokovic ‘Motivated’ To Compete For Titles & ‘Challenge Young Guns’

Top seed lifted the trophy in Monte Carlo in 2013 and 2015

Top seed Novak Djokovic feels that he is fully motivated and ready to test himself against the world’s best players once again as he prepares to play at his second tour-level event of the season at the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters this week.

“I still feel motivated to be on the Tour and compete with young guys and try to challenge the best players in the world for the biggest titles,” Djokovic said in his pre-tournament press conference.

“I’m very pleased to be here and Monaco has been home for over ten years. I have been eagerly waiting for the moment when I will be out competing again, so this is the best place where I could possibly start.”


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The Serbian will begin his clay-court campaign against Spaniard Alejandro Davidovich Fokina and is hoping he can take confidence from his strong results on the surface in 2021, when he clinched titles at Roland Garros and the Belgrade Open and advanced to the final at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia.

“Clay court is the surface on which I grew up in Serbia and played many years only on that surface actually. Historically it hasn’t been my most successful surface, but I have had some big success on clay. [The] Roland Garros win last year is still fresh in my memory, so I try to use that as an inspiration to kick-start the clay-court season [in the] best possible way.

“I understand that I probably won’t be at my best at the beginning of this week. I am still testing my engine, so to say, and building my game, so it will take obviously some time, some matches to really get in the groove and find the competitive play that I really need.”

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Tsitsipas Back At ‘Home’ & Raring To Go In Monte-Carlo

Djokovic arrives at the third ATP Masters 1000 event of the season as the World No. 1, having reclaimed top spot on 21 March, after temporarily losing it to Daniil Medvedev for three weeks from 28 February.

The 34-year-old, who reached the quarter-finals in Dubai in February, knows that a deep run in Monte Carlo will maintain his position at the top of the sport.

“Being World No. 1 is the highest achievement that you can have in our sport, so I’ll try to maintain that position as much as possible,” Djokovic said.

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Sweet Revenge: Goffin Rallies Past Molcan For Marrakech Title

  • Posted: Apr 10, 2022

Sweet Revenge: Goffin Rallies Past Molcan For Marrakech Title

Belgian defeats Molcan in three sets for the trophy

Revenge tasted sweet for David Goffin on Sunday.

In the first week of the season, Alex Molcan defeated the Belgian in straight sets. But in their second clash, Goffin rallied from a set and a break down to triumph 3-6, 6-3, 6-3 and lift the Grand Prix Hassan II title.

“I’m very happy, proud of my week. It was not easy, a lot of tough matches,” Goffin said. “But at the end, I have my sixth title, here in Marrakech. It gives me a lot of happiness and confidence for the season on the clay.”

Molcan was in control of the championship match, serving at 6-3, 2-1, 40/15 in his second ATP Tour final. But the Slovakian lefty was unable to hold that service game, and that was the only opening the former World No. 7 needed. Goffin emerged victorious in Marrakech after one hour and 58 minutes to claim his sixth tour-level trophy.

“It was the case twice before that match that I lost the first set and I always stayed calm the whole week to turn it around. It was the case again today, because he was playing well. He was better than me in the first set, and then I managed to play better and better, serving better, being more aggressive in the middle of the second,” Goffin said. “I was the better player [after that]. I was playing even better in the third set, so I’m really happy the way I finished with another break [and] a good match point. I didn’t want to serve for the match, I preferred to finish with a break.”

The 2017 Nitto ATP Finals runner-up ended his 2021 season early due to a left knee injury and struggled to start this year, earning a 6-9 record before arriving in Morocco. But the 31-year-old battled through three three-setters en route to his first tour-level crown since Montpellier last February.

For a while, it seemed Goffin faced a steep climb against Molcan. The Belgian, who at his best is very consistent from the baseline and uses his movement to put pressure on opponents, was misfiring. Molcan took full advantage and moved to within four service holds of earning his maiden triumph at this level.

But the Slovakian missed a forehand drop shot to relinquish his break advantage in the second set and then missed another backhand drop shot in his next service game to allow his veteran opponent to go up a break.

Goffin found his game from there and broke early in the decider as Molcan’s backhand began to falter. The Marrakech crowd got behind the Belgian with chants of “David! David!”

Goffin stayed calm in the tense moments, saving break point at 4-3 in the final set when Molcan missed a backhand into the net. He avoided facing another break point by hitting a forehand winner on the line, and held on from there for the title.

What fans might not know is that Goffin warmed up for the match with former World No. 22 Hicham Arazi, a lefty who is the Grand Prix Hassan II Tournament Director.

“This morning it was really nice,” Goffin said. “We were chatting a little bit with each other and we were talking about when he came in Davis Cup when he was playing for Morocco against Belgium… he was an amazing, talented player when I was young, so it was nice.”

Molcan made an impressive run in Marrakech, where he earned three-set victories against top seed Felix Auger-Aliassime and sixth seed Botic van de Zandchulp before eliminating eighth seed Laslo Djere in straight set in the semi-finals. He was quick to thank the crowd during the trophy ceremony for supporting him throughout the week.

“I’m really grateful for it. You helped me to win many matches this week, so thanks again,” Molcan said. “Hopefully I will come here next year and you will cheer for me as well.”

He added: “It was an amazing week for me. I won a lot of matches and enjoyed it very much. I want to thank my coach Karol Beck. We’ve been working together for four months now and he has been very helpful.”

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Tsitsipas Back At ‘Home’ & Raring To Go In Monte-Carlo

  • Posted: Apr 10, 2022

Tsitsipas Back At ‘Home’ & Raring To Go In Monte-Carlo

Greek is the reigning Monte-Carlo champion

World No. 5 Stefanos Tsitsipas broke new ground at the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters last year when he soared to his first ATP Masters 1000 title at the clay-court event.

Returning to the Monte-Carlo Country Club this week, the Greek revealed he is feeling confident and excited to play in front of a supportive crowd as he aims to retain his title.

“[I am] feeling great,” Tsitsipas said in his pre-tournament press conference on Sunday. “Starting with the tournament here in Monte-Carlo, it feels [like] home for me to play on this court and having the opportunity this year to play in front of people and a massive crowd coming from both Italy and France.

“I have some supporters in Monaco. I have family here. It’s great sharing this with them and getting good weather hopefully all week long and a good series of tennis matches.”


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Tsitsipas enjoyed a strong clay-court season in 2021. Alongside his Monte Carlo victory, the 23-year-old triumphed in Lyon and advanced to the final at Roland Garros, where he lost to Novak Djokovic in five sets.

However, the 23-year-old is still aiming to win his first title of the season, with his best result this year coming in Rotterdam, where he soared to the championship match.

In preparation for his opening clash in Monte Carlo against 2019 champion Fabio Fognini or Frenchman Arthur Rinderknech, Tsitsipas hit with former World No. 3 Stan Wawrinka, who is competing at his first tour-level event since March 2021.

On the return of Wawrinka, Tsitsipas was full of praise, saying: “Having practised with Stan in the past, he can play good tennis. On his best days, he’s someone that can step on the court and do a lot of good things out there from everywhere around the court.”

Tsitsipas arrives in Monte-Carlo having competed at both hard-court Masters 1000 tournaments in March, advancing to the third round in Indian Wells and fourth round in Miami.

While the 2019 Nitto ATP Finals titlist enjoyed competing on hard in America, he is looking forward to playing on clay once again.

“I like the transition of hard to clay,” Tsitsipas added. “I enjoy switching from hard courts to clay courts. I always love coming back to the academy where I train and change my shoes and go back to the clay. It’s a good feeling.”

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Ebden & Purcell Win First Team ATP Tour Title In Houston

  • Posted: Apr 10, 2022

Ebden & Purcell Win First Team ATP Tour Title In Houston

Top seeds are first Aussies to win Houston title since Cash/Rafter in 1996

Top-seeded Australians Matthew Ebden and Max Purcell captured their first ATP Tour title as a team in their fourth tournament as a duo in Houston. After reaching the Australian Open final in January, they charged to the trophy at the Fayez Sarofim & Co. U.S. Clay Court Championship without dropping a set in four matches.

In Saturday’s final, they defeated twin Serbian brothers Ivan Sabanov and Matej Sabanov, 6-3, 6-3, to cap a dominant week in which they lost just 21 total games across eight sets.

“I had so much fun during the week. We were pretty clinical,” said Ebden. “I feel lucky to say that but we were able to get through in straight sets in all our matches, pretty rare in this shootout format.

“We’re super happy, super excited. We came to Houston early, we put in a lot of training days, got really used to the courts and conditions and really enjoyed our time here. I think that paid off in the end. To get the title, we’re really happy with that.”

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The Aussies broke serve four times in 10 chances in the final, and faced just one break point.

Ebden and Purcell are the first Australians to win the Houston title since Pat Cash and Patrick Rafter in 1996. It was the fifth career ATP Tour title for the 34-year-old Ebden and the first for the 24-year-old Purcell.

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Matos & Vega Hernandez Win Marrakech Title In ATP Tour Team Debut

  • Posted: Apr 10, 2022

Matos & Vega Hernandez Win Marrakech Title In ATP Tour Team Debut

Brazilian/Spanish duo won seven consecutive sets in title run

Rafael Matos and David Vega Hernandez first competed as a team last week in Marbella on the ATP Challenger Tour. On Saturday at the Grand Prix Hassan II, they capped off their tour-level team debut with a title.

The Brazilian/Spanish duo defeated Andrea Vavassori and Jan Zielinski, 6-1, 7-5, in the Marrakech final. After dominating the opening set, the champions trailed by a break in the second but won two sudden-death break points — including one on match point — to earn the victory. The first sudden-death point doubled as a set point for Vavassori and Zielinski on serve at 5-4.

Matos, the doubles World No. 68, claimed his third ATP Tour title and his second of 2022, with both previous triumphs coming alongside fellow Brazilian Felipe Meligeni Rodrigues Alves.

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The Marrakech title was a second tour-level crown for the 27-year-old Vega Hernandez, who won his first title last season in Umag alongside Fernando Romboli of Brazil.

“We lost our first set 2-6 this week, so we didn’t have a great start and therefore it feels even more special to stand here with the trophy,” said the Spaniard. “I also want to congratulate Andrea who is a good friend, and I’m always happy to share a court with him.”

That opening set was the only one the champions dropped on the week. After advancing to the second round in a Match Tie-break, they rattled off three straight-sets wins. Matos and Vega Hernandez’s semi-final victory over Aleksandr Nedovyesov and Aisam ul-Haq Qureshi avenged a loss to that pairing one week ago in Marbella.

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Opelka Outduels Kyrgios To Reach First Clay Final In Houston

  • Posted: Apr 09, 2022

Opelka Outduels Kyrgios To Reach First Clay Final In Houston

American awaits Isner or Garin, both former champs

Reilly Opelka edged Nick Kyrgios in two tight sets to reach his first clay-court final on the ATP Tour Saturday at the Fayez Sarofim & Co. U.S. Men’s Clay Court Championship.

The American’s 6-3, 7-5 win puts him through to his third tour-level final of the season, with all three coming on American soil. His three finals in 2022 is second only to Nadal’s four.

“I’ve progressed every match,” Opelka said of his performance in his first clay event of the season. “I’ve felt more and more comfortable moving and sliding and all that.

“Every warmup I’ve had has been long because I’ve been trying to get more feel and more comfort on this stuff. It’s not second nature like it is for Garin. He can take a year off and come here and feel right at home. Different story for me.”

The third seed hit 18 aces in the match to Kyrgios’ 11, and won 86 per cent (24/28) of his first-serve points.

One break was enough for Opelka to take the opening set, and he again drew first blood on the return in the second to lead 4-3. But Kyrgios broke back immediately on his only break chance of the match to set up a tense finale.

The American did not drop another point on serve in his final two service games, either side of his third break of the match at 5-5. He now awaits the winner of Saturday’s second semi-final between fourth seed John Isner and defending champion Cristian Garin, the fifth seed. 

“Both of them have won here before, have had a lot of success here before,” said Opelka, previewing the final. His countryman Isner won the Houston title in 2013.

“That’s what you want in the final. For the tournament’s sake… you want it to be the best match you can get,” he continued.

“I think this draw here, with Garin, Fritz, Isner, Kyrgios, Tommy Paul, who’s great on clay, it’s a stacked tournament, a very stacked field. It comes down to playing high-level tennis because it’s a high-level draw.”

All of the action from Houston can be seen on ESPN3 in the U.S., with Sunday’s final set to begin at 2 p.m. local time.

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Scouting Report: Djokovic, Tsitsipas, Alcaraz Among Monte-Carlo Headliners

  • Posted: Apr 09, 2022

Scouting Report: Djokovic, Tsitsipas, Alcaraz Among Monte-Carlo Headliners

An executive summary of what every fan should know about the coming week

The ATP Tour’s European clay-court swing will open in style with the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters, the season’s third ATP Masters 1000 event and its first on clay.

Two-time champion Novak Djokovic, back at World No. 1, will lead the field in his first competitive action since Dubai in February. Defending champ Stefanos Tsitsipas is seeking his first title of 2022, while Miami champ Carlos Alcaraz looks to build on the biggest title of his young career.

ATPTour.com looks at 10 things to watch this week.


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1) Djokovic Returns For Second ATP Tour Event of 2022: After a Dubai quarter-final loss saw him cede the top spot in the ATP Rankings, Djokovic enters Monte-Carlo back at World No. 1. But his status as top seed did not hand him an easy draw: He could face Alcaraz in the quarter-finals, and could see 14th seed Roberto Bautista Agut or Daniel Evans in the third round, with the Brit ending his 2021 Monte-Carlo run in the last 16 one year ago.

On Monday, Djokovic will begin his 365th week atop the ATP Rankings, extending his own record. The 34-year-old lifted the Monte-Carlo title in 2013 and 2015, and holds a 35-12 record at the Monaco event. 

2) Tsitsipas Seeded Third For Title Defense: Tsitsipas’ 2021 Monte-Carlo title began a purple patch for the Greek on the red clay. After claiming the trophy without dropping a set, he reached the Barcelona final, won the title in Lyon and reached his first Grand Slam final at Roland Garros. 

All seven of Tsitsipas’ tour-level titles have come in Europe, as did his best ATP Tour result of the 2022 season to date — a final run in Rotterdam. He enters Monte-Carlo after posting a 3-2 record in Indian Wells and Miami, his fourth-round loss to Alcaraz in South Florida standing out as one of the matches of the young season. The Greek will open against a qualifier in Monaco.

3) Alcaraz Back On The Clay: The 18-year-old Spaniard grew up on clay courts, but after he blitzed to a 10-1 record in reaching the Indian Wells semi-finals and winning his maiden ATP Masters 1000 title in Miami, many wondered if hard courts might suit his game best.

“All I can say is I’ve got two titles on clay and one on hard court,” Alcaraz said. “I feel very comfortable in both surfaces, so I don’t mind playing on clay or on hard court.”

His two clay titles came in Umag last July and Rio de Janeiro in February, and he carries a career-high ATP Ranking of World No. 11 into Monte-Carlo. Seeded eighth in Monaco, he could face a third-round showdown with Indian Wells champ Taylor Fritz ahead of a potential quarter-final against Djokovic.

4) Zverev Seeks Monte-Carlo Breakthrough: Alexander Zverev is a five-time ATP Masters 1000 champion, including three titles on European red clay. The German World No. 3’s best Monte-Carlo result came in 2018, when he reached the semi-finals. He holds an 8-5 record at the event, but is 2-2 in his last two appearances, bowing out in the last 16 each time.

Zverev’s best result of 2022 came when he reached the Montpellier final, where he lost to first-time ATP Tour champ Alexander Bublik. He enters the European clay swing off of a quarter-final showing in Miami. 

5) Ruud To Back Up Surprise Miami Final: Casper Ruud surprised himself by reaching his first ATP Masters 1000 title on the Miami hard courts. Now back on his favoured clay, the fourth seed will look to improve upon his Monte-Carlo semi-final run one year ago. He also reached the Madrid semis in 2021.

Six of Ruud’s seven ATP Tour titles have come on clay, though he is still seeking his first Masters 1000 trophy. After a first-round bye, the Norwegian could face Aslan Karatsev in the second round.

6) Top 10 Seeds Can Add To Trophy Count: In addition to Alcaraz, four other Top 10 seeds enter Monte-Carlo with at least one 2022 ATP Tour title to their name: Felix Auger-Aliassime, Andrey Rublev, Cameron Norrie and Taylor Fritz.

Both Alcaraz and Rublev have two titles on the season. They join three-time titlist Rafael Nadal as the only multiple-trophy winners on the year in singles, with the Spaniard set to miss out on Monte-Carlo with a rib stress fracture.

7) Wild Cards Wawrinka, Tsonga Add Intrigue: Former Top 5 players Stan Wawrinka and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, born 20 days apart, are both ranked outside the Top 200 entering Monte-Carlo. Wawrinka, 37, is making his first ATP Tour appearance in over a year, since Doha last March, following two left-foot surgeries in 2021.

The Swiss, who is also playing doubles with Auger-Aliassime, faces Bublik in the opening round. France’s Tsonga, 36, recently announced that he will retire at Roland Garros next month. The Frenchman will open against Marin Cilic.

8) #NextGenATP Stars In Action: In addition to Alcaraz, Italians Jannik Sinner and Lorenzo Musetti will lead the way for the younger generation in Monte-Carlo. 

Ninth seed Sinner faces Borna Coric in the opening round, while Musetti takes on Benoit Paire. Sinner, 20, is making his second Monte-Carlo appearance after a second-round showing in his 2021 debut. Musetti, also 20, is seeking his first win in Monaco after a first-round exit in his debut last season.

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9) Fognini Defending ATP Ranking Points: While Fabio Fognini is no longer the defending champion in Monte-Carlo, he is defending 500 ATP Ranking points from his 2019 title run — 50 per cent of the initial 1,000 points he earned as champion. Those 500 points represent 37 per cent of the World No. 32 Italian’s ranking points.

10) Ram/Salisbury Lead Doubles Draw: Joe Salisbury rose to the top of the ATP Rankings for the first time following his run to the Indian Wells quarter-finals with longtime partner Rajeev Ram. The pairing has been rewarded with the top seed in Monte-Carlo as it seeks a first ATP Tour title of 2022. Croatia’s Nikola Mektic and Mate Pavic follow as the second seeds, after Pavic lost his World No. 1 ranking to the Briton.

A number of singles stars are also in the Monte-Carlo draw. In addition to the Auger-Aliassime/Wawrinka partnership, the likes of Zverev, Tsitsipas, Rublev and Fritz also feature, as well as the high-powered pairing of Hubert Hurkacz and Sinner.

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Resurgent Goffin Reaches Marrakech Final, First Of 2022

  • Posted: Apr 09, 2022

Resurgent Goffin Reaches Marrakech Final, First Of 2022

Belgian to face Molcan on Sunday

The last time David Goffin reached an ATP Tour semi-final, he went on to win the Montpellier title last February. He’s on track to repeat that feat at the Grand Prix Hassan II following a straightforward victory on Saturday in Marrakech.

The 31-year-old Belgian defeated Federico Coria, 6-3, 6-3, to reach the title match in his first clay tournament of the 2022 season. After a pair of gruelling three-set victories over Spaniards Pablo Andujar and Roberto Carballes Baena, Goffin was pleased to be off the court in one hour and 23 minutes, especially after dropping the first two games of the match.

“It was a short match, so it’s good because the last two matches were more than two hours and 30 minutes,” he said. “It was not easy. At the beginning I was a little bit nervous. The energy was a little bit down so I had to push myself to play better, to come back, to break back.

“After that, I started to feel more relaxed and my quality of ball was better, and then I started to play really well at the end of the first set.”

Both men saved a break point in consecutive games early in the second, with Goffin making the breakthrough in the eighth game of the stanza before serving it out. After losing his opening service game, Goffin held firm on serve for the rest of the match, saving all four break points he faced from that point.

“I managed to deal with my emotions at the end to finish the match so I’m happy to play another final, especially here, the first tournament on clay,” said the Belgian. “I will give everything tomorrow.”


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He’ll next face Slovakian Alex Molcan, who will be competing in his second ATP Tour final after a 6-1, 7-5 result over eighth seed Laslo Djere. It will be the pair’s second ATP Head2Head meeting, after Molcan’s victory at the Melbourne ATP 250 in January.  

“He’s a great fighter, he’s moving so well,” Goffin said of his final opponent. “He’s lefty so he’s using his lefty game really well on clay, especially two days ago against Felix, he played well. So it’s a tough opponent.”

Molcan defeated top seed Felix Auger-Aliassime in a third-set tie-break in the second round, then upset sixth seed Botic van de Zandschulp in a three-set quarter-final.

In the semis, after dominating the opening set against Djere, Molcan again secured an early break in the second before the Serbian levelled at 4-4. But the 24-year-old reclaimed the advantage by claiming his fourth break of the match to avoid a tie-break. 

“It was a tough match,” Molcan assessed. “Lajovic is a tough player so I knew it was going to be tough. From the beginning I had a break up, so I felt pretty good on the court… It was really tough in the end but I’m really glad that I won.”

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Day 1 Preview: Dimitrov Headlines Monte-Carlo Action

  • Posted: Apr 09, 2022

Day 1 Preview: Dimitrov Headlines Monte-Carlo Action

2019 finalist Lajovic plays Krajinovic

Day one of the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters will see former World No. 3 Grigor Dimitrov, 2019 finalist Dusan Lajovic and 15th seed Nikoloz Basilashvili take to court in first-round singles action at the third ATP Masters 1000 event of the season.

View Schedule | View Singles Draw | View Doubles Draw

G. Dimitrov (BUL) vs [15] N. Basilashvili (GEO)

Former semi-finalist Dimitrov will kick off his campaign Sunday when he faces 15th seed Nikoloz Basilashvili on Court Rainier III in Monte-Carlo. Dimitrov has a strong record on the clay in Monaco, having reached the last four in 2018 and advanced to the quarter-finals in 2013 and 2015.

The Bulgarian, who is making his ninth appearance in Monte-Carlo, has earned wins against 2014 champion Stan Wawrinka, former World No. 7 Fernando Verdasco and World No. 6 Matteo Berrettini at the tournament over the years and arrives this week in confident mood, after advancing to the quarter-finals in Indian Wells last month.

Dimitrov leads Basilashvili 1-0 in their ATP Head2Head series, but that meeting came back in 2017 on hard in Sofia. Georgian Basilashvili has never been beyond the first round in three previous appearances in Monte-Carlo.

D. Lajovic (SRB) vs F. Krajinovic (SRB)

Dusan Lajovic will take on Filip Krajinovic in an all-Serbian battle, with the latter leading their ATP Head2Head series 2-1. Krajinovic, who advanced to the third round in Monaco in 2021, downed Lajovic in three sets in the first round in Indian Wells in March.

Lajovic will provide stiff competition in Monte-Carlo, though, having soared to his only Masters 1000 final at the tournament in 2019. The World No. 48 upset seeds Dominic Thiem and Daniil Medvedev before falling to Italian Fabio Fognini in the championship match.


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A. Davidovich Fokina (ESP) vs M. Giron (USA)

Spaniard Alejandro Davidovich Fokina and American Marcos Giron will kick off the main-draw action on Court Rainier III in what will be the first ATP Head2Head meeting between the pair.

Davidovich Fokina defeated Alex de Minaur, Berrettini and Lucas Pouille en route to the quarter-finals last season and will be aiming to snap a three-match losing streak against Giron. Meanwhile, the American is making his Monte-Carlo debut.

M. Fucsovics (HUN) vs L. Harris (RSA)

Hungarian Marton Fucsovics and South African Lloyd Harris will round off the main-draw singles action when they compete on Court des Princes. The pair are tied at 2-2 in their ATP Head2Head series, with Fucsovics winning their most recent meeting in Doha in February. The World No. 57 will be competing for the fourth time on the clay in Monte-Carlo, while Harris is making his debut.

Other Action

#NextGenATP Czech Jiri Lehecka will be aiming to reach the main draw at a Masters 1000 event for the first time when he takes on Frenchman Benjamin Bonzi in the final qualifying round, while singles stars Hubert Hurkacz and Jannik Sinner will begin their doubles campaign against Marcelo Melo and Alexander Zverev.

SCHEDULE – SUNDAY, 10 APRIL 2022

COURT RAINIER III start 11:00 am
Qualifying – [WC] F. Cobolli (ITA) vs [11] E. Ruusuvuori (FIN)

Not Before 1:00 pm
A. Davidovich Fokina (ESP) vs M. Giron (USA)
G. Dimitrov (BUL) vs [15] N. Basilashvili (GEO)
D. Lajovic (SRB) vs F. Krajinovic (SRB)

COURT DES PRINCES start 11:00 am
Qualifying – [1] B. Bonzi (FRA) vs J. Lehecka (CZE)
Qualifying – H. Dellien (BOL) vs [Alt] T. Daniel (JPN)
M. Fucsovics (HUN) vs L. Harris (RSA)
[WC] M. Melo (BRA) / A. Zverev (GER) vs H. Hurkacz (POL) / J. Sinner (ITA)

COURT 2 start 11:00 am
Qualifying – [7] O. Otte (GER) vs [10] J. Munar (ESP)
Qualifying – [4] S. Baez (ARG) vs [9] K. Majchrzak (POL)
T. Brkic (BIH) / N. Cacic (SRB) vs [PR] F. Auger-Aliassime (CAN) / S. Wawrinka (SUI)
K. Khachanov / A. Rublev vs [5] T. Puetz (GER) / M. Venus (NZL)

COURT 9 start 11:00 am
Qualifying – [Alt] B. Zapata Miralles (ESP) vs [13] J. Sousa (POR)
Qualifying – [6] M. Cressy (USA) or [WC] L. Van Assche (FRA) vs [Alt] R. Albot (MDA) or [14] H. Rune (DEN)
[8] M. Arevalo (ESA) / J. Rojer (NED) vs A. de Minaur (AUS) / C. Norrie (GBR)

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Djokovic & Wawrinka Entertain Fans In Casino Square Match

  • Posted: Apr 09, 2022

Djokovic & Wawrinka Entertain Fans In Casino Square Match

Djokovic and Wawrinka also hit together on Thursday

World No. 1 Novak Djokovic will be aiming to capture his third Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters title this week when he returns to the Tour in Monaco.

However, before the serious business starts on Sunday, the top seed joined former World No. 3 Stan Wawrinka in the Casino Square, where the pair competed in an entertaining mini-match in front of an excitable crowd.

Djokovic and Wawrinka hit trick shots, posed for photos and chatted with each other as they delighted the fans in Monte-Carlo with their array of skills.

<a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/stan-wawrinka/w367/overview'>Stan Wawrinka</a>/<a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/novak-djokovic/d643/overview'>Novak Djokovic</a>
Photo Credit: Stephane Danna/Monte-Carlo

The singles stars arrived at the Monte-Carlo Country Club earlier this week and trained together on Thursday on Court Rainier III ahead of the third ATP Masters 1000 tournament of the season.

Djokovic lifted the trophy on the clay in Monte-Carlo in 2013 and 2015 and is competing in just his second event of the season here after reaching the quarter-finals in Dubai in February.

Meanwhile, Switzerland’s Wawrinka arrives at the clay-court tournament having not played at a tour-level event since last March due to injury. The former World No. 3 triumphed in Monte-Carlo in 2014 and accepted a wild card into the draw.

Djokovic will face Alejandro Davidovich Fokina or Marcos Giron in his first match and could meet #NextGenATP Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz in a blockbuster quarter-final clash. Wawrinka is in the bottom quarter of the draw and will open against Alexander Bublik.

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