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Tough Dubai Draw For Djokovic As Medvedev Hunts No. 1 Spot

  • Posted: Feb 19, 2022

Tough Dubai Draw For Djokovic As Medvedev Hunts No. 1 Spot

Russian will capture top spot in ATP Rankings with Acapulco title

With his World No. 1 ATP Ranking on the line, Novak Djokovic faces a tough first assignment of 2022 when he takes on #NextGenATP star Lorenzo Musetti in the first round of the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships in Dubai.

The Serb returns to the ATP Tour this week knowing that Daniil Medvedev will become World No. 1 for the first time if the Russian wins the title at the Abierto Mexicano Telcel presentado por HSBC in Acapulco. The talented Musetti gave Djokovic a real scare by taking the first two sets in the pair’s sole previous meeting at Roland Garros last year, but Djokovic is a five-time champion in Dubai and will be confident of performing well again in the desert conditions of the U.A.E.

View Draw: Dubai

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Djokovic’s half of the draw at the ATP 500 event is littered with in-form rivals. Should he get past Musetti he could play 2018 Rolex Paris Masters champion and Adelaide International 1 finalist Karen Khachanov in the second round, with a semi-final with Rotterdam champion Felix Auger-Aliassime also a possibility.

Second seed Andrey Rublev headlines the bottom half of the draw, and he will look to snap a two-match losing streak against the World No. 28 Daniel Evans in the opening round. A potential semi-final opponent for the Russian is former World No. 1 Andy Murray, who opens up against a qualifier as he aims to repeat his title run from his last appearance in Dubai in 2017.

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Bautista Agut Gains Basilashvili Revenge, Wins Doha Title

  • Posted: Feb 19, 2022

Bautista Agut Gains Basilashvili Revenge, Wins Doha Title

Spaniard clinches 10th tour-level trophy

Roberto Bautista Agut ended his dominant week in style on Saturday, downing Nikoloz Basilashvili 6-3, 6-4 in the Qatar ExxonMobil Open final to win his first ATP Tour title since 2019.

In a repeat of last year’s championship match in Doha, a pumped-up Bautista Agut played consistently and aggressively from the baseline to gain revenge over the Georgian, who triumphed in the final in 2021.

“I am very happy,” Bautista Agut said. “It has been a while since I lifted a trophy. I have been working very hard to reach another final and to get the chance to win another title. It was a big dream for me to win a title and I have now won twice in Doha. It is very special for me and I am very happy.”

The Spaniard fired his groundstrokes through the court and rallied from a break down in the first and second sets to seal his victory after 86 minutes. It is the second time Bautista Agut has lifted the trophy at the ATP 250 event, having clinched the crown in 2019.

The World No. 16, who dropped just one set en route to the title, has now won 10 tour-level crowns, holding a 10-9 record in championship matches. Doha is the second ATP Tour tournament where the 33-year-old holds multiple titles, after lifting the trophy in Auckland in 2016 and 2018.

“It was a really tough final,” Bautista Agut added. “This year we played without wind, which was much better for me. It was not easy to recover after a really tough battle yesterday, but I think I did a good job today. It is my 10th ATP Tour title and I am very happy.”

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With his victory, Bautista Agut now leads Basilashvili 4-2 in their ATP Head2Head series and has improved to 11-3 on the season.

In a lively start, Basilashvili raced ahead as he overpowered Bautista Agut with his flat groundstrokes under the lights in Doha. However, the Spaniard then started to find his rhythm, hitting with greater depth to break back before he improved on serve. The 33-year-old then broke again, before he reeled off his fifth game in a row, sealing the set when Basilashvili hit a return long.

The second set followed a similar pattern to the first set, with Basilashvili breaking to lead, before Bautista Agut rallied to level at 3-3. Fuelled with belief, the second seed continued to hit with too much consistency for the Georgian, who struggled to deal with Bautista Agut’s variety. After breaking for a 5-4 lead, the Spaniard held his nerve on serve to clinch the title.

The 2021 Doha champion Basilashvili was aiming to win his sixth tour-level title. This week, the third seed defeated Mikael Ymer, Marton Fucsovics and Arthur Rinderknech as he regained his top form to reach the final.

“I am super happy with how I played in this tournament,” Basilashvili said during the trophy ceremony. “I love coming back here. I would like to congratulate Roberto for a great tournament. I would like to thank the crowd. I am super proud to play in front of you.”

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Berrettini Wins Rio Opener After Lengthy Rain Delay

  • Posted: Feb 19, 2022

Berrettini Wins Rio Opener After Lengthy Rain Delay

Top seed could face Alcaraz in QFs

Matteo Berrettini had to wait an extra day to start his Rio de Janeiro campaign. Then he had to wait a little longer to wrap up a 6-4, 6-7(6), 6-3 win over home favourite Thiago Monteiro after failing to convert on two match points in the second set.

Thursday’s rain pushed the second-round match back by a day, and Friday’s showers halted the contest just after the Italian rocketed a forehand winner to bring up break point at 3-4 in the third.

“Everything was really difficult,” said the World No. 6, who was playing his first clay-court match since Roland Garros. “But you have to [go through] that in order to be in this kind of position in the rankings. At these kinds of tournaments, you have to play your best tennis in the important moments. Today worked out really well, especially in the first and the third, so I’m really happy about that.”

After a six-hour delay, they returned with the match on a knife’s edge. Monteiro saved that break point with a big serve to the Berrettini backhand, but clipped the net cord on a second as the Italian closed in on the quarter-finals.

Relying on his usual recipe of big serves and big forehands, Berrettini got to triple match point. After the Brazilian battled back to 40/30, the top seed caressed a clever drop shot to close it out.

Just nine points were required following the resumption of play, and the match finished after 11:30 p.m.

Before the rain, Berrettini won the opening set without facing a break point, but fell behind at 4-1 and 5-2 in the second. He stopped Monteiro from serving out the set at 5-3, then saved a set point on serve in the next game. It was the Brazilian’s turn for a comeback in the tie-break, as he saved two match points in erasing a 5-2 deficit. From 6-4 down, Monteiro won the final four points of the set.

The third set remained on serve until Berrettini’s late charge.

This was the top seed’s first ATP Tour action since his semi-final run at the Australian Open, where he lost to eventual champion Rafael Nadal in four sets. He could face a rematch with Carlos Alcaraz next, one month after he beat the Spaniard in a fifth-set tie-break in the AO third round. 

The seventh-seeded Alcaraz was two points from taking the opening set against Federico Delbonis on Thursday before rain stopped the match at 5-4, 30/15. Following Berrettini’s win, more rain has delayed the resumption of that match on Quadra Guga Kuerten.

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Murray/Soares Score SF Spot In Rio

  • Posted: Feb 19, 2022

Murray/Soares Score SF Spot In Rio

Klaasen/McLachlan surge to Marseille championship match

Third seeds Jamie Murray and Bruno Soares took advantage of a break in the Rio de Janeiro rain to complete a rain-delayed 6-3, 6-4 quarter-final win over Benoit Paire and Albert Ramos-Vinolas at the Rio Open presented by Claro on Friday.

Murray and Soares backed up some solid serving with three breaks of serve on the clay of the ATP 500 event. They await either top seeds Marcel Granollers and Horacio Zeballos or Spanish pairing Carlos Alcaraz and Pablo Carreno Busta in the semi-finals.

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Klaasen/McLachlan Reach Final In Marseille
At the Open 13 Provence in Marseille, the first final spot was booked as second seeds Raven Klaasen and Ben McLachlan secured a 5-7, 6-3, 10-4 victory over Matwe Middelkoop and Andreas Mies.

A tight encounter saw both teams break serve only once, but it was the South African-Japanese pairing, seeking a third ATP Tour title together, who held their nerve in the Match Tie-break as they surged to an 8-2 lead before sealing victory.

There was another exciting finish in the last quarter-final match at the ATP 250 event, as Danish #NextGenATP star Holger Rune teamed up with home favourite Hugo Gaston to defeat Polish pairing Szymon Walkow and Jan Zielinski, 7-6(2), 5-7, 10-6. Rune and Gaston now face a semi-final clash with Ukrainian-Russian pairing Denys Molchanov and Andrey Rublev on Saturday.

Nedovyesov/Qureshi Into Delray Beach SFs
At the Delray Beach Open by VITACOST.com, third seeds Aleksandr Nedovyesov and Aisam-Ul-Haq Qureshi overcame American pairing Nicholas Monroe and Jackson Withrow, 7-6(4), 7-5. The Kazakh-Pakistiani pairing won 90 per cent (35/39) points behind first serves in a solid display to reach the semi-finals, where they will face American wild cards Robert Galloway and Alex Lawson. 

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Norrie Breaks Korda Duck To Reach Delray Beach SFs

  • Posted: Feb 19, 2022

Norrie Breaks Korda Duck To Reach Delray Beach SFs

Briton to face “good friend” Tommy Paul in SFs

The third time — and the third set — was the charm for Cameron Norrie against Sebastian Korda in Delray Beach on Friday.

After straight-set losses to the American at the Delray Beach Open by VITACOST.com (SF) last season and the Australian Open (R1) this year, the World No. 13 got his first win in the ATP Head2Head matchup, 6-2, 1-6, 7-6(4).

In the quarter-final, Norrie was at his best early and late. After an inspired start, he had to stop his opponent from serving out the match in the third before a steady finish earned him the win.

“Its always a tricky matchup against Sebi,” the top seed said post-match. “He’s such a great player. He’s a tough matchup for me in general, but I ended up coming out here, I was super aggressive and managed to be the one dictating play a little bit more.

“Then he started doing that to me in the second set, and what a battle it was in the third set.”

After a pair of one-sided sets, the decider was finely poised at 4-4. Korda used pair of forehand winners — one off the ground, one off the volley — to convert the first break chance for either man in the frame. But after he closed from 0/40 to 30/40 in his attempt to serve it out, a double fault restored parity.

With new life, Norrie tightened his game down the stretch and Korda could not recover from some untimely errors.

It was all Norrie in the early going, as he created a break point in all four of his first-set return games and converted in the last two. He faced his first break points in a six-deuce second game of set two, with Korda taking his fourth opportunity to edge ahead and kickstart a one-sided set in his favour.

After escaping with the win, Norrie will face fourth seed Tommy Paul in Saturday’s semis, after the fourth seed dismissed Stefan Kozlov, 6-3, 6-1, in an all-American quarter-final earlier on Friday. 

“Tommy is so talented. He’s one of my good friends on tour,” Norrie previewed. “It’s never going to be easy, but tomorrow is going to be a battle. He’s so talented and he comes forward a lot.”

With a win in his third ATP Tour quarter-final of the season, Paul gets through to the final four for the first time. He finished the 2021 season with his first ATP Tour title in Stockholm and entered Delray Beach with a career-high ATP Ranking of World No. 41.

The in-form American has dropped just six games in two Delray matches, starting with a 6-2, 6-0 win over Denis Istomin on Wednesday.

The Delray Beach night session will open with second seed Reilly Opelka vs. seventh seed Adrian Mannarino, and finish with third seed Grigor Dimitrov taking on Aussie John Millman.

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Qualifier Safiullin Stuns Tsitsipas in Marseille

  • Posted: Feb 18, 2022

Qualifier Safiullin Stuns Tsitsipas in Marseille

Russian World No. 163 defeats top seed to reach SFs

Roman Safiullin is producing the magic this week in Marseille.

The World No. 163 claimed the best victory of his career on Friday as he upset two-time champion Stefanos Tsitsipas 6-4, 6-4 to reach the semi-finals of the Open 13 Provence.

The Russian had come through tough three-setters against Alexei Popyrin and Tomas Machac to reach his first ATP Tour quarter-final, but he showed no signs of fatigue or nerves as he outplayed the top seed from the start.

It was an uncharacteristically sloppy performance from Tsitsipas, but he was regularly forced into errors by the ball-striking and variety of the World No. 163’s game.

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The Russian showed he meant business early, bringing a high level to the opening set as he broke for 3-2 and remained composed to serve it out, converting his first set point with a clean backhand winner.

An extraordinary opening to the second set saw Tsitsipas save five break points in the opening game, as the Russian refused to let his opponent settle on serve. Although the Greek did manage to hold, Safiullin had another five opportunities in the next Tsitsipas service game, and he stayed aggressive to finally complete the break.

Qualifier Safiullin was strong on serve to ensure that early break was enough to seal the set and the match, running out a deserved winner in one hour, 35 minutes. The Russian lost just four points behind his first serve in the match, with Tsitsipas creating just one break opportunity.

Safiullin, who won two singles matches for Team Russia at January’s ATP Cup, will now face either Rotterdam champion Felix Auger-Aliassime or fifth seed Ilya Ivashka in the semi-finals.

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Bautista Agut Edges Khachanov In Doha Thriller

  • Posted: Feb 18, 2022

Bautista Agut Edges Khachanov In Doha Thriller

Reigning champion Basilashvili advances

Roberto Bautista Agut demonstrated his fighting qualities on Friday at the Qatar ExxonMobil Open, edging Karen Khachanov 2-6, 6-3, 7-5 in a thriller under the lights in Doha.

The Spaniard produced a highly-intense and aggressive performance, overcoming the Russian in two hours and 26 minutes to reach the final at the ATP 250 event for the second consecutive year.

“The atmosphere was unbelievable,” Bautista Agut said in his on-court interview. “I want to give a lot of credit to Karen, he was playing unbelievably. I had to fight really hard to turn the score around. It was a really tough match.”

The second seed found his range as the match went on with the key turning point coming in the third game of the second set, when Bautista Agut fended off seven break points in a mammoth game to hold. From there, the World No. 16 put his foot down and raised his level deep in the third set, breaking at 5-5 with a powerful smash, before holding to seal his win.

The 33-year-old, who overcame Andy Murray and Alejandro Davidovich Fokina for the loss of just three games in his opening two matches, now leads Khachanov 6-2 in their ATP Head2Head series.

“He was playing very fast,” Bautista Agut added. “He was playing very solidly, he was defending very well and he hit many unbelievable passing shots. I had to play incredibly well tonight. I enjoyed tonight so much.”

Bautista Agut has strong pedigree in Doha, having lifted the title in 2019 and reached the final last season. The Spaniard will be aiming to capture his first tour-level crown since he triumphed in Doha three years ago when he faces Nikoloz Basilashivili in a repeat of last years championship match on Saturday.

Khachanov was aiming to reach his second tour-level final of the season, after advancing to the final at the Adelaide International 1 in January.

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Earlier, Basilashvili continued his love affair with the Qatar ExxonMobil Open, soaring into the final for the second consecutive year with a 6-4, 6-2 win over Frenchman Arthur Rinderknech.

The Georgian lifted the trophy in Doha last season, defeating Roger Federer en route. Basilashvili will have the opportunity to triumph again when he takes to court on Saturday after he broke Rinderknech three times to end the World No. 61’s run and advance.

“I am feeling great,” Basilashvili said. “I really like playing in Doha. I see the ball really well here and physically I feel much better than previous matches. The final will be a tough match.”

Basilashvili, who arrived at the ATP 250 event on a six-match losing streak in 2022, is aiming to win his sixth tour-level title this week.

Rinderknech was bidding to reach his second final of the year, having enjoyed a run to the championship match at the Adelaide International 2 in January.

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Rublev Into Marseille SFs, Bonzi’s Dream Run Continues

  • Posted: Feb 18, 2022

Rublev Into Marseille SFs, Bonzi’s Dream Run Continues

Russian sees off home favourite Pouille after scare

Andrey Rublev pulled off another final-set recovery in Marseille to see off Lucas Pouille and reach the semi-finals of the Open 13 Provence on Friday.

Having recovered from a break down in the third set against Richard Gasquet in the second round on Wednesday, Rublev repeated the trick in the quarter-finals to break French hearts again as he withstood an inspired performance from wild card Pouille and come through 6-3, 1-6, 6-2 in one hour and 41 minutes.

The Russian was pleased to come through another bruising encounter in Marseille. “It’s tough to play against such great players like Richard or Lucas,” said Rublev after the match. “Especially when they play at home, it’s even tougher. That’s why it’s not easy to beat them and why we played three sets, but I’m happy that I won another match and I’m in the semi-finals.”

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The Russian looked in control early on as he took the opening set, Pouille appearing to be feeling the after-effects of his marathon second-round victory over Radu Albot on Thursday night.

The former Top 10 Frenchman, who has struggled with injuries in recent years, was seeking his first tour-level semi-final since 2019. He produced an excellent second set to level the match as he broke the World No. 7 twice while resisting significant pressure on his own serve.

Pouille broke for a 2-0 lead in the deciding set as the crowd grew excited at the prospect of an upset, but the Russian found an extra gear from that point. The Russian ultimately converted four of 11 break point opportunities in the match as he powered to his second ATP Tour semi-final of the season and extended his ATP Head2Head lead over Pouille to 3-0.

“Lucas won so many titles, he beat top players,” said Rublev. “Especially indoors, with his serve, it’s really tough to play against him when he serves and has a huge forehand. He broke me in the second set and I went a bit down mentally, and if I wanted to win I needed to raise my level. In the third set I started to get back mentally and raised my level and I think that was the key.”

Rublev’s next opponent will be ninth seed Benjamin Bonzi, after the Frenchman upset World No. 15 Aslan Karatsev 6-1, 6-3 to reach his first ATP Tour semi-final earlier on Friday.

After capturing six ATP Challenger Tour titles in 2021 and adding a seventh to his career total in Cherbourg just two weeks ago, Bonzi gave a further signal that his transition to the top level is on track with an accomplished performance as his Russian opponent struggled to find any kind of consistency.

In the first ATP Head2Head meeting between the pair, the Frenchman was quick out the blocks, breaking Karatsev twice and sealing the first set in style with an ace out wide.

Bonzi’s serving remained strong throughout. The World No. 69 lost just three points behind his first delivery in the match and, although Sydney champion Karatsev did find a better level as the match wore on, it proved too little, too late as the Frenchman sealed victory in one hour, 17 minutes.

The win was Bonzi’s first over a Top 20 player and he is yet to drop a set in Marseille going into Saturday’s semi-final with Rublev.

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The Tour – Food Court: Why Hydration Is Key To Brooksby's Diet

  • Posted: Feb 18, 2022

The Tour – Food Court: Why Hydration Is Key To Brooksby’s Diet

Learn more about how the 21-year-old views his diet

Jenson Brooksby is one of the brightest young stars on the ATP Tour. The American, who began 2021 outside the Top 300 of the ATP Rankings, is at a career-high World No. 45 following his run to the Dallas Open final.

ATPTour.com caught up with the 21-year-old to learn about his cooking skills, how he approaches his diet during tournaments and training weeks, the importance of hydration, his favourite “cheat” foods and more.

How often do you cook?
I’m getting into it more lately when I’m home. I shoot for four nights a week to have some food at home. It’s definitely healthier in the long run and it’s a good skill to have, so I’ve been trying to get into it more the past year.

How did you learn?
It’s mostly self-learning, also some from my parents — what foods to have, what’s pretty simple to cook, good meals, simple stuff you could get from a store. I’d say for the past two months I’ve been having more food for myself at night.

What’s the Jenson Brooksby special?
I don’t think I’m there yet to have a specific special! Mostly I’ll make ground beef and brussels sprouts and some veggies or chicken. Usually there are different types of meat with veggies, sometimes salad.

Watch: A Day In The Life Of Jenson Brooksby

As a professional athlete your diet is especially important. How strict are you with your diet?
Strict in some areas, definitely. I trust my team — my PT [physiotherapist], my fitness [coach] and their knowledge with it. Definitely a big focus is electrolytes and hydration. It’s something I’m still working to improve on, how many electrolytes [I need], how much water to have, that type of thing. Also with proteins, carbs and fats.

It’s not like any food is really limited, although I don’t have anything [that is] processed. But it’s more about when to have carbs, when the most important time to eat is, so it’s really been that type of stuff this past year.

What made you get into that mindset?
Wanting to have more discipline with myself and just working harder to try to reach the top one day. If you want to do that, then all these areas you have to have good habits instilled in you, which is my goal. Hopefully two, three years down the road, whether it’s the fitness, the PT, the food or the tennis, that it’s all just really engrained by that time.

For those out there who sometimes struggle getting on track with their nutrition or diets, what tip do you have for them?
It’s not easy. I just think you have to always have your goals in the back of your mind. What are you pushing for? Why are you putting in those investments and that work to do these things? I definitely have more steps to go, but I’m happy with the progress I’ve made in the past year.

A few years ago, around college, before college, sometimes I was lazier in these areas. Those are habits from all the years in my junior career that I needed to break. It takes time, but I think always having in your mind why you’re doing it and keeping positive towards it is big.

How often do you allow yourself a cheat meal?
There’s no specific amount of time, really. Occasionally, definitely, as long as it’s at the right time. Maybe after a tournament, when you have a little break. It’s nothing really exact, usually. You just have a feel for when you can have a little more. Even then, I’m the type of person where it’s tough for me to even have a little bit because then I want so much more. I’m sure there are a lot of people like that. I have to be careful. Nothing exact, just depends when I feel it.

What’s your go-to cheat meal?
I need to think about that for a second! It could be a bit of chocolate or maybe even a pizza, something like that. I guess a pancake could be another one, for example. For me I would consider that kind of a “cheat”, too.

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Is there something you’ll just never eat and if so, why?
I would say hot dogs, honestly. That’s probably a common one. I never really liked them. I tried when I was younger and just never got into them.

On the day of a match, what’s your typical diet?
There’s no exact meal every time, but I always try to have more carbs in the morning, some quick energy. Always for dinner at the end of the day will be more protein-based and some carbs. For the match, and it has to be leading up to the match, too, but hydration is key. You need to drink a lot of water. What I’m going to shoot for in the future is maybe a gallon of water or more, and then along with the electrolytes. You really have to stay on that.

An example for breakfast could be toast with peanut butter and some eggs, some fruit and maybe a little meat as well, or yogurt with granola. There are always different match times. If it’s at a weird time where you’d want to wait on having lunch for example, then you just have a bar or some extra stuff to get some more energy. Even during the match have some nuts or something more energy-based and then proteins.

With the hydration, is it something where you have to be especially on top of it because by the time you realise you’re behind on it, it’s too late?
With how physical all my trainings are, I’m learning I can’t afford to not be on top of these things at all times. There could be different factors, but even if one thing is off, it can just lower your energy and make for a less productive practice, which you never want to have at all. I’ve seen how important it is.

You mentioned after a tournament might be when you “cheat”. How different do you eat during a tournament compared to a training week?
Whether it’s training weeks or tournaments, it’s still always pretty focussed. I try to treat it the same because even when you’re home training, the hours are usually a little higher. To have that physicality, whether it’s in the gym or on court, you still need to do all those things right… really whether it’s the hydration or type of eating, it’s really similar all the weeks.

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