Tennis

add news feed

post a story

Czech star Tomas Berdych stepped up his preparations for Wimbledon by beating Ukrainian Alexandr Dolgopolov at the Boodles in Stoke Park.
Czech star Tomas Berdych stepped up his preparations for Wimbledon by beating Ukrainian Alexandr Dolgopolov at the Boodles in Stoke Park.
29 minutes ago
Xavier Malisse and Nicolas Mahut are through to the last eight in 's-Hertogenbosch after earning victories on Wednesday. Malisse overcomes Yen-Hsun Lu while Mahut downs Andrey Kuznetsov.
Xavier Malisse and Nicolas Mahut are through to the last eight in 's-Hertogenbosch after earning victories on Wednesday. Malisse overcomes Yen-Hsun Lu while Mahut downs Andrey Kuznetsov.
about 1 hour ago
British teenager Kyle Edmund produced a battling performance against experienced Frenchman Gilles Simon before going down 7-6 (7-5) 7-6 (7-3) at Eastbourne.
British teenager Kyle Edmund produced a battling performance against experienced Frenchman Gilles Simon before going down 7-6 (7-5) 7-6 (7-3) at Eastbourne.
about 1 hour ago
Second seed Gilles Simon made a successful start to the AEGON International, having upended wildcard Kyle Edmund in straight sets. The Frenchman is joined by veteran Radek Stepanek, who defeated 3rd seed Philipp Kohlschreiber.
Second seed Gilles Simon made a successful start to the AEGON International, having upended wildcard Kyle Edmund in straight sets. The Frenchman is joined by veteran Radek Stepanek, who defeated 3rd seed Philipp Kohlschreiber.
about 1 hour ago
Denis Kudla, Alex Kuznetsov, Wayne Odesnik and Bobby Reynolds all advanced through Wimbledon qualifying to earn a spot in the main draw.
Denis Kudla, Alex Kuznetsov, Wayne Odesnik and Bobby Reynolds all advanced through Wimbledon qualifying to earn a spot in the main draw.
about 2 hours ago
AEGON INTERNATIONAL Eastbourne, England June 17-22, 2013 $690,000/Premier Grass/Outdoors Results - Wednesday, June 19, 2013 Singles – Second Round (2/WC) Li Na (CHN) d. Marion Bartoli (FRA) w/o (viral illness) Ekaterina Makarova (R...
AEGON INTERNATIONAL Eastbourne, England June 17-22, 2013 $690,000/Premier Grass/Outdoors Results - Wednesday, June 19, 2013 Singles – Second Round (2/WC) Li Na (CHN) d. Marion Bartoli (FRA) w/o (viral illness) Ekaterina Makarova (RUS) d. (3) Angelique Kerber (GER) 63 64 Yanina Wickmayer (BEL) d. (4) Petra Kvitova (CZE) 36 64 75 (5) Caroline Wozniacki (DEN) d. Laura Robson (GBR) 64 64 (6) Maria Kirilenko (RUS) d. (WC) Elena Baltacha (GBR) 46 64 63 Lucie Safarova (CZE) d. (WC) Samantha Stosur (AUS) 76(5) 63 Elena Vesnina (RUS) d. Heather Watson (GBR) 61 36 62 (Q) Jamie Hampton (USA) d. Hsieh Su-Wei (TPE) 64 76(2) Doubles – Quarterfinals (1) Petrova/Srebotnik (RUS/SLO) d. Hsieh/Lucic-Baroni (TPE/CRO) 62 75 Niculescu/Zakopalova (ROU/CZE) d. (2) Huber/Mirza (USA/IND) 63 36 119 (Match TB) Doubles – First Round (3) Groenefeld/Peschke (GER/CZE) d. (WC) Keothavong/Murray (GBR/GBR) 64 63 Order Of Play – Thursday, June 20, 2013 Centre Court (from 11.00hrs) 1. ATP: López vs. Verdasco 2. Elena Vesnina vs. Li Na (NB 13.00hrs) 3. Ekaterina Makarova vs. Caroline Wozniacki 4. ATP: Tomic vs. Simon (NB 16.00hrs) 5. [Butorac/Ram or Fleming/Marray] vs. Matkowski/Nielsen Court 1 (from 11.00hrs) 1. Jamie Hampton vs. Lucie Safarova 2. ATP: Dodig vs. Fognini 3. ATP: Seppi vs. Stepanek 4. Maria Kirilenko vs. Yanina Wickmayer 5. Kalashnikova/Rosolska vs. Groenefeld/Peschke Court 2 (NB 14.00hrs) 1. Pennetta/Vesnina vs. Chan/Safarova 2. Peya/Soares vs. Murray/Peers
USA
about 2 hours ago
Stanislas Wawrinka reached the quarter-finals of the Topshelf Open in Den Bosch thanks to victory over Paolo Lorenzi.
Stanislas Wawrinka reached the quarter-finals of the Topshelf Open in Den Bosch thanks to victory over Paolo Lorenzi.
about 2 hours ago
EASTBOURNE, England—Ivan Dodig, while he’s ranked just 50th in the world and has never been above No. 32, has always seemed to me to be a model competitor. He treats the game like a job; he tries what he can, and if it doesn&...
EASTBOURNE, England—Ivan Dodig, while he’s ranked just 50th in the world and has never been above No. 32, has always seemed to me to be a model competitor. He treats the game like a job; he tries what he can, and if it doesn’t work, he doesn’t to turn it into a personal reflection on himself. He knows his limits and works within them, and doesn’t indulge in the angst and self-torture that we see from many of his more talented colleagues. Dodig, at least, knows that he has limits. Maybe that’s because, from a physical standpoint, Dodig is an unlikely-looking tennis player. He has a stocky build, rather than the long and lanky one we normally associate with the sport. Like his fellow lunch-bucket artist David Ferrer, he goes about his business with his shoulders hunched, and his shots are utilitarian rather than artistic or creative—in his hands, the racquet is a tool rather than a wand. The 28-year-old Croatian is not a performer in any sense; every move and expression is related to the job he has to do (though it should be noted that he's not above the occasional rage-filled outburst). Today, on grass against 6’5” Milos Raonic, serve-and-volley was his best tactic, so he served and volleyed. At one point in the second set, Dodig slipped and fell and spun out on the turf. His legs whirled out from under him like a break dancer’s. But when he got up, there were no Murray-esque moans, no glares of anger at the slippery patch of grass beneath him, no time spent walking it off or feeling embarrassed about his tumble. Dodig got up and got on with it. He also got on with upsetting Raonic, the top seed. Raonic has been here this week with new coach Ivan Ljubicic, and their practices have involved a fair amount of time spent rushing the net. Raonic tried to use that tactic against Dodig, to little avail. If he wasn’t passed at the net, he was caught in no-man’s land. To be fair, Raonic was equally hesitant from the baseline. If he wasn’t throwing a lame backhand slice into the net, he was late getting around for his inside-out forehand. Despite all that, Raonic still had a set point in the second-set tiebreaker, but somehow he failed to get in position for a simple backhand near the net. He caught it late, and pushed it wide. It wasn't Milos' day. Asked about his new coaching arrangement with Ljubicic, Raonic said, “Obviously, I think it needs time, that’s for sure, and I think the approach and things we’re trying to achieve are a bit different. We’re trying to incorporate things and understanding that it’s not always going to work, try to sort of win the matches but sort of think about what I’m trying to improve. It’s about having a long-term goal.” At the All England Club in 2011, one veteran tennis writer predicted that Raonic would win Wimbledon within four years. With that serve, it didn’t seem like an insane thing to say. Next week we’ll be halfway there, and while the Canadian has steady progress during that time—he’s No. 15 in the world—he hasn’t shown a special aptitude for grass. He lost to Sam Querrey in the second round at Wimbledon last year, and so far in 2013 he’s 0-2 on the surface. Today he expressed some misgivings about trying to round his game into shape while having to practice on it. “I’ve got to figure out my thing,” Raonic said. “It’s like I’m just not executing the things I need to execute. Obviously the surface doesn’t make it easy. I think it’s easier for me to figure out things on hard courts.” Raonic, a big man and bigger server who did his best to play like Pete Sampras, seemed like the model of a Wimbledon winner when he arrived on tour. But the missile-throwing model is starting to look pretty creaky. What I noticed most today was how easily Dodig wa
about 2 hours ago
The Wimbledon Championships 2013 gets underway on Monday 24th June as the world’s top players head to the famous grass courts of the All England Club for the third Grand Slam of the year. Defending champion Roger Federer is eyeing a reco...
The Wimbledon Championships 2013 gets underway on Monday 24th June as the world’s top players head to the famous grass courts of the All England Club for the third Grand Slam of the year. Defending champion Roger Federer is eyeing a record eighth Wimbledon title but will face tough competition from Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal The post Enjoy Wimbledon 2013 Championships with bet365 appeared first on Tennis Guru.
about 3 hours ago
Today, we’ll take a look at the way Wimbledon has “evolved” in our “Uncomfortable Questions” series. Think of these daily posts as posing questions that nobody wants—or thinks—to ask in the midst...
Today, we’ll take a look at the way Wimbledon has “evolved” in our “Uncomfortable Questions” series. Think of these daily posts as posing questions that nobody wants—or thinks—to ask in the midst of all those animated conversations about the favorite sons and daughters as Wimbledon approaches. Today, I’ll ask: Was it a mistake for Wimbledon to slow down the grass? The conventional wisdom in tennis has always been that slower courts produce more rallies, and more rallies provide more enjoyment for spectators. This may be true, but there are a few byproducts associated with slowing down the courts to the point where we are now approaching de facto standardization. It diminishes the pool of potential champions and contenders, and it also promotes a specific style of play. Or maybe I should say that it has wrecked what once was a fairly robust palette of competitive styles that seemed to guarantee a greater diversity in results. Since 2004, one or another of the men’s “Big Four” has won 35 of the 38 Grand Slam events, and their record in Masters 1000 events is even more impressive. Since 2005, only 12 of the 77 Masters titles went to someone outside that group. Kudos to Novak Djokovic, Andy Murray, Roger Federer, and Rafael Nadal, but there’s a kind of sameness at work in their superiority, too. We don’t really have a dominant player, nor even a dominant rivalry (although Djokovic-Nadal shows signs of becoming that). We have four guys who are that much better than anyone else, and the uniformly slow surfaces tend to reinforce their stranglehold for the simple reason that slower courts allow better players more time to adapt to and counter opponents who are in the proverbial “zone,” or able to harness superior power. That isn’t entirely a good thing, and it represents a departure from the thinking that gave us the pro game the way it’s played today. Time ago, we had specialists on clay and experts on grass and indoor carpet in the mix, and styles as diverse as dogged baseline grinding and kamikaze serve-and-volley—and everything in between. The surfaces used on the 11-month pro calendar offered something to practitioners of every style. It was essential to the very idea of a world tour, which partly sought to test the players on all surfaces under all conditions. That has changed dramatically. The move to slower surfaces, along with technology-driven changes—including variations in racquet-head size and string and frame materials—have empowered a specific style based on, ideally, a big serve, a powerful forehand (as I wrote the other day), and great defensive skills. This creates a self-selecting group, and it highlights an odd byproduct of the enormous trend toward standardization. The guy we think of as “the champ” has to fight for his reputation every day; he’s got to take on everyone, from Alejandro Falla to Fabio Fognini, to maintain his status. This is sort of like making the heavyweight champion fight everybody who’s on the undercard on any given fight night, and it lends credibility to claims, made most vociferously by Nadal, that the ranking system is flawed and the players are chained to a wheel that doesn’t stop for anyone. Let’s put it simply: How many times does Rafa have to win Monte Carlo anyway? But the system continues to generate revenue (don’t ever, ever underestimate how much importance people attach to that, even as they criticize) because the appetite for tennis is great and the world is still big enough so that once you finally make your way around, you might as well start all over again. What’s gone missing, though, is what you might call the “local” angle that used to be fairly important in tennis. North American or British players no longer tread softly when they arrive in mainland Europe, knowing that
about 4 hours ago