Tennis

World number one Serena Williams has distanced herself from the rest of the field once again after sealing the prestigious Internazionali BNL d’Italia or Italian Open for the second time in her career on Sunday with an impressive w...
World number one Serena Williams has distanced herself from the rest of the field once again after sealing the prestigious Internazionali BNL d’Italia or Italian Open for the second time in her career on Sunday with an impressive win against number three Victoria Azarenka. This is the American’s 51st career WTA title. The top seed The post Serena Williams blasts past Azarenka to win Italian Open 2013 title appeared first on Tennis Guru.
11 minutes ago
Success on clay has remained a bit beyond Caroline Wozniacki’s reach so far. One Premier tournament and one International tournament complete the Road to Roland Garros within striking distance of Paris.  None of the women involved ...
Success on clay has remained a bit beyond Caroline Wozniacki’s reach so far. One Premier tournament and one International tournament complete the Road to Roland Garros within striking distance of Paris.  None of the women involved are in serious contention for the clay season’s ultimate prize, but the absence of those elite names could lead to some tightly contested matches in playing fields without clear favorites.  I forwent predictions this time because your guess is as good as mine.  (Feel free to opine in the comments, as always.) Brussels: Top half:  Seven of the Brussels seeds will receive seeds in Paris next week, a strong statement considering the tournament’s placement on the eve of Roland Garros.  In need of a strong statement herself is top-seeded Caroline Wozniacki, who took a wildcard into the tournament following opening-round losses in Madrid and Rome.  Wozniacki has struggled on clay for most of her career but should aim to halt her skid before dropping outside the top ten.  Unfortunately for her, recurrent nemesis Julia Goerges lurks in the quarterfinals.  This German notably defeated Wozniacki to win the Stuttgart clay title two years ago, and she has added two more victories over the Dane since then.  Since she has impressed hardly more than Wozniacki has recently, though, one can’t entirely discount Swiss clay specialist Romina Oprandi or the qualifiers who litter this section. None of the women in the second quarter has distinguished herself consistently on clay, although Arantxa Rus does own a Roland Garros victory over Kim Clijsters.  Having reached the second week of Roland Garros last year, the fourth-seeded Sloane Stephens looks to build upon her modestly encouraging effort in Rome.  There, Stephens won consecutive matches for the first time since defeating Serena Williams at the Australian Open.  Her depleted confidence resurfaced in a lopsided loss to Maria Sharapova, but a small tournament like Brussels offers a useful venue to rebuild that strength.  With fast-court specialists like Tsvetana Pironkova and Magdalena Rybarikova around her, Stephens might face her stiffest resistance from Peng Shuai.  The Chinese double-fister won their only previous meeting, also on clay, but Stephens has improved markedly in the two years since then. Bottom half:  By far the most intriguing first-round match of the draw pits third-seeded Dominika Cibulkova against Kaia Kanepi.  This battle of 2012 Roland Garros quarterfinalists will feature a contrast of styles between the compact, agile Slovak and the robust, heavy-hitting Estonian.  Never have they met on clay, while Kanepi has won two of three matches overall.  Of some lesser note is a potential second-round clash between Varvara Lepchenko and Stefanie Voegele.  The American upset Schiavone at Roland Garros last year and has continued the clay success atypical among her compatriots this year with two victories over Roberta Vinci.  For her part, Voegele reached the semifinals of Charleston on green clay, although she has won only one match on red clay.   Kanepi defeated Lepchenko last fall before the injuries that sidelined her for several months, so an upset of Cibulkova could open her draw. Probably disappointing many Belgian fans, their two leading women would meet as early as the second round in their home tournament.  Both have achieved more success on grass and hard courts than on clay, and both open against rising American stars.  Having upset Li Na in Madrid as a lucky loser, Madison Keys will aim to snuff out home hope Kirsten Flipkens in a match of baseline first strikes against all-court craft.  Belgian No. 2 Yanina Wickmayer faces a somewhat easier assignment in the form of Jamie Hampton, who has not won a match in a clay main draw this year.  Awaiting one of the Belgians in the quarterfinals is second-seeded Roberta Vinci, an artisan of traditional clay-court tennis.  Vinci has not found her best form for much of the spring but did win a small
about 2 hours ago
"It didn't go how I hoped and I was missing too many easy forehands and crucial points," Federer said. "He does an incredible job returning from the back of the court and it is hard because he covers the court so well."
"It didn't go how I hoped and I was missing too many easy forehands and crucial points," Federer said. "He does an incredible job returning from the back of the court and it is hard because he covers the court so well."
about 3 hours ago
©Colette Lewis 2013-- Urbana, IL-- Stanford, Florida and UCLA, three gold standards in women's college tennis, will be joined by upstart Texas A&M in Monday evening's semifinals after all... For the complete story, click on ...
©Colette Lewis 2013-- Urbana, IL-- Stanford, Florida and UCLA, three gold standards in women's college tennis, will be joined by upstart Texas A&M in Monday evening's semifinals after all... For the complete story, click on the title of the post to go to zootennis.com
about 3 hours ago
Did you know Rafael Nadal has now beaten Roger Federer more times than he has any other player on tour?
Did you know Rafael Nadal has now beaten Roger Federer more times than he has any other player on tour?
about 5 hours ago
Rafael Nadal talks about his big win over Roger Federer today in the Italian Open final in Rome.
Rafael Nadal talks about his big win over Roger Federer today in the Italian Open final in Rome.
about 5 hours ago
Roger Federer assesses his one-sided loss today to Rival Rafael Nadal in Rome.
Roger Federer assesses his one-sided loss today to Rival Rafael Nadal in Rome.
about 5 hours ago
AP Photo/Andrew Medichini Articles: Racquet Reaction: Nadal d. Federer – by Steve Tignor (tennis.com) Nadal Masterclass Stuns Federer, Wins 24th ATP World Tour Masters 1000 Crown – via atpworldtour.com Rafael Nadal crushes R...
AP Photo/Andrew Medichini Articles: Racquet Reaction: Nadal d. Federer – by Steve Tignor (tennis.com) Nadal Masterclass Stuns Federer, Wins 24th ATP World Tour Masters 1000 Crown – via atpworldtour.com Rafael Nadal crushes Roger Federer to show clay supremacy in Rome final – by Kevin Mitchell (guardian.co.uk) Rafael Nadal hammers Roger Federer in Italian Open final – via bbc.co.uk Rafael Nadal routs Roger Federer, but French Open triumph isn’t assured – by Courtney Nguyen (si.com) Ruthless Rafa blows away Federer to conquer Rome – by Nathan Williams (sport360.com) Nadal dominates Federer to win in Rome – AP via usatoday.com Rafael Nadal crushes Roger Federer in Italian Open final and races back into the world’s top four – by Simon Briggs (telegraph.co.uk) Entering the Lion’s Lair – Rome semifinal write-ups by Jesse Pentecost (thenextpoint.com) Nadal Grabs No. 4 Seed At Roland Garros – via atpworldtour.com Rafa to play an exhibition in Argentina in late November? (mangle) Rafael Nadal vuelve a la Argentina – looks like it (mangle) Videos/Audio: In case you missed me adding them to the video post, post match interview in English and Spanish Match highlights 2013 Internazionali BNL d’Italia Hot Shot Countdown – the lesson of this video seems to be you have to play really hot shots to win a point against Rafa. Music Montage Of 2013 Internazionali BNL d’Italia – video wrap-up of the tournament Signing autographs after the win. Photos: Inés made screen grabs of the final. Marianne Bevis has some Rafa in Rome photos. Photo set via Zimbio Photos by @Rafaddicted. Rafa does social media: Rafa proven he’s speedy off the court…and that he’s a sponsor’s dream. Social media related to Rafa: Post win Vine Nike salutes Rafa’s win and ponders the future. KIA celebrated Rafa’s win. Since there was so much social media for today, I’m doing this via Storify instead of embedding each tweet. Don’t forget to vote in the poll for which method you prefer. I can’t embed Facebook stories in Storify, so they are above. [View the story "May 19th - Rafa in Social Media" on Storify]
about 9 hours ago
Hi Fedfans. So Roger didn’t end up winning his first Rome title and it was a disappointing display from him, but as I said in my preview post I view this as a freebie match for Roger and I will not go back on my word and bash him f...
Hi Fedfans. So Roger didn’t end up winning his first Rome title and it was a disappointing display from him, but as I said in my preview post I view this as a freebie match for Roger and I will not go back on my word and bash him for not showing up in the final. It wasn’t close, with Nadal breadsticking Roger 6-1, 6-3. It was funny because last night there was a tornado in my town. The power lines got torn up which meant there was no electricity in my town and I couldn’t watch the match. So when I woke up this morning I quickly drove to the next town to find a Wi-Fi spot, where I got a $128 ticket for speeding and I also ended up missing the first set. When I started watching I could immediately see Roger was not into the match. So it cost me $128 to watch the second set of a blow out. Haha! Still I wasn’t very upset. I was disappointed that Roger did not at least try to make the match competitive, but I wasn’t mad. It has been a good week for Roger regardless of what happened in the final, and I won’t let one disappointing match spoil that for me. I honestly though that there was nothing for Roger to lose in this match however, and that he would at least go out there and be competitive and just enjoy it. Even if he then loses it will be better for his confidence than not even trying and being blown off the court. Lets say he plays really well and Nadal wins 6-4 in the third. That is still a really good result and would have given him confidence. But it didn’t work out that way. It was really a lackluster performance from Roger. His whole body language said ‘I don’t want to be here’. So yes I am disappointed that I lost $128 for nothing but in the big picture I am still satisfied. After this performance you feel there is a much slimmer chance that his quarter final streak will be broken at Roland Garros anyway. And he made his first final of the year, including a much needed 60o ranking points. After this loss I hope people understand better when I say that Roger sometimes sub-consciously tanks to avoid Nadal. I don’t think people realize the emotional scars Roger have from matches against Nadal. You have to look no further than the 2006 Rome final which I posted about yesterday to understand that. It is because of matches like that that Roger showed up disinterested today and appears disinterested when he knows Nadal is in his draw. Another important thing to realize is that Nadal is currently in the ascendancy. He has been riding a wave of confidence while Roger has been struggling. In 2012 it was the other way around when they faced off in Indian Wells and that time Roger won 6-3, 6-4. So from that perspective today’s result was pretty much expected. Roger is not in the ascendancy right now. Making the final here is one good result, but it doesn’t mean that Roger 3.0 is back all of a sudden. I mean Nadal has just won his 6th title from 8 finals since his comeback. He is clearly on a serious roll. How he does it I don’t know. He constantly complains about his knee problems and downplays his chances in spite of having won an event 6-8 times and being the clear favorite. He plays year after year and wins tournament after tournament with the most taxing game style in history, but neither tires nor burns out. He also lives in a country where doping has been legal in sport until 2006, and blood bags gets destroyed by court order. The situation borders on the absurd. As a Fedfan you may be disappointed by Roger’s performance today. But let me put things in perspective for you. What does Roger represent as a human being? What does Nadal represent as a human being? Here, let me help you out with that. Let me start with tennis. In tennis Roger is the artist, the lover. He plays for the love of the sport and he is a creator. He creates things on a tennis court that has never been created and he entertains unlike any player in the history of the s
about 9 hours ago
The post Rome rankings are up. Looks the seeding issue for Roland Garros is the total non-issue I’ve thought it was all along. Other than that, the only movement was with Wawrinka dropping back out of the top ten to be replaced by ...
The post Rome rankings are up. Looks the seeding issue for Roland Garros is the total non-issue I’ve thought it was all along. Other than that, the only movement was with Wawrinka dropping back out of the top ten to be replaced by Tipsarevic. Pos Name Points Pos Moved Tourns Played 1 Djokovic, Novak 12,310 0 19 2 Murray, Andy 8,670 0 18 3 Federer, Roger 8,000 0 20 4 Nadal, Rafael 6,895 +1 20 5 Ferrer, David 6,740 -1 26 6 Berdych, Tomas 4,700 0 25 7 Del Potro, Juan Martin 4,320 0 22 8 Tsonga, Jo-Wilfried 3,795 0 25 9 Gasquet, Richard 3,090 0 23 10 Tipsarevic, Janko 2,640 +1 29 In the race for the World Tour Finals, Rafa is #1.
about 9 hours ago