Tennis

(May 21, 2013) Andy Murray has withdrawn from the French Open due to a back injury. The world No. 2 from Scotland had to withdraw from his second round match at the Italian Open last week to Marcel Granollers due to a lower back injury. ...
(May 21, 2013) Andy Murray has withdrawn from the French Open due to a back injury. The world No. 2 from Scotland had to withdraw from his second round match at the Italian Open last week to Marcel Granollers due to a lower back injury. “It’s a really tough decision and I love playing in [...]
39 minutes ago
Top seed Marion Bartoli was a shock early casualty at the WTA Internationaux de Strasbourg as she was beaten in straight sets by Italy's Camila Giorgi.
Top seed Marion Bartoli was a shock early casualty at the WTA Internationaux de Strasbourg as she was beaten in straight sets by Italy's Camila Giorgi.
about 1 hour ago
Serbia's Viktor Troicki came through a tough battle with America's Michael Russell to book his place in the second round of the Power Horse Cup in Dusseldorf.
Serbia's Viktor Troicki came through a tough battle with America's Michael Russell to book his place in the second round of the Power Horse Cup in Dusseldorf.
about 1 hour ago
The home players enjoyed a good day at the Open de Nice Cote d'Azur on Monday as Gael Monfils, Paul-Henri Mathieu and Guillaume Rufin all advanced to round two with victories.
The home players enjoyed a good day at the Open de Nice Cote d'Azur on Monday as Gael Monfils, Paul-Henri Mathieu and Guillaume Rufin all advanced to round two with victories.
about 1 hour ago
Frenchman Gael Monfils and Italy's Fabio Fognini made successful opening bids in Nice, as round 1 wraps up.
Frenchman Gael Monfils and Italy's Fabio Fognini made successful opening bids in Nice, as round 1 wraps up.
about 2 hours ago
1) I don't like the word "favourite", but the fact is Serena goes into RG several leagues above even her two closest 'rivals' - a term that's beginning to make increasingly less sense even notionally.I had a sense Masha and Vika were mak...
1) I don't like the word "favourite", but the fact is Serena goes into RG several leagues above even her two closest 'rivals' - a term that's beginning to make increasingly less sense even notionally.I had a sense Masha and Vika were making modest advancements in their recent encounters with her, but Madrid and Rome clearly show otherwise. Failing an early letdown - she's typically slow off the mark which can prove serious even in cases far less severe than last year's Razzano meltdown - it's difficult, as of now, to see her losing to anyone. Or, to put it another way, a "disrespectful" top 50 upstart (not necessarily even a "sensation") would appear to have a greater chance of springing an upset in week one than either one of Vika and Masha would of maybe even keeping things competitive in week two.2) However much Rafa may be the "favourite" (he'll doubtless suggest otherwise), he remains, unlike Serena, vulnerable to his closest rival on clay.Novak's early losses and the confidence Rafa's sure to accrue in a comeback that now includes 6 wins in 8 consecutive finals (has shot him to the top of the Race, and only really "lacks" a win over Novak), may render even that concern into something less worrying. His surreal proficiency on his preferred surface was perhaps more evident in the latter stages of Rome than at any other time during his comeback and particularly in that eye-watering first set he played against Berdych. But the fact remains that Novak is the one player with a M1000 win over him on clay this season and the only player I can see staying with him over five sets.3) I don't know what peculiar metaphysical alchemy takes place when Federer plays Nadal but, on clay at least, it now feels like we're well beyond talk of lefty forehands being viciously spun high into single handed backhands, or of analysis itself. There's nothing wrong with this 'post-analysis' analysis. It can be immensely liberating. But it means one has to stop floating 7 year old theories like Federer stubbornly refusing to change the size of his racquet as the meaning of life; or the very unique pressure Rafa puts him under to hit big as the primary cause of more and more rash errors which, though somewhat true, mostly feels like a way to avoid confronting reality.The closest Fed ever got to solving this problem was also in Rome 7 years ago in the final, my personal favourite of their many encounters (even Wimbledon 08). You could describe the two match points he blew then (11:50 in the above clip) as "pressure to hit big/end the point" - that certainly wasn't what I saw this weekend.Instead, I saw him adrift, spiritually disconnected from proceedings, in a way which transcends talk of shanks, focus and match-ups. Rafa doesn't just possess obvious tactical advantages over him, he seems to embezzle the core of his very soul on a clay court, leaving him a facsimile of the player he only thinks, rather than believes, he should be.Glass half full: reaches a final and back at #6 in the ATP Race in his second event back. Half empty: not much in the way of serious match practice (Gilles Simon at #17 was his highest ranked opponent prior to the final) and his last pre-RG memory of competition on a clay court will be of another annihilation at the hands of one Rafael Nadal. He's Roger Federer. He'll make the second week - if for no other reason than that the GS format of 5 sets with a day off in between works to his advantage by allowing him to drop a set now and again whilst continuing to play himself into form (Serena has no such luxury). Beyond that, I'm just not buying into the pessimism I'm already seeing because, quite simply, none of the problems described above vs. Rafa apply to Djokovic. If Djokovic, or for that matter anyone, beats him, age will certainly factor into it, but it will essentially be about their having played a better match rather than any specific technical incompatibility or uniquely spiritual angst.There may well be a universe in
about 3 hours ago
“She plays like the ones I didn’t like to play so much, like Serena, or Lindsay Davenport.”—Martina Hingis, 2013 International Tennis Hall of Fame inductee and rookie coach, on her protégé, Anastasia...
“She plays like the ones I didn’t like to play so much, like Serena, or Lindsay Davenport.”—Martina Hingis, 2013 International Tennis Hall of Fame inductee and rookie coach, on her protégé, Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova. We’re accustomed to coaches pumping up their players, but when that coach was No. 1 at age 16 on the strength of the three Grand Slam singles titles she earned in 1997, it adds a heavy dose of credibility to her comments—even if Hingis does have her work cut out with the spectacularly talented but sometimes mortifyingly inconsistent Pavlyuchenkova. I’m not sure that the comparison with Serena Williams extends much beyond the fact that both players have a surfeit of power. Pavlyuchenkova is just 21, but she hasn’t approached her career-high singles ranking of No. 13 earned in July 2011. At a comparable age, Williams was already a Grand Slam champ (she won the U.S. Open at a Hingis-like 17 years of age), while Pavlyuchenkova’s best result at a major thus far has been a pair of quarterfinals in 2011. The Davenport comparison is more convincing, not just because Pavlyuchenkova has a comparable platform. She’s thickly built, and while she’s four inches shorter than Davenport, she’s still well on the tall side at 5’10”. Pavlyuchenkova hits a very clean ball, but seems to have some flaws in her competitive make-up. While Davenport had enormous, consistent success, she often disappointed her most devout fans with surprisingly ineffective performances in Grand Slam events. She was the year-end No. 1 four different times, but won “only” three Grand Slam titles, plus an Olympic gold medal in singles. Hingis also said that coaching Pavlyuchenkova has been a pleasure because the Russian is “a good listener,” and that too is reminiscent of Davenport, an intelligent, perceptive player and commentator who’s gone on to be a valuable asset in the Tennis Channel commentary booth. Still, given the extent to which Pavlyuchenkova has been spinning her wheels for almost two years now, you have to wonder if she’s ever going to justify the strong praise heaped on her by Hingis. The upcoming French Open may give us some clues. Pavlyuchenkova began working with Hingis this year, and she’s steadily climbed from No. 36 to her present ranking of No. 19. She’s been in three finals already—Brisbane (where she lost to Serena), Monterrey, and Oeiras—the latter two victories, both on the same red clay she’ll find underfoot at Roland Garros next week. But be warned—Pavlyuchenkova has taken some losses that are truly head-scratchers, less because of the opponent than how poorly she competed. In Rome last week, she lost to No. 44 Romina Oprandi, 6-2, 6-0. At Kuala Lumpur she fell to No. 197 Bethanie Mattek-Sands, 6-4, 6-1. And in her next event, Indian Wells, she dropped a 7-5, 6-1 decision to No. 69 Johanna Larsson. After losing to Serena in Brisbane, she told the champ: “I don’t know how to play tennis when I play against you.” Unfortunately for Pavlyuchenkova, she can make that same statement against other players at unexpected times. Hingis’ main challenge will be ironing out the peaks and valleys, and showing her protégé how to be a competitor as well as a huge talent.
about 3 hours ago
BRUSSELS OPEN Brussels, Belgium May 20-25, 2013 $690,000/Premier Red Clay/Outdoors Results – Tuesday, May 21, 2013 No matches completed due to rain Order Of Play – Wednesday, May 22, 2013 Center Court (from 10.00hrs) 1. Kaia ...
BRUSSELS OPEN Brussels, Belgium May 20-25, 2013 $690,000/Premier Red Clay/Outdoors Results – Tuesday, May 21, 2013 No matches completed due to rain Order Of Play – Wednesday, May 22, 2013 Center Court (from 10.00hrs) 1. Kaia Kanepi vs. Dominika Cibulkova 2. Sofia Arvidsson vs. Peng Shuai (NB 11.00hrs) 3. Yanina Wickmayer vs. Jamie Hampton 4. [...]
about 4 hours ago
RESULTS – TUESDAY, 21 MAY, 2013 Singles – First Round [6] F Fognini (ITA) d [Q] M Cecchinato (ITA) 16 61 62 P Mathieu (FRA) d [LL] R Harrison (USA) 64 64 [Q] S Stakhovsky (UKR) d [Q] R Dutra Silva (BRA) 62 63 [WC] G Monfils (...
RESULTS – TUESDAY, 21 MAY, 2013 Singles – First Round [6] F Fognini (ITA) d [Q] M Cecchinato (ITA) 16 61 62 P Mathieu (FRA) d [LL] R Harrison (USA) 64 64 [Q] S Stakhovsky (UKR) d [Q] R Dutra Silva (BRA) 62 63 [WC] G Monfils (FRA) d S Giraldo (COL) 46 63 63 [...]
about 4 hours ago
INTERNATIONAUX DE STRASBOURG Strasbourg, France May 20-25, 2013 $235,000/International Red Clay/Outdoors Results - Tuesday, May 21, 2013 Singles – First Round Camila Giorgi (ITA) d. (1) Marion Bartoli (FRA) 63 62 (WC) Virginie Razz...
INTERNATIONAUX DE STRASBOURG Strasbourg, France May 20-25, 2013 $235,000/International Red Clay/Outdoors Results - Tuesday, May 21, 2013 Singles – First Round Camila Giorgi (ITA) d. (1) Marion Bartoli (FRA) 63 62 (WC) Virginie Razzano (FRA) d. (2) Tamira Paszek (AUT) 61 64 (3) AlizĂ© Cornet (FRA) d. Mathilde Johansson (FRA) 63 62 (4) Hsieh Su-Wei [...]
about 5 hours ago