Tennis

BRUSSELS OPEN Brussels, Belgium May 20-25, 2013 $690,000/Premier Red Clay/Outdoors Results - Wednesday, May 22, 2013 Singles – Second Round Zheng Jie (CHN) d. (1/WC) Caroline Wozniacki (DEN) 62 64 (4) Sloane Stephens (USA) d. (Q) Z...
BRUSSELS OPEN Brussels, Belgium May 20-25, 2013 $690,000/Premier Red Clay/Outdoors Results - Wednesday, May 22, 2013 Singles – Second Round Zheng Jie (CHN) d. (1/WC) Caroline Wozniacki (DEN) 62 64 (4) Sloane Stephens (USA) d. (Q) Zhang Shuai (CHN) 64 60 Romina Oprandi (SUI) d. (6) Julia Goerges (GER) 63 ret. (right wrist injury) (7) Varvara Lepchenko (USA) d. (WC) Elena Baltacha (GBR) 62 60 (8) Peng Shuai (CHN) d. Olga Govortsova (BLR) 46 76(4) 76(4) Kaia Kanepi (EST) d. Jana Cepelova (SVK) 63 63 Suspended due to darkness (2) Roberta Vinci (ITA) is tied with (Q) Yulia Putintseva (KAZ) 63 57 Singles – First Round Kaia Kanepi (EST) d. (3) Dominika Cibulkova (SVK) 64 76(6) (4) Sloane Stephens (USA) d. Tsvetana Pironkova (BUL) 63 26 63 (5) Kirsten Flipkens (BEL) d. Madison Keys (USA) 64 16 62 (6) Julia Goerges (GER) d. (LL) Coco Vandeweghe (USA) 61 75 (8) Peng Shuai (CHN) d. Sofia Arvidsson (SWE) 63 60 Romina Oprandi (SUI) d. (Q) Melanie Oudin (USA) 62 62 Zheng Jie (CHN) d. (Q) Mallory Burdette (USA) 62 46 63 Jamie Hampton (USA) d. Yanina Wickmayer (BEL) 16 63 64 (Q) Yulia Putintseva (KAZ) d. (WC) Alison Van Uytvanck (BEL) 61 60 (Q) Zhang Shuai (CHN) d. Magdalena Rybarikova (SVK) 61 63 Doubles – First Round (2) Groenefeld/Peschke (GER/CZE) d. Craybas/Vandeweghe (USA/USA) 62 63 Dabrowski/Peer (CAN/ISR) d. (3) Chan/Jurak (TPE/CRO) 61 64 (4) Govortsova/Rosolska (BLR/POL) d. Czink/Jovanovski (HUN/SRB) 61 61 Melnikova/Sasnovich (RUS/BLR) d. Kapshay/Kondratieva (UKR/RUS) 63 75 Order Of Play - Thursday, May 23, 2013 Center Court (from 10.30hrs) 1. Kirsten Flipkens vs. Jamie Hampton 2. Yulia Putintseva vs. Roberta Vinci (tbc; NB 11.30hrs) 3. Zheng Jie vs. Romina Oprandi (NB 12.00hrs) 4. Sloane Stephens vs. Peng Shuai 5. [Kirsten Flipkens or Jamie Hampton] vs. [Yulia Putintseva or Roberta Vinci] 6. Varvara Lepchenko vs. Kaia Kanepi Court 1 (from 11.30hrs) 1. Klemenschits/Klepac vs. Groenefeld/Peschke 2. Melnikova/Sasnovich vs. Govortsova/Rosolska (NB 12.30hrs) 3. Mirza/Zheng vs. Dekmeijere/Kalashnikova (after suitable rest) 4. Dabrowski/Peer vs. Flipkens/Rybarikova (after suitable rest)
USA
35 minutes ago
INTERNATIONAUX DE STRASBOURG Strasbourg, France May 20-25, 2013 $235,000/International Red Clay/Outdoors Results - Wednesday, May 22, 2013 Singles – Second Round (3) Alizé Cornet (FRA) d. (Q) Magda Linette (POL) 63 64 Misaki Doi (J...
INTERNATIONAUX DE STRASBOURG Strasbourg, France May 20-25, 2013 $235,000/International Red Clay/Outdoors Results - Wednesday, May 22, 2013 Singles – Second Round (3) Alizé Cornet (FRA) d. (Q) Magda Linette (POL) 63 64 Misaki Doi (JPN) d. (4) Hsieh Su-Wei (TPE) 64 46 76(3) Anna Tatishvili (GEO) d. (5) Monica Niculescu (ROU) 46 63 62 (7) Chanelle Scheepers (RSA) d. (Q) Shelby Rogers (USA) 26 63 64 Johanna Larsson (SWE) d. (WC) Virginie Razzano (FRA) 63 63 Eugenie Bouchard (CAN) d. Camila Giorgi (ITA) 63 60 Lucie Hradecka (CZE) d. Lauren Davis (USA) 62 62 (Q) Flavia Pennetta (ITA) d. María-Teresa Torró-Flor (ESP) 62 63 Doubles – First Round Bouchard/Pekhova (CAN/BLR) d. (1) Hantuchova/Hradecka (SVK/CZE) w/o (Hantuchova: right shoulder injury) (2) Grandin/Uhlirova (RSA/CZE) d. Domachowska/Torró-Flor (POL/ESP) 61 63 (4) Date-Krumm/Scheepers (JPN/RSA) d. (WC) Feuerstein/Michel (FRA/SUI) 63 63 McHale/Moulton-Levy (USA/USA) d. (WC) Garcia/Johansson (FRA/FRA) 64 61 Order Of Play – Thursday, May 23, 2013 Central (from 11.00hrs) 1. Eugenie Bouchard vs. Anna Tatishvili 2. Alizé Cornet vs. Chanelle Scheepers (NB 13.00hrs) 3. Flavia Pennetta vs. Misaki Doi 4. Lucie Hradecka vs. Johanna Larsson (NB 17.30hrs) Court 1 (from 12.00hrs) 1. Maria/Paszek vs. Grandin/Uhlirova 2. Bouchard/Pekhova vs. Barrois/Buryachok (after suitable rest) 3. McHale/Moulton-Levy vs. Date-Krumm/Scheepers (after suitable rest) Court 2 (from 13.00hrs) 1. Black/Erakovic vs. Linette/Piter
USA
39 minutes ago
Far away from the spotlight and massive crowds of the biggest events in tennis, the sport’s other half lives. The second-tier of professional tennis features players with a variety of interesting histories, each one different from ...
Far away from the spotlight and massive crowds of the biggest events in tennis, the sport’s other half lives. The second-tier of professional tennis features players with a variety of interesting histories, each one different from the next. There are the juniors looking to make the transition to the senior tour; the battle-tested journeymen who’ve slogged away at this level for one tournament too long; and finally, the veterans looking for their one shot back in the sun. Although they come from different places, they have one thing in common. Often, the qualifying competition for main tour events takes place in the shadow of some of the world’s biggest stadiums. The average fan would do well to recognize more than a handful of names who compete week-in and week-out on the second circuit; these are players who first chase their dreams in the “tournament before the tournament.” Just getting in to the main event is enough for some of them, but not all of them. Both Flavia Pennetta and Andrea Petkovic know what it’s like to win on the biggest stages. Combined, they have won 11 WTA singles titles, reached six quarterfinals in grand slam events and spent time in the world’s top 10. Both are also coming off of injury plagued 2012 seasons; Petkovic first suffered a back injury during the early part of the year, and then was sidelined with an ankle injury for much of the rest of it. Pennetta, who suffered from a wrist injury for the majority of the past year, tried to play through the pain to get one more chance at representing Italy at the Olympics. She did just that, and made the third round. However, she eventually decided to undergo surgery and missed the rest of the year. Coming into this week, Petkovic was ranked 138 while Pennetta sat at 158. Both missed the first major of the year at the Australian Open, and their clay court preparation for the second major of the year brought them down decidedly different paths. Pennetta dropped nearly 50 places in the rankings after failing to defend last year’s quarterfinal showing in Rome. Neither woman’s current ranking would’ve been good enough to ensure a main draw place in Paris. Despite the similarities, there is one notable difference between the two. Pennetta took advantage of a protected ranking, ensuring her entry into Roland Garros. As a result, she was able to enter the warmup event with arguably the weakest field this week in Strasbourg. Forced to qualify, the Italian went about her business to win three matches and make the main draw; she nearly didn’t, however, as she was forced to rally from a set down in her final qualifying match. She continued her solid week with wins over Elina Svitolina and Maria-Teresa Torro-Flor. The weather wreaked havoc with the schedule, and Pennetta is the lowest-ranked, but by far the most accomplished, player in the quarterfinals. Having won just three singles matches since her comeback in Bogota, Pennetta’s five wins so far this week have given the Italian the crucial match practice that she needs coming off of an injury. Unfortunately, Petkovic did not have that luxury. The German, who returned in Indian Wells, started her clay-court campaign with two wins in Charleston before giving a walkover to Caroline Wozniacki in the third round. A wildcard recipient in Stuttgart, Petkovic lost her opener to Ana Ivanovic and lost her first match in Madrid qualifying to the on-form Bethanie Mattek-Sands. Passed over for a wildcard into Rome, Petkovic arrived in Paris short on red-clay match play and this showed in her attempt to qualify. After defeating Nadiya Kichenok in straight sets in the opening round, she fell by a tough 6-7(1) 7-6(2) 6-4 decision to unheralded Yi-Miao Zhou. They say the last thing to come back after an injury layoff is match instincts. A player can do all the right things in practice, but it’s nearly impossible to replicate the tense situations that come with being do
about 2 hours ago
Johanna Konta's hopes of making the main draw at the French Open have been dashed after she was knocked out in the second round of qualifying.
Johanna Konta's hopes of making the main draw at the French Open have been dashed after she was knocked out in the second round of qualifying.
about 5 hours ago
Third seed Juan Monaco booked a spot in the semifinals with a win over Tobias Kamke early Thursday. The Argentine is joined by 6th seed Jarkko Nieminen, who passed into the final four after Tommy Haas withdrew due to illness.
Third seed Juan Monaco booked a spot in the semifinals with a win over Tobias Kamke early Thursday. The Argentine is joined by 6th seed Jarkko Nieminen, who passed into the final four after Tommy Haas withdrew due to illness.
about 5 hours ago
Maria Kirilenko is on the cover of the June 2013 issue of the Russian edition of Women's Health. The 26-year-old tennis star is beautifully working her relatively new blonder-than-before hair. Maria's most recent tournament wa...
Maria Kirilenko is on the cover of the June 2013 issue of the Russian edition of Women's Health. The 26-year-old tennis star is beautifully working her relatively new blonder-than-before hair. Maria's most recent tournament was the Internazionali BNL d'Italia in Rome, which she had to leave with an unfortunate left knee injury in the round of 16 against Sara Errani. The Russian is now enjoying a week off and she's expected to rejoin the WTA action in time for the French Open which starts on May 26th. (via The Slice)
about 8 hours ago
13-year-old Pasquale Procaccino looking to make a difference (May 22, 2013) A standout player at the Junior Tennis Champions Center in College Park, MD, 13-year-old Pasquale Procaccino is looking to make a difference in the tennis commun...
13-year-old Pasquale Procaccino looking to make a difference (May 22, 2013) A standout player at the Junior Tennis Champions Center in College Park, MD, 13-year-old Pasquale Procaccino is looking to make a difference in the tennis community. As he likes to say, “playing tennis, hitting the ball, sharing with others is lots of fun and is great for helping focus on all parts of life.” And one of Pasquale’s goals is to share that fun with kids of all ages and backgrounds. So when – as part of the Junior Tennis Champions Center outreach program called “Game On” – he found himself teaching his peers tennis on courts that were cracked, full of weeds and covered with trash, he decided to act. Pasquale has organized a fundraiser on Friday evening, May 24th, 2013 at the Royal Restaurant in Old Town Alexandria (734 N St. Asaph St, Alexandria, VA 22314 (703) 548-1616) to help fund expanding the “Game On” program to more locations in the greater Washington, DC area, and then eventually to repair and resurface those courts that first motivated him to act. The owners of the restaurant said they will contribute a portion of dinner sales from other diners that evening not related to the fundraiser to help the cause. “It seemed like such a good experience for them,” Pasquale said of his time with his peers. “If they could plan on nicer courts, enjoy nicer equipment, they could enjoy it much more.” The Junior Tennis Champions Center inspires kids to become champions on and off the court with the “Game On” outreach program, which teaches tennis to inner city children ages 5 – 12. Tennis is more than just life itself, it is life. The discipline, commitment, focus, and desire we need to become successful in life mirrors the skills you must have to become a successful on the courts. The JTTC is located at the Tennis Center at College Park, Md., a USTA Regional Training Center. It is also the home of the University of Maryland tennis teams. The award-winning facility is recognized as one of the most comprehensive tennis venues in the United States. Pasquale has been training at the TCCP in the Champs program after school for 3 years and regularly competes in Mid-Atlantic junior tournaments.  He attends Burgundy Farm Country Day School in Alexandria and will graduate from the 8th grade this spring.  He will attend TCCP full time next year and plans to enter T.C. Williams High School in the fall of 2014.  In addition to his strong commitment to tennis, Pasquale is an avid piano player, participating in festivals and competitions several times a year.
about 10 hours ago
©Colette Lewis 2013-- Urbana, IL The Central Illinois weather gods answered the prayers of everyone involved in the NCAA Division I Team Tournament, with no rain delays in the six days of... For the complete story, click on ...
©Colette Lewis 2013-- Urbana, IL The Central Illinois weather gods answered the prayers of everyone involved in the NCAA Division I Team Tournament, with no rain delays in the six days of... For the complete story, click on the title of the post to go to zootennis.com
about 14 hours ago
Next thing you know, there'll be telephones that let you know the weather and keep up with sports scores around the world!So as you've noticed, I haven't posted here in a minute. I've still been writing elsewhere, like on Tennis View's w...
Next thing you know, there'll be telephones that let you know the weather and keep up with sports scores around the world!So as you've noticed, I haven't posted here in a minute. I've still been writing elsewhere, like on Tennis View's website. I plan on being here more, though, with the blogger app. This is my first of many (I hope!) posts using my iPhone. A busy man needs tech for busy times!Anyway, stay tuned!
about 16 hours ago
Rafa interview and practice footage from today: Posted by molvi1501. Articles: Rafatigue? Nadal’s dominance on clay never gets old; more mail – by Jon Wertheim (si.com) The Rally: 2013 French Open – tennis.com pundits...
Rafa interview and practice footage from today: Posted by molvi1501. Articles: Rafatigue? Nadal’s dominance on clay never gets old; more mail – by Jon Wertheim (si.com) The Rally: 2013 French Open – tennis.com pundits Tignor and Bodo be pundity. Rafael Nadal ¡¡¡sorprendente!!!. Palma del Río, el mejor ITF Future de España. – Rafa praise and concern for the future of Spanish tennis from Toni Colom (mangle). French Open build-up: Who’s hot and who’s not? – via thetennisspace.com French Open preview: Can anyone stop Nadal or Djokovic lifting the trophy in Paris? – by Alex Kay (dailymail.co.uk) A chance to play Poker with Rafa in Paris? (mangle) Videos/Audio: Rafa practiced in Manacor today and spoke to iB3 afterwards. A longer version of the above. Cute animated KIA promo. Region blocked like me? Inés comes to the rescue. 2013 French Open: 5 Men Who Can Beat Nadal – overwrought voice-over of doom! Doom! Photos: Marianne Bevis has added some photos from the Rome final to her Rafa set. Social media related to Rafa: Rafa on the cover of Tenis World magazine. [View the story "May 22nd - Rafa in Social Media" on Storify] Other stuff: Want to go down an Australian Open tennis Memory Lane? The vault is open.
about 17 hours ago