• Atlanta Day 3 Round up

    Atlanta Day 3 Round up
    Atlanta
    Thanks to http://www.newstimes.com

    It was a mixed day for the seeded players at the BB&T Atlanta Open. 2009 U.S Open Series champion and ninth seed Sam Querrey was upset by Dudi Sela 6-2, 6-4. The Israeli’s return game was too good for Querrey who managed only 53 percent of his first serves in and could only stand by and watch as Sela won 77 percent of points on his second serve.

    The other upset seed was sixth seeded Denis Istomin who was beaten 5-7, 6-1, 6-4 by 91st ranked Lukas Lacko in a context that saw ten breaks of serve.

    Seeds who did make it through to the last eight were Vasek Pospisil (4), who beat Illya Marchenko 7-5, 6-3, and Yen-Hsun Lu (7) who beat American Alex Kuznetsov 6-4, 6-4.

    Jack Sock also made it through to his fifth ATP quarter-final of 2014 when he beat 349th ranked Michael Venus 6-4, 6-2. Sock will face Lacko in the next round.

  • Atlanta Open Day 2 Round-up

    Atlanta Open Day 2 Round-up
    Atlanta Open
    Jack Sock at the net in Atlanta (Thanks to zimbio.com)

    The second day of the BT&T Atlanta Open was a smooth one as far as the seeds on show were concerned. Sixth seed Denis Istomin won, beating Rajeev Ram 6-1, 6-4. The other seed playing was Marinko Matosevic who beat Victor Estrella Burgos 6-0, 6-2.

    The big match of the day in terms of home crowd excitement was the victory of Robby Ginepri, the American 2005 U.S Open semi-finalist, over Sergiy Stakhovsky who made his name knocking Roger Federer out of the second round of Wimbledon in 2013. Ginepri won 7-6(3), 3-6, 6-0. Ginepri will play top seeded compatriot John Isner in the next round.

    Another American through was Jack Sock who beat Alejandro Gonzalez 6-2, 6-4. Tim Smyczek also made the round of 16 when he thrashed Ryan Harrison 6-0, 6-2.

    Other winners were Benjamin Becker, Lukas Lacko, Illya Marchenko and Thiemo de Bakker.

    Follow the U.S Open series with The Tennis Review

  • Tomas Berydch jokes about Tennis player’s time-keeping between points

    Tomas Berydch jokes about Tennis player’s time-keeping between points
    Berdych
    Courtesy of Tomas Berdych

    Tomas Berdych is quite the funny man. Here is his latest joking around when he compares some of the players on the tour to tortoises when it comes to keeping time between points. Wonder who he means?

  • Is Bernard Tomic Back?

    Is Bernard Tomic Back?
    Tomic
    Thanks to http://www.holaciudad.com

    Bernard Tomic beat Ivo Karlovic 7-6, 3-6, 7-6 to win the ATP 250 Bogota Open Sunday. Does this mean that the once hailed Future of tennis is back?

    The last couple of months have seen various young players thrown into the mix in discussions as to who will be the future stars of the ATP. Dimtrov, Thiem, Nishikori, Raonic, Pospisil, Vesely, and just last week 17 year old Zverev entered the fray. All have been profiled, analysed, and hailed. But one name, once very much seen as the future of tennis, has been missing-Bernard Tomic.

    Tomic, who won the Australian Open and U.S Open junior titles, used to be the leader of the pack, and, never short of confidence, claimed he would one day be the world No.1  But his name has been missing from somewhere very important when it comes to leading any pack of any kind-the upper echelons of the rankings. Last week, Tomic was ranked 124, almost a 100 place drop from his career high of 27.

    That high came in June 2012 after a 12 month period in which Tomic made the Wimbledon last eight, and the fourth round of the Australian Open.

    It was not long after though that the rot set in for Tomic as one disaster followed another. The young star was vilified after being suspected of tanking in his second round loss to Andy Roddick at the U.S Open by his own countrymen Rafter and Cash.

    Ending the season with a 26-27 record, Tomic managed to pull himself together for the start of 2013, winning the title in Sydney and making the third round in Melbourne.

    But in May, Tomic was set back by more controversy as his father punched his hitting partner, an incident which got him column inche for all the wrong reasons again. Tomic still made the last sixteen at Wimbledon, but he would not be able to string together two consecutive victories the rest of the season.

    2014, like the start of 2013, also appeared brighter for Tomic as he made the Sydney final. However until his win in Bogota, Tomic went 3-9. His Wimbledon performance though was a good one, going out again to Berdych in four sets.

    Bogota could be a turnaround for Tomic. Now ranked 70, he will at least get direct entry into the US Open and can focus on the upcoming US Open Series.

    The youngster,with his big serve and great hands, has all the tools to do live up to his potential. But with his liking for nightclubbing, a colorful family life, and an at-times questionable competitive spirit, whether or not he can do it is still up for debate.

    However, performances like his beating Karlovic in a final set tiebreaker in the Bogota final, victories like he has had over Verdasco at the Australian Open 2012, and his last eight performance and last sixteen performances at slams suggest if he can get it together, he can get back up there in the mix. Right now, with other young star’s names being bandied about as the ATP’s future, Tomic is going to have to work hard to get back where he used to be and get up to where he has always said he belongs.

    Commentary by Christian Deverille

  • Why the U.S Open Series Rocks

    Why the U.S Open Series Rocks
    U.S Open Series
    Thanks to http://www.tennisfashioncritic.com

    The U.S Open Series starts Monday. The Series, made up of nine events spread out over five weeks of tournaments climaxing in the U.S Open, is well worth celebrating for numerous reasons.

    Fans get plenty of tennis:

    First and foremost, tennis fans get seven weeks of hard court tennis, on the surface that is perhaps the fairest of them all, rewarding offensive, defensive and all-court play.

    It makes sense:

    The tennis season, to be frank, is a mess. Other than the clay court season, none of it makes sense: the first slam starting three weeks into the season with barely any warm ups; the big hard court Masters in Indian Wells and Miami coming after; two weeks between the French and Wimbledon, and the mish-mash of outdoor and indoor hard-court events that makes up the anti-climatic season end.

    So, just as with the clay court season, it is nice to have the US Open Series. It make a professional sport look, well, professional. Tennis is competing with Football, Basketball, Ice-hockey, Baseball and American Football  for the attention of sports fans. The more organised and easy to follow it is, the more new fans will jump on board. Tennis does not need casual fans or those new to the sport wondering why there are some random clay court events after the grass and why the end of the season has a mix of outdoors and indoors events with no big final hurrah. It needs fans to see it looking as professional as it can, which means being organised, in order to get them spending their time nodding their head in approval, and not scratching it.

    The players get some prep and we get some good play at the Open:

    Players need the prep for the filthy hot conditions the U.S Open will be competed in, plus it helps to get back into the swing of  things on hard after the grueling clay court season and the bitty grass court ‘season.’

    And, as a result of the Series, the U.S Open has produced some of the best slam matches in recent years, such as the Djokovic-Federer semis in ’10 and ’11, the Murray-Djokovic ’12 final, the Del Potro versus Federer final in ’09, and the Serena Williams-Vika Azarenka ’12 and ’13 finals. The latter rivalry between Williams and Azarenka on hard courts has developed into the most intriguing one in women’s tennis, a welcome addition to a tour on which rivalry was becoming an obselete term.

    It motivates the big players to turn up:

    Hard courts are hard on the body, especially the joints, and the North American summer is brutally hot and humid, so there are plenty of reasons to skip a few U.S hard-court summer events, especially if you have already tasted some glory earlier in the season and need some rest. But with a leaderboard to climb and some checks to cash, the body can recover in some nice hot tub by a beach even more decadently come mid-September. Players like Federer, Williams, Nadal, and Djokovic, who win the most matches and play the least events, have all put in time and won the series, no doubt driven by adding some more prestige to their resumes. And the possibility of adding a million dollars to their U.S Open prizemoney, should they win both the Series and the Open, is probably somewhat of a draw.

    Lesser known players can thrive:

    By lesser-known, this mean players who casual tennis fans might not be too aware of. For example, Elena Dementieva, Sam Querrey, and Mardy Fish, all of whom have won the series, and won a few column inches as the sports media profile them. The last two names, Querrey and Fish, are particularly important as tennis in the U.S wanes on the men’s front, so any male player doing well, and being handsomely rewarded, will encourage a few youngsters to pick up a racket and work towards the same.

    With all the pros of the U.S Open series, it is hard to figure out why the rest of the tour does not get itself together and in shape. Imagine how Wimbledon and the Australian Open would be, too, if they were preceded by such a lead-up? The former, in particular, would benefit as there might be less early exits from the big names and better play overall as players adjusted to the surface.

    But that’s the stuff of further debate. For now, as the U.S Open Series gets ready to serve up seven weeks of tennis, tennis fans have some popcorn to microwave, some sofas to sink into and some serious hard-court tennis to enjoy.

     Follow the U.S Open Series with The tennis review.

  • Five Great Things about Lindsay Davenport

    Five Great Things about Lindsay Davenport

     Davenport

    Thanks to panoranews.com

    Lindsay Davenport was inducted into the hall of fame last weekend. A very deserving induction indeed. Here are five reasons why:

    She turned her body and career around:

    She went from being criticized for being overweight to being one of the fittest women on the tour.

    Davenport
    Thanks to http://www.businessinsider.com

    That took dedication, some fight and passion to transform herself the way she did. Doing so transformed her career, too. She went from being a potential threat to carrying out and causing damage at the big ones.

    She won 3 Majors:

    She won her first final, too, beating the best player of the time, Martina Hingis, at the 1998 US Open in straight sets.

    Davenport
    Thanks to wtatennis,com

    She followed that up with the ’99 Wimbledon title, beating none other than the seven time champion and recently crowned French Open winner, Steffi Graf.

    Davenport
    Thanks to wtatennis.com

    Next up was the ’00 Australian Open title, once again beating then defending champion Hingis. Each title was won with the clean hitting, clinical fashion of someone who, as she said in her Hall of fame induction, striking the hell out of the ball just came easy.

    Davenport
    Thanks to filmovizia.blogspot.com

    Not only did she win three Majors, but she was the player to beat in many more, coming runner up twice at Wimbledon, once at the US Open and once in Melbourne. That last defeat was the only one that ever cast a cloud over her reputation for giving her all, when after leading Serena Williams by a set and a break she failed to win another game, seemingly melting down once Williams got her teeth into the match.

    But the doubts did not last long. Her performance at the following Wimbledon where she lost the final 7-9 in the third to Venus Williams put her right up there as one of her generation’s greatest competitors.

    She competed in probably one of the best grand slam finals of all time:

    Davenport had match point against Venus Williams in the ’05 Wimbledon final, and it took the two time former champion’s athleticism and shot-making to play her way back into the match and take it in an epic third, the longest final in the history of the ladies’ singles at SW19. For 2hrs and 45 mins, tennis spectators were treated to the very best the women’s game had to offer, and when it was over, it was truly a case of neither player deserving to lose. There was though only one name engraved on the champion’s roll of honor, but there will always be two names mentioned when anyone discusses what went on before that name was carved.

    She was number One on the WTA rankings:

    For 98 weeks, and on 8 separate occasions from Oct. ’98 to her final stint which ended Jan.26 ’06. She also ended 4 season’s as the year end number One. That is impressive stuff considering Graf, Hingis, Venus, Serena, Henin, Clijsters, and Capriati, all number ones and slam winners in that time frame, were competing for points.

    She is, and has always been, a great ambassador to her sport:

    Davenport
    Thanks to sw19-2005.blogspot.com

    Always smiling,  gracious and as professional as they come, Davenport has represented tennis as well as anyone. In her capacity now as a commentator, though she may ‘throw shade’ now and then, her insight is second to none. Olympic winner, Fed Cup winner, it has not always just been about the slams but the team effort, too. Representing herself, her country, her sport, Davenport has always been a great ambassador for a sport she says she loves, and which her participation in has earned her a fair amount of love, too.

    The tennis review can think of five reasons why Lindsay Davenport deserves her place in the Hall of fame. Is there anything Lindsay fans would like to add?

     

     

  • Wimbledon review

    Wimbledon review
    wimbledon
    Thanks to sports.ndtv.com

    Man of the tournament:

    Novak Djokovic. A winner has probably never had another player run them so close in this department as Djokovic was by Federer, but the Serbian has to get it for the way he dug deep to take charge of the fifth set at 4-4 and win his first slam since the 2013 Australian Open.

    Woman of the tournament

    Petra Kvitova. From the third round on, once Serena was out, the tournament was Kvitova’s. And with the beautiful controlled grass court tennis, with ever such a hint of rage about it, who knows, she might have only allowed Williams the same number of games she did Bouchard.

    Match of the tournament (men’s)

    Djokovic Vs. Federer. Slams need these kind of five set battles in the finals. The very best fighting to the death. Enough has been written about this match but let’s just say don’t be surprised to see it top best of the year lists come December.

    Match of the tournament (women’s)

    Cornet Vs Williams. Cornet’s creativity and flair, and most pleasing of all, fight, came to the fore as she outthought and outfought Serena Williams in the third round.

    Performance of the tournament (men)

    Cilic Vs Berdych. Cilic hit 20 aces and 46 winners to 27 errors as he took out the 2010 finalist and sixth seed in straight sets in the third round.

    Performance of the tournament (women)

    Petra Kvitova beat Venus Williams. It was a serving performance like none other from Kvitova as she saw off the five time champ 6-4 in the third.

    Shock of the tournament (men)

    Kyrgios beat Nadal -but why a shock considering Kyrgios’ aggression and huge serving? More because he was ranked 144 and a wildcard. But Nadal, who had lost the opening set of his three previous matches. was ripe for the picking, and Kyrgios was rather ravenous.

    Shock of the tournament (women)

    Cornet beat Serena. Yes, Cornet had handled Serena in two sets in Dubai, hitting down the middle and denying her any rhythm, but this is Wimbledon, and no one seriously thought the Serena 2014 slam slump was going to go all the way into the year’s third slam. But it did, and shockingly so.

     

     

  • Novak Djokovic downs Federer in five to win Wimbledon

    Novak Djokovic downs Federer in five to win Wimbledon
    wimbledon
    Thanks to acn.com.ve

    Novak Djokovic has beaten Roger Federer 6-7 (7), 6-4, 7-6 (4), 5-7, 6-4 to win his second Wimbledon title in a match that will be remembered as one of the greatest finals of all time.

    The match was a high quality contest from the get-go as in the first set the two men held serve all the way to the tiebreak. Both men’s strengths were at their best, and, more crucially, so were their weaknesses as Djokovic served better than ever and Federer’s ground-strokes held up to the Djokovic baseline onslaught, especially the much targeted backhand.

    Federer just edged the breaker as his grass court skills were in full flow on the big points.  At 7-7, a service winner got him to set point and then his formidable and constant presence at the net forced Djokovic into error.

    Djokovic though got an early chance to break in the second set as his return game pressured Federer into double-faulting to hand him break point. A signature backhand passing shot up the line sealed the break.

    Djokovic then held serve all the way to the business end of the set at 5-4. He served out to even the match at a set all, a smash, a shot he has struggled with at times on the big occasions, sealing him the set.

    The third set went with serve as both men kept up their high percentages, winning over 70 percent of points behind that shot. Games flew by and neither man looked like the vulnerable men who had lost so limply in their Roland Garros exits. Another tiebreak ensued and Djokovic’s greater consistency on his ground game prevailed as the Federer forehand errored too often while a huge forehand from Djokovic earned him set point. The top seed mixed it up in a long rally ending in his favor as a Federer backhand slice down the line went wide, its ambition a compliment to the grinding prowess of the Serb.

    In the fourth set, Djokovic, his serve, groundstrokes and mind all clicking in the right place, seemed to have gotten his grip on the match as he got Federer on the run and forced an error to break for 3-1. The Serb then held serve all the way to 5-3, and the moment to serve out for his first slam since the 2013 Australian Open had arrived.

    But the Swiss was not going away, showed an intensity so often missing since his 2012 Wimbledon win, and broke back with a forehand down the line winner.

    Djokovic was not disheartened at seeing his lead slip, however, and worked his way to championship point on Federer’s serve as he forced an error from the Federer backhand. But the Swiss produced his best when in danger, saving it with an ace and went on to win the game and level at 5-5.

    Federer was now in the ascent, forcing his will on Djokovic with a weight as heavy as all seven of his Wimbledon trophies. The fourth seed would go on to win the next two games to take the fourth set 7-5 and take the match into a fifth set.

    Djokovic, who had lost 5 of his last 6 Major finals, did not vanish inside himself as many might have. He stayed calm, and though his first serve slipped down to below 60 percent, so that did of his opponent. One stat that did remain high was winners, with errors remaining low, to produce a final set of impressive quality considering the pressure on both slam-starved men’s shoulders.

    The decider went with serve all the way to 4-5 when Federer served to stay in the match. Djokovic’s return was at his best when he needed it and at 15-30, he struck a huge forehand down the line to force an error and earned himself two more championship points. The best returner in the game then got a look at a second serve and went for broke, going for the Federer backhand and producing the error he wanted on his third deep and heavy strike to take his second Wimbledon title.

    An emotional Djokovic fell to the grass, picked some up and ate it. Then he went to the player’s box, entering gentlemanly by the recently installed gate, and hugged his team and the man who had flown triumphantly  across the same lawn from which he had just eaten three times, Boris Becker.

    Then the moment it had all been about. A teary-eyed Djokovic finally got his hands on a slam trophy, the one he said in his post-match interview meant the most to him. The Serbian star dedicated the trophy to his wife and future child, his first, and now deceased, coach, and his family and team who had sacrificed so much for him to live his dream. A dream he well deserved after competing in a contest that looked like it was set to turn into another nightmare, a contest that was a dream to watch for tennis fans the world over.

  • Federer’s eighth Wimbledon title one match away

    Federer’s eighth Wimbledon title one match away
    wimbledon
    Thanks to http://www.telegraph.co.uk

    Roger Federer is one match away from winning his eighth Wimbledon title. The world no.4 beat Milos Raonic in straight sets in a semi-final match in which he faced just one break point, never dropped serve and broke the serve of the best server in the game three times. In the final he will face the game’s best returner Novak Djokovic who was pushed all the way in his four set win over Grigor Dimitrov.

    Federer and Djokivic have not faced each other in a slam final since the 2007 US Open when Djokivic broke through to a slam final for the first time. Now they face again as Federer, aged 33, nears the end of his career and Djokovic is right at the heart of his.

    They also meet at a time when majors have been quite hard for both men to come by. Federer has not won one since winning the Wimbledon title in 2012 while Djokovic has gone slamless since the Australian Open 2013. Somewhat worse for Djokovic, he has gone 1-5 in his last slam finals.

    The match will rest not only on whether Djokovic’s return can get the better of Federer’s serve, or whether the Swiss’ variety and grass court skills can trump Djokovic’s athleticism and consistency, but also on which man can handle the nerves of that elusive slam title being so close within their grip.

    The edge has to go to Federer. He has the history of seven wins behind him, the confidence he has the better grass court game and no weaknesses Djokovic can prey on. Meanwhile, Djokovic has one major downfall Federer can exploit- his movement. On grass, Djokovic often loses his grip and slips, something the sure-footed Federer never does. And on grass movement is key. Expect that to be the key that will open the door for slam eight at SW19 for the Swiss.

     

     

  • Petra Kvitova Knocks out Genie Bouchard to win second Wimbledon title

    Petra Kvitova Knocks out Genie Bouchard to win second Wimbledon title
    wimbledon
    Thanks to http://www.itv.com

    Petra Kvitova has won the 2014 Wimbledon Ladies singles title. The Czech sixth seed beat 13th seed Genie Bouchard 6-3, 6-0 in 55 minutes in a match that will go down as one of the finest performances in Wimbledon history.

    Kvitova’s eyes were as big on the prize as the footballs she was seeing as she belted the ball as cleanly as ever seen on the lawns of SW19. The Czech broke her opponent, playing in her first slam final, at 1-1 in the opening set, a forehand return cross court clipping the line.

    Though Bouchard threatened the Kvitova serve in the next game, the Czech had too much variety with the spins and speeds of her deliveries. It was a day a player dreams of as everything was working for her, a backhand passing shot on the run at 2-1 letting Bouchard know that she would not get into the match by exploiting her weaknesses.

    That point pushed Kvitova on as she rushed Bouchard, hitting winners and being aggressive on the return. A double fault from Bouchard saw her face two break points. Bouchard got out of the hole, but found herself serving again in no time as Kvitova raced through her own service game to lead 4-2.

    A rattled Bouchard double faulted to go down 15-40 as the pressure of an aggressive Kvitova camped inside the baseline mounted. Kvitova then broke with a forehand winner taken on the rise from the baseline.

    With Kvitova serving for the set at 5-2, the weapons and tactics Bouchard was expected to employ with some success finally paid of. Bouchard’s aggressive return and a backhand down the line winner brought her to 15-40. She then broke as she forced an error from an on the run Kvitova.

    The fightback though was short-lived as Kvitova broke to take the set with a forehand winner of a second serve.

    A set up, Kvitova won her opening service game to love and then broke again for 2-0 as she hit hard and flat on her backhand to Bouchard’s feet on the baseline forcing the error on the second strike.

    The set looked to settle into a rout as Kvitova led 40-15 only to be taken to deuce. A service winner and an ace later and the Czech had the game, the 3-0 lead assured. The sixth seed fistpumped to her box, a stumble avoided, the road to the title as clear as her strategy.

    Another forehand winner on break point, the ball flying as fast from the Kvitova racket as Bouchard’s first slam final was slipping away from her. Or being dragged from her so ferocious was Kvitova’s grip on proceedings.

    Murmurs from the crowd, perhaps uncomfortable that the player most talked about before the match was muted in the match itself, were silenced as a hurrying Kvitova pounded down another serve regardless as she raced through another service game to love, every point ended on a winner.

    0-5 down and serving, Bouchard did her best to stay in the match, moving forward to take the game to Kvitova, but she hit a forehand in the net to go championship point down.

    Kvitova though did not want the match gifted to her after playing so spectacularly. She engaged in something approaching a rally with Bouchard before striking a backhand crosscourt winner with the clarity and punch of a woman freed from the fears that gripped her after her 2011 win, a woman ready to get the Venus Rosewater dish once more in her hands and to take all the ups and downs that might follow with the heart of a champion.