Thứ Ba, 8 tháng 12, 2015

‘Positive energy’ fuels Rafael Nadal as he hits the ground running in IPTL

He will take a day or two to celebrate Christmas but don’t be fooled by the smiles: Rafael Nadal is on a mission.

At the end of a long, challenging season for the 29-year-old force of nature that is Rafael Nadal, the tennis world finally seemed to be righting itself.

In the space of a year, the 14-time Grand Slam champion had slipped from world No1 in June 2014 to No10 this summer in the aftermath of quarter-final losses at both the Rome Masters and the French Open. By the time the Tour reached its climax at the World Tour Finals in London in November, though, Nadal was back to No5—and once there, he beat all three round-robin opponents, including two higher-ranked players.
He had won 61 matches from 81 played, won three titles from six finals, and was now in the semi-finals of one of the most prestigious tournaments of the year. He was happy that his form was heading in the right direction, but not so satisfied that he felt able to take a well-earned rest.
His message was blunt, and even silenced—briefly—the packed media centre at the O2: “I didn’t make the right work: I don’t deserve a vacation this year.
“I’m going to have the next couple of days after here [he would lose in the semis to Novak Djokovic], yes, have some days off next week only. Then Friday, Saturday and Sunday I have the charity event for my foundation in Mallorca. I’m going to practise physical performance. I not going to practise tennis next week, but probably Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, I’m going to be in the gym. Then Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday I going to practise a little bit of tennis—and physical performance still. Then IPTL.”
That last was a reference to his debut appearance in the tennis jamboree that has taken the off-season by storm, the fast and furious, team-based International Premier Tennis League that this year takes in five cites from Dubai, across India, and on to the Far East.
And thereby hangs a tale. Nadal was originally signed to play in the first IPTL season last year, but a series of injuries to wrist and back, plus appendicitis, played havoc with his fitness and his schedule from Wimbledon 2014 onwards. He would win just four matches in the three tournaments he played during the late autumn, and would miss the US Open and the World Tour Finals entirely.
Not surprisingly, perhaps, Nadal faced repeated blows to his confidence through the first months of 2015. It would, for example, become the first year in a decade that he failed to win a Grand Slam or a clay Masters title, and the first in a decade that he fell from the top five. He also suffered losses to men he had previously dominated: Fernando Verdasco, Tomas Berdych, Milos Raonic, plus a shock loss to the 102-ranked Dustin Brown in Round 2 at Wimbledon.
His solution, as has been the case after every physical knock-back, was to work harder, and by the US Open swing, he began to talk of a rise in confidence—and of the certainty that his game would follow. He made the finals of Beijing and Basel and the semis in Shanghai Masters, and London reinforced that form.
And should anyone doubt that hard graft remains his watchword, he practised longer and harder than any of his seven colleagues at the O2: His pre-match warm-ups were more intense than their training sessions. And, he seemed to say, if one practice session is good, two must be better—he switched from Centre Court to practice court and back in jaw-dropping fashion.
So to conclude his stay at the O2 with the assertion that he did not deserve a vacation… well, his back-story explained the split-second silence that followed.
But he meant every word. Nadal is now in Manila with the IPTL’s Indian Aces, and soon confirmed that the work has indeed not stopped: “I have been doing an event for my Foundation with my family in Majorca. And I have been practising for a few days before I came here. Not much, but I hope it’s going to be enough. I’m going to try and work as hard as I can this week in IPTL, and when I’m back in Majorca, continue with my preparation [for Australia].
He has also, he admitted, managed a bit of golf, a bit of fishing, and to attend the wedding of his friend, Marc Lopez, but since arriving in the Philippines, he and coach Toni Nadal have already done a kids’ training clinic on behalf of the Rafa Nadal Academy, and at his next stop in New Delhi, where his foundation has a centre, he hopes to link up with the children who are benefiting from the centre’s education programme.
As he sat courtside in Manila, absorbing the rules and regulations of the IPTL format, Nadal reflected back on 2015 and forward to 2016.
“I think I did start to play better after Montreal, Cincinnati, US Open—not confident enough to win the matches I wanted to win, but it’s true after that in Shanghai, Beijing, Basel, Paris, and London I started to play great tennis and win matches against the best players at the World Tour Finals. And I’m happy for that fact, and that helped me to finish the season with positive energy.
“As for 2016, it’s important just to be happy competing. This year, for a couple of months, I wasn’t enjoying much the competition because I had problems with the self control of emotions, but now it feels I am better, that it is almost fixed, so I’m just happy for that, and my main goal is try to keep going like this.”
Happy is the word to sum up his demeanour once he was on court competing—even in this showbiz environment. He could barely stop beaming through his opening doubles match with Ivan Dodig, and after going 0-3 down against Berdych in his singles set, he surged back to seal the match for the Aces in the tie-break 11th game.
He was drenched in sweat, yet with the stop-clock ticking down the seconds, he discarded towels and tics to play fast, continuous tennis that produced some glittering shot-making. His serve was big, his backhand sharp, his infamous forehand more than a match for the Czech’s. And the smile grew broader with every rally.
Nadal next follows the IPTL circus to Delhi, where he will collide with Roger Federer in what promises to be a blistering half hour or so of tennis. But Nadal, for all the fun, sees this as a stepping-stone to bigger prizes in 2016.
“For me, is like being in Mallorca practising. I’m going to be practising a lot every day. It’s like preparation for next season. That’s it. I’ll come back to Mallorca. I have 14 to 22 December that Joao Sousa is coming to practise, then Abu Dhabi.”
The three-day UAE Mubadala event is a high-quality, round-robin showdown between six top-20 players that begins even before the New Year is rung in. From there, the Spaniard heads to Doha and a first opportunity—if the draw plays out—to avenge the four defeats he suffered to Djokovic in 2015.
No doubt Nadal will take a day or two to celebrate Christmas, at home with his nearest and dearest, but don’t be fooled by the smiles: Nadal is on a mission.

IPTL Manila day 3: Tomas Berdych, Rafael Nadal and Serena Williams in action - IPTL tennis live

Tomas Berdych is set to lead the UAE Royals against the OUE Singapore Slammers, while the Philippine Mavericks take on the Micromax Indian Aces on Tuesday.

Day 6 of the 2015 International Premier Tennis League (IPTL) will see Tomas Berdych and Ana Ivanovic spearheading the Royals against the Singapore Slammers, lead by Andy Murray, Stan Wawrinka and Karolina Pliskova. Following on from that clash, home side Philippine Mavericks will take on the Indian Aces, who enjoyed a win yesterday.

The Indian Aces currently sit atop the leaderboard, having won 56.2% of their matches, although it should also be noted that they have played the least amount of matches out of all of the five teams.  While the Indian Aces have played three times, the Philippine Mavericks, Singapore Slammers and UAE Royals have all played four times and the Japan Warriors have played five times. 

How to watch and bet on IPTL tennis live from Manila

UAE Royals vs OUE Singapore Slammers, 4pm local/8am GMT

Tomas Berdych of UAE Royals is set to lead the side in a rematch against the Singapore Slammers
This will mark the second meeting between the two teams after they clashed on the first day of action. The Royals triumphed, but only marginally, scraping through with a 26-20 victory. In singles action Ana Ivanovic was successful against fellow top 20 star Belinda Bencic, while Australian up-and-comer Nick Kyrgios surprised Tomas Berdych.

Both teams are currently relatively close on the leaderboard given they have both won two matches and also lost two matches each. However the Slammers are marginally higher, in third position, based on their winning percentage, 50% compared to 49.5%.

Berdych is once again scheduled to headline the UAE Royals in action, joined by fellow top 10 star Ivanovic and also former top 10 player Marin Cilic. However, the side will again be without Roger Federer, formerly of last year’s winners Indian Aces, as the 17-time Grand Slam champion is not scheduled in action until the Dubai, New Delhi and Singapore legs of the competition. 

Federer was part of the winning Indian Aces during the inaugural edition of the International Premier Tennis League (IPTL) last year, although the 17-time Grand Slam champion was recruited to the UAE Royals during the player’s draft held earlier in 2015. 

The side is also joined by Cilic’s current coach and former World No. 2 Goran Ivanisevic, as well as veteran Daniel Nestor and rising French star Kristina Mladenovic.

Meanwhile, Federer’s compatriot Stan Wawrinka headlines the Slammers, along with Andy Murray, and fellow top 20 stars Karolina Pliskova and Belinda Bencic. However, similarly to Federer, Murray will also be absent from this clash in Manila, as he will join the Singapore Slammers later on in Dubai.

However, despite Federer and Murray’s absence, expect an exciting contest nonetheless as the Slammers bid for revenge against the Royals. 

Philippine Mavericks vs Indian Aces, 7:30pm local/11:30am GMT

The Indian Aces, headlined by a resurgent Rafael Nadal who is making his debut at the competition this week, are currently atop of
Rafael Nadal made a successful debut to IPTL action yesterday (TED ALJIBE/AFP/Getty Images)

the standings, given they are yet to lose a clash. They recorded the nail-biting 25-24 win against the Japan Warriors in their first contest, before backing it up with a more convincing 27-22 victory against the Singapore Slammers later in the week. In Manila yesterday they also recorded another relatively straightforward win, overcoming the UAE Royals 30-18 as Nadal officially made his maiden appearance. 

Meanwhile, home team the Philippine Mavericks, have already contested four ties, one more than the Indian Aces, and they are currently standing at 3-1, putting them second on the leaderboard, just behind the Aces. 

This will mark their first clash this year, with World No. 1 Serena Williams likely to take on Australian Sam Stosur, while a possible showdown between Milos Raonic or Richard Gasquet against Nadal also looms. Williams has won two out of four singles matches to date, while Stosur has won just the one so far. Nadal also won his only singles match, while Raonic has won two out of three and Gasquet lost his only singles match to date against Philipp Kohlschreiber.


IPTL action is live from Manila from 4pm local/8am GMT on Tuesday.

Thứ Năm, 8 tháng 10, 2015

Nadal through to Quarter-finals at China Open; Tomas Berdych Out


Third seed Rafael Nadal put up a much improved performance and beat Vasek Pospisil in straight sets 7-6, 6-4 to reach the quarter-finals.

Unlike in his opening round encounter against Chinese wild card Wu Di during which Nadal was broken four times, he saved Pospisil's only break point but admitted it was hard.

"Very tough first set and the second (set) was close, happy to have the break at the right moment. His serve is huge, his first and second serve very good, so it was tough for me to have breaks. I think I played solid with my serve, so happy about that, and I played a good tie-break, so very happy to be in the quarter-finals again here in Beijing. Last year I lost in that round so it is good for me, good news to be at the same round as last year."

Next up for Nadal is American Jack Sock.

In other action,

Last week's Shenzhen Open winner Tomas Berdych is out after a 6-4, 6-4 defeat by Pablo Cuevas.
He is the third seeded player to fall in the first round in Beijing.

World number four David Ferrer fared better and dumped Lukas Rosol.

His next opponent is wild card entry from Taiwan Lu Yen-Hsun.

And Chinese pair Liang Chen/Wang Yafan are in the last eight in women's doubles.

Tomas Berdych beaten at China Open while Rafa Nadal reaches quarter-finals

Tomas Berdych crashed out in the first round of the China Open on Wednesday, losing to Pablo Cuevas 6-4 6-4 just two days after winning his first title of the year in the rain-delayed Shenzhen final.
The second-seeded Berdych won the Shenzhen Open last weekend and was targeting back-to-back titles in China, but will now have to wait at least another week to secure a spot in the eight-player field at the ATP Finals in London.
He's currently next in line for a berth, sitting in fifth place in the standings with a more then 300-point lead over his nearest competitor, Kei Nishikori.
Also in first-round action, huge-hitting Ivo Karlovic battled past Guillermo Garcia-Lopez 7-5 7-6 (7-1).
David Ferrer is in top-form after winning the Malaysian Open last weekend
David Ferrer is in top-form after winning the Malaysian Open last weekend
Fourth seed David Ferrer, fresh from winning the Malaysian Open in Kuala Lumpur, continued his impressive return to form following his elbow problems this summer, with victory over Lukas Rosol 7-6 (7-5) 6-2 to reach the quarter-finals.
In the day's other games, Lu Yen-Hsun from Taiwan upset Viktor Troicki 6-4 7-5 while Jack Sock beat Andreas Haider-Maurer 6-3 6-1.
Rafa Nadal: Came through against talented Canadian Vasek Pospisil
Rafa Nadal: Came through against talented Canadian Vasek Pospisil
Rafa Nadal secured a a last eight berth when he defeated Vasek Pospisil 7-6 (7-3) 6-4 in the late match and he will now take on the Canadian's doubles partner Jack Sock.
The Spaniard picked up his game considerably following his first-round match with the 230th-ranked Chinese wild card Wu Di, during which he was broken four times.
Against Pospisil, Nadal only faced one break point - and he saved it.
Britain's Dominic Inglot and Swedish partner Robert Lindstedt were beaten 4-6 7-6 (7-4) 10-7 in the doubles competition by second seeds Marcin Matkowski of Poland and Serbian Nenad Zimonjic.

Thứ Hai, 7 tháng 9, 2015

(6) Tomas Berdych

Tomas Berdych will arrive at the US Open hoping to reach his Australian Open heights.

Tomas Berdych reached the 2012 US Open semis
Tomas Berdych reached the 2012 US Open semis
His final four showing in January was followed by sub-par fourth round exits at the French Open and Wimbledon.
The Czech briefly held a career-high position of No 4 in the world rankings after the semi-finals in Australia, where he lost to Andy Murray.
He endured an exit at the French Open after defeat to Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, but has previously reached the latter stages at the Qatar Open, Miami Open, Monte Carlo Masters and Madrid Open.
Berdych, who works with Andy Murray's old coaching duo of Dani Vallberdu and Jez Green, also lost in the last four to the British No 1 in Miami and endured a shock loss to Gilles Simon at Wimbledon.
His best US Open showing remains in 2012 when he made the semi-finals before Murray, the eventual winner, beat him. He was present in Montreal and Cincinnati as he gears up to try and better that record from three years ago.
The powerful 29-year-old is a dangerous player if he finds a rhythm and his huge ground strokes could prove a threat in any competition.

Berdych Sets Gasquet Duel

Tomas Berdych was on the brink of falling behind two sets to none against Guillermo Garcia-Lopez, but the Czech survived the Spaniard's test, prevailing 6-7(2), 7-6(7), 6-3, 6-3.
Berdych needed three hours and 22 minutes to book his spot in the Round of 16 for a fourth consecutive year, firing 53 total winners and converting on six of 14 break opportunities to defeat World No. 31 Garcia-Lopez. The Czech draws level in the FedEx ATP Head2Head against the Spaniard at 3-3, having dropped their most recent meeting at the 2014 Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters.
"I felt good all the way through," said Berdych. "The first set wasn't the best. I had a set point and had my chances, but wasn't able to make it. He played quite well and unfortunately didn't happen to win the first set. Then, it was a close second set and I was on top of him and playing well. It was a matter of time to take my chances and that's what I did."
Berdych will renew his 10-year-old rivalry against Richard Gasquet with a quarter-final berth at stake. The series is tied at 6-6, with the Czech winning in straight sets this year in Doha and Madrid.
"Gasquet is a very tough opponent," added Berdych. "He's playing really well lately and having some good results."
The World No. 12 Frenchman downed Bernard Tomic 6-4, 6-3, 6-1 in just under an hour and a half, dominating in points under four shots (60-43). He hit 43 winners to Tomic's 23. Gasquet reached the fourth round at the US Open for the sixth time, having reached the semi-finals in 2013 (l. to Nadal).

Young's Historic Comeback; Berdych, Isner Cruise Through Openers

American Donald Young rallied from two sets down for the first time in his career as he upset 11th seed Gilles Simon 2-6, 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 in three hours and 34 minutes. The 26-year-old Young was previously 0-17 after losing the first two sets in Grand Slam and Davis Cup play. It also marked the first time Simon lost a match from two sets up, dropping to 34-1 in his career.
Young had lost all 11 sets in his five previous matches with Simon, but turned his fortunes around against the Frenchman as he saved 21 of the 30 break points he faced. He goes on to face Aljaz Bedene, who was leading 3-6, 6-4, 3-0 when Ernests Gulbis retired from their match.
Sixth seed Tomas Berdych made light work of American Bjorn Fratangelo in the first round of the US Open on Tuesday, claiming a 6-3, 6-2, 6-4 victory in one hour and 41 minutes.
The Czech struck 37 winners and saved six of the seven break points he faced to notch his 43rd victory of the season. The 29-year-old Berdych reached the quarter-finals at Flushing Meadows last year, falling to eventual champion Marin Cilic, and was a semi-finalist in 2012 (l. to Murray).
Berdych goes on to face Jurgen Melzer, who came through qualifying before denying home hope Denis Kudla 6-3, 7-5, 6-1. Berdych leads their FedEx ATP Head2Head 4-2 and has won their past three meetings.
Top American John Isner also made a strong start, dismissing Malek Jaziri 6-2, 6-3, 6-4 in one hour and 43 minutes. Isner fired 24 aces and converted four of his 11 break points.
The 30-year-old Isner has reached two finals on the ATP World Tour this summer, winning the Atlanta title (d. Baghdatis) and finishing runner-up a week later in Washington (l. to Nishikori). His best US Open result came in 2011, when he lost a close quarter-final clash with Andy Murray.
Isner won 41 of 42 points on his first serve. "Wow, I did not know that," said Isner. "I actually felt like I could have made more first serves today, too. The percentage I think could be a little higher.
"I've played well this summer. It started in Atlanta and I played well in D.C. and Montreal. Went deep three tournaments in a row and it really did a number on me physically. I lost a super tough match in Montreal where I left it all out on the court there and didn't have much in Cincinnati. I'm rested up and I'm ready to go. I'm happy to get off the court today in a quick fashion."
Robin Haase also pulled off a great escape, rallying from two sets down to beat Dustin Brown 4-6, 4-6, 6-3, 7-5, 6-4.
Japanese 19-year-old Yoshihito Nishioka, one of 10 teenagers in the US Open main draw, claimed his first Grand Slam main draw victory as he battled past Paul-Henri Mathieu 6-4, 2-6, 6-7(7), 6-1, 6-2.
Ivo Karlovic sent down 21 aces as he defeated Federico Delbonis 6-3, 7-5, 7-5 to reach the second round. The 21st-seeded Croat goes on to challenge Jiri Vesely, a 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 victor over Paolo Lorenzi.

Tomas Berdych v Guillermo Garcia-Lopez, US Open 2015: Where to watch live, preview and betting odds

Tomas Berdych
Tomas Berdych takes on Guillermo Garcia-Lopez in the third round of the men's singles clash of the 2015 US Open on Saturday, 5 September.
Where to Watch Live
The match starts at 4pm BST. Live coverage of the match is available on Sky Sports 3 and Sky Sports 3 HD. Live scores and real-time internet updates are available on the US Open's official website.
Overview
Berdych's best showing in the US Open was his 2012 semi-final entry. He lost to Andy Murray, who went on to win the final after defeating Novak Djokovic in a five-set thriller. The Czech tennis star's best performance in the Grand Slam was in 2010 when he made it to the final of the Wimbledon. He will be hoping to seal his first career Grand Slam later this month.
In the previous round, Berdych registered a comfortable victory over Jurgen Melzer. He defeated him in straight sets and the final score was 7-6, 6-1, 6-3. Meanwhile, Garcia-Lopez had to overcome Nicolas Mahut to seal a berth in the third round.
After winning the first two sets, the 32-year-old came close to sealing a straight set victory, only to lose the third set in a tiebreaker. Garcia-Lopez won the fourth set comfortably as the final score was 6-4, 6-2, 6-7, 6-1.
Betting Odds (888Sport.com)
  • Tomas Berdych to win: 1/10
  • Guillermo Garcia-Lopez to win: 13/5
Head-To-Head
Garcia-Lopez has a 3-2 lead over Berdych in overall meetings. The pair clashed in only one Grand Slam event and the Spaniard won it during the 2017 French Open.
US Open History
Berdych has never faced Garcia-Lopez in the US Open and the pair will face each other in the third round clash for the first time on Saturday.

Tomas Berdych v Richard Gasquet US Open 2015 preview and match time: Berdych, Gasquet to continue decade-old rivalry



Tomas Berdych will be aiming to make it to his second US Open quarter-finals in a row when he takes on Richard Gasquet on Monday.

Seeded sixth in the competition, Berdych came back from the verge of going two sets down to Guillermo Garcia-Lopez in his fourth round match before coming back to win 6-7(2), 7-6(7), 6-3, 6-3. Needing three hours and 22 minutes to seal his fourth round berth for the fourth successive year, Berdych had a total of 53 winners and he won six of his 14 break-points against Garcia-Lopez.

Speaking of his previous victory that had come after Berdych defeated Bjorn Fratangelo and Jurgen Melzer in straight sets in the first two rounds, the Czech world number six said: "I felt good all the way through. The first set wasn't the best. I had a set point and had my chances, but wasn't able to make it. He played quite well and unfortunately didn't happen to win the first set. Then, it was a close second set and I was on top of him and playing well. It was a matter of time to take my chances and that's what I did."

Gasquet had no such worries in his win over Bernard Tomic, his third round opponent. He defeated the Australian in straight sets, winning 6-4, 6-3, 6-1 after the first two rounds hadn't gone exactly in the manner he wanted. 

The French 12th seed needed five sets against Thanasi Kokkinakis in his opening round match, before being stretched to four by Robin Haase in his second round encounter to make it to the third.

Interestingly, Berdych and Gasquet go a long way. They have faced each other 12 times over the last 10 years and the fact that both players have won six matches each shows how closely-matched they have been all this while.

By 2014, in fact, Gasquet had taken a 6-3 lead over Berdych but the Czech came back to win their last three encounters in a row to make it 6-6. On hard court surfaces, nothing separates them again, with both players having won four times apiece. They have already played each other twice this year - at Doha and at the Madrid Masters - and both times, Berdych recorded a straight-set win against Gasquet.

Tomas Berdych and Richard Gasquet are scheduled on court from 5.30 am local/10.30 pm BST.