Popular Posts Today

Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Wozniacki cruises into quarters of Korea Open

Written By Emdua on Kamis, 20 September 2012 | 08.32

Caroline Wozniacki has rolled into the Korea Open quarters without dropping a set.

Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark cruised into the quarterfinals of the Korea Open on Thursday by beating Caroline Garcia of France, 6-2, 6-3.

Wozniacki will face Klara Zakopalova of the Czech Republic, who defeated Magdalena Rybarikova of Slovakia 6-1, 7-6 (6).

Varvara Lepchenko of the United States ousted Anabel Medina Garrigues of Spain 6-4, 6-1. Ekaterina Makarova of Russia also reached the quarterfinals by beating Jamie Hampton of the United States 6-3, 7-5.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/si_tennis/~3/EMeT4WNzAGc/
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
08.32 | 0 komentar | Read More

No. 2 seed Istomin loses at St. Petersburg Open

Written By Emdua on Rabu, 19 September 2012 | 13.32

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia (AP) - Second-seeded Denis Istomin of Uzbekistan was eliminated in the first round of the St. Petersburg Open, losing to Lukasz Kubot of Poland 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 Wednesday.

Eighth-seeded Jurgen Zopp of Estonia advanced to the second round when Russian qualifier Andrey Kumantsov, trailing 6-3, 5-3, retired because of dizziness.

Igor Andreev of Russia, who was scheduled to face Sergiy Stakhovsky of Ukraine, withdrew because of a right shoulder injury. On Friday, Andreev retired because of the injury in the second set of the opening singles match against Brazil in the Davis Cup.

Stakhovsky then beat Russian lucky loser Ivan Nedelko 7-6 (2), 6-2, while Ricardas Berankic of Lithuania led 6-2, 3-3 when Philipp Petzschner of Germany retired with a right knee injury.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/si_tennis/~3/b7ysCmMNJ8w/
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
13.32 | 0 komentar | Read More

The Serena Effect

Serena Williams drew in over 17 million viewers to the U.S. Open women's final.

Erick W. Rasco/SI

Another case of burying the lede: 16 million watched Andy Murray vs. Novak Djokovic but 17.7 million watched Serena Williams vs. Victoria Azarenka in the U.S. Open finals. Does this bolster the notion that women should continue to earn as much as the men, or do we chalk this up to the Monday vs. Sunday broadcast?
-- Chris, Broomfield, Colo.

• This bolsters the notion that ratings can be misleading. We work on the assumption that the job of the publicist is to present the rosiest picture imaginable, cherry-picking some data points and ignoring others. But these numbers had me scratching my head. Let's be clear: 17.7 million viewers didn't watch the match, per se. They tuned in at some point. Given that you had a women's match that followed the popular NFL, preceded the popular 60 Minutes AND exceeded its time window, I'm not sure how meaningful that figure is. Likewise, the men's match spanned five hours and bled into Monday prime time. How many viewers were looking for 2 Broke Girls or whatever and happened to tune in?

More sobering -- if more honest -- framing: The women's final averaged a 3.9 rating, and the men's averaged a 2.3 rating, the second lowest ever. I don't discount the Serena effect and don't want to diminish her effect on the ratings. But as Chris notes, you can't really compare a Sunday sporting event with a sporting event that begins on Monday afternoon -- and isn't even carried by all the network's affiliates. (Bottom line: These Monday finals are toxic.)

Murray dropped off his resume on my desk. He had an asterisk on two of his titles: Next to Olympic gold 2012, it stated Rafa Nadal skipped the Games and that Roger Federer was exhausted due to a four-and-a-half hour semifinal the day before. Next to his U.S. Open 2012 victory, it stated that once again Nadal did not participate and that Djokovic had the disadvantage of a day's rest before the final as opposed to two days off for Murray. Is Murray being too harsh on himself or will Nadal's return expose him as a one slam winner?
-- Tina Wilson, Los Angeles

• Funny, the resume he dropped with me, made no such mention. And I when I looked it up on Google -- the inevitable next step after receiving a resume -- I saw that he beat the seven players placed before him. Which is all we ask.

I don't disagree that players have had tougher draws. But A) I don't go for this asterisk business much. B) In his fifth final -- a month from having beaten Federer on Centre Court -- Murray beats the defending champ in five sets. That ought to douse any discussion that this was somehow less than legit.

Jon, here are some numbers furthering the conversation on Serena's greatness: Major Finals Winning Percentage: Navratilova (56%), Evert (53%), Graf (71%), Serena (79%). Major Tournaments won vs. Total Tournaments won Percentage: Navratilova (11%), Evert (11%), Graf (21%), Serena (33%). I understand that Navratilova, Evert, and Graf played many more tournaments during their careers but these numbers look pretty darn good!
-- A.K. Saleem, Edmond, Okla.

• Thanks. We could quibble with some of this. (If Evert and Navratilova were contemporaries, wouldn't we expect their numbers to be lower? And Serena played much fewer events on average each year, so wouldn't we expect her winning percentage to be higher?) But the more data, the better....

Why do you omit David Nalbandian in the short list of candidates for best active males never to have won a major? You listed Tsonga, Berdych, Ferrer and Soderling (in that order) for that double-edged honor, but why look over Nalbandian?
-- Joanna, Seoul, Korea

• I think it's semantics. For the dubious honor of best active players never to have won a major, isn't there an assumption that it's still possible? In the case of Nalbandian, his best days are -- by, like, a decade -- behind him. This is the same reason I put Tsonga (one major final) above Soderling (two major finals). Judges?

Best player never to reach a major final? I'd take Davydenko over Ferrer. Same number of Slam semis (4), one more quarterfinal (6), three masters wins (and a 3-0 record in masters finals), 1 tour championships wins and 5 years finished in the top 5 (vs. 3 for Ferrer). Plus Davydenko leads their head-to-head 3-2. The way Ferrer's playing, he could easily eclipse Davydenko's stats in the next couple years but I say Davydenko has the edge for now. Tim Henman has a good case too.
-- Nick Einhorn, Brooklyn, N.Y.

• See above.

Since I know you love these HoF questions... Is Murray a lock now that he won the U.S. Open (let's say he doesn't win another and never reaches No. 1)?
-- Gene, Metuchen, N.J.

• Given the "One Slam and a bit more" precedent, how could you deny Murray? One Slam title and four other finals. Semis or better at all four. Olympic gold. A bunch of Masters titles. Good record against the other Big Four members. It sounds silly: By winning the U.S. Open he guaranteed himself HoF enshrinement. But, again, given the current requirements, how could he be denied?

How about that men's final for 'greatest match ever?' Truly inhuman shotmaking and defense, 50-plus shot rallies, AND balls being blown hither and yon in the wind. And enough momentum swings to render even the hardiest Scots comatose towards the end.
-- Rick, Albuquerque

• Too many lop-sided sets. Too many errors. Too many lapses. Insufficient fifth set drama. Don't get me wrong: I enjoyed the match immensely. But even for the "Men's Grand Slam Final of the Year" award, I pick Australia over the U.S. Open.

Shots, miscellany

• Mauricio of Sao Paulo, Brazil, wrote: "So it seems we are officially back to the 80s in men's tennis. We have a 30-plus-year-old still winning Slams and reclaiming No. 1 (Federer/Connors), we have the clay king facing a possible early retirement (Nadal/Borg), a unique character putting on one of the best seasons of all time (Djokovic 2011/McEnroe 1984), and now we have the stoic, less celebrated player among the Big 4 breaking through at a Grand Slam after losing his first four major finals (Murray/Lendl). Interesting how history has a way to repeat itself."

Another good one came from Andy J. Thessaloniki, Greece: "Lendl was not only the player to lose the first 4 of his finals, but also, like Murray, had to beat a 5 time slam champion (McEnroe) to win his first final."

And let's pause to discuss how cool this is: We had bits of tennis trivia come in on the same night from Oslo, Sao Paulo and Salonika. How many other sports can say that?

• Venus Williams leads the D.C. Kastles to World TeamTennis glory.

• The controversy with Indian Tennis continues to build.

• Not to be outdone, we have Davis Cup drama in Argentina.

• Ivan H. of New York: "Jon, here's a link to a fun little photo project I put together recently. It's called tennis hands."

• This week's sports book recommendation: When Saturday Mattered Most.

• Tim, Hopkinton, Mass: "I found myself in Toronto on a business trip this week and, since it's film festival week, went to see the premiere of the Venus and Serena documentary. It was excellent. The filmmakers had virtually unlimited access and we got an amazing behind the scenes look at their lives and their tumultuous 2011 season. I only wish that Venus and Serena had attended. During the Q&A session, the filmmakers said that they were "still reacting" to it, implying that they weren't happy with the final cut. Had they been there, however, they would have been able to experience the audience's reaction. You could literally feel the sense of admiration of their struggle and accomplishments coming from everyone in the room. And, it would have been great from them to have heard Wyclef's (he did the soundtrack) response when asked what he felt about the story. "It's a story of TRIUMPH, man (mon?)," he said. And that, "everyone should leave here feeling like they have a battery pack on their backs... full of energy and feeling like they can do anything." Wyclef got a rousing ovation for his comments. I can only imagine how we would have reacted to seeing Venus and Serena on stage immediately after the film, but I do know that they would have been overwhelmed to see and feel the audience's reaction. Just a wonderful film, and a must see for any tennis fan. Triumph, mon."

• Venus and Serena withdrew their support for this movie:

• The USTA announced that U.S. Open attendance topped 700,000 for the fifth time, finishing at 710,803.

• Israeli tennis aficionado and occasional Dirk Nowtizki hitting partner Marc Stein (known in his more solemn moments as: Frank M. Stein) points out: "Israeli No. 2 Amir Weintraub led his country into Davis Cup World Group with a pair of wins over Japan's Ito (67) and Soeda (53). All five of his career tour level wins have come in Davis Cup...others: Raonic (31), Federico Gil (84), Janowicz (156)."

• Remember our note about Kim Clijsters warming up Kirsten Flipkens at the U.S. Open? Seems it paid off.

• Good Q&A with Novak Djokovic.

• Here's some perspective on Andy Murray from India.

• Troy of Fort Wayne, Ind: "One thing I noticed that has not been mentioned yet is another "milestone" for Serena Williams, in a summer filled with them, she surpassed the $40 million mark in career prize earnings. Given her 45 career titles, that averages out to a whopping $888,888.89 (rounded up on the pennies) per title lifetime average. Pretty amazing numbers."

• Nick DeToustain writes: "Love how you went all Serpico on P-Mac calling matches at the Open. And re: long-lost siblings, how about Jana Novotna and Novak Djokovic's mom, Dijana?"

Have a good week, everyone!

19 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/si_tennis/~3/fSNaloR2RkU/
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
12.32 | 0 komentar | Read More

Mayer ousts Blake at Moselle Open, Seppi next

METZ, France (AP) -- Fourth-seeded Florian Mayer of Germany advanced to the quarterfinals of the Moselle Open, beating James Blake 6-7 (4), 6-3, 6-4 on Wednesday.

Mayer broke the American in the ninth game of the deciding set and served out for the victory. He will next meet fifth-seeded Andreas Seppi of Italy or Frenchman Vincent Millot.

Seppi reached the second round with a 6-7 (7), 6-3, 6-4 win over Croatia's Ivan Dodig in a scrappy match which saw 14 breaks of serve overall.

Later, top seed and defending champion Jo-Wilfried Tsonga of France plays countryman Clement Reix in the second round.

In remaining first-round matches, American Jesse Levine beat Cedrik-Marcel Stebe of Germany 6-3, 6-2, and Michael Berrer of Germany advanced when Jan Hajek of the Czech Republic retired while trailing 6-4, 2-0.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/si_tennis/~3/TYlX9IdEyWU/
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
12.32 | 0 komentar | Read More

Youzhny wins in St. Petersburg; Lacko, Lu ousted

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia (AP) - Top-seeded Mikhail Youzhny of Russia beat Michal Pospisil of Canada 7-6 (4), 6-1 Tuesday to advance to the second round of the St. Petersburg Open.

Two other seeded players were eliminated in first-round matches: Lukas Lacko of Slovakia and Yen-Hsun Lu of Taiwan.

The fifth-seeded Lacko was beaten 6-3, 6-2 by Grega Zemlja of Slovenia, while the sixth-seeded Lu lost to Roberto Bautista-Agut of Spain 6-4, 6-2.

Youzhny, the 2004 champion and a two-time runner-up, won four consecutive points in the first-set tiebreaker and then took the last five games after both players held their opening serves in the second set.

The 29th-ranked Youzhny won his eighth career title in Zagreb, Croatia, in January but has not advanced past the second round in five events since losing to Roger Federer in the quarterfinals at Wimbledon.

"The first match at any tournaments is always not an easy one,'' Youzhny said. "When he (Pospisil) served well it was tough to receive. I've played few matches after Wimbledon and definitely lack practice.''

Zemlja won five consecutive games in the first set and never faced a break in the second.

"It wasn't easy. Maybe it looked easy, but I was fighting throughout the match,'' Zemlja said. "I was trying to win every point, every game.''

Daniel Gimeno-Traver of Spain also advanced to the second round, eliminating Florent Serra of France 7-6 (5), 6-2.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

19 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/si_tennis/~3/-dgE2UYOobk/
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
10.02 | 0 komentar | Read More

Coming Up Short

John Isner lost his match to David Ferrer in four sets as Spain beat the U.S. in the semi-finals 3-1.

Manuel Queimadelos Alonso/Getty Images/SI

Ah, the dignity and harmony of Davis Cup. Great players giving it all for their countries, fostering team spirit on a prestigious stage that rivals anything in tennis.

Wait a minute; that must be some other Davis Cup. Certainly not the one we witnessed over the weekend.

Maybe it arrived too soon. Media sage Matt Cronin describes his thirst for tennis as "insatiable," but he tweeted that "Davis Cup four days after the U.S. Open final is a tough task, even for me." In any case, it was hardly compelling when measured against the event's lofty standards.

Breaking it down by countries:

UNITED STATES: I can't recall a pair of U.S. Davis Cup players who were less fun to watch. The too-tall timbers, John Isner and Sam Querrey, gave a spirited effort against Spain, but there just isn't enough variety in their games. It's not as if they could shrink a few inches on demand, but I've always been partial to quick, agile athletes who operate cleverly around the net and cover acres of ground during wild, improbable points.

The laid-back Querrey has quite likely reached his peak on tour: solidly inside the top 50, equally capable of an impressive win or a languid defeat, no threat to even reach the semifinals of a major. Isner has brought himself so close to the brink, he has gained untold fan support along the way, but he has become a symbol of negativity -- a trait that hardly meshes with his upstanding character.

Throughout his struggles in the clay-court season and the ensuing three majors, he was bitterly critical of his play, sounding as if his cause was utterly hopeless. Here's a man fairly defined by endurance -- that 70-68 set he took from Nicolas Mahut at the 2010 Wimbledon -- and yet, he has become a consistent failure in five-set matches (4-10 lifetime). Since his impressive early Davis Cup run, defeating both Roger Federer and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga on the road, he's found a way to lose virtually all of his important matches. And his lack of acceptable temperament surfaced once again in his loss to David Ferrer on Sunday, when he took to smashing and kicking his rackets on court.

Perhaps there's hope for the future in the presence of Ryan Harrison and Jack Sock, both of whom possess a fierce competitive nature, but when it comes to American prospects over the next few years, in any setting, Pete Sampras probably put it best as he pondered the retirement of Andy Roddick. "It's a little thin, unfortunately," Sampras told the New York Times. "Andy really is the last truly great American player. No disrespect to the guys playing now, but they are not quite to the level where Andy was."

SWITZERLAND: Worth mentioning only because Roger Federer played against the Netherlands, while the other Big Four stars sat out. And it doesn't sound as if Federer has much of a commitment to Davis Cup. "Not a whole lot, to be honest," he said on Sunday. "For me, it's about enjoying being with teammates, and that's about it, really." He also portrayed himself as "wounded, tired and exhausted," with no clear plan as to how to approach the rest of the year.

SPAIN: Just a fabulous performance against the U.S. in Gijon, the port city on Spain's Atlantic north coast. Even as he resides just outside the tour's elite, Ferrer is becoming a worldwide celebrity with his Davis Cup performances (lifetime 15-0 on clay) and inspired play at the majors. Nicolas Almagro had a great weekend, as well, winning that 7-5 fifth set against Isner to set the tone for a team heading once again to the Davis Cup final, this time against the Czech Republic, and who knows? Rafael Nadal hasn't ruled out the possibility of competing.

CZECH REPUBLIC: Tomas Berdych and Radek Stepanek were simply sensational in the hostile setting of Buenos Aries, bringing down favored Argentina to reach the final for the second time in four years. This time, significantly, it will be on home soil, and imagine what that could do for the Czechs' tennis future. There will be thousands of young players in attendance or following the action closely. This country is building a base of exceptional power players, from Berdych and Lukas Rosol (who overpowered Nadal at Wimbledon) to Petra Kvitova and seven other hard-hitting women in the WTA's Top 100. Ivan Lendl and Martina Navratilova would be proud.

As for capturing the spirit of Davis Cup, Stepanek failed miserably. He ripped the Argentine fans for being "very noisy" (Radek, that's what this thing is all about) and lamely questioned the legitimacy of Juan Martin del Potro's wrist injury. Stepanek has always been sort of a weird cat, though. Cheer for him at your peril.

ARGENTINA: Rumors have spread this week about dissension on the team. That's certainly nothing new, recalling the Del Potro-David Nalbandian squabbles in past years, but it sounds rather contrary to hear that Del Potro set himself apart from the team. This guy has a heart bigger than the Valdes Peninsula, and he's earned worldwide admiration this year with his gestures of passion and dignity. He broke down in tears after defeating Novak Djokovic in the Olympics, thus earning a precious bronze medal. He was the epitome of class at Arthur Ashe Stadium after ending Roddick's career. And although he was devastated by this new injury (to his left wrist; he had surgery on the right), he ignored medical advice and put himself at further risk by competing in singles on Friday, because it meant that much to his country's cause.

Whatever people might be saying about Del Potro just now, they don't have an audience in this corner. This man is a class act all the way. Unless he needs a new round of surgery, he'll have more than three months to prepare for the Australian Open.

AUSTRALIA: If you think Isner and Querrey represent a grim reminder of past U.S. Davis Cup teams (try Sampras, Courier, John McEnroe and Andre Agassi in'92), imagine the level of disgust in Australia after its shockingly awful loss to Germany. This is the greatest Davis Cup country of them all, graced by the likes of Rod Laver, Roy Emerson, Ken Rosewall, John Newcombe and Tony Roche in the glory years. The current team is a joke in comparison, strapped by a hopeless confluence of old age and impetuous youth.

Nobody ever said Lleyton Hewitt gave up on the tennis court; it simply isn't in his nature. But this is a well-worn Hewitt, immersed in the twilight, and you know he's at the end of a distinguished career when he loses a win-or-else match to Germany's 127th-ranked Cedrik-Marcel Stebe in Davis Cup. It's an unthinkable result. Far more disconcerting, though, is the ongoing malaise of Bernard Tomic, the boy genius now considered an out-and-out embarrassment to a great tradition.

At Wimbledon, he was admittedly content with a first-round loss to David Goffin, saying, "To be honest, I haven't been really working hard the last two months. I like that I've lost. I think it's good for me."

At the U.S. Open, John McEnroe flatly accused Tomic of tanking against Roddick, and the 19-year-old essentially agreed. That prompted a lively critique from Australian Davis Cup captain Patrick Rafter, calling Tomic's performance "disgraceful" and adding, "There's no use sugar-coating something, and I'm sick and tired of tip-toeing around it. He needs to do the work. If he wants to be part of Davis Cup, he has to train and work hard. If those goals aren't met, then he won't be part of the team."

Fast-forward now to Sunday, on a clay court at Hamburg's Rothenbaum Stadium, and a match against Florian Mayer that could clinch the tie for Australia. It's not that Tomic's loss was particularly stunning, on the surface; Mayer is the more accomplished, experienced player. But in going down 6-4, 6-2, 6-3, Tomic "looked lost at times," according to The Age (of Australia), and by the middle of the second set, "his shoulders started to slump." The Melbourne Herald reported that Tomic "never looked in the game" and "he shook his head in frustration as everything he tried, failed."

This is not the type of attitude the Aussies remember from Emerson, Newcombe or Rafter himself. It reached the point where Roche, who helps coach the team, had a tempestuous courtside exchange with Tomic late in the first set. "We don't know what was said, but it was animated," said Brian Phillips, calling the match for Australian radio. "Tomic's effort was really disappointing, lackadaisical. He didn't dig deep enough...he almost waved the white flag."

Tomic talks big in his press conferences, even calling out reporters who dare mention his shortcomings, but for those who take pride in Australia's tennis history, he's a colossal failure. Perhaps the most biting comment came from Pat Cash, once a competitor of the highest order, in the Times of London during Wimbledon: "I really don't know if Tomic is the sort of guy who thinks about the words of the Australian national anthem, particularly that bit about toiling with hearts and hands."

18 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/si_tennis/~3/oRPGbivgSvQ/
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
10.02 | 0 komentar | Read More

Davis Cup '13: Swiss vs. Czechs; US hosts Brazil

Roger Federer could face Tomas Berdych in the first round of Davis Cup in 2013.

AP

LONDON (AP) -- The first round of the 2013 Davis Cup could feature a matchup between Roger Federer and Tomas Berdych, the man who beat him in the quarterfinals of the U.S. Open two weeks ago.

Switzerland was paired against the Czech Republic in Wednesday's draw for the opening round of the World Group. In other matches, Spain will travel to Canada, the United States will be at home against Brazil, and Argentina will host Germany.

Top-ranked Federer has a career 11-5 record against Berdych, but the No. 6 Czech defeated him in four sets at the U.S. Open. Berdych also beat Federer in the quarterfinals at Wimbledon in 2010 and at the 2004 Athens Olympics.

Switzerland will be at home for the Feb. 1-3 series. Federer does not always play in the early rounds of the Davis Cup and his plans for 2013 are uncertain.

Federer played in last weekend's playoff against the Netherlands, winning both singles matches to lead Switzerland to a 3-2 victory that ensured his country stayed in the World Group for 2013.

Berdych secured all three points for the Czechs in their semifinal win over Argentina. The Czechs will host Spain in the final Nov. 16-18.

The Czechs hold a 6-2 advantage against Switzerland, although the Swiss won the last time they met on home soil in 1998.

In other matches, it's France vs. Israel, Kazakhstan vs. Austria, Italy vs. Croatia and Belgium vs. Serbia.

Spain and Canada have met only once before, with Spain winning 4-1 at home on clay in 1991. But Canada, led by 15th-ranked Milos Raonic, will likely pick an indoor venue and fast surface that will make the conditions much tougher for the Spaniards.

"Canada was one of the strongest rivals we could have gotten, not only for the quality of a team led by Milos Raonic but also because we'll have to play as visiting team just one week after the Australian Open, which means another long trip and time change,'' Spain captain Alex Corretja said. "It will be a complicated tie.''

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

19 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/si_tennis/~3/RHOyYw1ronw/
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
10.02 | 0 komentar | Read More
Techie Blogger