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Canada and France are tied at 1-1, today’s doubles are critical for both teams.

by on Feb.11, 2012, under Davis Cup, Milos Raonic

Thornhill's Milos Raonic prepares to serve in his Davis Cup match against France on Friday night in Vancouver.

Canadian captain Martin Laurendeau has to at the very least consider putting Raonic in the dubs as well instead of Pospisil on Saturday. For starters, Pospisil was obviously demoralized by his very forgettable performance against the powerful Tsonga. He wondered aloud in post-match interviews whether he’d be chosen to play doubles. More to the point, he’s just not playing very well at the moment, and hasn’t delivered a great deal of elite tennis since his magical Davis Cup performance for Canada in Israel last September. So the smart move for Laurendeau might be to wheel out Raonic, a strong doubles player himself, and that awesome serve. Beat the French in doubles, and Canada still has a shot at the huge upset.

The final choices don’t have to be announced until noonish on Saturday, with the match set for 2 p.m. local time (5 p.m. in Toronto). But after a day on which the pro-Canada crowd at Thunderbird Arena on the grounds of UBC started to get the feel of what’s permissable in Davis Cup and the kind of difference they might be able to make this weekend, expect Saturday and Sunday to be filled with raw emotion along with pounding drums, bugles, thundersticks and manner of things not usually associated with this sport. While Pospisil wilted, Raonic had the crowd in full roar by the end of his triumph over Benneateau, with his powerful serve hammering out 24 aces and frustrating the overmatched Frenchman every time he got a sniff. What Raonic didn’t deliver against Lleyton Hewitt at the Australian Open – a dominant performance — he most surely did deliver against Benneteau. Hard to say what the lineups will look like on Saturday. But what we can say is two exciting days for Canadian tennis await.

 

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Aussies too strong for China as they go ahead 2-0 with victories by Tomic and Hewitt.

by on Feb.10, 2012, under Bernard Tomic, Davis Cup, Lleyton Hewitt

Australia leads China 2-0 in the Davis Cup Asia Oceania Zone One tie at Geelong, following a straight sets victory by Bernard Tomic over Wu Di today. The Aussie young gun was tested by world No.502 Wu, but pulled out a 6-4 7-6(3) 6-3 victory in windy conditions. “One day I hopefully can win the Davis Cup,” Tomic said, appreciative of the sell-out Geelong crowd, who at times referred to him as ‘Saint Bernard.’ In the first singles rubber, Lleyton Hewitt defeated China’s No.1 Zhang Ze representative 6-2 6-1 7-6, and will now hope to seal the tie when he steps out on Saturday with doubles partner Chris Guccione against Zhang Ze and Li Zhe. Following his victory over Zhang – which began easily and ended in a tussle – Hewitt warned that Wu Di was a far better player than his 500-ranking suggested. “Di Wu is the best 500 player I’ve ever seen,” Hewitt said. Added Australian Captain Patrick Rafter following Tomic’s victory: “They [the Chinese players] don’t get out of the country as much as they probably should. If they did that they’d be around the 200 mark at least.” Struggling with his returns, Tomic fell behind 3-0 in the second set of his match, but lifted his intensity enough to edge Wu with his deceptively low-angled slices, drop shots and deep ground strokes. How did Wu describe the experience of playing the young Wimbledon quarterfinalist? “He’s very cerebral player,” Wu said through an interpreter.

Tomic said the wind had messed with his rhythm, while Rafter believed the most difficult aspect of the rubber was for the world No.36 to mentally stay in a match he was expected to win easily. “Bernie more than anything struggled mentally,” said Rafter. “I know he’s hitting the ball well. It’s hard for him to get up sometimes for these sort of matches because he is playing someone he knows he should beat and he’s clearly a better player. To close that out he kept his mind together and that was the one thing I was proud of him, he probably didn’t play the prettiest tennis … but he found a way to win.” Rafter admitted the Australian side had been in several tight spots today, but were in no mood to drop a rubber. “He [Wu] put Bernie under a bit of pressure there for a while, if Bernie didn’t go with him he would have found himself in a tough four, five set match and I didn’t really want that, I wanted to be two nil up. That’s what we expected, that’s what we wanted on day one and we’ll try to close out tomorrow,” said Rafter.

A doubles victory for the home side on Saturday would propel them into a second zonal tie against either Chinese Taipei or Korea, with the winner progressing to a World Group play-off in September.

 

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US Davis Cup team are definite underdogs against Switzerland on clay.

by on Feb.09, 2012, under Davis Cup, Roger Federer, Stanislas Wawrinka

For the first time in eight years, Roger Federer has made himself available for the first round. The 16-time Grand Slam champion leads a Swiss team on indoor clay here in Fribourg, about 20 minutes by train from the Swiss capital, Bern, against an American team missing the injured Andy Roddick. Federer’s presence, alongside that of his Olympic gold medal doubles partner Stanislas Wawrinka, makes Switzerland one of the leading nations in this year’s competition – always presuming Federer plays beyond this weekend. “It’s just another tie for me,” he said, “it doesn’t matter when and where it is, it’s all a matter of priorities. My team is a group of great friends, that’s what I enjoy about it, that I can spend some time with them, and hopefully try to win but if we don’t it doesn’t matter. It’s about trying your best and having a good time.” If nothing else, his approach helps keep the focus on this weekend, in which he and Wawrinka are nominated to play on all three days.

Realistically, for the US to win, Fish has to beat Wawrinka in the opening match. There is also a belief that Ryan Harrison’s nomination alongside Mike Bryan is a ploy to keep the Swiss guessing, and even the American captain Jim Courier says the length of matches Fish and Isner play on the opening day will influence his ultimate choice of doubles pair. That suggests Fish could well team up with Mike Bryan, the way he did in September 2008 when the two Americans beat Spain’s Lopez/Verdasco on the clay of Madrid. Any suggestion it might be asking too much of Fish to play on all three days is refuted by his performance in September 2010, when he played two singles five-setters and a four-set doubles on the clay of Bogota to help the USA beat Colombia. With Federer playing, the visitors are clearly the underdogs, but there is a good spirit in the American team. And Fish makes an interesting point: “We like our chances here. We have the most uncomfortable player on our team in Isner, and I’m certainly glad I’m not playing him.”

Friday

R1: Wawrinka (SUI) v Fish (USA)

R2: Federer (SUI) v Isner (USA)

Saturday

R3: Federer / Wawrinka (SUI) v M. Bryan / Harrison (USA)

Sunday

R4: Federer (SUI) v Fish (USA)

R5: Wawrinka (SUI) v Isner (USA)

 

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Raonic will face the winner of the Hewitt/Roddick match.

by on Jan.19, 2012, under Australian Open, Milos Raonic

Canadian Milos Raonic is trying to start the new season even better than he did a year ago. The No.23 seed had his work cut out for him on Thursday, working his way past Philipp Petzschner 6-4 5-7 6-2 7-5 on Show Court 3. It was in Australia that Raonic qualified for the main draw last year before making a tear to the fourth round, breaking through for the first time at a slam and making tennis enthusiasts take notice. In 2012, he already has a title to his name and booked his place in the third round with the four-set, nearly three-hour win. Raonic made an impressive start to 2012 by winning the ATP stop in Chennai where he beat Top 10 players Nicolas Almagro and Janko Tipsarevic on his way to his second career title. He also won in San Jose in 2011. Thursday morning he and Petzschner, the German ranked No.63, locked horns into the early afternoon. Raonic used a break in the first game of the match to secure the first set 6-4, his serve ticking along just fine, bolstered by his forehand. Raonic won the set when he served out wide to Petzschner, then clocked a forehand winner crosscourt to take the set. But Petzschner worked his way into the match in the second, frustrating the Canadian by bringing him into net and often passing him or forcing an error. Petzschner, an accomplished doubles player, used a drop volley winner to take a 2-1 lead. “I was struggling a little bit, I don’t know why,” Raonic said. “He started well and just put a lot more pressure on me.” It was in the tenth game of the second set that Petzschner was really able to put pressure on the Raonic serve. He held three set points at 0-40 only to watch Raonic rocket three service winners at him. At 5-6, however, Raonic made a series of errors, including a backhand long when Petzschner rushed the net, giving the 27-year-old German the set, 7-5.

Petzschner fought off a break point in the fifth game of the fourth set before Raonic had to dig out of another 0-40 hole in game eight. The seeded player looked destined to close out the match when he broke in the next game, running down a drop shot to flick a spectacular crosscourt winner before forcing Petzschner into a half-volley error. But Raonic couldn’t serve it out at 5-4 in the fourth, needing to break Petzschner for the second time in as many games and the fifth time in the match in game 12. He won the tie just short of the three-hour mark when Petzschner batted a forehand long. “I know he can play really well,” Raonic explained. “My goal was really just to stick with him [until] I get my opportunities.” Raonic’s big serve provided plenty of opportunities, clocking at 225 KMH at one point in the match. Raonic bashed 15 aces to Petzschner’s 10. The two men seemingly traded stats: Raonic hit 43 winners to Petzschner’s 43 unforced errors. The German hit 37 winners to Raonic’s 38 unforced errors.

He is a name that many are keeping their eye on after he raced through the Chennai draw and seemed to have a special place in his heart for the courts at Melbourne. Counting his wins in qualifying he is 8-1 over the last two years here. But Raonic’s early success in 2011 wasn’t for nothing. He was named the tour’s Newcomer of the Year and reaching a career-high ranking of No.25 after starting the year No.152.

 

 

 

 

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Czech Republic wins second Hopman Cup.

by on Jan.07, 2012, under Hopman Cup, Petra Kvitova, Thomas Berdych

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The Czech Republic has won the Hyundai Hopman Cup for the second time with top seeds Petra Kvitova and Tomas Berdych going right through the week unbeaten in singles ending with the Final inside the Burswood Dome on Saturday against France’s Marion Bartoli and Richard Gasquet. World No. 2 Kvitova finished off her outstanding week and debut in Perth by beating world No. 9 Frenchwoman Bartoli 7-5, 6-1 in the women’s singles to give the Czechs a winning start and then the seventh ranked Berdych finished the job beating former world No. 7 Gasquet 7-6, 6-4. It is the Czech Republic’s second Hopman Cup title after Jana Novotna and Petr Korda won the sixth tournament in 1994 by beating Germany’s Anke Huber and Bernd Karbacher in the Final.

Now in the nation’s eighth appearance at the Hyundai Hopman Cup, Kvitova and Berdych have added their names to the list of champions and also made the Czech Republic just the sixth country to win the Cup at least twice along with the USA (six times), Slovak Republic (three), Spain (three), Switzerland (two) and Germany (two). It has been an outstanding week in Perth for the Czech pair who now both have every reason to have confidence of contending for the first Grand Slam of the year in Melbourne at the Australian Open. Kvitova is fresh off an amazing 2011 that included a Wimbledon crown, the Fed Cup and being the ITF World Champion and WTA Player of the Year, and now her 2012 has got off to an outstanding start. This week she has beaten defending American Hopman Cup champion Bethanie Mattek-Sands, Bulgaria’s Tsvetana Pironkova, world No. 1 from Denmark Caroline Wozniacki and then in the Final France’s Bartoli. ”It was a really good match (against Wozniacki) but today I played much better against Marion and it’s always tough to play with someone at the top,” Kvitova said. ”It’s really good to win at the beginning of the season and of course I have to say thank you to Tomas because without him we wouldn’t win. ”You played really unbelievable and it was an honour to play with you. And of course with our team, with them it’s always really fun. It’s really enjoyable in Perth and of course I have to say thank you to Hopman Cup.”

Berdych was playing for the Czech Republic at the Hopman Cup for the third time and also went through undefeated in his men’s singles matches with American Mardy Fish, Bulgaria’s Grigor Dimitrov, Denmark’s Frederik Nielsen and then France’s Gasquet in the Final. ”It couldn’t be better, it was an extremely great week and first of all I need to congratulate my partner. She won all she can and I just add some winnings again and now we can be standing here and have such a nice trophy so it was really good week,” Berdych said. ”I think it was possibly the best Final that could come of those two Groups and we are happy for that. We would like to congratulate them as well to get the Final and wish them both the best of luck for the rest of the season, for the Australian Open and all of the weeks. I think everybody enjoyed it, we had the best time on court and I hope the people liked it.”

France also had a tremendous week in Perth, though, as Bartoli and Gasquet got their nation into the Hopman Cup Final for the second time, but the French are still chasing that elusive first title. Bartoli might have lost tight encounters with Kvitova and world No. 5 Li Na, but did beat Australia’s Jarmila Gajdosova and Spain’s Anabel Medina Garrigues impressively. Gasquet has this week shown the form that saw him reach the world No. 7 ranking in 2007 by beating Australia’s Lleyton Hewitt, Spain’s Fernando Verdasco and China’s Wu Di.

The attendance for Hyundai Hopman Cup XXIV, which will be the last at Perth’s Burswood Dome before the tournament moves to the new Perth Arena, was 8365 to take the total for the week to an impressive 72,776.

 

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Kaia Kanepi won her second career title as she stormed to a 6-2 6-1 win over Daniela Hantuchova in the Brisbane International final.

by on Jan.07, 2012, under ?

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The big-hitting 26-year-old has produced upset wins over seeds Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, Andrea Petkovic and Francesca Schiavone to reach the final and produced the same superb form against Hantuchova. She was particularly devastating early in the second set, dropping just a solitary point in the first four games as she powered towards the biggest win of her career to date, adding to the title she won in Palermo in 2010.  That dominant start to the second set in fact extended Kanepi’s run to nine games in succession from 1-2 in the opener. Hantuchova should have been the fresher of the two players, having been granted a quarter-final walkover following Serena Williams’ withdrawal and then won her semi-final when Kim Clijsters retired during the second set. But Kanepi’s giant-killing run had seen her build momentum and she won 82% of points on her first serve as she recorded her first victory in four career meetings with the Slovakian, eventually finishing the encounter with her fourth match point.

The victory is set to lift Kanepi from 34th to 26th in the WTA rankings, ensuring she will be seeded for the Australian Open. Hantuchova will rise from 24 to 21.

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Czech Republic booked their spot in the final of the Hopman Cup.

by on Jan.06, 2012, under Caroline Wozniacki, Hopman Cup, Petra Kvitova

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Czech Republic booked their spot in the final of the Hopman Cup after Petra Kvitova and Tomas Berdych helped them to victory over Denmark. Kvitova set up the win when she put her country 1-0 up by beating Caroline Wozniacki 7-6 3-6 6-4 in a battle between the top two players in the world. Berdych then cruised past Frederik Nielsen 6-1 6-3 to give the Czechs an unassailable lead and a place alongside France in the final of the mixed gender team event. Although there were no WTA ranking points on offer Kvitova and Wozniacki gave it their all, with the former eventually emerging victorious after a contest that featured numerous swings of momentum. Kvitova had played down the importance of the clash beforehand but said afterwards that the result would give her a confidence boost heading into the Australian Open. ”It was a great match from both of us,” the Wimbledon champion said. ”I am glad that I won because it was a small test of how we are prepared for the Aussie Open. Caroline played very well and it was a close match.”

Despite the defeat, Wozniacki will take plenty of positives from her performance and is confident she will improve with more time on court. ”I didn’t feel like I was playing my best tennis in my first two matches, but I worked on some things yesterday that I wanted to improve,” Wozniacki said. ”I felt like we both played some good tennis out there and it could have gone either way. I feel like my form is starting to go up and I always play better with a few matches under my belt.”

In a match of contrasting styles, Kvitova hit twice as many errors as her more defensively-minded opponent, with the more aggressive approach paying off in the deciding set. Both Kvitova and Berdych and have gone unbeaten through their rubbers in the group stage, meaning Czech Republic have wrapped up victory in every match so far before the mixed doubles contest.

 

 

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Bulgaria defeats Denmark in the Hopman Cup to put Group A up for grabs.

by on Jan.04, 2012, under Grigor Dimitrov, Hopman Cup

Bulgaria’s Tsvetana Pironkova and Grigor Dimitrov has ensured that Group A at Hyundai Hopman Cup XXIV remains wide open after beating Denmark’s Caroline Wozniacki and Frederik Nielsen 2-1 at Session 7 at Perth’s Burswood Dome today. Denmark got off to a good start when world No. 1 Wozniacki won her women’s singles match over Pironkova 7-5, 4-6, 6-2 but then exciting Bulgarian youngster Dimitrov beat Nielsen 7-6, 6-2 to force a deciding mixed doubles. That ended up going to the Match Tie-break as well after Denmark won the first set 6-3 and Bulgaria the second 6-4. Pironkova and Dimitrov dominated the Match Tie-break, though, 10 points to one to win the first Tie at the Hopman Cup for their nation in their debut appearance. The result in favour of Bulgaria also makes sure that Group A remains wide open in the race for Saturday’s Final. Denmark and Bulgaria have now won a Tie each as have the top-seeded Czech Republic but the fourth-seeds USA are yet to notch a victory. However, the American team of Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Mardy Fish will face the Czech pairing of Petra Kvitova and Tomas Berdych tonight in Session 8 of Hyundai Hopman Cup XXIV. A Czech Republic win would mean they are in prime position to make the Final heading into Friday’s Tie with Denmark, but if the USA are victorious then Friday’s double-header will see all four teams from Group A still capable of earning a spot in the Final.

The Tie began with Wozniacki having to fight hard for the second straight time in her women’s singles clash, but the world No. 1 came out victorious to open Session 7 with a 7-5, 4-6, 6-2 victory over Pironkova. The match lasted 2hrs 32mins to be the longest women’s singles clash this week so far. After the 21-year-old Dane made a whirlwind flight from Thailand to Perth on Monday to take on the USA’s Bethanie Mattek-Sands and end up winning 7-6, 6-2, she was again challenged strongly by her Bulgarian opponent. Pironkova might be ranked No. 46 in the world, but has beaten the likes of Venus Williams and Vera Zvonareva twice in her career already, and came out strongly against Wozniacki. The 24-year-old broke Wozniacki’s serve in the third game of the first set and then went up 4-2, but the world No. 1 quickly hit back to level things at 4-4, 5-5 and then broke Pironkova’s serve to take out the opening set 7-5 in 69 minutes. It was again Pironkova who started strongly in the second set as she raced to a 3-1 and then 4-2 advantage. This time she was able to maintain it to take out the set 6-4 to send the contest into a deciding third set. The third set was all the world No. 1, though, as she won it 6-2 to give Denmark a winning start to the Tie fresh off their win over the USA on Monday night as well. Dimitrov then won his men’s singles clash over Nielsen 7-6, 6-2. Nielsen, though, was coming off an outstanding three-set performance against American Mardy Fish on Monday night and Dimitrov also took it up to Czech Tomas Berdych on Monday. That set up a tight tussle between the Bulgarian and Dane. The first set was an especially hotly-contested battle. There was no break of serve despite both players, but especially Dimitrov, having plenty of break points. It went to the tie-break and Dimitrov was able to open up an early 6-2 advantage. Nielsen did hit back to be within 5-6, but the Bulgarian was able to hold serve for the last point to secure the set seven points to five. The Bulgarian then eventually capitalised on a break point opportunity in the first game of the second set to take Nielsen’s serve and from there the 20-year-old cruised through to take it out 6-2.

Then in the mixed doubles, it was the Denmark pair who made the bright start taking out the first set 6-3. However, Pironkova and Dimitrov hit back in the second winning it 6-4 any cruised to the Match Tie-break victory to heat things up in Group A of Hyundai Hopman Cup XXIV.

 

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