Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Nadal vs Federer di Final Madrid Masters


MADRID, KOMPAS.com - Final Madrid Terbuka pada Minggu (17/5) akan mempertemukan dua pemain tenis terbaik di muka bumi ini. Pemain nomor satu dunia Rafael Nadal bakal beradu kekuatan dengan pemain nomor dua dunia, Roger Federer.

Dua pemain top ini maju ke partai puncak usai menaklukkan lawan-lawannya pada pertandingan semifinal yang berakhir Minggu dini hari WIB. Nadal lebih dulu mendapatkan tiket babak empat besar setelah berjuang selama 4 jam 3 menit untuk menang 3-6 7-6(2) 7-6(2) atas Novak Djokovic, sedangkan Federer menang straight set 6-3 6-4 atas Juan Martin del Potro.

Bagi Nadal, keberhasilannya ke final ini membuka peluangnya untuk mencetak sejarah baru. Jika menang di Madrid ini, maka petenis Spanyol ini akan menjadi orang pertama yang menjuarai tiga gelar Masters lapangan tanah liat pada tahun yang sama.

Ya, dua gelar sebelumnya sudah diraihnya di Monte Carlo Masters dan Roma Masters. Semuanya dilalui setelah mengalahkan musuh yang sama seperti di semifinal ini, yakni petenis Serbia, Djokovic.

Sementara itu bagi Federer, keberhasilannya masuk final memberikan kesempatan kepada untuk mengakhiri paceklik gelar di awal musim 2009. Selain itu, dia juga memiliki peluang melakukan revans setelah kalah di final Australia Terbuka bulan Januari lalu.

Hanya saja, jika melihat statistik maka peluang Federer lebih kecil karena secara keseluruhan Nadal unggul 13-6 dan selalu menang dalam lima pertemuan terakhir. Perjumpaan paling gres adalah duel lima set di final Wimbledon dan Australia Terbuka.

Di samping itu, Nadal adalah "raja lapangan tanah liat", sedangkan Federer tak pernah bisa mengalahkan Nadal di lapangan jenis ini. Tak heran jika petenis Swiss ini sangat penasaran untuk menaklukkan Nadal di atas lapangan tanah liat, termasuk mematahkan rekor petenis kidal tersebut yang pada lima tahun terakhir menjadi juara grand slam Perancis Terbuka, yang mulai bergulir akhir bulan ini. (TIC)

Monday, May 11, 2009

Musing on Madrid


In traveling from Rome to Madrid, we’ve gone from the peeling to the gleaming, from the historic to the high-tech, from the solemn-sounding Foro Italico to the postmodern-sounding Magic Box. And what did we find when we got there? Marat Safin with his hands in the air and his racquet bouncing on the clay in front of him.

The center court in Madrid looks great from what I’ve seen over the last hour on TV, though my first thought was that the light and atmosphere reminded me of the light and atmosphere in the similarly high-tech main stadium in Hamburg, the tournament that was booted off the schedule this year to make room for this one—the new has been replaced by the even-more-new. Otherwise, it sounds like it’s been a shaky start in Madrid, with Spaniards Nadal and Robredo noting the site’s deficiencies: few practice courts, buildings still under construction, cramped locker rooms, a silly blue clay court, and an owner, Ion Tiriac, with delusions of world domination. Are these legitimate beefs, or the gripes of touchy pros who have had their routine disturbed for the week? We’ll find out in the days and years ahead. What’s interesting so far is that Nadal, who is dead set against Tiriac’s idea of Madrid becoming a “Fifth Slam,” is turning out to be just as much of a traditionalist as his predecessor at No. 1, Roger Federer. Why would either of them want the sport to do anything differently? It might mess with their mojo.

The biggest change is that Madrid is a dual-gender event, which, according to most of the sport’s observers, is the best way for each tour to maximize its appeal. That means we have two draws to break down: Both of them feature virtually every player of importance in limited, 56-person draws—it felt a little early in the week to see Safin play Tsonga today. But both of them will have their own very different storylines playing out.



The Men

First Quarter
It may sound illogical, but the men’s event is now less about who can beat Nadal than whether he can keep winning all the way through to another French Open. That would mean five straight tournament titles, more than he’s ever pulled off in one spring. While that kind of sustained dominance may seem unlikely, what’s even more unlikely is that he’ll lose a match on clay in the foreseeable future. We’ll see if Nadal’s early irritation with the facility and the surface has any affect on his attitude.

Nadal’s quarter is loaded with fellow Spaniards—Ferrer, Verdasco, Ferrero, Montanes, Granollers, Lopez, and Almagro. Plus, there’s Argentina’s Juan Monaco, who nearly reached the semis in Rome two weeks ago. Of those, Verdasco and Ferrer have the best chance of making some inroads against Nadal. I might say the same thing for Almagro, except that I haven’t seen him once during this clay season, which isn’t a good sign.
First-round match to watch: Almagro vs. Kohlschreiber—nice backhands.
Semifinalist: Nadal

Second Quarter
This time Novak Djokovic, after losing to Nadal in the Monte Carlo and Rome finals, has the honor of appearing in the same half as the top seed. He’s slotted to play the winner of Tsonga and Simon in the quarters. Before that, he doesn’t have a lot to worry about—Sam Querrey has already knocked out 15th seed Radek Stepanek. I’m curious to see whether either Tsonga or Simon will make some kind of move heading into Roland Garros. There’s an opportunity here for each of them.
Semifinalist: Djokovic

Third Quarter
After a couple weeks of rest and practice, Andy Murray picks up his clay campaign again. He’s opposite his old friend Juan-Martin del Potro in this section; he’s near Tommy Robredo; and he begins with the perhaps tricky Simone Bolelli, an Italian who knows his way around a clay court. Will Murray’s momentum be slowed by his early loss in Rome? I don’t think so—he has the big picture in mind and seems to have learned not to sweat the day-to-day and point-to-point as much as he once did. On del Potro’s side is Stan Wawrinka, who could easily reach the quarters or beyond.
Dark horse: Tomas Berdych. He won his first event of 2009 last week, and he might face del Potro in the second round.
Semifinalist: Murray

Fourth Quarter
Roger Federer may not have it easy to start. He could get Igor Andreev, who had him on the ropes at the U.S. Open last year, in his opener, and then perhaps James Blake, who made an unexpected surge last week in reaching the Estoril final. On the other side are Roddick, Haas, Gulbis, and Davydenko. Why do I like Roddick’s chances, despite the fact that he’s coming off his honeymoon? He’ll already have nothing to lose on clay; now he’ll have even less than nothing. And despite most evidence to the contrary, he isn’t that bad on this stuff.
Semifinalist: Roddick

Semifinals: Nadal d. Djokovic; Murray d. Roddick
Final: Nadal d. Murray


The Women

First Quarter
After a spell of the routine and the random, there were suddenly a few sparks of drama floating around the WTA tour as this tournament got underway. They began when Serena Williams proclaimed herself, rather than the top-ranked Dinara Safina, the “real No. 1.” Safina countered by beating Serena’s sister on her way to a title in Rome. I was about to say that now we just need to cement the moment with a showdown between the two new rivals in Madrid, except, naturally, Serena retired in the first round.

Safina begins with a potentially tough first-rounder in Na Li. In the quarterfinals she might need to repeat her win in the Rome final over Svetlana Kuznetsova. Is Safina just another part-time No. 1, like Jankovic and Ivanovic, or is she ready to make it part of her identity? Last week it seemed to be the latter. We’ll learn more soon.
Semifinalist: Safina

Second Quarter
Jelena Jankovic has bottomed out and is slowly finding her way back to the surface. It hasn’t been a straight line upward, but she’s certainly in better spirits than she was in the U.S. in March. Hantuchova, Dulko, Petrova, Wozniak, Bartoli: Jankovic doesn’t have any insurmountable obstacles on her way to the semis. Let’s see if JJ is ready to take advantage of the opening and put herself back in the running for Roland Garros.
Semifinalist: Jankovic

Third Quarter
The new face of 2009, Victoria Azarenka, has kept up the good work through the spring, and there’s no obvious reason to think it won’t continue in Madrid—which, in WTA terms, means she’ll probably crash and burn in the first round. She’s scheduled to face Elena Dementieva in the quarters.
Semifinalist: Azarenka

Fourth Quarter
Serena and Venus were somehow been thrown into the same quarter—this is the problem with not caring about where you’re ranked, and, therefore, seeded. While Serena is out, Venus had a solid run to the semis in Rome.
Semifinalist: V. Williams

Semifinals: Azarenka d V. Williams; Safina d. Jankovic
Final: Safina d. Azarenka


I’ll be in Madrid this week, and at the tournament for a day or two. I will let you know how it is, and whether the tournament is running a little more smoothly from the fan’s perspective. Enjoy it back here. FYI: If you want to see the women, you’ll have to leave the Tennis Channel, which only carries the ATP feed, and hit TennisTV.com.

05/11/2009 | Permalink | Send to a Friend

Monday, April 27, 2009

Murray out in windy Rome


Andy Murray and Ross Hutchins lost their opening doubles match at the ATP Italian international in Rome on Monday.

The British pair bowed out of the event, losing to world number 47 pair Julien Benneteau and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga who claimed a 6-4 6-4 victory.

"The conditions were terrible," admitted Murray. "There was dust everywhere, wind blowing leaves from the trees on to the court."

He added: "We had to stop in between points because dust was getting in our eyes.

"I've played in windy conditions before but unlike Barcelona, where it also can get windy, this was something else."

Murray will be back in action in the singles draw when he takes to the court against Juan Monaco on Tuesday. The Argentinian player, who is ranked 58, earlier beat Nicolas Kiefer 6-3 6-4.

Murray, who has been training in Rome since Friday, is wary of clay-court specialist Monaco but is confident about his chances of going far in this tournament.

"Monaco had an injury last year but before that he was ranked in the top 20," he said. "He does well on clay and looks comfortable on this surface.

"He has been playing well in this surface in tournaments in South America, while he reached the fourth round of the 2007 French and US Open.

"But I am feeling more comfortable on clay this year than with respect to last year."

PA Sport

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Awal Mulus Nadal


Kamis, 23/04/2009 05:34 WIB
Barcelona Open
Awal Mulus Nadal
Rossi Finza Noor - detiksport


Reuters
Barcelona - Rafael Nadal mengawali langkahnya dengan mulus di turnamen Barcelona Open. Berhadapan dengan Federico Gil, Nadal menang dengan skor 6-2 6-2.

Di lapangan tanah liat Real de Club Tenis, Barcelona, Kamis (23/4/2009), Nadal sukses mematahkan servis Gil pada game ketiga. Selanjutnya petenis nomor satu dunia itu pun tak terbendung lagi.

Nadal kemudian menggagalkan tiga servis Gil lainnya sebelum menutup laga ini dengan kemenangan 6-2 di set kedua. Ia pun berhak untuk melaju ke babak 16 besar.

"Ini adalah kemenangan tanpa banyak kesulitan. Saya merasa sangat nyaman tanpa melakukan hal apa pun yang spektakuler," ujar Nadal seperti dilansir Reuters.

Nadal yang sebelum ini juga menjadi juara di turnamen tanah liat lainnya, Monte Carlo Masters, ditempatkan sebagai unggulan teratas dalam turnamen ini. Ia juga digadang-gadang untuk menjadi juara pada Rolland Garros yang juga merupakan turnamen dengan clay court.

Dalam pertandingan lainnya, Fernando Verdasco mengalahkan Nicolas Lapenti dengan skor 7-5 6-3. Di babak selanjutnya ia akan berhadapan dengan petenis asal Republik Ceko, Thomas Berdych.

Sedangkan unggulan ketiga, Nikolay Davydenko, mengalahkan petenis asal Prancis, Arnaud Clement, dengan skor 7-6 6-2. Di babak selanjutnya, Davydenko akan berhadapan dengan unggulan kelima, Fernando Gonzalez.

( roz / arp )

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Nadal & Federer win clay openers


Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer opened their clay-court seasons with comfortable second-round victories at the Monte Carlo Masters 1000.

Federer, without a title since October, had originally decided to skip the famous event but accepted a late wildcard as he looks for some form.

And the world number two came through 6-4 6-4 against Seppi to reach round three of the Masters 1000 tournament.

Nadal had far too much for Argentina's Juan Ignacio Chela, winning 6-2 6-3.

The Spaniard, going for his fifth straight title in Monte Carlo, stormed 4-0 ahead with some blistering play before Chela recovered to 4-2 and a 0-40 lead.

Nadal regained his focus to save all three break points and powered through the set before letting another early lead slip in the second.

We've been playing on hard court now for nine months - you never see a bad bounce

Roger Federer

After dropping two games from 3-0, the world number one again gathered himself to grab one more decisive break and see out the match.

Nadal was critical of his performance following his victory and admitted he would have to improve in certain areas to win his fifth straight title in Monte Carlo.

"I had some tough moments during the match," Nadal said.

"I played some games well, I had some terrible games... (I was) up and down during all the match.

"I have to improve my concentration in the next match. That's the important thing."

Elsewhere on Wednesday number five seed Juan Martin Del Potro suffered a shock 4-6 6-1 6-4 defeat, losing to Croatian Ivan Ljubicic .

But number six seed Nikolay Davydenko was safely through beating Croatian Ivo Karlovic in straight sets 6-4 6-3.

British number one Andy Murray beat Victor Hanescu on Tuesday and in the last 16 he will play Italian Fabio Fognini , who thrashed Marin Cilic 6-2 6-0.

Federer went into his opening match with a 4-0 record against Seppi, the world number 40, but potentially vulnerable after a bad loss to Novak Djokovic in Miami last time out.

But the 27-year-old, who married his long-term girlfriend Mirka Vavrinec last week, made the first breakthrough with some heavy forehands in game nine after saving two earlier break points.

Two magnificent games followed from the 13-time Grand Slam champion as he served out the set and broke at the start of the second, going on to seal a comfortable victory.

606: DEBATE
Did anyone realise that Federer has lost only 4 times in 2009? Twice to world #4 Once each to world #1 and #3

Aussie_Ahmed

"I am very happy to have won my first match on clay," he said. "It takes some time to adjust to the surface, the rebounds and the sliding.

"We've been playing on hard court now for nine months - you never see a bad bounce.

"So all of a sudden you're a little bit worried, sometimes hitting half volleys because they can bounce onto your frame."

Federer will play compatriot Stanislas Wawrinka in the third round after the 13th seed beat Argentina's Martin Vassallo Arguello 2-6 7-5 6-2.

In other matches, seventh seed Fernando Verdasco defeated Philipp Kohlschreiber 6-3 6-4, and 11th seed Nikolay Davydenko returned from an injury lay-off to beat Ivo Karlovic 6-4 6-3.

Argentina's David Nalbandian , the 12th seed, beat Spaniard Marcel Granollers 4-6 6-3 6-1, and Spanish 10th seed David Ferrer destroyed Marc Gicquel 6-1 6-0.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Re-live the memories of AO 2009


Wednesday 1 April 2009
By Tennis Australia
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Australian Open 2009 captured the world's attention as the world's best went head to head for the first Grand Slam title of the year. Now you can re-live the highlights of Australian Open 2009 with the official DVDs.

Australia's Jelena Dokic surprised everyone with her stirring run to the quarterfinals, while Rafael Nadal and Fernando Verdasco played out a semifinal that had millions on the edge of their seats.

These are just two of the titles that will be coming to the Australian Open shop soon.

* Australian Open 2009 Official Film

* Classic Match DVD – Jelena Dokic Tournament

* Rafael Nadal v Fernando Verdasco Semifinal

To reserve your copy of any of these DVDs please email your order to aoshop@tennis.com.au by Thursday 30 April 2009. DVDs are priced at $30 each.

DVDs should be available from May although if the arrival date changes we will contact you to keep you updated.

Please ensure that you include a contact email address and phone number with your order so that we can contact you.




Watch highlights on AO TV

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Nadal breezes into third round







World number one Rafael Nadal breezed past qualifier Michael Berrer and into the third round of the Indian Wells Masters series on Sunday.
Nadal downed Germany's Berrer 6-2 6-1 in just 67 minutes, encountering little resistance from the 28-year-old ranked 112th in the world.
Nadal, the 2007 champion in the California desert, broke Berrer in the opening game of each set and marched on from there.
"I played a very comfortable match," said Nadal, who booked a meeting with Russian Dmitry Tursunov, a 7-6(5) 4-6 6-3 winner over American qualifier Michael Russell.
Nadal, who won his fourth French Open title and first Wimbledon crown in 2008, boosted his hardcourt credentials with his Australian Open triumph this year.
But the 22-year-old Spaniard said he wasn't entertaining thoughts of a calendar Grand Slam.
"I haven't thought about that," he said. "The true Grand Slam is not impossible, but really, really difficult.
"Right now, I only focus on trying to continue to improve my tennis."
Last year it was Novak Djokovic who arrived at the first Masters series of the year as the Australian Open champion.
Seeded third this year behind Nadal and Roger Federer, the defending champion from Serbia admitted that he wasn't on quite the same high now that he was at this time in 2008.
But he believes his victory in Dubai two weeks ago, with the new racquet he has struggled to adjust to, showed he is moving in the right direction.
"This year hasn't started maybe the way I thought I would, but now I've raised my confidence in a higher level," he said. "Winning Dubai meant a lot for my confidence level and for my game overall."
Djokovic defeated 54th-ranked Argentinian Martin Vasallo Arguello 7-5 6-4.
He went up a break in each set, only to give it back, but managed to break again in each frame to seal the win.
"Winning this first match, it's never easy," Djokovic said. "From the baseline he made me work a lot with some points. But I played as much as I needed to, and I'm happy to get through."
Djokovic next faces German veteran Tommy Haas, who downed compatriot Rainer Schuettler 6-7(4) 6-2 6-4.
Women's top seed Dinara Safina of Russia had to work to book a fourth-round berth, beating China's Peng Shuai 7-5 6-4.
Safina, who has a chance to supplant the absent Serena Williams atop the world rankings by reaching the final of this WTA event, was up a break in the second set but gave it back before breaking Peng again to lead 5-4.
The Russian made no mistake as she served for the match, finishing off with a love game.
"Suddenly I stopped in the middle of the second set," Safina said. "I was like, 'What am I doing? Just play!'"
Despite the lapse of concentration Safina avoided the upset bug that saw 15 of 32 seeded women eliminated in the second round, including second-seeded Jelena Jankovic of Serbia, No.3 Elena Dementieva and No.6 Svetlana Kuznetsova, both of Russia.
In the fourth round she'll meet US veteran Jill Craybas, who beat slumping Czech Nicole Vaidisova 6-4 6-3.
Fourth-seeded Russian Vera Zvonareva also reached the fourth round with a 6-3 6-1 win over Petra Kvitova of Czech Republic.
But No.17, Amelie Mauresmo of France, was beaten in the late night match by China's Li Na 7-5 6-2.
Men's sixth seed Juan Martin Del Potro rallied for a 6-7(6) 6-3 6-1 victory over wildcard Ryan Sweeting, and seventh-seeded American Andy Roddick advanced with a 6-1 7-6(3) victory over Austrian qualifier Daniel Koellerer.
There was disappointment for France's ninth-seeded Gael Monfils, beaten 6-7(5) 6-1 6-4 by wildcard John Isner.
In other men's matches, last year's surprise men's finalist Mardy Fish, who shocked Federer in the semifinals in 2008, was beaten 7-6(4) 7-6(1) by France's Jeremy Chardy.
Chardy next faces Spain's David Ferrer, runner-up to Djokovic in Dubai, who beat US qualifier Todd Widom 6-4 7-5.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

IW: Hard Lessons from Court 4


Opposition is tennis' essential quality. Two people face each other with nothing but themselves and a stick. The court's 90-degree grid and pure white lines are set off by the curve of the ball. At the professional level, the grunts of the players and the dry thud of their shots are enclosed in the soft authority of the chair umpire's voice.
All that was true this afternoon when Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark stood across from Kaia Kanepi of Estonia at the BNP Paribas. The match was played on Court 4, where the Tennis Garden meet the desert. Beyond this, there's nothing but sand and scrub grass. Call it another form of opposition.
The stands are low out there. You get a full view of the cavernous sky and its gradations of blue—it seems more prominent here, a bigger deal, than in the East—which is set off by jutting brown hills and rows of stark, white lighting towers that line each side of the courts. From this vantage point, everything is dry and stripped and hard. Wozniacki's and Kanepi's shots cracked through the air, and you could hear each individual scrape—chicka-chicka-chicka—of their shoes as they set up to hit.
The two were opposed in appearance. Wozniacki is blonde, small but strong-legged, and wore a gleaming yellow top. Kanepi is broad and tall and power-packed, with short hair. But when they hit the ball, each seemed equally unlikely to be able to do what she did, to generate so much pace, to put their shots in the corners so consistently—Woz because she seems too small; Kanepi because she doesn't fit the body type of a tennis player. Wozniacki makes up for her size with lots of left-hand in her elaborate two-handed backhand, while Kanepi has tremendous timing on her forehand. Chalk it up to the power of good hands and hard work to overcome physical obstacles.
How good is Wozniacki, who is already ranked No. 13 at 18 years old? She's isn't a fluid mover and her strokes don't have effortless pop the way Kanepi's forehand does—Wozniacki is listed at 5-foot-10 but doesn't play that tall. For Wozniacki to become the "real thing," a Top Fiver, it will be an uphill fight all the way. It's how she plays each point now, fending the ball off and sending it away from her opponent with maximum effort and focus. She'll have to fight for everything.
Wozniacki won this 6-3 in the third, but the final set was a back and forth affair, as so many women's matches are. Each player was loose when she was behind, tight when she was ahead, somewhere in between when the score was tied. The key game was the seventh. Wozniacki served at 4-2 and went up 40-15. Kanepi unloaded on a slew of forehands and came back to hold break points. But those same forehands caught the tape when it counted, and Woz held for 5-2. Were those just mistimed, or mis-aimed, or just plain missed shots? I can say from experience that there's no such thing as a simple missed shot in a final set. It's the result of a slight tightening when you know there's something on the line.
Kanepi, who plays a riskier game than Wozniacki, was just a little more susceptible to those tightenings. Her shots have too little margin to survive them. In the final game, Wozniacki ended the back and forth by coming up with her biggest serve of the match at 30-30, and repeating it at 40-30. A good sign: She knows how to win these types of tight, early-round, side-court contests.
When the two walked to the net to shake hands—the opposing forces of tennis brought back together in the end—I was thinking more about Kanepi, the loser on the day. Why had she tightened when she was ahead and loosened when she was behind? Why do all of us do the same thing every time we play a match that matters to us? When we're on the verge of disaster, we relax; when we're on the verge of triumph, we do the opposite. Maybe this is the real, hard lesson that tennis teaches us about ourselves: We're more afraid to succeed than we are to fail.
03/15/2009 in 2009 Entries Send to a Friend