Stanislas Wawrinka beats improved Raonic and qualifies to semis - UBITENNIS
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Stanislas Wawrinka beats improved Raonic and qualifies to semis

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TENNIS – Monte-Carlo 2014. Stanislas Wawrinka edged Milos Raonic in a tight first set before rolling to a good 7-6 (5) 6-2 win worth a place in the semi-finals of ATP Master 1000 of Monte Carlo. Giulio Gasparin

The Australian Open champion was forced to a first-set tiebreak by the heavy serve of the Canadian and he found himself trailing 3-0 and then 5-3 before finding his best game and close 7-5.

In the second set, with the boost of confidence given by the first set, the Swiss found his trademark shots and after breaking Raonic’s serve on the very first break point of the match, he sailed to a comfortable win.

The world number 10, however, showed great improvements on the surface and it was clear the new prompts given by the coaching of Riccardo Piatti and Ivan Ljubicic are starting to kick in.

Raonic adopted new tactics, trying to avoid baseline rallies by charging the net and this combination of strong serves and net rushes seemed to work, as the Canadian faced no break points in the first set.

Wawrinka remained the best clay courter of the two and his aptness to the surface started to make an impact whenever the rallies began to grow longer.

Nonetheless, the Swiss number one exploited his big and varying serve to keep the pressure off, as much as giving no break points to his opponent throughout the match.

Having had the advantage to serve first, the world number three led the first set from the very beginning, but both times Raonic had to serve to stay in the set, the Canadian found his best serve to give no chances to his opponent.

Wawrinka started the tiebreak in the worst possible way as he was let down by his ground-strokes: first his favourite backhand down the line finished long and after a good serve from the Canadian, it was his forehand to go wild.

Down for 3-0, the Swiss did not let this bring him down and with two good serves and then a stunning backhand passing shot on the run, he got the mini-break back.

An unlucky netcord stopped Wawrinka’s forehand, giving another chance to Raonic, but on 4-5 up, the serve of the Canadian went missing.

The same net that stopped the Swiss’s forehand transformed a return in a winner to even the score, then Raonic sank an easy forehand on the bottom of the net, giving Wawrinka the chance to serve for the set.

The world number three did not let this go unused and with a massive serve he closed the tiebreak.

Raonic started the second set with three big serves to set a 40-0 lead, but the Wawrinka stepped in and by trying to be aggressive from the return, he scored four straight winners to get to the first break point of the match.

Raonic missed an easy forehand again and handed the first break.

Wawrinka started to trust more his shots and got another easy hold featuring one more stunning backhand down the line.

Raonic stopped the leak with two consecutive holds, but there was little he could do in the service games of the Swiss.

In the seventh game of the second set, Wawrinka pushed on the throttle once more and found another break to go serving for the set.

With another big service game, the third seed closed the match with ease, showing a renewed confidence after the worrying weeks on the American hard courts.

Wawrinka will now face the winner of Rafael Nadal against David Ferrer, with Nadal as the big favourite. But both the Spaniards will have to beware, because the Swiss has yet to face a single break point in the tournament and his game seems to be back to the Australian levels.

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Rafael Nadal To Play Laver Cup In Berlin

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Rafael Nadal has eased speculation that he might be retiring from the sport soon after signing on to play in the Laver Cup later this year. 

The 22-time Grand Slam champion is the latest player to join the line-up for this year’s team competition which features Europe taking on the rest of the world over three days. It will be Nadal’s fourth appearance in the competition and his first since 2022. He competed in the inaugural edition of the event back in 2017 alongside co-founder Roger Federer. 

“I am very happy to be playing Laver Cup in Berlin for Team Europe,” Nadal said in a press release. “I have some really special memories from my Laver Cup experiences, including all the emotions from London two years ago playing alongside Roger for the last time.”

Nadal’s decision to play comes amid questions about his future in the sport. The former world No.1 has previously indicated that this year could be his last on the Tour but he has stated that no decision has been made. In recent months he has been sidelined from action due to injury setbacks and has only been able to play in two tournaments so far this year. 

“At this stage in my career I really want to go out there and make the most of every opportunity I am given,” he explains.
“Teaming up is always an incredible experience and I have always enjoyed it, the competition is different and exciting. I’m looking forward to going to Berlin and helping Team Europe win back the Laver Cup.”

Other European players confirmed to be playing are Carlos Alcaraz, Daniil Medvedev and Alexander Zverev. Meanwhile, Alex de Minaur, Taylor Fritz and Tommy Paul have agreed to play for Team World. This year’s event will be held in Belin at the Uber Arena between September 20-22. 

The Laver Cup was inspired by golf’s Ryder Cup. It was co-founded by Federer’s Team8 management company (which he formed with agent Tony Godsick), businessman Jorge Paulo Lemann and Tennis Australia. In 2019 it became an official ATP sanction event and now has a place on the official calendar. 

Nadal is set to return to competitive action at the Madrid Masters which he has won on five previous occasions. He has been drawn to play teenage wild card Darwin Blanch in the first round. If he wins, Nadal will then play Alex de Minaur who knocked him out of the Barcelona Open last week. 

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Carlos Alcaraz In Doubt For Madrid Open Title Defence

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Carlos Alcaraz admits that he is not certain if he will be ready in time to play at next week’s Madrid Masters.

The 20-year-old is yet to play a clay tournament in Europe due to a forearm injury which ruled him out of both Monte Carlo and Barcelona. He hurt his right arm whilst training shortly before the Monte Carlo event began. 

It is the latest in a series of injury issues that has affected Alcaraz throughout his young career. Since the start of 2023, he has also been derailed by issues with his abdominal, hamstring, post-traumatic arthritis in his left hand and muscular discomfort in his spine. 

“My feeling isn’t right, but it is what it is. Now I’m fully focused on recovery and I have a little more time,” Alcaraz told reporters in Barcelona on Monday.
“My goal is to try and go to the Madrid Open, but at the moment nothing is certain. I was given specific recovery times and I’ve respected them, but I haven’t felt good. I don’t want to get ahead of myself.
“I can’t say I’ll be 100% in Madrid, but that’s my intention. We’ll train and do everything we can so that the feelings improve so I can play a match … It’s also a very special tournament for me.”

Alcaraz has won the past two editions of the Madrid Open, which is classed as a Masters 1000 event. In 2022 he defeated Alexander Zverev in the final and then 12 months later he beat Jan-Lennard Struff in the title match.

The setback comes after what has been a steady start to the year for Alcaraz who has reached the quarter-finals or better in four out of five tournaments played. He successfully defended his title in Indian Wells and then reached the semi-finals in Miami. 

Should he not play in Madrid, it is likely that the Spaniard will lose his No.2 spot to Jannik Sinner who is just over 100 points behind him in the standings. He will still have the chance to play a clay-court event before the French Open with Rome taking place early next month. 

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Olympic Qualification Is Not the Only Goal For French Veteran Gael Monfils

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Gael Monfils (image via https://twitter.com/atptour)

Gael Monfils admits he doesn’t have too many years left on the Tour but this doesn’t mean his targets are any less ambitious. 

The 37-year-old has enjoyed a rapid rise up the rankings over the past 12 months following battles with injury. At his lowest, he was ranked 394th last May but is now in 40th position. As a result, he is closing on securing a place in the Olympic Games which is being held in his home country of France for the first time since 1924. The tennis event will be staged at Roland Garros. 

“When I was 400, I was thinking the Olympics would be great, but it’s going to be tough,” Monfils told reporters on Tuesday. 
“There are younger players playing well. If I don’t qualify, I don’t mind. It will just mean I’m very close to the ranking I want to be. That ranking will allow me to find another goal.”

Monfils is already a three-time Olympian but has never won a medal at the event. He reached the quarter-finals of the singles tournament twice in 2008 and 2016. 

Another goal of Frenchmen is the Wimbledon championships which concludes just three weeks before the Olympics begin. The proximity of these tournaments will be a challenge to all players who will be going from playing on clay to grass and then back to clay again. 

“I really want to go and play Wimbledon. I don’t have so many Wimbledons to play in the future. The Olympics is one goal, not the only goal.” Monfils states.
“My dream is of course to be part of the Olympics. I played three times at the Olympics. I’d like to be there again. But I also really want to do well in Wimbledon this year. To reach my goal, it has to be including Wimbledon.” He added. 

Monfils is currently playing at the Monte Carlo Masters where he beat Aleksandar Vukic in his opening match. In the next round, he will take on Daniil Medvedev in what will be their first meeting since 2022. He leads their head-to-head 2-1. 

Medvedev has openly spoken about his roller-coaster relationship with playing on the clay. He admits it is not his favourite surface but how much of a factor could this be in his upcoming clash with Monfils?

“Of course, it’s not his favourite one, but he’s still Daniil Medvedev, and whatever the surface, it’s always very complicated to play him,” Monfils concludes. 

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