Davis Cup: Team GB to take on Australia as the Belgians to battle the Argentines - UBITENNIS
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Davis Cup: Team GB to take on Australia as the Belgians to battle the Argentines

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TENNIS – Andy Murray rallied from a set and a break down in the Davis Cup quarter final match against last year’s finalist from France to edge Frenchman Giles Simon 4-6 7-6(5) 6-3 6-0 to earn the British team the Davis Cup semifinals for the first time in 34 years. Australia fought back from 0-2 down to edge Kazakhstan 3-2. Diego Sampaolo

Murray gave the home team the 3-1 lead on grass at the Queen’s Club where he won the ATP 500 title last June. The Scotsman won his match against Jo Wilfred Tsonga 7-5 7-6 (12-10) 6-2 after saving three set points to bring Great Britain level to 1-1 on Friday and the doubles match with his brother Jamie with 4-6 6-3 7-5 (7-1) 6-1 over Jo Wilfred Tsonga and Nicolas Mahut. In the opening match on Friday Simon beat James Ward 6-4 6-4 6-1

Great Britain has reached the Davis Cup semifinal for the first time since 1981. The British team will play against Australia on 18-20 September.

Simon hit a forehand winner down the line to break serve for 2-1 Simon hurt his knee in a fall but he served out the set after saving two break points. Murray went down a set and a break and came close to losing the second set after losing a hard-fought 35-shot rally but he recovered to break back to draw level to 4-4 and forced the set to the tie-break. Simon took a 4-1 lead in the second-set tie-break but Murray fought back with a backhand and two volleys to reel off five of the next six points to earn a set point at 6-5 before clinching the set with a big serve after 74 minutes.

Murray hit a big serve to seal the set before taking a 3-0 lead in the third set with a double break. Simon broke back but Murray broke again for 5-3 en route to 6-3. Murray broke early in the fourth set for 2-0 to cruise to 6-0 in the fourth set after three hours and 26 minutes. Simon received treatment on his left ankle after slipping on the court.

“The whole weekend has been fantastic. This team has done amazing things. We are punching above our weight here. We are in the semifinals of the biggest competition in tennis. I am just proud to get here and hopefully we can do well against Australia next September. It obviously feels unbelievable to get through that. It wasn’t looking great in the second set. I just managed to find a way and used up all my last ounces of energy. We went through a period where we had Tim Henman and Greg Rusedski were two top-ten players and we never won a World Group match, so that shows you how difficult it is to do”, said Murray.

Lleyton Hewitt beat Aleksander Nedovyesov 7-6(2) 6-2 6-3 to give Australia the decisive 3-2 point against Kazakhstan. Nick Kyrgios and Thanasi Kokkinakis were replaced by Australian captain Willy Masur with Lleyton Hewitt and Sam Groth after losing the first two singles matches on Friday. The decision paid off at the end. Groth beat Mikhail Kukushkin 6-3 7-6(6) 4-6 7-6(6) after the Kazakh player did not convert set point in the second and the fourth sets in the two tie-breaks.

Hewitt teamed up with Sam Groth to win the doubles match on Saturday over Andrey Golubev and Aleksander Nedovyesov with 6-4 7-6(4) 6-2 before earning the Australian team the two decisive points which enabled Australia to come back from 0-2 down to take a 3-2 win.

It was the first time since the 1939 Davis Cup final against the United States in 1939 that Australia has rallied from 0-2 down to win a match in this event. Australia returns to the Davis Cup semifinals after nine years.

“I have said some of the greatest wins have been in Davis Cup and some of my toughest losses”, said Hewitt

Belgium has reached the semifinal for the first time since 1999. Ruben Bemelmans and Kimmer Coppejans beat Daniel Nestor and Adil Shamasdin 7-5 3-6 6-4 6-3 in Ostend to earn Belgium the 3-0 lead.

Belgium will play against Argentina at home. The South-American sealed a 3-0 win against Serbia after Carlos Berloq and Leonardo Mayer cruised past to 6-2 6-4 6-1 over Nenad Zimonjic and Viktor Troicki

 

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‘Big Things Will Happen’ – Emma Raducanu Hails Reunion With Childhood Coach

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Emma Raducanu - Cincinnati 2022 (foto Twitter @cincytennis)

Emma Raducanu has experienced a rollercoaster journey since winning the US Open in 2021 but the Brit believes she is on the right path to her best form. 

Raucanu, who is currently ranked 303rd in the world, hasn’t won another title since her Grand Slam triumph and has missed months of the Tour due to various injury setbacks. Last year, she underwent two surgeries on her wrists and another on her ankle. This week in Stuttgart she is playing in her sixth tournament since returning to competitive tennis following those surgeries. 

In recent weeks Raducanu has been building momentum on the Tour. Last weekend she beat world No.23 Caroline Garcia in the Billie Jean King Cup and on Wednesday she dropped just three games during her 6-2, 6-1, triumph over ex-No.1 Angelique Kerber at the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart. 

The 21-year-old partly credits her resurgence to the work she has done with Nick Cavaday. Her childhood coach who she reappointed to her team shortly before this year’s Australian Open.   

“I feel very comfortable working with him. I have known him since I was a young age, so he’s someone who I feel like I can trust, and that’s a big thing for me,” Raducanu told reporters in Stuttgart. 
“I feel like he’s known me since a young age. He knows pretty well how I operate. I would say I haven’t changed at all since I was like 8 or 9. But everything around me has changed, but it’s mentally I feel like I’m the exact same person. 
“We have obviously been doing great work this year, and it’s starting to show, but the training weeks we have been doing since the start, it’s just been slowly building and building. Whenever it all comes together, I think, like, big things will happen.”

As to what areas of Raducanu’s game has improved, she believes her serve is more effective. Against Kerber in Stuttgart, she won 56% of her service points and saved nine out of 11 break points faced. 

“I am playing some really good tennis. I feel like I’m a lot more dominant in my service games.” She said.
“I think it’s a combination of doing actual good practice weeks, doing the right things. I’m really enjoying working with Nick, my coach. It’s great to have a familiar face, but I also think we’re just working really well together as a team.”

In Stuttgart, Raducanu will play Czech Republic’s Linda Nosková in the second round who knocked out Jelena Ostapenko in her opening match. 

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Ons Jabeur Admits Injury Setback Was Tougher Than Expected

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Ons Jabeur – (foto via Twitter @PorscheTennis)


Ons Jabeur says she has a duty to be upfront about her struggles to help the next generation of professional players on the Tour. 

The two-time Wimbledon finalist ended a five-match losing streak on Wednesday at the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix where she defeated Ekaterina Alexandrova 2-6, 6-3, 7-6(1) in her opening match. The victory was the first Jabeur has recorded since February 7th when she beat Emma Raducanu at the Abu Dhabi Open. Overall, she has won three out of nine matches played so far in 2024.

Jabeur’s lacklustre results coincided with a flare-up of a knee issue that has been troubling her for more than five years. It is an injury that comes and goes but the Tunisian says playing on the clay helps her. 

“It’s been a couple of tough months. I didn’t expect that an injury could affect my mental so badly.” The world No.9 told reporters in Stuttgart.
“The knee was affecting me so badly, and I didn’t realize. I kept going and trying to play matches even though I knew I wasn’t ready, and that didn’t help with the level of losing basically against anyone on Tour.”

The 29-year-old is not afraid to speak about her struggles in the sport. She believes being honest about such problems helps both her and those watching her play. 

“I feel like it’s my duty, and to be honest, for the next generation when they watch you, not to think that everything is perfect on the court. There are some tough moments, some up-and-downs, but the most important thing is that you give it all on the court.” She said.

Jabeur will be hoping to get back on track during the European clay swing. Last year she experienced mixed fortunes on the surface. She won the Charleston Open, reached the semi-finals in Stuttgart and the quarter-finals of the French Open. However, at two other events during this period, she lost her opening match. 

“Playing on clay really helps my knee a lot. I’m getting the movement much better.” Jabeur explained.
“I think it just a matter of matches and definitely more training and keep being patient because I feel like that’s the key for me right now.”

Jabeur, who is seeded seventh in Stuttgart, will next play Italy’s Jasmine Paolini. 

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Rafael Nadal Takes Positives From Barcelona Exit Against Alex De Minaur

Rafael Nadal exited the tournament in Barcelona in the second round to Alex De Minaur.

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(@bcnopenbs - Twitter)

Rafael Nadal believes that he can be competitive for Roland Garros despite his 7-5 6-1 defeat to Alex De Minaur in Barcelona.

The 12-time champion suffered a straight sets defeat to the in-form Australian in the second round.

There was a valiant comeback from Nadal in the opening set as he recovered from a break down to get back onto level terms.

However De Minaur was too strong for Nadal as the world number eleven won nine of the last ten games to set up a third round meeting with Daniel Altmaier or Arthur Fils.

After the match Nadal congratulated De Minaur on the victory and analysed his own performance, “I mean Alex is a great player but honestly no, in terms of tennis today he’s in better shape than me so he is playing at a really high level since the beginning of the season, I think he made a really important step forward in his level of tennis,” Nadal told reporters in Barcelona.

“So just happy for him and congratulate him for the level he played today. And I think I was able to show myself most important to show the world and show myself when I was really trying and showed a high percentage of intensity, my level was there to compete.

“And I didn’t practice a lot so that encourages me to keep going and tells me that if I spend the day on the tour and keep practicing with the players on this surface, I really hope and really believe that I can keep being competitive and my body will allow me to push the way that I know.”

The defeat to De Minaur was Nadal’s third match all season having struggled with injury with the Spaniard hinting this could be his last time playing in Barcelona.

Despite the loss Nadal admits he feels happier and more comfortable than he did a couple of weeks ago, “I feel much more comfortable and much more happier today than one week and a half ago,” Nadal explained.

“I managed to play two matches, playing against great players and I mean when I was able to play I was not very far without a doubt. And I feel myself that if I’m able to keep practicing days on the tour and if my body allows me to spend hours on court and have the practices the way that I need.”

Now the next goal for Nadal is to try to reclaim his Roland Garros title, a tournament he has won on 14 different occasions.

As for Roland Garros Nadal just hopes he can be competitive for the second Grand Slam of the season as he intensifies his preparations over the next few weeks, “I hope to be competitive, that’s the truth and I hope and believe that I can be competitive in a few weeks,” Nadal stated.

“That’s the way I need to perceive today and my final goal is to give myself a chance to be realistically competing at Roland Garros. In my tennis career I was able to compete at the highest level at every single tournament, trying to win tournaments and I was not able to do it today.

“But I hope to be ready in a few weeks.”

Before Roland Garros, Nadal will hope to play in Madrid which starts on the 25th of April.

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