2013 Tennis Thread

Gulbis sweeps to surprise Delray title

Ernests Gulbis beat Edouard Roger-Vasselin 7-6 6-3 in a battle of unlikely finalists to clinch the Delray Beach International title.
Gulbis, the 2010 Delray champion, dumped second seed Tommy Haas out of the semi-finals, while Roger-Vasselin earned a place in his first ATP singles final with a stunning win over big serving American John Isner, the tournament's top seed.
Gulbis had been ranked 109 in the world when he beat Haas but jumped to 67th after the win, while his French opponent went from 105th to No. 78. Haas is ranked 19th and Isner 15th.
Latvian Gulbis leaned on his experience facing a set point at 5-4 down in the first but wriggled out of trouble to ***** a tiebreaker, which he won 7-3.
With momentum now on his side, Gulbis cruised in the second set and completed the victory in 1 hour and 36 minutes.
Sunday's match was the first time two players ranked outside the top 100 had faced off in a final since 2007.
 
Nadal: The most emotional week of my career

Rafael Nadal's fist-pumping comeback reached a new high with his victory at the Mexican Open on Sunday, giving tennis fans hope the 11-times grand slam champion can return to the top of the game.
In an unexpectedly one-sided match, Nadal blew away three-times defending champion David Ferrer 6-0 6-2 in little over an hour.
But the relatively ***** claycourt event in the picturesque Pacific resort city of Acapulco took on far greater significance as the sport's attention focused like a laser on Nadal's left knee and the injury that had ****** him to take a seven-month hiatus from the tour.
Few top players have taken that much time off and been able to reclaim their former glory, but Nadal was not focusing on the history books following his latest win.
"I don't know if it's happened before, but what I do know is this has been the most emotional week of my career after such a difficult time," the world number five said in an interview with Reuters.
While there were moments during the week when Nadal visibly limped, he said his knee fared much better than during his earlier comeback events at the VTR Open in Chile and the Brazil Open, both last month.
"There were days in Brazil when it was really bad, and in Chile, during one match as well. But here, it didn't hurt. It just bothered me some," he said. "This was the first week where I could run with complete freedom and no limitations."
Nadal, 26, suffers from chronic knee tendinitis and last September discovered he had a partially torn left patella tendon. He had been absent from tournament tennis since his upset loss in the second round of Wimbledon last year to little-known Czech Lukas Rosol.
Former American tennis pro Brad Gilbert noted that Nadal's latest victory came on the heels of wins over some of the sport's top competitors, including world number four Ferrer.
"Ferrer is playing arguably the best tennis of his career," said Gilbert. "I mean, the guy has been on fire."
Gilbert is perhaps best known for coaching top players Andy Murray, Andy Roddick, and Andre Agassi. He adds that dealing with injuries can be very tricky.
"Andre used to tell me that if you are nursing something that's sore, and you try to play through it, that's the easiest way to hurt something else," he said.
Fellow Spaniard Tommy Robredo, who also was ****** to take seven months off the tour following a thigh injury last year, emphasises the physical strain of top flight tennis.
"You have to push your limits every week, every match, for so many weeks back to back," said Robredo, a former top-five player who lost in the Acapulco second round.
"We always have something hurting here or there."
Tennis historian Steve Flink points to past comeback efforts of top players to stress the exceptional nature of Nadal's current run.
"The example I think of is John McEnroe after the 1985 season," said Flink. "He decided to go on a sabbatical. He was gone closer to six months and frankly it did not work out. He was really never the same player he had been when he left."
Flink notes that McEnroe won all of his major titles prior to taking the time off, and he was only in his mid-20s.
Agassi was also sidelined from the tour for several months at the end of 1993 due to wrist surgery, Flink adds, but his absence was not as long as Nadal's.
"His was quite a successful comeback," said Flink, pointing to Agassi's triumphs at the US Open and Wimbledon.
Whether or not Nadal, follows the example of McEnroe or Agassi remains to be seen, but early reviews are encouraging.
"If his knee isn't hurting, if it's solid, I think we have Nadal back in the hunt for everything," said Miguel Angel Zubiarrain, a tennis analyst for Spain's Cadena SER radio network.
Nadal is scheduled to play an exhibition match against Juan Martin del Potro at New York's Madison Square Garden on Monday, and will then test his knee further at the California's Indian Wells hard-court tournament.
"In a sense he's reminiscent of Jimmy Connors in the 70s and 80s," said Flink. "It's not necessarily his game that wins the public over, although his game is electrifying at times, but it's his professionalism and his fighting spirit," said Flink.
"It doesn't matter whether its Acapulco or Wimbledon," he added, "he gives it absolutely everything he's got."
Asked what keeps him going, Nadal smiled and paused.
"My motivation is tomorrow, just one day at a time, right?" he said. "I've just got to keep working to be able to do what I enjoy, which is play."
 
Hingis tops list of 2013 Hall of Fame class

Swiss former world number one Martina Hingis, a winner of five Grand Slam singles titles, headlined the International Tennis Hall of Fame's list of inductees for the 2013 class.
Broadcaster Cliff Drysdale, tennis promoter Charlie Pasarell and former Romanian player Ion Tiriac will be inducted to the contributor category, the Newport, Rhode Island, hall said in a statement. Australian Thelma Coyne Long was previously named as an inductee to the master player category.
Hingis, who won the Australian Open and Wimbledon at the age of 16, quit tennis for the first time in 2003 at the age of 22, suffering from ankle injuries. She returned in late 2006 and finished the following year ranked seventh.
However, she quit for a second time in 2007 under a cloud after she tested positive for ******* at that year's Wimbledon. Hingis served a two-year ban but maintained her innocence.
The 32-year-old Swiss won a total of 15 Grand Slam titles including nine major doubles titles and one mixed doubles crown, and claimed 43 singles titles and 37 doubles titles.
She won three successive Australian Open singles titles from 1997 and also triumphed at Wimbledon and the U.S. Open, and was a finalist at the French Open. In 1998, Hingis led the Swiss team to their only Fed Cup title.
Long, 94, won a pair of Australian singles titles among 19 women's Grand Slam titles, including doubles and mixed doubles between the 1930s and 1950s.
Drysdale was a player during the 1960s and 1970s and then helped launch the ATP, serving as its first president. He later turned to broadcasting and for more than 30 years has been one of the sport's most respected voices.
Pasarell, a former U.S. number one and ATP co-founder, is most recently known as past director and managing partner of the Indian Wells tournament. He also partnered with Arthur Ashe and Sheridan Snyder to launch the National Junior Tennis League.
Tiriac, a former player turned tennis power broker, has been an influential leader in roles ranging from coach to player manager to tournament promoter. He spent 15 years on Romania's Davis Cup team, helping them reach the finals three times.
The Class of 2013 will be inducted on July 13 in Newport.
 
Berdych to return to Queen's Club

World number six Tomas Berdych will play the traditional Wimbledon warm-up event at Queen's Club in June as he targets a repeat of his 2010 run to the final at the grasscourt slam.
The Czech confirmed on Tuesday that he would take part in the London event, now called the Aegon Championships, in a bid to sharpen his grasscourt skills after the European clay season.
It will be Berdych's first return to the club for eight years and comes on the advice of his new manager and former world number three Ivan Ljubicic.
"I think it could be a good advantage to be in London to get used to the conditions and to those great courts, and I think this is exactly what I need before Wimbledon," Berdych, one of the most consistent players on tour last year, said in a statement from the organisers.
"Even though it's a long time since I played there (at Queen's) I still remember that beautiful club very well. I have to say that I have never played on a better grass court than at The Queen's Club.
"The experience of reaching the Wimbledon final was great. It showed me a lot of things - that I'm able to play really well through two weeks, which is very tough," added the 27-year-old, who lost to Rafa Nadal in the 2010 Wimbledon final having beaten Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic to get there.
Ljubicic reckoned Berdych would benefit from arriving in London earlier than usual.
"He only played Queen's once before and I thought he should change that," he said.
"Travelling is tiring. If a player stays in London and gets used to London grass - and the Queen's Club courts are the closest to the courts at Wimbledon - it can only be a good thing. I think it's the best preparation for Wimbledon."
Berdych - beaten in the Dubai final last week by Djokovic - will be joined at Queen's Club by Britain's U.S. Open champion Andy Murray, who is also looking for his first Wimbledon title after reaching the final there last year against Federer.
He won the London Olympic gold medal against the Swiss on the same centre court weeks later.
 
Kuznetsova sets up Jankovic clash in Indian Wells

Svetlana Kuznetsova eased into the second round of the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells with a comfortable 6-3 6-1 win over Andrea Hlavackova.
The Russian, once ranked two in the world but now 46th, saw off her Czech opponent in 71 minutes to set up a date with 18th seed Jelena Jankovic, who had a first-round bye.
Kuznetsova, who is currently enjoying something of a resurgence after an injury-hampered 2012 season, won 78 per cent of her first service points and was broken just once.
The two-times runner-up at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden had five break opportunities and she took them all in a clinical display to book a clash with Jankovic, who won the tournament in 2010.
"I'm happy to be back on the court, this is the main thing," said Kuznetsova.
"Every day I just try the best I can and things are coming along pretty well. I feel really balanced within myself, which is important."
Kuznetsova was sidelined by a right knee injury for six months last year but has made an encouraging start to the 2013 season, reaching the quarter-finals in Sydney and also at the Australian Open.
In a later match, Italy's Francesca Schiavone downed compatriot Flavia Pennetta 7-5 6-1 to kick off her campaign in winning style.
Schiavone, ranked one place below Kuznetsova, saved eight of 11 break points in an error-strewn first set while breaking Pennetta's serve four times.
The second stanza was more comfortable, although Schiavone still had to save a further three break points on her way to wrapping up victory in an hour and 49 minutes.
Her reward is a tough match-up with second seeded Russian Maria Sharapova.
The top half of the draw gets under way on Thursday, with Britain's Heather Watson and Laura Robson both in action.

Indian Wells results

Round 1

Christina Mchale (U.S.) beat Tsvetana Pironkova (Bulgaria) 6-3 6-4

Francesca Schiavone (Italy) beat Flavia Pennetta (Italy) 7-5 6-1

Lourdes Dominguez Lino (Spain) beat Grace Min (U.S.) 1-6 6-4 6-3

Maria Sanchez (U.S.) beat Olga Puchkova (Russia) 6-3 6-3

Lesia Tsurenko (Ukraine) beat Ayumi Morita (Japan) 6-1 6-2

Lara Arruabarrena Vecino (Spain) beat Sesil Karatantcheva (Kazakhstan) 6-4 1-6 6-3

Anabel Medina Garrigues (Spain) beat Casey Dellacqua (Australia) 6-1 6-3

Shahar Peer (Israel) beat Marina Erakovic (New Zealand) 6-3 6-4

Svetlana Kuznetsova (Russia) beat Andrea Hlavackova (Czech Republic) 6-3 6-1

Olga Govortsova (Belarus) beat Mandy Minella (Luxembourg) 6-2 3-6 6-4

Mallory Burdette (U.S.) beat Jill Craybas (U.S.) 6-3 6-1

Silvia Soler Espinosa (Spain) beat Vania King (U.S.) 6-7(7) 6-2 6-1

Chanelle Scheepers (South Africa) beat Kristina Mladenovic (France) 6-4 6-1

Johanna Larsson (Sweden) beat Timea Babos (Hungary) 6-7(5) 6-2 6-0

Simona Halep (Romania) beat Lauren Davis (U.S.) 6-2 6-0

Ksenia Pervak (Kazakhstan) beat Zheng Jie (China) 6-1 6-2
 
Tennis to introduce biological passports

Tennis will introduce biological passports for players and increase the number of ***** tests done each year.
A number of players, including 17-times Grand Slam winner Roger Federer, had called for the sport to up its anti-doping measures in the **** of high-profile cases in other sports.
A biological passport is an electronic document containing test results collated over time that can be used to detect changes that might indicate doping.
"The implementation of the athlete biological passport is an important step in the evolution of the Tennis Anti-Doping Programme as it provides us with a great tool in the fight against doping in our sport," said International Tennis Federation president Francesco Ricci Bitti in a statement.
According to figures on the ITF website, the governing body carried out only 21 out-of-competition ***** tests in the professional game in 2011.
Cycling's governing body, the UCI, carried out more than 3,314 out-of-competition ***** tests in the same year.
The UCI introduced biological passports in 2008 to track any ***** changes in riders against an original profile.
 
Nadal set for his first hardcourt test on comeback

Buoyant after a successful tournament run on clay in recent weeks, Rafa Nadal knows he will face the toughest test of his injury comeback at the BNP Paribas Open.
Following a shock second-round exit at Wimbledon last year, the Spanish left-hander was sidelined for seven months by a left knee injury and he now returns to the hard courts of Indian Wells, a surface where his all-action, fist-pumping game has always been most vulnerable.
"I am just here to try my best," the world number five said after practising on one of the outside courts at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden. "We will see how the knee answers on hard.
"It seems that the results on clay were positive, especially because the knee was feeling better and better every week, especially the last week. Now I am going to try here on hard."
Nadal returned to the ATP circuit last month in South America where he competed in three relatively ***** claycourt events, winning two of them after reaching all three finals.
He was especially pleased with his performance at the Mexican Open in Acapulco where he clinched the title after sweeping aside three-times defending champion David Ferrer 6-0 6-2 in little over an hour on Sunday.
"I played much, much, much better than what I thought and in Acapulco I played a fantastic tournament," Nadal smiled.
"And in the final at Acapulco, forget about if I was seven months away from tennis, I played much, much better than a lot of finals when I am competing at 100 per cent. I played one of my best matches probably ever on clay in the final."
Asked how his troublesome knee was feeling as he prepared for the elite ATP Masters 1000 event at Indian Wells, Nadal replied: "I have good days and I have bad days during all the claycourt season.
"The important thing for me today is that most of the days I have changed the dynamic and I have much more good days than bad days. That's a positive thing.
"The only negative thing on clay when I have a bad day is your movements are easier than here (on a hardcourt surface)."
A left knee injury ****** Nadal to pull out of the semi-finals in Miami last March - and began a chain of events that meant he would not play on hard courts again for a whole year.
Though he went on to win an 11th grand slam title at the French Open last June, his season came to an abrupt end two weeks later following a defeat to Czech journeyman Lukas Rosol.
Nadal ended up missing the US Open and January's Australian Open but he said his biggest disappointment was having to skip the Olympic Games staged in London.
"That was the hardest," he added. "When I had to take the decision, I take it. I didn't have no choice. I couldn't move.
"That was a sad moment for me because these kinds of opportunities are not forever. Maybe it's only one time in life and I lost that opportunity. But I can always be positive, keep working and try to be in Rio in 2016."
Asked if he had ever considered quitting the sport during his seven months on the sidelines, Nadal replied: "I never thought about that.
"It was just a long time and sometimes it is hard when you practise every day in the gym, when you work a lot on the recovery and it's not an injury that you know exactly when you are going to come back.
"It's an injury that you look every day how the feeling improves or gets worse and sometimes it's frustration when you feel that every day you test yourself and feel that you are not improving. But I never felt about that (quitting)."
During his hiatus, Nadal said he enjoyed spending more time with his ****** and friends in Mallorca while also playing plenty of golf and going fishing, and could envision a life outside tennis.
"I can live without tennis," he added. "But when you cannot do what you want to do it is not easy. I am a competitor and I know this world is not forever, the tennis career.
"I really enjoy being a tennis player and I feel very lucky to have the chance to work in one of my hobbies. But life is a lot of things and sometimes much more important other things than the tennis."
 
Murray aims for Indian Wells boost after break

Having made early exits from the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells the last two years, US Open champion Andy Murray is banking on a long break from the game to help spark his form for the 2013 edition.
The 25-year-old Scot has not competed since he lost to Novak Djokovic in the Australian Open final in January, preferring instead to work on his fitness for long-term gain.
"In terms of playing matches, yeah, that's a disadvantage," Murray said about his five-week lay-off since the season's first Grand Slam. "But I value my fitness block.
"I think you make a big difference throughout the course of the year and in the Grand Slams. My mind tells me that if you train for three-and-a-half weeks when no one else is training, then physically you should be in better shape.
"But you also need to get the matches and I haven't played very well here the last few years so I'll need top up my game this year."
Murray, a runner-up at Indian Wells in 2009 and a losing quarter-finalist in 2010, could not explain why he has struggled at the California desert venue over the last two years, on both occasions being eliminated in his first match.
"I just haven't played well in the matches that I have lost here," the world number three said. "I will just try and play better this year, compete as hard as I can.
"Even if I'm not feeling great in my first match, just try and hustle, chase as many balls down as possible, try and find a rhythm. I used to play well here when I was younger. I liked the conditions but the last few years it's just been a struggle."
Murray, who clinched his first Grand Slam crown at last year's US Open after mining Olympic gold at the London Games in a stellar 2012 campaign, knows he has generally played well after taking short breaks from the game.
"I played well in Australia and at the beginning of years after taking a five-week break from competition and I always played well after Wimbledon when I took that four or five-week break," he said.
"Also when they changed the schedule after the US Open I took a few weeks off as well before I started playing the indoor stretch and I always played well there too.
"It isn't always easy the first few matches back but, in the long-term and the long-run for preserving my body and giving my career hopefully a bit more length, it will help."
Having finally landed his maiden Grand Slam title, Murray conceded his ***** of winning Wimbledon for the first time had become even more tantalising after losing last year's final at the All-England Club to Roger Federer in four sets.
"I was kind of viewing every Grand Slam as being equal or exactly the same, I would have said, the last few years because I hadn't won one and I was desperate to try and win one," the Scot said.
"Now I'll approach every Grand Slam the same way ... but with what happened at Wimbledon last year and obviously at the Olympics and everything I have experienced there over the last few years, obviously over time it will mean more and more to me.
"I will try and do my best again this year but it's a tough competition to win," smiled Murray, who became the British man to reach the Wimbledon final since Bunny Austin in 1938.
 
Federer 'really excited' to have Nadal back

Four-times champion Roger Federer was delighted to welcome back to the ATP Tour his long-time rival Rafael Nadal, a man he could face in the quarter-finals of the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells.
Spaniard Nadal has slipped to fifth in the world rankings after being sidelined for seven months last year due to a left knee injury and is seeded to meet Federer in the last eight of the elite ATP Masters 1000 event in the California desert.
"I only just saw him yesterday after my practice, I was really excited to see him again," Swiss world number two Federer told reporters at Indian Wells on Thursday as the men's tournament began.
"We haven't had much contact. I think he really wanted to get away from it all, which I totally understand.
"I was really happy to see him doing so well in Acapulco and it's great to see him here playing on the hard courts. I'm hoping to catch up with him this week."
Left-hander Nadal returned to the ATP circuit last month in South America where he competed in three relatively ***** claycourt events, winning two of them after reaching all three finals.
He gave himself a huge confidence boost for Indian Wells, where he is a twice former champion, by overpowering fellow Spaniard David Ferrer 6-0 6-2 in the final of the Mexican Open in Acapulco on Sunday.
Federer returns to one of his favourite venues for the Indian Wells event but the Swiss maestro is still seeking his first ATP title of the year after producing contrasting form in his first three tournaments.
After reaching the Australian Open semi-finals, where he lost to Andy Murray, Federer was beaten by Julien Benneteau in the Rotterdam quarter-finals before squandering three match points in a semi-final defeat by Tomas Berdych in Dubai.
"I played really well in Australia," said Federer, a 17-times grand slam champion. "Rotterdam, I was disappointed because I thought I could have done better. I played so well the year before and I never really got going against Benneteau.
"And in Dubai I was a bit unfortunate losing with three match points, and having to explain the loss when you feel you should be preparing for the final.
"What happened, happened. I am playing fine. Obviously I would have hoped to have won a tournament by now but overall I am happy with my game."
While Federer and Nadal, as seeded players, have a bye into the second round at Indian Wells, former world number three David Nalbandian of Argentina advanced with a 6-4 6-2 win over Spaniard Marcel Granollers in the first round on Thursday.
Also progressing were twice former champion Lleyton Hewitt, who battled past Czech Lukas Rosol 6-4 3-6 6-1 in cold and blustery conditions, and fellow Australian Bernard Tomic, who overpowered Brazil's Thomaz Bellucci 6-4 6-3.
Hewitt, winner here in 2002 and 2003, will next meet big-serving American John Isner, who lost to Federer in last year's final at Indian Wells.
"It's going to be a tough match," former world number one Hewitt said of his second-round opponent. "I've had the better of him in the past, then lost to him in a tight match in the final of Newport last year."
In the second round of the women's event, double champion Daniela Hantuchova of Slovakia overcame Stephanie Foretz Gacon of France 6-3 3-6 6-4 and Romania's Irina Begu stunned Britain's Heather Watson 6-2 6-4.
Hantuchova will next face Australian Open champion and top seed Victoria Azarenka of Belarus while Begu takes on fourth-seeded German Angelique Kerber.
 
Biological passports good news, says Federer

Roger Federer has applauded the announcement that tennis will introduce biological passports for players and urged the sport to make the ATP Tour "as clean as it possibly can be" with a broad approach.
Earlier in the day, the International Tennis Federation also said it would increase the number of ***** tests done each year under its anti-doping programme in the **** of several high-profile cases in other sports.
"That's good news," 17-times Grand Slam winner Federer said at the BNP Paribas Open.
"I think tennis has done a good job of trying everything to be as clean as possible but we are entering a new era. Everything is becoming more professional with more money involved.
"We just need to make sure from our side that we are doing everything we can and for that reason we need the players to engage in this process. We have to do everything to ensure our tour is as clean as it possibly can be."
Federer and many of his peers have been prominent in calling for tennis to up anti-doping measures, especially following the admission in January by seven-times Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong that he doped throughout his cycling career.
"The cycling issue has been around for quite some time but what surfaced this year obviously was super extreme," Federer said. "And that really gets you thinking that we just have to make sure that we do everything we possibly can."
According to figures on the ITF website, the governing body carried out only 21 out-of-competition ***** tests in the professional game in 2011.
Cycling's governing body, the UCI, carried out more than 3,314 out-of-competition ***** tests in the same year.
"Things changed around," Federer said of the procedure of out-of-competition ***** tests in tennis. "Before it was like, 'Okay, where are you going to be?'
"Now it's like, 'Where are you going to be for that one hour during the day, you have to give them everything, all your details and that stuff. It took some getting used to."
However, Federer said he wanted ***** testing to be more democratic as well as more frequent.
"Last year, through the Dubai, Rotterdam and Indian Wells swing where I won all three tournaments, I didn't get tested once. And that shouldn't be okay," the 31-year-old Swiss said.
"You've just got to go test those guys who are doing really, really well anyways but also in the Challenger levels, in the first rounds, so that nobody really falls through.
"It's important that everybody falls into the same string - ATP, ITF, WADA, whoever else is involved, the players, the officials, everybody needs to understand that this is really important for the integrity."
A biological passport is an electronic document containing test results collated over time that can be used to detect changes that might indicate doping.
 
Baghdatis falls early in Indian Wells

World number 35 Marcos Baghdatis was the highest profile casualty on the opening day of the men's draw of the BNP Paribas Open, the Cypriot falling to Daniel Brands.
Baghdatis, who reached the quarter-finals in Indian Wells seven years ago, was dumped out 6-0 7-6(3) by his German opponent.
Next up for Brands is Andreas Seppi of Italy.
Former world number one Lleyton Hewitt, twice a winner in Indian Wells, booked a date with 2012 runner-up John Isner after beating Lukas Rosol.
The Australian took an hour and 35 minutes to secure the 6-4 3-6 6-1 win, during which he converted four of 12 break points.
Hewitt won the title in 2002, when he defeated Tim Henman in the final, and a year later with victory over Gustavo Kuerten.
Fellow Australian Bernard Tomic, ranked 45 in the world and holder of one title already this season - Sydney - kicked off the day's play at Indian Wells Tennis Garden with a 6-4 6-3 win over Thomaz Bellucci of Brazil to set up an intriguing second-round encounter with Richard Gasquet.
David Nalbandian stuttered slightly in his first-round encounter with Marcel Granollers but the Argentine former world number three managed to save seven of eight break points to progress 6-4 6-2.
World number 37 Kevin Anderson also registered a straight-set win, 7-6(6) 6-3 over Victor Hanescu as the South African continues his comeback from elbow surgery. Anderson is now 10-3 so far this season.
Serbia's Viktor Troicki was upset by David Goffin, the Belgian claiming his third tour victory of the year with a 4-6 6-3 6-4 win. It is Goffin's first appearance at the Californian event.
The seeded players at the tournament have byes into the second round. The world's top players, including Rafael Nadal, will all be in action later in the week.

BNP Paribas results

Round 1

Ryan Harrison (U.S.) beat Go Soeda (Japan) 6-0 4-6 6-3

Ernests Gulbis (Latvia) beat Feliciano Lopez (Spain) 6-3 6-2

Ivan Dodig (Croatia) beat Guido Pella (Argentina) 6-1 6-2

Lleyton Hewitt (Australia) beat Lukas Rosol (Czech Republic) 6-4 3-6 6-1

Denis Istomin (Uzbekistan) beat Vasek Pospisil (Canada) 7-6(5) 6-3

Wayne Odesnik (U.S.) beat Roberto Bautista (Spain) 7-5 7-5

Mischa Zverev (Germany) beat Jurgen Melzer (Austria) 3-6 6-3 7-6(3)

Daniel Brands (Germany) beat Marcos Baghdatis (Cyprus) 6-0 7-6(3)

David Nalbandian (Argentina) beat Marcel Granollers (Spain) 6-4 6-2

Kevin Anderson (South Africa) beat Victor Hanescu (Romania) 7-6(6) 6-3

Leonardo Mayer (Argentina) beat Xavier Malisse (Belgium) 6-2 3-6 6-4

Jarkko Nieminen (Finland) beat Igor Sijsling (Netherlands) 4-6 6-3 6-3

Benoit Paire (France) beat Lukasz Kubot (Poland) 5-7 7-5 6-2

David Goffin (Belgium) beat Viktor Troicki (Serbia) 4-6 6-3 6-4

Paolo Lorenzi (Italy) beat Gilles Muller (Luxembourg) 7-5 6-4

Bernard Tomic (Australia) beat Thomaz Bellucci (Brazil) 6-4 6-3
 
Petra, you silly cow! That was one of the worst matches I've ever watched.

Yet ... :drawheart:

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Watson and Robson ousted in Indian Wells

British interest in the women's draw of the BNP Paribas Open is over after both Heather Watson and Laura Robson fell at the first hurdle in Indian Wells.
The nation's number one Watson dropped to a 6-2 6-4 defeat to Irina Begu while Robson, playing later in the day, suffered a spectacular collapse to lose 2-6 7-6(2) 6-1 to Sofia Arvidsson.
Watson, who recently celebrated entering the world's top 40 at 39, had chances to stamp her authority on her match against Begu but failed to convert any of the six break points she had.
Begu, ranked 53 in the world, broke three times from her six opportunities over the course of the match, which lasted an hour and 43 minutes.
The Romanian now meets Angelique Kerber in the second round after the German seed was handed a first-round bye.
"Today wasn't my best day at the office," Watson said.
Robson looked well-placed for victory over Arvidsson after a commanding opening set, during which she won 71 per cent of her first service points and saved all three break points she faced.
The 19-year-old continued in the same fashion to race to a 4-1 lead in the second set before her form completely deserted her. The experienced Arvidsson, ranked 49 in the world, took advantage to ***** a tie-break, which she duly claimed to send the match to a decider.
Robson, six places higher than the Swede in the world rankings, never recovered and she fell apart in the third, failing to convert any of the five break point chances she had while handing nine opportunities to her opponent.
Arvidsson took two of those, which was enough to complete victory in just over two hours on court. She goes on to meet Julia Goerges.

BNP Paribas Open results

Round 1

Madison Keys (U.S.) beat Melanie Oudin (U.S.) 6-4 4-6 6-3

Garbine Muguruza Blanco (Spain) beat Bojana Jovanovski (Serbia) 2-6 7-5 6-3

Stefanie Voegele (Switzerland) beat Petra Martic (Croatia) 4-6 6-4 6-3

Magdalena Rybarikova (Slovakia) beat Romina Oprandi (Switzerland) 7-6(4) 6-0

Alexandra Dulgheru (Romania) beat Michelle Larcher de Brito (Portugal) 6-4 6-4

Daniela Hantuchova (Slovakia) beat Stephanie Foretz Gacon (France) 6-3 3-6 6-4

Mirjana Lucic-Baroni (Croatia) beat Pauline Parmentier (France) 7-5 6-3

Jamie Hampton (U.S.) beat Bethanie Mattek-Sands (U.S.) 5-7 6-3 6-1

Kiki Bertens (Netherlands) beat Annika Beck (Germany) 3-6 6-4 6-1

Alize Cornet (France) beat Monica Puig (Puerto Rico) 6-7(3) 6-2 6-2

Urszula Radwanska (Poland) beat Arantxa Rus (Netherlands) 6-3 6-3

Sofia Arvidsson (Sweden) beat Laura Robson (Britain) 2-6 7-6(2) 6-1

Kimiko Date-Krumm (Japan) beat Galina Voskoboeva (Kazakhstan) 6-4 3-6 6-4

Taylor Townsend (U.S.) beat Lucie Hradecka (Czech Republic) 3-6 7-6(1) 6-3

Irina Begu (Romania) beat Heather Watson (Britain) 6-2 6-4

Monica Niculescu (Romania) beat Elina Svitolina (Ukraine) 6-0 6-0
 
Kvitova tested on way into third round

Former Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova survived 10 double faults and an erratic second set to beat Olga Govortsova of Belarus 6-4 3-6 6-3 in the second round of the BNP Paribas Open.
The big-serving Czech, seeded fifth in the elite WTA event at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden, sealed victory after a marathon encounter lasting two hours and 21 minutes when a Govortsova forehand sailed wide.
Kvitova, who clinched her 10th WTA singles title in Dubai last month, will next face Ukrainian Lesia Tsurenko, a 6-1 3-6 6-1 winner over Kazakhstan's Yaroslava Shvedova earlier in the day.
In mainly overcast and blustery conditions at the California desert venue, the opening set went with serve until world number seven Kvitova was surprisingly broken in the fifth game, after double-faulting, to trail 2-3.
However, the pony-tailed Czech immediately broke back, then steadily took control before clinching the set in 49 minutes with a rasping forehand service return as the Belarusian lost serve for a second time.
Govortsova, ranked 67th, took advantage of Kvitova's serving troubles in the second set, breaking her opponent in the third and ninth games to level the match.
But the left-handed Czech, who claimed her first grand slam crown at Wimbledon in 2011, recovered form in the third, breaking Govortsova's serve in the seventh and ninth games to wrap up the win.
In other matches on Friday, Italy's Roberta Vinci brushed aside Ksenia Pervak of Kazakhstan 6-3 6-4 and Sweden's Johanna Larsson beat Russian Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 7-5 6-1.
Later in the day, Russian world number three Maria Sharapova was scheduled to face Italy's Francesca Schiavone while third-seeded Agnieszka Radwanska of Poland was down to play American teenager Maria Sanchez.
Australian Open champion Victoria Azarenka of Belarus, who demolished Sharapova 6-2 6-3 in last year's BNP Paribas Open final, will launch her title defence in the second round on Saturday.
British interest in the women's draw in California ended a day previously, when both Heather Watson and Laura Robson were sent packing.

BNP Paribas Open results

Round 2

5-Petra Kvitova (Czech Republic) beat Olga Govortsova (Belarus) 6-4 3-6 6-3

Lesia Tsurenko (Ukraine) beat 31-Yaroslava Shvedova (Kazakhstan) 6-1 3-6 6-1

14-Roberta Vinci (Italy) beat Ksenia Pervak (Kazakhstan) 6-3 6-4

Johanna Larsson (Sweden) beat 26-Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (Russia) 7-5 6-1
 
Djokovic feels close to last year's stunning form

Oozing confidence after making a sizzling 13-0 start to the year, Novak Djokovic looks every inch the same player who reigned supreme in the men's game during his astonishingly successful 2011 season.
Though the Serbian world number one was reluctant to make any predictions about how his 2013 campaign may pan out, he sounded an ominous warning to his rivals on Friday while talking about his sensational early form.
"It feels the same (as it did in 2011) ... the way I started the year," Djokovic said at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden, where he will play his opening match of the BNP Paribas Open in the second round on Sunday.
"I have great memories from 2011. That was by far my most successful year in the career. But it's very early still to say what's going to happen, so I don't want to predict anything.
"My mindset will stay the same, and that is to enjoy the moment, to be in the moment, to try to do my best in the present, take it step by step and then see how far I can go."
In 2011, Djokovic won a career-best 10 ATP titles, including three Grand Slam crowns, after reaching 11 finals en route to a stunning 70-6 match record.
He won his first seven tournaments of the season while compiling a 41-match winning streak, the best run to start a year since John McEnroe's 42 in 1984.
Fast forward two years and the dominant Djokovic has triumphed in his first two events, winning the Australian Open in January and the Dubai Championships last week, while extended his winning streak to 18 matches since October.
"So far so good," the 25-year-old Serb said of his unbeaten run since Andy Murray defeated him in last year's US Open final.
"I couldn't ask for a better start of the season, winning Australia and Dubai, playing on hard courts, which is my most successful and most preferable surface that suits my game the best.
"Obviously winning in Australia for the last couple of years gives me a strong sense of confidence which I carry into this tournament. I think that's one of the big reasons why I tend to play my best in this period."
Hardcourt specialist Djokovic has always enjoyed competing at Indian Wells, winning the title here in 2008 and 2011 after losing to Spaniard Rafa Nadal in the 2007 final.
"I won this tournament in the past and I like spending time here and in Miami these few weeks," the Serb smiled. "Hard courts are my favourite surface. This is where I feel most comfortable and confident on the court."
Djokovic expressed delight that his good friend and rival Nadal, also a double champion at Indian Wells, was back on the ATP Tour after being sidelined for seven months last year due to a left knee injury.
"It's really great to see him back for our sport in general, for fans, for everyone who loves tennis because he's such a popular and charismatic player," said the Serb, a six-times Grand Slam champion.
"I have seen a few of his matches ... he's still very impressive on clay, you know. Not much has changed. That's his favourite surface. He's the king of clay, he's so comfortable playing there."
Left-hander Nadal returned to the ATP circuit last month in South America where he competed in three relatively ***** claycourt events, winning two of them after reaching all three finals.
 
Tight spot no problem for Kuznetsova

Russian Svetlana Kuznetsova found herself in a tight spot in more ways than one at the BNP Paribas Open but managed to escape with a come-from-behind victory after a timely wardrobe change.
Overwhelmed in the opening set on a chilly day at Indian Wells, Kuznetsova immediately felt more comfortable when she discarded her leggings and went on to upset 18th-seeded Serb Jelena Jankovic 0-6 6-2 7-5 in the second round.
"For me it's very difficult to play in cold weather because even when I tried to play in the long tight pants in the first set, I cannot," said Kuznetsova, a losing finalist here in 2007 and 2008.
"I think I can do it every time I go and try, and I know I cannot. I can practise in them without problem, but when I have matches I always start to lose. I have to take them off and then all the things changes.
"I don't think I started to win because of my pants, but still, I was not moving. I just had to change things."
Kuznetsova, a winner of 13 WTA singles titles, said she immediately felt much more at ease on the second Stadium Court at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden after removing her leggings.
"They are very tight, so they were kind of pushing my stomach and I was not so much comfortable," she added. "It was not bothering me like so much, but after I took it off I was feeling a little bit looser.
"So it's a little bit funny. Yeah, it's just the pants, but I don't blame them. I mean, it's all because of me."
Kuznetsova, who spent six months on the sidelines last year due to a right knee injury after losing in the first round of Wimbledon, has enjoyed her relatively low-profile status this week at Indian Wells.
"I had no pressure," smiled the Russian, whose world ranking has dropped to 46th from a career-high second. "She (Jankovic) is seeded; I'm not seeded. I have no pressure this year at all.
"Overall, I was thinking that I don't want to have any pressure in my life, that I feel much better without pressure. I will try to keep things this way, but I always think when I come on the court it's going to depend on me and on my game.
"I was pretty bad in the first set, but I managed to change it. So I'm pretty happy with it, but I have to change the start."
 
Davydenko sets up Del Potro clash

Former world number three Nikolay Davydenko progressed into the second round of the BNP Paribas Open with 7-6(1) 6-2 over fellow veteran Paul-Henri Mathieu.
Davydenko, who reached the quarter-finals in Dubai in his last outing this year, took his tally of victories to 10 for the season and improved his record against Mathieu to 7-4.
The Russian hit five aces and won 77 per cent of his first service points over the course of the match, which he wrapped up in just under an hour and a half.
Davydenko, now ranked 42 by the ATP, next plays Juan Martin Del Potro, who received a first-round bye at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden.
Tommy Robredo, ranked 69 in the world, was ousted by Marinko Matosevic, who won 7-5 6-2.
Matosevic, placed 16 spots higher in the world rankings than the Spaniard, becomes the fourth Australian into the second round, after Bernard Tomic, Lleyton Hewitt and Matthew Ebdon, the latter beating Andrey Kuznetsov 6-3 4-6 6-4 on the same day.
American James Blake cheered the home crowd with a 6-3 6-4 win over Dutchman Robin Haase.
It was a regulation victory for the former world number four, now 99, that was completed in just under an hour. He next faces Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in a clash sure to prick the interest of the Californian crowd.
US Open champion Andy Murray's first opponent will be Evgeny Donskoy after the Russian downed Tatsuma Ito of Japan 6-2 6-1 in his first-round clash.
And Novak Djokovic, the top seed, will meet Fabio Fognini in his opener, the Italian beating Slovenia's Aljaz Bedene 6-4 6-3 for the privilege.

BNP Paribas Open results

Round 1

Lu Yen-Hsun (Taiwan) beat Tim Smyczek (U.S.) 2-6 6-2 6-2

Bobby Reynolds (U.S.) beat Benjamin Becker (Germany) 6-3 3-6 6-4

Michael Llodra (France) beat Daniel Munoz (Spain) 7-5 6-3

Daniel Gimeno-Traver (Spain) beat Lukas Lacko (Slovakia) 6-1 6-4

Fabio Fognini (Italy) beat Aljaz Bedene (Slovenia) 6-4 6-3

Bjoern Phau (Germany) beat Alejandro Falla (Colombia) 7-6(1) 6-2

James Blake (U.S.) beat Robin Haase (Netherlands) 6-3 6-4

Nikolay Davydenko (Russia) beat Paul-Henri Mathieu (France) 7-6(1) 6-2

Ivo Karlovic (Croatia) beat Jack Sock (U.S.) 3-6 7-6(8) 6-2

Carlos Berlocq (Argentina) beat Santiago Giraldo (Colombia) 6-0 2-6 7-5

Evgeny Donskoy (Russia) beat Tatsuma Ito (Japan) 6-2 6-1

Albert Ramos (Spain) beat Horacio Zeballos (Argentina) 6-3 6-3

Matthew Ebden (Australia) beat Andrey Kuznetsov (Russia) 6-3 4-6 6-4

Pablo Andujar (Spain) beat Steve Johnson (U.S.) 2-6 6-1 6-4

Philipp Petzschner (Germany) beat Dmitry Tursunov (Russia) 6-4 6-4

Marinko Matosevic (Australia) beat Tommy Robredo (Spain) 7-5 6-2
 
Sharapova, Radwanska advance at Indian Wells

Former champion Maria Sharapova cruised into the third round of the BNP Paribas Open with a ruthless 6-2 6-1 demolition of Italy's Francesca Schiavone.
Despite tricky court conditions on a chilly and blustery afternoon at the California desert venue, the Russian world number three delivered a superb display of deep, accurate groundstrokes to seal victory in just over an hour.
Second-seeded Sharapova, champion here in 2006, broke Schiavone's serve three times in each set and will next face Carla Suarez Navarro, a 6-1 6-1 winner over fellow Spaniard Silvia Soler Espinosa.
"We broke each other back and forth in the beginning of the first set, and then she had a few opportunities," Sharapova said after both players wore leggings on a surprisingly cold day at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden.
"But once I started being a little bit more aggressive I felt like I had an edge on her. She's a tough first round, that's for sure. She likes those centre court matches. She lives in those opportunities.
"She makes you hit so many balls and she has such a great slice. But, again, that's when she has time to do all that. I try to take that away from her, right from the beginning."
Schiavone, who claimed her only grand slam singles title at the 2010 French Open, has slipped to 47th in the world rankings from a career-high fourth.
In the evening match, third seed Agnieszka Radwanska of Poland ****** little time in crushing American teenager Maria Sanchez 6-2 6-1 and will next meet Romania's Sorana Cirstea, who came back to beat Spaniard Anabel Medina Garrigues 4-6 6-3 6-1.
Svetlana Kuznetsova also advanced to the third round on Friday, recovering from a poor start after discarding her long tights to upset 18th-seeded Serb Jelena Jankovic 0-6 6-2 7-5.
"I was pretty bad in the first set, but I managed to change it," Kuznetsova, a losing finalist here in 2007 and 2008, said.
"So I'm pretty happy with it, but I have to change the start."
The Russian, who was sidelined by a right knee injury for six months last year after losing in the first round of Wimbledon, did not blame her tights for her slow start but said she felt much more comfortable without them.
"Even though I tried to play in long tight pants in the first set, I cannot," the 27-year-old smiled. "I can practise in them without a problem, but when I have matches I always start to lose and I have to take them off.
"They are very tight, so they were kind of pushing my stomach and I was not so much comfortable. It was not bothering me like so much, but after I took them off I was feeling a little bit looser. It's a little bit funny."
Kuznetsova, whose world ranking has plummeted to 46th from a career-high second, will next face ninth seed Marion Bartoli of France who brushed aside South Africa's Chanelle Scheepers 6-3 6-3.
Earlier, 2011 Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova survived 10 double faults and an erratic second set performance to beat Olga Govortsova of Belarus 6-4 3-6 6-3 in the first match of the day on the second Stadium Court.
The big-serving Czech, who clinched her 10th WTA singles title in Dubai last month, will next face Ukrainian Lesia Tsurenko, who beat Kazakhstan's Yaroslava Shvedova 6-1 3-6 6-1.
In other matches, sixth-seeded Italian Sara Errani battled past Spaniard Lourdes Dominguez Lino 6-2 3-6 6-3 and 12th seed Dominika Cibulkova of Slovakia beat Romania's Simona Halep 7-5 7-6.
Australian Open champion Victoria Azarenka of Belarus, who demolished Sharapova 6-2 6-3 in last year's BNP Paribas Open final, will launch her title defence against Slovakia's Daniela Hantuchova in the second round on Saturday.

BNP Paribas Open results

Round 2

3-Agnieszka Radwanska (Poland) beat Maria Sanchez (U.S.) 6-2 6-1

19-Klara Zakopalova (Czech Republic) beat Shahar Peer (Israel) 6-7(2) 6-2 6-3

9-Marion Bartoli (France) beat Chanelle Scheepers (South Africa) 6-3 6-3

2-Maria Sharapova (Russia) beat Francesca Schiavone (Italy) 6-2 6-1

Svetlana Kuznetsova (Russia) beat 18-Jelena Jankovic (Serbia) 0-6 6-2 7-5

12-Dominika Cibulkova (Slovakia) beat Simona Halep (Romania) 7-5 7-6(3)

13-Maria Kirilenko (Russia) beat Christina Mchale (U.S.) 4-6 6-4 6-1

25-Carla Suarez Navarro (Spain) beat Silvia Soler Espinosa (Spain) 6-1 6-1

27-Sorana Cirstea (Romania) beat Anabel Medina Garrigues (Spain) 4-6 6-3 6-1

6-Sara Errani (Italy) beat Lourdes Dominguez Lino (Spain) 6-2 3-6 6-3

5-Petra Kvitova (Czech Republic) beat Olga Govortsova (Belarus) 6-4 3-6 6-3

Lesia Tsurenko (Ukraine) beat 31-Yaroslava Shvedova (Kazakhstan) 6-1 3-6 6-1

14-Roberta Vinci (Italy) beat Ksenia Pervak (Kazakhstan) 6-3 6-4

Johanna Larsson (Sweden) beat 26-Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (Russia) 7-5 6-1
 
Spaniard Ferrer ousted at Indian Wells

Spanish world number four David Ferrer became the first top seed to tumble out of the men's event at the BNP Paribas Open, losing 3-6 6-4 6-3 to big-serving Kevin Anderson in the second round on Saturday.
Fourth-seeded Ferrer, a winner of two ATP titles this year who is known for his speed across the court, was overpowered by his South African opponent in the final two sets as Anderson wrapped up victory in just under two hours.
Serving for the match in dazzling sunshine at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden, Anderson sealed his first win against the Spaniard in two career meetings when Ferrer dumped a backhand service return into the net.
The towering South African clinched both fists in jubilant celebration before walking to the net to shake hands with his opponent.
Anderson, who broke Ferrer's serve once in the second set and twice in the third, will next face Finland's Jarkko Nieminen, who crushed Spaniard Fernando Verdasco 6-1 6-0 earlier in the day.
In other matches, Swiss Stanislas Wawrinka came from a set down to beat American Wayne Odesnik 3-6 6-2 6-1 while Frenchman Benoit Paire swept past Germany's Philipp Kohlschreiber 6-4 6-2.
Later on Saturday, four-times champion Roger Federer was scheduled to launch his title defence against Uzbekistan's Denis Istomin while Spaniard Rafa Nadal, sidelined for seven months last year by a left knee injury, faces American Ryan Harrison.
 
Hewitt blunts the power of Isner in upset win

Former world number one Lleyton Hewitt gave himself a welcome confidence boost by upsetting big-serving American John Isner 6-7 6-3 6-4 in the second round of the BNP Paribas Open on Saturday.
Australian Hewitt, champion here in 2002 and 2003, made the most of the few chances that came his way after losing a closely contested opening set on a tiebreak at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden.
The 32-year-old, who has played a limited schedule in recent years, broke the 15th-seeded American early in the second set and late in the third to claim victory in two hours 23 minutes.
"It's nice to beat a big name," Hewitt told reporters after ousting Isner, who reached last year's final at Indian Wells where he was beaten by Roger Federer in straight sets.
"John's obviously a tough match for anyone to play, and especially coming off a good result here last year.
"The last couple of years I haven't played that much, I guess. I missed this tournament through surgery last year but in the past I have always played pretty well here. I felt pretty comfortable today."

BIGGEST DISAPPOINTMENT

Hewitt improved his win-loss record for the season to 6-4, his biggest disappointment a sixth first-round exit at the Australian Open in January, when he was beaten by Serbian world number nine Janko Tipsarevic.
"It's good just to know you're thereabouts," said the Australian, a winner of 28 ATP titles with the most recent coming at Halle in 2010.
"I feel like I have been hitting the ball pretty well in practice. Down in Australia I hit the ball well. I drew a tough match in Tipsarevic. It's just a matter of getting matches under my belt, as well.
"And obviously for me the priorities are the slams and Davis Cup. I try and pride myself on playing well in those matches."
Hewitt was delighted to be able to blunt the power serving and fierce forehand of the towering Isner, improving his record against the American to 3-1.
"You get a few opportunities out there to break, and you have to stand up and take your chances when they come," he said.
"I felt like I had more chances throughout the match. The first set could have gone either way, and then I dug deep early in that second set to get up. That was a big momentum change then.
"He was still dangerous, though, using his forehand a lot on my service games and trying to hit through the court. I was able to hang tough there, get the vital break and go up 4-3 in that final set."
Hewitt will next face Stanislas Wawrinka after the 18th-seeded Swiss came from a set down to beat American Wayne Odesnik 3-6 6-2 6-1.
 
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