2013 Tennis Thread

Tsonga routs Federer in Paris

There will be no Roger Federer in the semi-finals of the French Open for only the second time in nine years after Jo-Wilfried Tsonga produced a rip-roaring performance to beat the Swiss 7-5 6-3 6-3 in the quarter-finals.
Twelve months after blowing four match points at the same stage against Novak Djokovic, Tsonga made sure he had a much easier ride as he sparked wild jubilations on Chatrier Court by downing a player who is used to being a fan favourite no matter where he plays.
A backhand long from Federer on match point handed Tsonga a place in the last four at Roland Garros for the first time as Federer made a quick exit from the arena where he had held aloft the Musketeers' Cup in 2009.
Tsonga will next face fourth seed David Ferrer after he beat Tommy Robredo 6-2 6-1 6-1 in an-all Spanish clash on Suzanne Lenglen.
A shot fired straight into Federer's armpit demonstrated just how badly Tsonga wanted to win this match.
Federer was left wide-eyed and wincing when the ball bounced off his sweat-soaked shirt. But that momentary pain was nothing compared to the mental anguish the Swiss was feeling two games later.
"This is obviously a crushing loss," Federer said following a quick shirt change. "I struggled a little bit everywhere. Personally, I'm pretty sad about the match and the way I played.
"Jo-Willy played great today. He was better than me in all areas today. He returned better than I did, served better than I did. I struggled to find my rhythm.
"I'm just disappointed I couldn't put in a better match today."
Federer did not even have to look at the statistics to know just how badly his day had gone.
For the record, he produced zero aces, three double faults - including one on break point - 34 unforced errors and won only 58 percent of points on his first serve.
The numbers were certainly not adding up for a man who has lit up the world stage for a decade sweeping up a record 17 Grand Slam trophies in the process.
The Swiss counts Tsonga as one of his close friends on the tour and if he was looking for any favours on Tuesday, they were in short supply.
Tsonga goaded Federer with some aerial shots that the Swiss could only smash into the net. He tormented Federer by nullifying his serve-and-volley tactics with his whipped returns. And he finally delivered the killer shot-into-the-body blow which left Federer gasping.
"Missing smashes goes hand in hand with missing so many other things," said Federer, who was broken six times during the contest.
"Should have never gotten broken (after being up) 4-2 (in the first set). In hindsight now that's obviously a huge game for me, and things didn't go well from then on for me today."
While Federer was left to digest everything that went wrong for him on Tuesday, Tsonga rejoiced in setting up a last-four date with Ferrer without dropping a set.
A backhand long from Federer on match point allowed Tsonga to bury memories of the "tragic near miss" against Djokovic and ***** about the possibility of becoming the first Frenchman in the final since Henri Leconte in 1988.
"I played very well against a champion who won everything but today it was my turn," said a beaming Tsonga.
"Ferrer has not lost more than three games in a set so I hope I can come back here in three days and do something big."
No Frenchman has won a major since Yannick Noah prevailed in 1983 at Roland Garros.
The pressure in Paris has accounted for a succession of French hopes.
Amelie Mauresmo, a double Grand Slam champion, never went past the quarter-finals at Roland Garros.
Richard Gasquet, once dubbed the 'Mozart of tennis', again threw away a two-set lead in the fourth round against Stanislas Wawrinka on Monday.
On Sunday, Gilles Simon came close to beating Federer in the fourth round, but the 15th seed lost after opening a 2-1 set lead.
Tsonga suffers occasionally from nerves, squandering four match points before bowing out against Djokovic in their quarter-final clash at the French Open last year.
But he is also the last Frenchman to reach a Slam final and the last male French player with a Masters title to his name, having played in the 2008 Australian Open final and winning the Paris Bercy title the same year.
"Unfortunately, I can't really enjoy (my victory). I can't celebrate. Of course it's very good because I did that, but the tournament keeps going," Tsonga said.
"When you beat Federer in the semis, of course you think you can go a lot further."
Tsonga is also ready to listen to advice from Noah, the former champion turned singer who knows a thing or two about winning Roland Garros.
"Well, when he sings I dance. When he says something to me I listen to him. I listen carefully to what he has to say," said Tsonga, who believes he has matured since his 2008 breakthrough.
"I think lately I have been making the right choices. I made the choice of being alone. I decided to practise alone because it was a challenge for me to see how much I love tennis," he explained.
In April 2011, Tsonga parted company with long-time coach Eric Winogradsky, deciding to train alone, a decision he says helped him confirm he was playing tennis for himself.
"I was making sure I was not trying just to respond to other people's expectations and that I really wanted it myself. I realized that I just loved tennis, that it was something extraordinary, that I would really want to do that," he said.
"And after a while I realised it was tough staying alone because, of course, there is the game itself. But there are many other things you have to manage as a tennis player. You have to be on time for practising every day. You have to eat correctly. You have to ***** well. You need the life of a champion."
Tsonga hired Lleyton Hewitt's former coach Roger Rasheed before last year's Paris Masters in October 2012.
"It's always useful to have people around you who can help you doing that," he said.
 
Paszek beats Keothavong, Konta wins opener

British number three Johanna Konta cruised into the second round of the Aegon Trophy in Nottingham as Anne Keothavong went out to top seed Tamira Paszek.
World number 33 Paszek, who chose to play on despite obviously struggling with illness, produced a gritty performance – saving eight set points at 4-5 in the first set and another in the tie-break - to get the better of Keothavong.
The 2012 Aegon International winner and two-time Wimbledon quarter-finalist battled on in the tiebreak, despite stopping with a coughing fit at one stage, before asserting herself in the second set and sealing the 7-6(6) 6-3 victory.
The Austrian moves on to play American Alison Riske on Wednesday.
“It has been a tough last couple of weeks, I’ve been struggling with my health and it is really nice to see that the hard work of the last week pay off,” Paszek said.
““I put all my heart out there I tried fighting to the end and play aggressive. My energy levels were at zero because I’ve been really sick these last couple of days.
“I didn’t have enough energy and strength to keep going for 7-6 or a third set, so I really left everything out there, played aggressive and went for my shots.”
Konta found her feet on grass quickly against Belgium’s An-Sophie Mestach, winning 6-2 6-4 to set up a meeting with fifth seed Misako Doi of Japan in the next stage on Wednesday.
The Aegon Team GB Fed Cup player was delighted to start the British grass court season and lead-up to The Championships, Wimbledon on the right foot.
“The conditions were tough out there with the wind, but I stayed solid and was glad to come out on top,” Konta said.
“I have some hours under my belt on the grass now and hope to take that into the next round – I’m happy with the start that I got.”
Elsewhere in the women’s singles draw, second seed and world number 69 Jana Cepelova crashed out against Canadian qualifier Gabriela Dabrowski, 2-6 6-4 7-6(5).
Fourth seed Eugenie Bouchard edged past Madison Brengle 6-4 2-6 7-5 to book a meeting with another American, Irina Falconi on Wednesday.
In the men’s draw British number three Alex Bogdanovic went out in straight sets to world number 137 Michael Berrer of Germany.
Despite his straight sets exit Bogdanovic was upbeat after getting a feel for grass.
“It was a tough match today, but I have to take the positive out of it as I actually played pretty well out there,” Bogdanovic said.
Berrer takes on Donald Young in the second round after the American the better of eighth seed Vasek Posposil of Canada.
Defending Aegon Trophy champion Benjamin Becker got his title defence off to a solid start, beating compatriot Matthias Bachinger 7-5 6-7(5) 6-3. He faces Steve Johnson next, with the American powering past Belgium’s Maxime Authom 6-4-6-4.

Aegon Trophy Men’s Singles Results – Round One

M Berrer (GER) d [WC] A Bogdanovic (GBR) 6-3 7-5

[7] B Becker (GER) d M Bachinger (GER) 7-5 6-7(5) 3-6

T Smyczek (USA) d J Duckworth (AUS)7-5 6-3

M Ebden (AUS) d T Ito (JPN) 7-5 6-2

[4] K De Schepper (FRA) d R Williams (USA) 6-3 7-6(12)

D Young (USA) d [8] V Pospisil (CAN) 7-6(5) 7-5

S Johnson (USA) d M Authom (BEL) 6-4 6-4

Aegon Trophy Women’s Singles Results – Round One

[1] T Paszek (AUT) d [WC] A Keothavong (GBR) 7-6(6) 6-3

[WC] J Konta (GBR) d A Mestach (BEL) 6-2 6-4

[4] E Bouchard (CAN) d [Q] M Brengle (USA) 6-4 2-6 7-5

M Sanchez (USA) d [5] M Doi (JPN) 6-2 6-3

S Fichman (CAN) d T Tansagugarn (THA)6-2 6-1

[3] K Pliskova (CZE) d M Larcher De Brito (POR) 7-5 7-5

[7] C Vandeweghe (USA) d S Dubois (CAN) 7-5 6-4

O Rogowska (AUS) v C Simmonds (RSA) 6-4 6-4

P Martic (CRO) v M Koehler (POR) 7-6(5) 6-1
 
Murray set sights on Queen's Club return

Andy Murray will be fit to play at the Wimbledon warm-up event at Queen's Club after missing the French Open due to a back injury, the world number two said on Wednesday.
Murray, the US Open champion and last year's beaten Wimbledon finalist, was ****** to miss the claycourt grand slam after aggravating a lower back injury at the Italian Open in May.
"Barring no setbacks in the next couple of days I will be making an appearance at the club of the queen next week," Murray said on Twitter.
The French Open, which is currently taking place at Roland Garros, was the first grand slam Murray has missed since Wimbledon in 2007 when he had a wrist injury.
 
Sharapova overcomes Jankovic

Maria Sharapova kept alive her hopes of retaining the French Open title with a 0-6 6-4 6-3 win over Jelena Jankovic in the quarter-finals despite a hail of unforced errors.
Sharapova's ****** is so confident about his ********'s French Open credentials that he has declared that she "can beat Rafael Nadal on clay".
Whether or not Yuri Sharapov still held that belief when his only ***** was whitewashed by Jankovic in the opening set of her Roland Garros quarter-final on Wednesday is anyone's guess.
What is in no doubt is that he raised a champion who is always ready to fight it out to the bitter end, and Sharapova kept her wits about her following a first-set walloping.
Sharapova had entered the contest with a 7-1 win-loss record over her old sparring partner from the Bollettieri Academy but no one would have guessed that following the opening 28-minute nightmare.
With the Russian's backhand misfiring, forehand malfunctioning and serve stuck in first gear, Sharapova gave Jankovic free rein to do as she pleased.
The Serbian former world number one blasted winners with her "money-shot" backhand "that pays my bills" and drew loud cheers for sliding into the splits as she chased down the ball.
Jankovic wrapped up the first set after yet another sloppy forehand from Sharapova, which took the number two seed's unforced errors count to 20.
"You have to erase the chapter and move forward... no matter how bad I was playing or how well my opponent was playing, I still felt I was in the match," a relieved Sharapova said in courtside interview.
"Sometimes you just have to get the job done, and I did today."
Jankovic, rather than pressing home her advantage in front of a group of flag-waving Serbian male fans who chanted her name throughout the match, paid a huge price for what at the time seemed like an innocuous mistake.
A slight misjudgement from the 18th seed in the opening game of the second set, when she opted to hit the ball at Sharapova rather than go for an outright winner, threw the Serbian off course and she went on to drop her serve and the set.
That left Jankovic to resort to her usual habit of muttering away to herself as Sharapova kept her eye firmly on the ball to break in the seventh game of the third.
A forehand into the tramlines from Jankovic handed Sharapova a place in the semi-finals for the third year running and a date with third-seeded Australian Open champion Victoria Azarenka who beat Russian Maria Kirilenko 7-6 (3) 6-2.
"At the end she was the better player. I was a bit unlucky, but I fought, I fought hard until the end," said Jankovic, who was unsurprisingly plastered with tape along her shoulder and thighs after a hectic few days of playing singles, doubles and mixed doubles in Paris.
"A couple of bad decisions...and this is what happens."
 
Azarenka beats Kirilenko

Victoria Azarenka's love affair with clay continued after she reached her maiden French Open semi-final with a 7-6(3) 6-2 defeat of former doubles partner Maria Kirilenko.
The former world number one from Belarus, seeded third at Roland Garros, put her friendship with Kirilenko aside to end the Russian 12th seed's resilience after nearly two hours on a sun-soaked Court Suzanne Lenglen.
Quizzed on her feelings about playing on clay, Azarenka said: "I still don't have any ring on my finger.
"But I feel like we made a step forward. We are moving in together. Kind of that type of a relationship is moving forward and see what happens after."
Azarenka, who has now reached the last four in all the grand-slam events, will meet defending champion Maria Sharapova, the second seed, against whom she enjoys a 7-5 record although she has lost their two matches on clay.
Azarenka took the opening set after 76 minutes, with Kirilenko, who was wearing a 'Paris-Charles de Gaulle' t-shirt after her match as if in a hurry to depart, taking a medical time out to have her hip treated.
The double Australian Open champion then broke early in the second set and held firm.
"In the beginning it was so close, I'm happy that finally at the third attempt I ****** that stage," Azarenka told a courtside interviewer, referring to her 2009 and 2011 quarter-final eliminations against Li Na and Dinara Safina respectively.
Former doubles partners Azarenka and Kirilenko, who reached the 2011 Australian Open final and claimed three titles together, were on either side of the net for the first time since the Belarussian prevailed in the Olympic bronze medal match last year.
With Azarenka bidding for a first Roland Garros last-four place, and Kirilenko looking to reach her maiden major grand-slam semi-final, tension was high.
The first game alone lasted almost 10 minutes with the first four games going against serve as both players endured a shaky start.
After holding for 4-3, Kirilenko took a medical time out, first on then off court to treat a lower back problem.
In the meanwhile, Azarenka practiced serving and her forehand and backhand as ball boys threw balls at her.
Kirilenko threatened in the following game, but Azarenka levelled for 4-4 with a nice backhand winner and she then broke with a service return winner.
Kirilenko, however, broke straight back to ***** a tiebreak to decide a set that lasted 76 minutes.
The fourth point, which saw Azarenka open a 3-1 lead, encapsulated the match, as Kirilenko put up a brilliant defence, only for the former world number one to prevail with a forehand winner at the end of a leg-snapping rally.
"One or two points really decided the first set, especially the beginning of the tiebreak. The way I started was really dominant," said Azarenka.
A break for 3-1 put her in command of the second set and she never looked back, dismissing her friend in ruthless fashion.
"We are pretty close friends. I'm always happy to see her. We talk outside the court, as well," said Azarenka.
"Of course on court it's all about, you know, winning the match."
Azarenka must continue to focus on her affair with clay.
"You have to keep loving each other. That's the most important, love all around," she said with a smile.
"Making it work every day. Really committing every time. But love is the first and most successful tool."
 
Jankovic proves she has the passion back

Ask Marko Jankovic whether his ****** Jelena has got the passion back for tennis and the answer would be a resounding yes.
Marko, her interim coach, took his place in Chatrier Court at the French Open on Wednesday and was in the firing line as the 28-year-old lost in the quarter-final to defending champion Maria Sharapova despite a stunning first set which she won 6-0.
Former world number one Jankovic is refreshingly quiet when she strikes the ball, but the volume went up as she aimed a non-stop monologue at the elder sibling who encouraged her to take up tennis when she was a nine-year-old.
While the angriest comments were fired his way after a losing point or a Sharapova winner, she sometimes looked daggers towards Marko after coming out on top in rallies.
It was nothing personal, though, as Jankovic explained.
"At one stage I lost the hunger and was just flat on the court, and that showed in my face when I competed," she told reporters after a 0-6 6-4 6-3 loss in her first grand slam quarter-final since 2010.
"Now I think I'm a different person. Even though I'm yelling, whatever I'm doing on the court, this is me. This is what the sport is all about.
"It's about passion, about really enjoying yourself. Even though I'm sometimes getting frustrated I really enjoy being there and competing and putting myself into position to win these big matches in front of a huge crowd on a huge court."
For the 28 minutes it took her to win the first set Jankovic was playing like the player who topped the rankings in 2008.
Sharapova recovered from a rare "bagel" to snatch victory but knew she had been in a scrap.
At 3-3 in the decider the outcome was too close to call but Sharapova contrived to make one audacious angled backhand and another screaming forehand winner to get the decisive break.
"She came up with some winners. That backhand, it was like between a dropshot and an angle, I don't know how she does that, but it was an amazing shot. Even if it was luck or not," Jankovic said of her old sparring partner from their days at the Nick Bollettieri academy.
"Credit to her. At the end she was a better player. I was a bit unlucky, but I fought. I fought hard until the end."
Jankovic, who finished a year outside the world's top-20 for the first time in five years, said the turning-point of her season came after tearing a thigh muscle in January.
"After that I said I really can't take this anymore. I wanted to put myself into great shape and give myself a chance to compete," said the 18th seed.
"I have been beating good players and today I put myself in a position to beat Maria."
 
Djokovic ousts Haas to set up Nadal semi

Novak Djokovic kept calm, cool and collected to subdue the challenge of 35-year-old Tommy Haas with a 6-3 7-6(5) 7-5 win in the quarter-finals of the French Open.
If the world number one still had nightmares about his mauling by Haas just over two months ago in Miami, he hid those fears well to set up a semi-final blockbuster with seven-times champion Rafa Nadal.
"Playing Rafa at Roland Garros is the biggest challenge on clay. I am ready to play five sets," Djokovic said as he chases the one Grand Slam trophy missing from his collection.
Haas was one of four 30-somethings to reach the men's quarter-finals but youth won out as only David Ferrer, who beat fellow 31-year-old Tommy Robredo on Tuesday, made it past the last-eight stage.
Just how much difference younger legs make was in evidence on a sun-drenched Suzanne Lenglen Court as Djokovic took full advantage of the nine-year age gap to come out on top in almost every department.
He had more aces (11-4), more points on first serve (82 percent-65 percent), more points on second serve (78 percent-42 percent), more winners (46-19) and more points won (116-84).
After Djokovic outplayed the German warrior in the first set, Haas went toe-to-toe with the Serbian in the second. Three times the 12th seed went ahead with a mini-break in the tiebreak but each time Djokovic fought back.
When Djokovic brought up set point by finishing off a 24-shot rally with a breathtaking crosscourt backhand winner, the damage was done and there was no way back into the set for Haas who was looking to become the oldest men's semi-finalist in Paris since 1968.
That left Haas slapping his chest in frustration, toying with the prospect of slamming his racket into the ground and hurling ***** at himself in German.
He desperately wanted to win the match as it would have given him a 100th Grand Slam match victory but Djokovic sunk the German's hopes in little over two hours.
Haas enjoyed one final hurrah in the third set, breaking the top seed when he was serving for the match at 5-4 but it was soon evident he was running on empty as he lost the next two games and the match when Djokovic whacked a backhand winner into the corner of the court.
"Today's opponent is tough," Djokovic said. "He has a precise serve, has an aggressive game, has variety in his shots, can play really well on defence, offence, and come to the net.
"So, yeah, it was a good performance for me in general. On the important points I came up with some good shots."
 
Nadal dismisses Wawrinka to set up Djokovic clash

It was the same old story as seven-times champion Rafa Nadal turned claycourt machine once again with a 6-2 6-3 6-1 demolition of Swiss ninth seed Stanislas Wawrinka in the French Open quarter-finals.
After huffing and puffing through the opening week of the claycourt Grand Slam, the Spanish third seed was at his awe-inspiring best to set up a meeting with world number one Novak Djokovic in a rematch of last year's final.
"It's always been the case. The deeper I go the better I play usually. It's always been the case. It's the same this year. It's the same old story," Nadal told a news conference.
Djokovic, who subdued German 12th seed Tommy Haas in straight sets, beat Nadal in their last clash when the Serbian ended his rival's eight-year reign at the Monte Carlo Masters in the final in April.
Nadal, however, made it clear that Friday's clash would be nothing more than a semi-final match, even if the winner will be the hot favourite to lift the Musketeers Cup on Sunday.
"This is semi-finals, not finals. The one who wins this match to come will go through to the final, full stop. The others are Tsonga and Ferrer, full stop. End of story," he said.
Nadal, who has lost only one match at Roland Garros and has won five titles on clay this season on his return from a lengthy injury layoff, marched through the opening set, conceding no break points against a tiring Wawrinka.
The Swiss, who survived a five-set thriller in the previous round, ran out of steam and ideas, bowing out on the first match point after less than two hours.
"Today I played my best match of the tournament, it's very positive," a beaming Nadal, who finally enjoyed dry and warm weather conditions, said in a courtside interview.
Wawrinka agreed that Nadal was simply unbeatable.
"It's the most difficult challenge to defeat Rafa at the French Open on the central court and with these conditions. They're excellent for him," he told a news conference.
"It's a lot faster and he can really have high balls on my backhand."
Nadal was asked why he always seems to peak as the Paris final looms.
"I don't control that, nobody does, it was not an easy first week," he said.
"I played better a bit against (Kei) Nishikori (in the fourth round) and today very well."
After dropping sets against German Daniel Brands and Slovakian Martin Klizan in the first two rounds, Nadal gradually found his best form.
It all went too fast for a red-faced Wawrinka on a sun-drenched Court Philippe Chatrier as Nadal showed his full array of massive pounding groundstrokes and high-bouncing top-spin shots.
Nadal, an 11-times Grand Slam champion, had no mercy for Wawrinka, whose one-handed backhand seemed weak compared to the drilling shots of the Spaniard who bagged the first set with a commanding ace.
Wawrinka, who has not taken a set from Nadal in 10 matches, made his only break of the match in the second set, but it came after he had already lost his serve.
The fickle Paris crowd, supporting the ninth seed over their seven-times champion, love nothing more than an upset and they pretended they were smelling one, roaring their support for Wawrinka.
The defending champion quickly sealed a second break and Wawrinka struggled to even stay in his slipstream.
With sweat streaming down his face, Nadal made only two unforced errors as he blitzed through the final set.
 
Evans to meet Klein in Aegon second round

Dan Evans set up an all-British second round battle with Brydan Klein at the Aegon Trophy in Nottingham with a hard-fought win over fifth seed Ryan Harrison.
Just one Brit will stand in the men’s singles event after Thursday’s match as Jamie Baker, Ed Corrie and Josh Goodall all went out in the opening round at the Nottingham Tennis Centre.
British women’s number three Johanna Konta scored a gutsy come-from-behind victory over fifth seed and world number 82 Misaki Doi to seal a place in the quarter-finals, prevailing 6-7(3) 6-2 7-6(4). It is the highest ranked player that Konta has beaten this year.
Five of the women’s single seeds bowed out in a dramatic day of action that saw world number 33 Tamira Paszek of Austria retire in the third set of her second round match against Alison Riske with a hamstring injury.
Meanwhile, Konta went the distance and impressed with her tenacity during the two hours and 20 minutes on court.
She steadied herself after twice being broken as she served for the first set, at 5-4 and 6-5. She came back strong in the second set before showing even more grit in the third.
The 22-year-old had her serve broken at 3-3 in the deciding set, but broke straight back before taking the match in the tie-break.
“She made me work for it," Konta said. “I didn’t take my chances in the first set, and credit to her she played well in those games and she played well in the tie-break – but that is history.”
Men’s wild card Evans recovered from a first set tie-break loss of his own to win the enthralling centre court spectacle 6-7(3) 6-0 7-6(5). Momentum swung dramatically a number of times in the deciding set.
Firstly, former world number 43 Harrison saved match point at 4-5, then the American had Evans under pressure with four break points with the contest poised at 5-5.
And when the match went to a tie-break, the 21-year-old Texan got off to a flying start to open a 2-0 lead.
Evans admits he had to dig deep to haul himself out of danger from there.
“I thought I played my best tennis in the tie-break,” Evans said. “It is very satisfying after losing the first set the way I did. It is good to start to start the grass season with a win - it definitely sets me up nicely for the next few days.”
Evans returns to centre court to meet Klein who had to battle back from a set down to beat fellow qualifier Prakash Amritraj of India 2-6 6-3 6-2.
Klein said: “It was an extremely tough match, in the first set he was making some awesome returns and serving well.
“It was a bit cold today so it took a while for my body to get going, I feel that I was a step too slow and my shots weren’t really going through with much penetration - credit to him, he jumped on that.
“He took me to town in the first set and I knew that if I didn’t change how the match was flowing it was going to be a quick loss for me, but I stepped up and got more aggressive.”
Elsewhere in the men’s singles, top seed Marinko Matosevic got the better of fellow Australian Sam Groth 6-3 7-5 to set up a second round meeting with Adrian Mannarino who got the better of Baker.
Meanwhile in women’s singles action, former Aegon Trophy winner Eleni Danilidou continued her strong form, getting the better of sixth seed Vesna Dolonc 6-2 6-4 to set up a meeting with the only remaining seed Karolina Pliskova.
Croatian Petra Martic put an end to qualifier Gabriela Dabrowski’s stunning run - which saw the Canadian overcome second seed Jana Cepelova in the first round – battling back from a slow start to triumph 1-6 6-1 7-6(3).

Men’s Singles – Round One

[WC] D Evans (GBR) d [5] R Harrison (USA) 6-7(3) 6-0 7-6(5)

A Mannarino (FRA) d [Q] J Baker (GBR) 7-6(4) 6-4

[2] D Sela (ISR) d D Kudla (USA) 6-1 6-2

R Bemelmans (BEL) d [WC] E Corrie (GBR) 7-5 7-5

[1] M Matosevic (AUS) d [Q] S Groth (AUS) 6-3 7-5

B Reynolds (USA) d I Marchenk (UKR) 7-6(2) 7-6(5)

[6] R Ram (USA) d [WC] J Goodall (GBR) 6-4 7-6(4)

[Q] P Amritraj (IND) v [Q] B Klein (GBR) 2-6 6-3 6-2

Women’s Singles – Round Two

M Czink (HUN) d [WC] T Moore (GBR) 6-1 7-5

[WC] J Konta (GBR) d [5] M Doi (JPN)

[3] K Pliskova (CZE) d O Rogowska (AUS) 2-6 6-4 7-5

E Danilidou (GRE) d [6] V Dolonc (SRB) 6-3 6-3

A Riske (USA) d [1] T Paszek (AUT) 4-6 7-5 2-0 ret.

P Martic (CRO) d [Q] G Dabrowski (CAN) 1-6 6-1 7-6(3)

S Fichman (CAN) d [7] C Vandeweghe (USA) 6-3 7-6(4)

I Falconi (USA) d [4] E Bouchard (CAN) 4-6 6-2 6-1
 
Evans gets Queen’s wild card

Britain’s Dan Evans has been awarded a wild card for next week's Aegon Championships at Queen’s Club.
The 23-year-old from Solihull will line up alongside Andy Murray and other top 10 players Tomas Berdych, Juan Martin del Potro and Jo Wilfried Tsonga in the London event.
Evans performed heroically to beat Dmitry Tursunov in the deciding rubber of Britain's Davis Cup tie with Russia in April.
He defeated American Ryan Harrison in Nottingham on Wednesday after winning a Futures tournament in Sweden last month to move inside the world’s top 300.
“Dan has backed up his great performance in the Davis Cup in Coventry with another win against a top 100 player at Nottingham this week,” said GB captain Leon Smith. “His form is good, and his focus is on making the most of the opportunity he's been given here."
Four-time winner Lleyton Hewitt, defending champion Marin Cilic, and rising star Grigor Dimitrov will also compete for the title.
 
Hradecka, Cermak win mixed doubles

The Czech Republic's recent run of tennis success continued at the French Open on Thursday when Lucie Hradecka and Frantisek Cermak claimed the mixed doubles title.
The country already holds the Davis Cup and Fed Cup team trophies and Hradecka/Cermak gave the nation another reason to rejoice with a 1-6 6-4 10-6 (champions tie-break) win over France-Canada duo Kristina Mladenovic and Daniel Nestor.
Hradecka brought up match point with an ace but after the Czechs had squandered their first attempt to close the match, they made no mistake on the second.
Mladenovic dumped the ball into the net to hand the Czechs victory in front of a handful of fans on Philippe Chatrier Court.
 
Nadal vs Djokovic : 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 6-7 (3-7), 9-7
An awesome game : great tennis in a thrilling game
 
Sharapova beats Azarenka to reach final

World number two Maria Sharapova remained on course to defend her French Open title with a hard-fought 6-1 2-6 6-4 victory over third seed Victoria Azarenka.
Maria Sharapova turned her French Open semi-final into a game of Russian roulette, firing winners and ugly shots with equal measure as the champion bludgeoned her way past third seed Victoria Azarenka 6-1 2-6 6-4 on Thursday.
The Russian, who next meets world number one Serena Williams, served 12 aces and 11 double faults in a see-saw encounter against the Belarussian.
Second seed Sharapova raced through the opening set in less than half an hour, spraying Court Philippe Chatrier with forehand winners.
Double Australian Open champion Azarenka hit back to take the second set but lost her momentum after a 30-minute rain interruption, her opponent wrapping it up on her fifth match point after two hours 10 minutes of baseline biffing and shrieking.
"I'm really happy with the way I came out from playing a tough match yesterday. I wish I could have carried that through in two - but I did the job and I'm happy from where I was in the beginning of the tournament to where I am today," Sharapova told a news conference.
"I just hope that I can improve for the next one."
Having lost her last 12 matches against Serena, the four-times grand slam champion Sharapova will indeed need to make a dramatic improvement to become the first female to retain her title on the Paris clay since Belgium's Justine Henin in 2007.
The Russian thumped 42 winners, most of them with her devastating forehand, but a total of 39 unforced errors also meant the contest could have gone either way.
Sharapova, who lost the opening set 6-0 to Serb Jelena Jankovic in the quarter-finals, made two double faults as she dropped her serve in the first game against Azarenka.
The Belarussian was making her first appearance in the French Open semi-finals.
"Today I'm disappointed about the match and what happened out there, but overall I have to give myself credit for going one step further," said Azarenka.
"Even though I lost today I still tried to come back and tried to make something happen, which before was much more difficult for me to do."
Azarenka also needed time to settle.
By the time she realised that, Sharapova had won six games in a row in 28 minutes, allowing the third seed only seven points in the process.
Azarenka started to find better angles in the second set and opened a 40-15 lead in the third game before a couple of sharp first-service return winners reminded her she would have to fight for every point.
Dark clouds gathered in the sky as Azarenka broke to go 4-2 up when Sharapova netted a backhand.
The Russian poster girl then conceded two break points at 5-2 when the umpire called Azarenka's shot in although TV footage showed the ball was long.
Sharapova saved the first break point with an ace but double faulted on the second.
The rain then intervened and it seemed to take the wind out of Azarenka's sails.
"I think the break kind of changed the momentum," she told a news conference. "I was just trying to make things happen too quick and started missing the ball."
A backhand winner gave Sharapova a break for 2-1, only for Azarenka to break back after yet another double fault at the end of a 10-minute game.
Sharapova kept playing at a hectic pace and soon went 5-2 ahead.
Azarenka saved four match points as she broke back for 5-3 and then held serve but the title holder already had her teeth sunk deep into her prey and finished the match off with an ace.
 
:bowdown: :iloveyou: Elena Vesnina and her partner Ekaterina Makarova win the doubles title at Roland Garros

from left to right: Katya, trophy, Elena :lovecoupl

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Williams sets up Sharapova final in Paris

Serena Williams was in no mood to hang around at Roland Garros on Thursday as she walloped 2012 runner-up Sara Errani 6-0 6-1 to reach the French Open final for the first time since 2002.
Williams had been ****** to wait as Maria Sharapova and Victoria Azarenka finished their rain-interrupted two-hour scrap - then mauled hapless Italian Sara Errani 6-0 6-1.
On the day the WTA celebrated its 40th anniversary, top seed Williams made a mockery of Errani's world ranking of five as she underlined her unshakeable grip on the women's game.
Fifth seed Errani, a claycourt expert who was runner-up to Sharapova last year, pocketed only 16 points and was mercifully put out of her misery by the world No.1 after 46 minutes.
Williams won 40 of her 52 points with winners, incredible statistics, yet she seemed unimpressed.
"I didn't necessarily go out there feeling great," she said. "It was more like, let's just see what happens and try to do the best I could," she added with chronic under-statement.
Sharapova, second in the rankings, has not beaten 31-year-old Williams since 2004, a 12-match losing sequence.
"I'd be lying if it doesn't bother me, obviously," Sharapova said of her record against the American who is looking for her first singles crown at Roland Garros since her maiden French Open title in 2002.
"I don't think it would be a pretty competitive statement if I said it didn't. I would love to change that around. Obviously, whatever I did in the past hasn't worked, so I'll have to try to do something different and hopefully it will."
Quite what that will be is anyone's guess as Williams, apart from a brief hiccup against Svetlana Kuznetsova in the quarter-final when she dropped her only set of the tournament, has looked unstoppable on the Parisian clay.
Errani never stood a chance.
The 26-year-old looked close to tears at 0-3 in the second set but avoided the dreaded "double bagel" by winning the fourth game of the second set when her opponent fired a backhand wide.
She raised her hands in celebration but Williams soon resumed the slaughter to win the most one-sided women's singles semi-final here since seven-times champion Chris Evert beat Camille Benjamin 6-0 6-0 in 1984.
 
Konta through to Nottingham semis

Johanna Konta's run at the Aegon Trophy continued after a 6-2 5-7 7-5 quarter-final win over Alison Riske at the ITF event in Nottingham.
British number three Konta, the world number 166, was handed a wildcard to the Aegon Classic in Birmingham next week and she justified her inclusion by ousting the American, who went through to the quarters after top seed Tamira Paszek pulled out injured.
Konta next faces world number 73 Karolina Pliskova for a place in the final. The other semi is between Petra Martic and Sharon Fichman, who beat Melinda Czink and Irina Falconi respectively.
“It was definitely a battle out there, I’m very happy to come through that because she definitely put up a fight,” Konta said.
“Being able to win when I’m not playing well is a good thing, but obviously I would have been a little happier if I played a few points differently.
“I feel that I have been playing better and better for the last couple of weeks, and it is nice that a a few results are coming through for me.”
In the men's draw, Britain's Dan Evans moved into the quarter-finals with a win over compatriot Brydan Klein.
Wildcard Evans, who stunned American fifth seed Ryan Harrison 6-7(3) 6-0 7-6(5) in the first round, made lighter work of Klein, winning 6-2 6-2 to book a last-eight clash with Australia's Matthew Ebden.
Ebden beat third seed Jesse Levine 5-7 6-3 6-2.
"I started slowly, but got going in the end,” Evans said. "I put a bit more pressure on myself to win, get through to the quarter-finals here and justify that wild card into Queen's.
"It is not often that I get to play in the main draw of challenger like this in Nottingham, and it would nice to play in the main draw of the ATP event."
 
Forget: Ferrer to give Tsonga tougher time than Federer

Jo-Wilfried Tsonga can expect David Ferrer to give him a tougher time than Roger Federer managed when they meet in their French Open semi-final on Friday, according to former France Davis Cup captain Guy Forget.
Sixth seed Tsonga is bidding to become the first Frenchman to win Roland Garros, let alone a grand slam title, since Yannick Noah prevailed in Paris in 1983.
"For Jo, it is going to be harder against Ferrer than against Roger (Federer)," Forget, a former world number four, told Reuters on Thursday.
Tsonga upset second seed and 17-times grand slam champion Federer in straight sets in the quarter-finals.
"The tough match that was expected for him against Federer did not happen," Forget, who captained France in the Davis Cup from 1999-2012, said.
"It will be a very balanced contest," he added, reminding that "between the two, the most consistent player behind the top four is Ferrer."
Noah, who beat Swede Mats Wilander 6-2 7-5 7-6 in the 1983 final, said Tsonga had the game to match Ferrer.
"What I know is that he (Tsonga) has been playing solidly. He's strong physically and mentally," he told reporters.
"One can ***** but he can expect a tough match. I have the feeling that he can win. He has what it takes."
 
Five Brits named in Aegon Classic draw

Five British women have been named in the main draw for the Aegon Classic at Edgbaston, Birmingham.
Laura Robson and Heather Watson are included by right, with Anne Keothavong, Johanna Konta and Tara Moore given wildcards to the pre-Wimbledon grass-court tournament.
British number three Konta’s recent improvement has seen her win seven ITF titles and move to world number 166. She is currently in action at the AEGON Trophy in Nottingham, and has reached the semi-finals of the ITF event.
Patrick Hughesman, tournament director for the Aegon Classic, said: “The wildcards have provided us with an opportunity for us to support the British players, allowing them to go straight in the main draw, without having to go through qualifying.
“We’ve got a really strong player field this year and we’re looking forward to seeing some great matches taking place during the week.”
 
Konta's Nottingham run ended by Pliskova

Johanna Konta and Dan Evans both went out of the Aegon Trophy event in Nottingham, at the semi and quarter-final stages respectively.
British women's number three Konta lost 3-6 7-5 6-3 to world number 73 Karolina Pliskova of the Czech Republic, who faces Petra Martic in the ITF event's final.
Australian Matthew Ebden saw off men's Davis Cup star Evans 7-6(1) 6-2 to move into the semis.
It was not all bad for the Brits though as brothers Ken and Neil Skupski will take on third seeds Jamie Murray and John Peers in Saturday’s men's doubles final.
Konta blasted through the first set in 30 minutes but Pliskova sealed a crucial break at 5-5 in the second, going on to hold and level the match.
Pliskova broke early in the decider and built a 3-1 lead before Konta broke back to tie it up 3-3. That was the last surge the Briton would make as Pliskova took the next three games to seal semi-final victory in around two hours.
The Czech admitted she was fortunate to recover in the second set.
“It wasn’t easy to recover after losing set point, but she helped me a little bit with a few mistakes," Pliskova said. “I just had to stay focused and calm because I knew if I broke back I could hold my serve again.”
Konta said she would take time to reflect on the match leading up to next week’s Aegon Classic at Birmingham, for which she has been handed a wildcard.
“She played the big points better than I did, and credit to her she was a better player on the day," Konta said. “I have to go back to the training court and work on things now.
"When you have a close loss like this, it takes a while to get past the emotional side to then be able to analyse it with my coach.”
Pliskova goes on to meet Martic in Saturday’s final after the Croat beat Canada’s Sharon Fichman 6-4 6-2.
Former top-50 player Martic, who has struggled with foot and knee injuries since last summer, will feature in her first final of the year and first on grass in her career.
In the men’s draw, Evans went out in straight sets to Australian Matthew Ebden 7-6(1) 6-2.
The GB Davis Cup star was serving for the first set at 5-4 but was broken, going on to lose in straight sets in one hour and 28 minutes.
Evans, who has also been awarded wild card entry into the main draw of the Aegon Championships at Queen’s Club starting Monday, said: “It was a disappointing end for me - I didn’t play that good out there.
“I found it hard to play my game against him - he did a good job of imposing his game on me.”
Ebden takes on Bobby Reynolds who got the better of Ruben Bemelmans 3-6 7-5 6-4 in his quarter-final meeting.
Frenchman Kenny De Schepper came from a set down to beat Michael Berrer of Germany 4-6 6-1 6-4. He faces defending Aegon Trophy champion Benjamin Becker in the Saturday's other semi-final.
 
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