Doubles at the World Tour Finals stole the show all the week, aside from a Saturday night singles semifinal thriller between Roger Federer and Stan Wawrinka. So what transpired on Sunday was a fitting end to 2014’s last tournament. Federer was forced to withdraw from the singles final against Novak Djokovic, but the doubles title match delivered.
Bob and Mike Bryan won their fourth year-end championship in their sixth final of the event when they overcame Ivan Dodig and Marcelo Melo 6-7(5), 6-2, 10-7 on Sunday afternoon in London. The brothers needed to erase yet another deficit in order to capture their 103rd career title as a team and 10th this season.
Comebacks were the theme all week long for the world No. 1 duo. Bob and Mike lost their first round-robin match to Lukasz Kubot and Robert Lindstedt, thus becoming the first team since themselves in 2009 to drop its opener and go on to lift the trophy. The Bryans also trailed by a set and 4-0 in the super-tiebreaker in their second tilt against Jean-Julien Roger and Horia Tecau.
“I’m happy the way we hung tough,” Mike said. “In our second round-robin match, we were down 4‑0 in the third‑set ‘breaker. Could have easily been knocked out there. You need a little bit of luck. It went our way this week. What can I say? It feels really satisfying to end the year on a high.”
When they surrendered the opening set to Dodig and Melo, it was nothing new. The Americans promptly delivered a near-flawless second frame of play, during which they committed a mere one double-fault. Set two arguably featured the point of the tournament, when a long exchange ended with Bob hitting a tweener lob over Dodig before the Croat answered with a tweener of his own, which Mike crushed with an overhead that Melo could not handle.
“The drive tweener doesn’t work in doubles,” Bob commented. “Guys are on top of the net. The (lob) tweener is the more successful option, I think.”
The Bryan brothers broke Melo twice in the second before finally solving Dodig’s serve in the ‘breaker. Having failed to break Dodig all day, they won all four of his service points in the decider.
“This is considered the fifth slam, with the top eight teams in the world,” Mike explained. “To lose our first match and bounce back, barely qualify for the semifinals, win today, was a great feeling.
“Looking back at the year, we’re very proud of the way it went. If we had to pick one highlight during this great season, it would probably have to be the U.S. Open. It was just a milestone we were shooting for. One of our big goals coming in the year is to try to hit 100 titles. We did it luckily at our home Grand Slam when there was a lot of talk about it.”
Ricky contributes to 10sballs.com and also maintains his own tennis website, The Grandstand.
Topics: ATP World Tour Finals, Bryan Brothers, Ricky Dimon, tennis doubles
#BRYANBROTHERS STAGE ANOTHER COMEBACK TO WIN TITLE AND SAVE THE DAY AT #WorldTourFinals BY @RD_Tennistalk http://t.co/8RAURMZFSF @Bryanbros
RT @10sBalls_com: #BRYANBROTHERS STAGE ANOTHER COMEBACK TO WIN TITLE AND SAVE THE DAY AT #WorldTourFinals BY @RD_Tennistalk http://t.co/8RA…
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