This is a rare occasion in which the elite eight-man field at the World Tour Finals is already set a stone before the BNP Paribas Masters even begins. As such, the upcoming week can be all about this tournament, itself.
All eight year-end championship participants can go after a coveted Masters 1000 title with no qualification worries of any kind. Only a few players hovering inside and outside the top 10 may have an alternate spot in London on their minds at the second to last event of the season.
Based on the field of 48, the final tournament of the proverbial regular season should not disappoint. The top 13 players in the world (No. 14 Milos Raonic is out) and 28 of the top 29 are in the draw.
It is a dangerous one for just about everyone involved, although two-time defending champion Novak Djokovic—as if he even need it—may have the friendliest path. He will open against either Thomaz Bellucci or lucky loser Teymuraz Gabashvili and would then face one of three Frenchmen—Gilles Simon, Gael Monfils, and Benoit Paire. Tomas Berdych and 2008 champion Jo-Wilfried Tsonga are also part of the top quarter.
Berdych’s campaign is likely to begin against Ivo Karlovic, a recent quarterfinalist in Basel.
Djokovic and Rafael Nadal are on a collision course for the semifinals, but the Spaniard is coming off a long week in Basel and is a mere 12-4 lifetime in Paris with no titles. Nadal’s first match could come against familiar foe Lukas Rosol, whom he outlasted in a third-set tiebreaker during first-round Basel action. Other big hitters in the section include Stan Wawrinka, Kevin Anderson, Dominic Thiem, and a red-hot Jack Sock.
Wawrinka is coming off an immediate loss last week to Ivo Karlovic and may be on upset alert against either Bernard Tomic or Fabio Fognini.
Anderson and Thiem played a stellar third-round match at the U.S. Open that shamefully ended in premature straight sets, with the South African winning in a trio of tiebreakers. Thiem is not exactly on fire, but he is playing well enough to take advantage of an opponent who is dealing with a shoulder issue.
Like Nadal, Federer is making a quick turnaround. The 34-year-old Swiss captured his seventh Basel title on Sunday by holding off his nemesis 6-3, 5-7, 6-3 after two hours and two minutes. Federer could be ripe for an upset if he loses a bit of interest in between Basel and the World Tour Finals, but can anyone capitalize? Nearest seed John Isner is once again underwhelming on European hard courts at the end of a long season. If Federer loses prior to the semifinals, it will likely come against Marin Cilic in the last eight. In order to get there, however, Cilic would likely have to survive Grigor Dimitrov and David Ferrer.
At the bottom of the bracket, a preview of the upcoming Davis Cup final could take place in the third round. Great Britain’s Andy Murray and Belgium’s David Goffin need just one win apiece in Paris before they would face each other. The 2015 Davis Cup could be decided by a potential Murray-Goffin showdown on the last day of the season. Either Kei Nishikori or an in-form Richard Gasquet could oppose Murray in the quarterfinals.
Quarterfinal predictions: Novak Djokovic over Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, Dominic Thiem over Bernard Tomic, Roger Federer over David Ferrer, and Richard Gasquet over Andy Murray
Semifinals: Djokovic over Thiem and Federer over Gasquet
Final: Djokovic over Federer or maybe the other way around ?(LJ)
Topics: Andy Murray, Atp World Tour, Bernard Tomic, Bnp Paribas Masters, David Ferrer, Dominic Thiem, Jo Wilfried Tsonga, Novak Djokovic, Paris tennis, Richard Gasquet, Ricky Dimon, Roger Federer, Tennis News
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