* Federer huffs and puffs and finally blows Cuevas down
* No first title for Kyrgios; Gasquet wins Estoril BUT NICK SEEMED PLEASED AT HIS EFFORT AND BITTLE OF CHAMPAGNE
* Both finals rained out in Munich
* Anderson first seed upset in Madrid
Munich
It’s too bad they can’t build a roof over Munich and collect the water and ship it to California. It would make everyone happier.
Once again, all action in Germany was rained out. In the singles final, Andy Murray and Philipp Kohlschreiber were on serve after five games; in the doubles, it was tied at 1-1. They will try to finish on Monday — whereupon the two singles finalists will have to hurry to Madrid. That’s not too bad for Murray, who has a first round bye. But Kohlschreiber has to play in the first round — and, if he wins, he’ll meet Murray again in the second!
Estoril
Singles – Final: (5) R Gasquet def. (7) N Kyrgios 6-3 6-2
It was a pretty ugly match for Nick Kyrgios — he won only 40% of the points, and lost in just more than an hour. We don’t know how much of that was fatigue and how much nerves from playing in his first final, but whatever the combination, it was deadly. He won’t be hitting a career high, and he’ll probably need more to earn a seed at Roland Garros; we show him at #35. The flip side is, it isn’t bad for his first event back from the first real layoff of his ATP career.
Richard Gasquet not only pays back Kyrgios for their meeting at Wimbledon last year, he also wins his second title of the year, and #12 of his career — tying him with Gilles Simon for second place among Frenchmen in the Open Era. It is only the third time in his career that he has won more than one title in a year — and both previous times (2006 and 2013), he has gone on to win three titles that year. Interesting and perhaps promising, rankings-wise; he’s up to at least #24 (he’ll be #23 if Kohlschreiber loses the Munich final), so his Roland Garros seed looks pretty secure — and he look like this might be one of the years he does something with it.
Doubles – Final: (2) Huey/Lipsky def. (1) M Lopez/Marrero 6-1 6-4
By the looks of things, Marc Lopez needs Marcel Granollers back. The match stats here were pretty ugly — Lopez/Marrero won only 35% of the points. The match lasted only 47 minutes. That leaves David Marrero still looking for his first doubles title since he and Fernando Verdasco won London 2013; Lopez is still looking for his first since he and Granollers won Buenos Aires 2014.
For both Treat Huey and Scott Lipsky, it’s a bit of a slump-buster; Huey wins his first title since Eastbourne 2014 (with Inglot) and Lipsky his first since Dusseldorf 2014 (with Gonzalez). Funny to see that Lipsky, an American, has won his last three titles in a row on clay (his title before Dusseldorf was Oeiras 2014).
For Huey, it’s career title #4 — and it’s his first on clay. So, with just four titles to his name, he has a surface sweep: Washington 2012 on hardcourt, Basel 2013 on indoor hard, Eastbourne 2014 on grass, and now this. He also earns his first title with someone other than Inglot, which must feel good. And, obviously, he has won a title for four years straight.
Scott Lipsky’s at-least-one-title-each-year streak goes back all the way to 2008, and Huey is the fifth partner with whom he has won a title. Pretty good numbers! The only sad thing is, of the 13 titles he’s won, all but one has been bottom-tier. Tough to make it to the top that way….
Istanbul
Singles – Final: (1) R Federer def. (3) P Cuevas 6-3 7-6(13-11)
Maybe signing up for Istanbul wasn’t such a bad idea for Roger Federer after all. He never looked comfortable on clay this week, and he didn’t look comfortable in this match, either. So perhaps Federer needed the practice. Pablo Cuevas wasn’t at his best — he had his right arm worked on a couple of times during changeovers — but he was moving well, and making Federer hit one more ball, and far too often, Federer failed. He hit a forehand long on match point at 6-4 in the second set tiebreak, then blew another service point up 7-6, then another at 9-8, before finally finishing it off.
But he finally won — his third title of 2015, and #85 of his career. He becomes the third player to win three titles in 2015, following Novak Djokovic (who has four) and David Ferrer. (It has been quite a year for players winning multiple titles: Djokovic has four; Federer and Ferrer three; Garcia-Lopez, Gasquet, Nishikori, and Wawrinka two each. That’s out of 28 events so far, so 18 of 28 events have been won by a player who already has multiple titles this year!)
The down side is, Federer will go into Madrid tired, and he doesn’t make any appreciable improvement in his ranking. He’s still #2, and he’s still more than 5000 points behind Novak Djokovic in the contest for #1. He can gain some ground at Madrid — but probably not enough to make much long-term difference; Djokovic still looks like a near-lock for the year-end #1.
On the other hand, it is likely to be a long time before Djokovic can match one particular Federer statistic: According to the ATP, this gives Federer titles in 19 different nations!
Had Pablo Cuevas won this, he would have joined the Two Titles This Season club and clinched the #22 ranking. As it is, he’s still stuck at one title in 2015, and has to wait to see what Philipp Kohlschreiber does at Munich to know if he will be #22 or #23.
Doubles – Final: Albot/Lajovic def. (1) Lindstedt/Melzer 6-4 7-6(7-2)
This felt a little like the singles final — the winners just didn’t seem to want to finish! Albot/Lajovic served for the match at 6-5 in the second set and were broken. But at least they had an efficient tiebreak.
It’s the first ATP title of any kind for both 25-year-old Radu Albot and 24-year-old Dusan Lajovic, and for Albot, it will result in a Top Hundred doubles ranking. Lajovic will remain far below that — but at least he has what looks to be a decent singles career ahead of him; it’s far less clear that Albot will ever get anywhere in singles.
Talk about misery for Lindstedt/Melzer, though! Robert Lindstedt is still looking for his first title since winning the 2014 Australian Open. At 38 years old, it’s looking as if he may never make it back to the Top Twenty even if he can win another title. Jurgen Melzer hasn’t been waiting as long — his last title came at Vienna 2014, less than six months ago — but it feels as if it’s time for him to really commit to doubles and see if he can make it as a doubles specialist rather than trying to win in both singles and doubles.
Madrid
Singles – First Round: S Bolelli def. (15) K Anderson 6-4 6-3
Not a huge surprise, given how well Simone Bolelli has been playing and how little Kevin Anderson likes clay, but it’s going to mean no Top Fifteen spot for Anderson. If he doesn’t get one of the Top 16 Roland Garros seeds, this match will be the one for him to remember.
Singles – First Round: J Monaco def. (WC) N Almagro 6-3 6-2
Nicolas Almagro has ground down several of his opponents in his comeback based just on his clay stubbornness, but that obviously wasn’t going to work against Juan Monaco. Almagro remains far below #100.
RANKINGS
Estimated ATP World Tour Rankings
As of May 3, 2015
Rank &
Prior…Player………..Points
1..(1) Djokovic……….13845
2..(2) Federer…………8635
3..(3) Murray………….6120
4..(4) Nadal…………..5390
5..(5) Nishikori……….5280
6..(6) Raonic………….5070
7..(7) Berdych…………4960
8..(8) Ferrer………….4490
9..(9) Wawrinka………..3495
10.(10) Cilic…………..3405
11.(11) Dimitrov………..2985
12.(12) Lopez…………..2380
13.(13) Simon…………..2255
14.(14) Tsonga………….2045
15.(15) Monfils…………2020
16.(16) Bautista Agut……1985
17.(17) Anderson………..1960
18.(18) Isner…………..1765
18.(19) Robredo…………1765
20.(20) Gulbis………….1730
21.(21) Goffin………….1705
22.(23) Cuevas………….1547
23.(28) Gasquet…………1535
24.(26) Kohlschreiber……1500
25.(22) Karlovic………..1470
26.(27) Tomic…………..1390
27.(25) Mayer…………..1352
28.(31) Garcia-Lopez…….1325
29.(30) Mannarino……….1258
30.(24) Klizan………….1190
Munich — Week of April 27
WINNER:
……………..QF………………SF……………F
1 Murray………(1)Murray………..Murray………..Murray
9 Rosol……….(9)Rosol
3 Bautista Agut..(3)Bautista Agut….Bautista Agut
6 Tomic……….Estrella Burgos
5 Kohlschreiber..(5)Kohlschreiber….Kohlschreiber….Kohlschreiber
4 Goffin………(4)Goffin
8 Fognini……..Thiem
2 Monfils……..G.Melzer(Q)………Melzer
STATUS OF SEEDS:
1 Murray……….
2 Monfils………WITHDREW
3 Bautista Agut…lost SF (Murray)
4 Goffin……….lost QF (Kohlschreiber)
5 Kohlschreiber…
6 Tomic………..lost 1R (Tipsarevic)
7 Klizan……….WITHDREW
8 Fognini………lost 2R (Thiem)
9 Rosol………..lost QF (Murray)
Estoril — Week of April 27
WINNER: Richard Gasquet
………………….QF…………..SF………….F
1 Lopez……………Haase
7 Kyrgios………….(7)Kyrgios……Kyrgios……..Kyrgios
[(LL)Vega Hernandez]..Carreno Busta…Carreno Busta
8 Muller…………..(8)Muller
5 Gasquet………….(5)Gasquet……Gasquet……..Gasquet
4 L Mayer………….Almagro
6 Chardy…………..Coric
2 Anderson…………Garcia-Lopez….Garcia-Lopez
STATUS OF SEEDS:
1 Lopez…….lost 2R (Haase)
2 Anderson….lost 2R (Garcia-Lopez)
3 Robredo…..WITHDREW (replaced by Vega Hernandez)
4 L Mayer…..lost 2R (Almagro)
5 Gasquet…..WON TOURNAMENT
6 Chardy……lost 1R (Chardy)
7 Kyrgios…..lost F (Gasquet)
8 Muller……lost QF (Carreno Busta)
Istanbul — Week of April 27
WINNER: Roger Federer
…………….QF……………SF………..F
1 Federer…….(1)Federer…….Federer……Federer
6 Kukushkin…..Gimeno-Traver
4 Giraldo…….(4)Giraldo
8 Schwartzman…(8)Schwartzman…Schwartzman
7 Youzhny…….Bellucci
3 Cuevas……..(3)Cuevas……..Cuevas…….Cuevas
5 Haider-Maurer.Dodig
2 Dimitrov……(2)Dimitrov……Dimitrov
STATUS OF SEEDS:
1 Federer…………WON TOURNAMENT
2 Dimitrov………..lost SF (Cuevas)
3 Cuevas………….lost F (Federer)
4 Giraldo…………lost QF (Schwartzman)
5 Haider-Maurer……lost 1R (Dodig)
6 Kukushkin……….lost 2R (Gimeno-Traver)
7 Youzhny…………lost 1R (Bellucci)
8 Schwartzman……..lost SF (Federer)
Madrid — Week of May 4
1 Federer
–bye
Gimeno-Traver (Q)
Kyrgios
Chardy
Bellucci (Q)
Mannarino
16 Isner
12 Tsonga
Rosol
Andujar (WC)
Sock
Karlovic
Gasquet
–bye
6 Berdych
3 Nadal
–bye
A Gonzalez (Q)
Johnson
Tomic
Vanni (Q)
Bolelli
15 Anderson
10 Dimitrov
Young
Fognini
Giraldo
Janowicz
Sousa (LL)
–bye
8 Wawrinka
7 Ferrer
–bye
Cuevas
Ramos-Vinolas (Q)
Verdasco
Garcia-Lopez
Vesely
9 Cilic
14 Bautista Agut
Copil (WC)
Querrey
Kokkinakis (Q)
Gulbis
Goffin
–bye
4 Nishikori
5 Raonic
–bye
Monaco
Almagro (WC)
L Mayer
Muller
Becker
11 Lopez
13 Monfils
Troicki
Klizan
Granollers (WC)
Falla (Q)
Kohlschreiber
–bye
2 Murray
SUNDAY
MUNICH
No matches completed — rain
ESTORIL
Singles – Final
(5) R Gasquet def. (7) N Kyrgios 6-3 6-2
Doubles – Final
(2) Huey/Lipsky def. (1) M Lopez/Marrero 6-1 6-4
ISTANBUL
Singles – Final
(1) R Federer def. (3) P Cuevas 6-3 7-6(13-11)
Doubles – Final
Albot/Lajovic def. (1) Lindstedt/Melzer 6-4 7-6(7-2)
MADRID
Singles – First Round
S Bolelli def. (15) K Anderson 6-4 6-3
J Monaco def. (WC) N Almagro 6-3 6-2
CONTENT VIA BOB LARSON TENNIS NEWS SERVICE.
Topics: Andy Murray, Atp World Tour, BMW Open, Clay tennis, Estoril Open, Federer, Istanbul Open, Munich, Mutua Madrid Open, Nick Kyrgios, Rf, Richard Gasquet
MEN’S TENNIS NEWS FROM #MUNICH, @rogerfederer WINS #IstanbulOpen, #ESTORIL AND A LOOK @ #MADRID- http://t.co/Cr5FNEi1kr #tennis #atpistanbul