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Showing posts with label Borna Coric. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Borna Coric. Show all posts

February 11, 2021

Across Generations

There's been a lot said over the last several years, especially in the men's game, about when the long-dominant players will finally hand over the reins to the next generation of tennis greats. But if we've seen anything in the first few days of the Australian Open, it's that it's not only the Big Three who are unwilling to go yet softly into that good night -- and that there are some new young guns in the mix ready to take the spotlight from those we've been championing so loud.


I'll start with the result from last night (this morning...) that most perfectly pairs the two ends of the spectrum -- defending champion Sofia Kenin against veteran Estonian Kaia Kanepi. As I mentioned a few days ago, this wasn't a match I would've watched closely, but boy am I glad I did. The 35-year-old, coming off a runner-up finish in the Gippsland draw with wins over red-hot Aryna Sabalenka and Ekaterina Alexandrova, was a strong underdog in her second round, but you wouldn't have known it to watch her play. With ten aces, an eighty percent first serve percentage and more winners than errors, she needed barely an hour to score the win against the young American. And with a next round against a recently-struggling Donna Vekic, I like her chances to keep going. Whether she'll keep her momentum going, who knows -- this is the only Major where Kanepi hasn't reached the quarters -- but she's certainly hungry to give it a try.

Another veteran who showed his chops on Thursday, Feliciano Lopez is also well off his career high ranking, hanging out in the low double digits after peaking at #12 in the world six years ago. But if his 75 straight Grand Slam main draw appearances don't prove his continued relevance, perhaps his performance against 31st seed Lorenzo Sonego does. Down two sets to the man who stunned Novak Djokovic just a few months ago, Feli found a way to rally and pulled out the last three sets in a match that lasted over three hours. In what will be his first third round in Melbourne since 2016, and the road only gets harder from here -- his next opponent, Andrey Rublev, has been on fire over the past year, and while he was tested in his second round, I imagine he'll come out swinging against the Spaniard. But if Lopez can recoup after his marathon last night, perhaps he can surprise us again.

Last among the under-the-radar Old Guard standouts is top doubles star Su-Wei Hsieh who, at #71 on the singles scene, was certainly expected to have her biggest successes when partnered up. But after what I thought was a pretty astounding win over 2020 Comeback Queen Tsvetana Pironkova in the first round, she took on 2019 U.S. Open champ Bianca Andreescu, who was playing her first event in some fifteen months, and was wholly on point. The 35-year-old, who's never made it past the fourth round at a Slam on her own, got off to a strong start against the Canadian, fifteen years her junior, and in under ninety minutes was able to capitalize on the rust that had accumulated after her long hiatus. She opens up Friday's play against qualifier Sara Errani, whose run to the French Open final in 2012 seems so, so long ago. While it won't be a walk in the park by any means, it's certainly a more manageable ask than what she's already battled.

Of course, it wasn't only the veterans pulling off big wins, and as at every Grand Slam we've already seen a peak of the talent that's still to come. Twenty-year-old Kaja Juvan, who beat Venus Williams last year in Acapulco and stunned Angelique Kerber in the first round of the French Open, was the top seed in the qualifying rounds for Melbourne and managed to advance without dropping a set. She got a bit of a pass in her opener against thirteenth seeded Johanna Konta, who was up a set but had to retire with an ab injury, and her second round against Mayar Sherif was filled with even more drama -- the exhausting two and a half hour plus match left everything on the floor for both players, but ultimately ended with the young Slovenian as the winner. She's not more challenges ahead, though, with a tough Jennifer Brady waiting for her in the third round. I'm not sure she'll recover in time, but I'm hoping her performance is a sign that we've only started to see what she can do.

And then there's Mackenzie McDonald who, at 25, admittedly isn't necessarily "young" anymore -- sorry, millennials -- but at least young in experience. Though he had a brief stint in the top sixty back in 2019 and even made the fourth round at Wimbledon the year before, he's had trouble staying consistent and currently sits just inside the top two hundred. But he has had some nice wins over the years -- my dear Juan Martin Del Potro in Delray Beach, Milos Raonic in Shanghai, and Borna Coric in the second round here on Thursday. It was his first top twenty-five win in quite some time and with his next round against Lloyd Harris, a man who went three hours in his five-setter against Alexei Popyrin in his last match, he might just be able to get the better of the sort-of-favorite. And a good showing there might help him set the stage for an even bigger year to come.

September 6, 2020

Half Way Through -- Where We Stand

So it appears I really suck at predicting semifinalsts at Grand Slams.

Three rounds in to this year's very strange U.S. Open, and only three of my eight selections are still alive. And while those standing are still looking strong and could very well fulfill my expectations, so many others have really asserted themselves in a way I could never have predicted.


The Women



Let's start with the first quarter of the ladies' draw where top seed Karolina Pliskova was upset by Caroline Garcia in the second round. It was the first "huge" shock in the women's draw -- which somewhat shockingly had more seeds emerge out of the first round than the mens -- but something I frankly saw coming. I also expected Jennifer Brady, a winner over Ashleigh Barty, Elina Svitolina, and Garbiñe Muguruza this year and a champion in Lexington, to do well, but that's where my foresight ends.

Yulia Putintseva, who's made a couple of Roland Garros quarters, has only won two matches here once, and Petra Martic, who'd I'd written off as a vulnerable eighth seed, both have been on point in their first few matches, and the fact that one of them will play for a spot in the final four is pretty surprising. But it appears we cannot count out 2016 champion Angelique Kerber who, at #23 in the world, is well off her best tennis, but seems to like winning that way. She's currently down a set to Brady in the fourth round, but she's certainly pulled off bigger comebacks in the past and might just be ready to do it again.

On the end of the draw, my complete Hail Mary pick of Johanna Konta was shocked by a resurgent Sorana Cirstea, but I take some comfort in the fact that my other one to watch, Elise Mertens, has been looking strong this first week. One of the players forced to suspend her second round match and pick it up again the next day, she's technically played three days in a row but kept her level high. And Aussie champ Sofia Kenin is comfortingly playing well again, after losing her first rounds in Dubai, Doha, and Cincinnati. She was pushed by Ons Jabeur last night, but clinched the win in reassuring form.

But you might have to keep an eye out now for two-time finalist Victoria Azarenka who, after a title run in "Cincy" is now riding an eight-match win streak, absolutely crushing Aryna Sabalenka, her vanquisher here last year, in the second round. Next up is a talented Karolina Muchova, one of my Cinderella picks in Melbourne. The 24-year-old Czech scored a huge win over Venus Williams in her opener and survived a big test from Cirstea yesterday. Unseeded Azarenka is actually one ranking spot below her seeded next opponent, but something tells me her experience could help her pull off the win -- and maybe help another one of my predictions come true.

The third quarter of the women's draw is where the most disruption has happened. Yes, Serena Williams making the fourth round shouldn't be a surprise -- though that outcome looked to be in question after she dropped her first set to Sloane Stephens yesterday -- but given her losses so far this summer, it certainly wasn't a given. For a spot in the quarters, she set up a rematch with Maria Sakkari, the woman who came back from a set down in "Cincy" to pull off the upset. Serena's not usually the type to let you get away with two wins in a row, but she has dropped straight matches to Naomi Osaka and Bianca Andreescu in recent years, so the Greek is certainly hoping she can capitalize.

But the real surprise has been Tsvetana Pironkova, a semifinalist at Wimbledon a decade ago. Since then she's retire, had a baby, and in the most unfortunately timed of announcements, decided to come back to tennis in March. But you can certainly see why -- she simply stunned my pick for this quarter, Garbiñe Muguruza, in the second round and went on to take out 18th seed Donna Vekic yesterday. With a fourth round against fellow veteran Alizé Cornet, who beat Sofia Kenin last week in Cincy and benefitted from the retirement of Madison Keys last night, she could very well make another break for the later rounds.

In the last quarter of the draw, the only one on the ladies' side where I picked the favorite to advance, Naomi Osaka has so far lived up to my expectations. But that's not to say there were no surprises here. Osaka, the oddsmakers' favorite to win the title, has dropped sets to Misaki Doi and Marta Kostyuk, so could be challenged by Anett Kontaveit in the next round. The 21st ranked Estonian put up a fight against the 2018 champion last week and has been on point this week. I wouldn't be surprised if she put up a big fight against the heavy favorite again.

I am frankly a little disappointed by the showing from Jessica Pegula, who has far outplayed her #63 ranking this year with wins over Caroline Wozniacki and Aryna Sabalenka. I thought she had the potential to be a spoiler in this section, and while she looked strong early, she fell in the third round to a strong Petra Kvitova. Instead it appears the Cinderella for the tournament will again be Shelby Rogers, a one-time quarterfinalist at Roland Garros who stunned Serena this summer in Lexington. Still ranked #93 in the world, she picked off one of my favorites, Elena Rybakina, in the second round and followed up by beating compatriot Madison Brengle a round later. Repeating her success against Kvitova will be a harder task, but if she can do it, this would certainly push her to new heights.


The Men





The men's draw has seen plenty of drama of its own, but top seeded and top ranked Novak Djokovic continues to dominate, dropping only one set to Kyle Edmund and inching closer and closer to an undefeated 2020 season. With a fourth round match against Pablo Carreno Busta it appears he's soon to take one step closer.

I am pleasantly surprised, though, by the showing from David Goffin, the other favorite in this quarter, who hasn't done too much this year since beating Rafael Nadal at the ATP Cup. I thought he might get tested and possibly upset in the first round by big-serving Reilly Opelka, but he seemed to handle the challenge well, going on to also easily defeat a strong Filip Krajinovic, who took out Dominic Thiem last week in "Cincy". Then there's young Denis Shapovalov, who started this year with so much hype, but came to the Open with a 5-8 record on the season and a handful of opening round matches. This week he's lived up to his seeding, but after a five-setter against Taylor Fritz -- where he had to come back from 1-2 sets down -- he might be spent in his next round.

I tried to hedge my pick for the second quarter of the draw by choosing two potential semifinalists, but that didn't work out too well for me. Roberto Bautista Agut had the upper hand, ousting Tennys Sandgren in the first round, but yesterday squandered a 2-1 set lead over surprising standout, and PTPA founding member, Vasek Pospisil, who'd already beating countryman Milos Raonic in the second round. It's by far the best showing from the Canadian on these courts -- he made the quarters at Wimbledon back in 2015 -- and against Alex de Minaur, who had his own 1-2 set comeback against Karen Khachanov yesterday, he might just be able to keep it going.

And while the advantage still lies with second seeded Dominic Thiem in this section, I've been impressed by young Felix Auger-Aliassime too. He's another one of those players who came into 2020 red hot and, unlike Shapovalov, seemed to make good on it. He reached the finals of two straight events in the late winter, Rotterdam and Marseille, and while he lost to Sandgren early last week in Cincy, his shot-making was clean and precise. After a tight opener in New York against Thiago Monteiro, he's looked unstoppable and against Thiem, a man he's never met before, could pull off a big upset.

For some strange reason I picked John Millman to surprise us in the third set, even though I knew how dominant last year's finalist Daniil Medvedev can be. And the Russian, happy to play the part of villain at the 2019 event, has been exactly that in his first week back, not dropping a set in his first three matches. Next up he faces Frances Tiafoe, who took out Millman in the second round and is finally living up to the expectations I've had for him. I'm not saying he will beat the world #5, but it sure will be fun to watch him try.

But maybe more impressive this week has been Matteo Berrettini, who I, maybe unjustly, thought would be a flash-in-the-pan. Last year's surprise semifinalist only played two events this year, racking up an unimpressive 2-2 record, but he's found his game at the Open again -- perhaps thanks to one ardent follower who's found a way to get around the no-fan policy this year. The Italian hasn't dropped a set yet, and though he faces a very talented Andrey Rublev in the next round, he might just be ready to keep going.

And finally the last quarter of the men's draw was stacked with young talent ready to make a name for themselves on the Slam courts. Stefanos Tsitsipas certainly put up a fight to make my prediction come true, but ultimately fell in a five-set, four-plus hour match that ended at one a.m. to Borna Coric, a man who we've been waiting for years to live up to his potential. He's never made the quarters of a Major, but with a fourth round agaist world #63 Jordan Thompson, he might be able to do it -- if he recovers in time.

But, of course, you have to assume the favorite for this section is now squarely Alexander Zverev, who made the semis in Melbourne this year too. He's dropped a set in each of his matches so far this first week, but next faces who has to be the biggest surprsie on the men's side, 99th-ranked Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, a 21-year-old from Spain playing in his first U.S. Open and only his third Slam ever. He's been tested, of course, needing five sets to get past Dennis Novak in his opener, and dropping a set in each of his next two matches too. He's clearly the underdog in his next match, but stranger things have certainly happened before.


Of course, with a week left to go at the U.S. Open, there's still a lot of game left to play, and any of the players still in the running could conceivably pull off some big wins. Will experience win out in the end, or will that new blood finally start asserting itself in both draws? Only time will tell.

And maybe, just maybe, one of these days I'll get the draws right.

June 22, 2020

Oh, Novak - Part Two

At the start of the coronavirus pandemic, the tennis community really stepped up. It proactively closed down tournaments to contain the spread, entertained us with the most creative of #TennisAtHome moments, donated millions of dollars to supply protective gear to medical staff. And after weeks of debate and discussion, we finally came up with a plan to hold the U.S. Open on schedule, in a way that will hopefully mitigate risk.

But after this weekend, we seem to have taken a huge step back.

At least two players at Novak Djokovic's Adria Cup tested positive for COVID-19 at an event in Croatia -- Grigor Dimitrov and Borna Coric. And honestly, it's no surprise.

There were little to no precautions taken at the event, which kicked off June 12th in Belgrade and was slated to travel to Montenegro this weekend. Press rooms were packed seat-to-seat, stadium risers were full of fans, players shook hands, hugged and even interacted with ball kids, and crowds gathered en masse outdoors.



Now, I get the need and desire to return to normal. We're all tired and restless after being couped up for months, and there is a real necessity for people to get back to work and earn a paycheck -- even for tennis players, the majority of whom have been effectively unemployed since March. But these exhibition matches felt less like a way to bring in a little cash and more a chance for some chest thumping.

And it may come as no surprise that Djokovic is at the center of it.

Though he contributed generously to relief efforts early on, he also raised a lot of eyebrows when he expressed his aversion to getting a coronavirus vaccine if and when one is available, also spouting some questionable "theories" about changing the molecular composition of water with your emotions. More recently he took issue with the U.S. Open saying it may limit players' entourages to one person, calling that an "impossible" condition. It bares noting that his fitness coach in Zadar this weekend just tested positive as well.

At the start of the Adria tour, Djokovic seemed to brush off concerns about safety protocols since the region hadn't seen as bad an outbreak as other hotspots and so, presumably, didn't need to be as careful. Now, with Sunday's championship match and next weekend's Montenegro leg called off, hopefully he's reconsidering.

But we need more.

Nole is, far and away, the elder statesman of this group. Not that Dimitrov, 28, and the rest of the players who participated -- mostly in their early to mid 20s -- shouldn't have known better, none of them participated against their will. But Djokovic has clout and a platform and, frankly, a responsibility that the others don't. And yet, we haven't seen a statement from him, nor an apology. And if photos over the last few days are any evidence, he's one of the few involved who hasn't gotten tested. (CORRECTION: Djokovic did get tested and is currently waiting for results of his COVID test. Though he took it after leaving Croatia, and after Dimitrov announced he was positive.)

Who knows what this weekend's developments will mean for the U.S. Open and other tournaments currently on the calendar for August. If cancelled, that again puts players in need of any prize money in a bind. But if not, the risks could be much worse.

This is an important time, not just for tennis but for the world. And the world's most influential people owe it to the rest of us, if not to make a difference, then at least to set an example.

And if the top ranked player in the world won't do it, who will?

March 28, 2015

The Newest Crop

It always seems that about this time of year we start to see a couple young players emerge on the tennis Tours. Some go on to accomplish big things in their careers, others fade away a little. But all are able to get in a couple wins that earn them a little more notice. And this year in Miami is no different.

We've already talked a bit about young Borna Coric. The Croatian teenager backed up his stellar 2014 season with a stunning win over Andy Murray in Dubai and a rapid rise to a career-high #59 in the world -- he was barely in the top three hundred at this time last year. Playing in just his second Masters level event in Miami, he's certainly at an experiential disadvantage, but that might not work too hard against him. After solidly beating Andreas Haider-Mauer earlier this month in Indian Wells, he had a slight hiccup against the Austrian in his opener -- he only won one game in the opening set -- but came back strong for the win. He faces eighteenth seed David Goffin next but, with a mediocre 5-6 record on the year so far, the Belgian seems to be struggling to keep the momentum from his comeback season. For a guy who's beaten two of the three top ten players he's met during his career, Coric could certainly take advantage of this opportunity too.

James Duckworth has been around a little longer, but outside his native Australia he hasn't garnered too much attention. The twenty-three year old has won a couple Challengers titles but has made much less headway on the bigger stages. He's struggled to qualify for most Majors and hasn't won any main draw matches outside of his homeland. He did manage a nice victory over Gilles Simon to start this season in Brisbane, though, and after beating Dominic Thiem in the first round of the BNP Paribas Open he finally cracked the top hundred. He had to manage through preliminaries in Miami too but managed a good win over fellow qualifier Damir Dzumhur in his opener. He's on serve early in his rematch against Fernando Verdasco now -- Duckworth lost a fairly quick two sets to him a few weeks ago in Indian Wells -- but we all know how inconsistent the Spaniard can be and maybe the underdog will get a chance to pounce.

There's plenty of fresh talent on the women's side too, but perhaps the most notable name is one we got a quick glimpse of not too long ago. Catherine Bellis was ranked #1208 in the world when she drubbed Melbourne finalist Dominika Cibulkova in the first round of last year's U.S. Open. She had a shot at going even further when she bageled Zarina Diyas in their second set and seemed to have momentum to manage even that win. She ultimately lost to the underrated Kazakh -- but she was able to get revenge. Fresh off a ITF title in Racho Santa Fe, the fifteen-year-old Cici only dropped just three games to the twenty-ninth seed yesterday, needing barely an hour to score the win. The road gets much tougher from here of course -- she'll most likely face two-time defending champion Serena Williams -- she's won a total of seven titles in Miami -- next. But she still seems destined to climb much higher than her current #211 ranking and even getting a couple good shots in on Serena, who incidentally won her first U.S. Open a few months after Bellis was born, could put her well on the road to do just that.

Unlike some of these other guys, Daria Gavrilova hadn't had many high-profile wins on the WTA Tour before this week, but the 2010 U.S. Open Juniors champ but was quick to change that in Miami. The Russian wildcard, whose first round opponent retired in the middle of their opening set, didn't seem hampered by the lack of match play. Facing second seed Maria Sharapova -- five times a finalist here but still unable to capture the one big crown that's eluded her -- the world #97 was relentless. She took advantage of weak serving from MaSha, keeping her well below fifty percent on second serve and firing off the only two aces of the match herself. The five-time Grand Slam champ was sent packing in straight sets, marking by far her earliest loss at this event since 2003. For her efforts Gavrilova will have to handle Kurumi Nara, a titlist in Rio last year, and while the lady from Japan can be a tricky player to be sure, there's no reason the lesser-known Russian can't follow up her big upset with another one.

The question for these guys, of course, is whether they can follow up success in Miami not just with more wins over the next week, but much more importantly, wins in the months to come. And hopefully they'll all be able to stick around and show us just how much they've got to give us.

March 5, 2015

A Long History: Davis Cup First Round Preview

Is it just me, or do the pairings for some of this weekend's Davis Cup ties seem to hold a little more historic significance than usual? Whether the battles bfacring up political tensions, reminders of centuries-old imperialism, or long-standing rivalries, you can't help but feel this weekend won't be the first time a couple of these combatants have faced off.

Germany vs. France

The two euro zone superpowers have a long political and economic history with each other as they jockeyed for control of the Continent, and things could get just as exciting on the tennis courts this weekend. Both teams are bringing their best, but despite homecourt advantage the Germans might find themselves struggling. Top ranked Philipp Kohlschreiber has only won two matches this year, both against sub-#90 players. And Benjamin Becker hasn't done much better, scoring a nice upset of Julien Benneteau in Melbourne, but failing to rebound from a long second round against Lleyton Hewitt a match later. Meanwhile, while the French are missing top dog Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, they do have both Marseille finalists Gilles Simon and Gael Monfils to helm their squad. Simon, who beat his compatriot for the title, also has a win over Andy Murray under his belt this year. With results like that, they'll have a pretty good shot at making a run back to the final.

Great Britain vs. U.S.

Over in Scotland the Americans will make another bid to get out from under British reign, and they may have had the firepower to do it. While big-serving John Isner has fallen a bit off the highs of his game recently, once-struggling Donald Young seems to have re-found his. After briefly falling out of the top two hundred in 2013, he's clawed his way back to relevance, reaching at least the quarters of three events already this year. It's been a while since he's beaten anyone in the top twenty, though, but he might have the momentum to change that this weekend. Of course world #5 Andy Murray will be standing in both their ways -- but the Australian Open runner-up has lost to both Gilles Simon and emerging star Borna Coric in recent weeks and notched a loss to Young in Indian Wells a few years back. Still, he's more than capable of carrying the team on his own. It may ultimately come down to the doubles rubbers and there the U.S. could rely heavily on its beacon Bryan Brothers -- the twins picked up their 106th title together in Delray and have clinched wins for their country on more than one occasion. There's no reason they can't do it again.

Argentina vs. Brazil

We're probably more used to seeing the South American soccer heavyweights face off on a different kind of battleground, but this weekend they'll concentrate instead on the clay courts. And while the surface certainly suits both teams, it's hard to give either one a clear edge. Argentina has the stronger roster on paper, but they are missing their big guns -- former world #4 Juan Martin Del Potro is still recovering from wrist surgery while Juan Monaco, last week's finalist in Buenos Aires, is sitting out this tie. The Brazilians, meanwhile, are bringing their best, but their top player Joao Souza is only just peaking at #75, and Thomaz Bellucci, once so close to the top twenty, hasn't had too many big wins over the last year. The Argentines do bring Leonardo Mayer, one of the more underrated players in the sport, and Diego Schwartzman, who won the year-end Challengers' title last season -- the Brazilians counter with a couple highly-ranked doubles players in Marcelo Melo and Bruno Soares. At the end of the day Buenos Aires might provide a slight homecourt advantage, but it could go all the way down to the wire.

Serbia vs. Croatia

The two former Yugoslavian states faced off once before at Davis Cup, with the Serbs winning handily 4-1, and this time might not be much different. The Croats are still without their big star, U.S. Open champ Marin Cilic who continues to recover from a shoulder injury, and are instead led by young Borna Coric. That's not so bad, though -- the eighteen year old beat Rafael Nadal last year in Basel and is fresh off a win over Andy Murray in Dubai. At a career-high #61 in the world, he might just be able to add one more top-ten scalp to his take. Still you have to give a strong edge to the Serbs, who bring world #1 Novak Djokovic and rapidly rebounding Viktor Troicki to the mix. The former followed up a title in Melbourne with a run to the final in the UAE, while the latter picked up his first title since 2010 as a qualifier in Sydney. Add to that Nenad Zimonjic who, at thirty-eight years of age, is still a solid force on the doubles circuit and it's tough to see the home team having too much trouble.

Belgium vs. Switzerland

Of course not all the match-ups this weekend are so fraught with historical undertones, but everyone still has parts to play. The traditionally neutral Swiss are likely to remain typically unbiased this weekend, event as they should be mounting a defense of their first ever Davis Cup title. Roger Federer decided to sit out the 2015 season, while fellow top-tenner Stan Wawrinka, who's also skipping this weekend's action, has yet to decide whether he'll play later in the year. That leaves a host of relative unknowns to make any kind of stand for Switzerland -- the highest ranked player is #292 Yann Marti. That could give Belgian's comeback kid David Goffin an opportunity to make up for some recently lackluster results -- he's lost twice in a row to veteran Marcos Baghdatis and has only gotten past the second round of one event this year. Even Steve Darcis, who notched his biggest career win over Rafael Nadal at Wimbledon two years ago, could step up to the plate and notch a couple wins off the Challengers' circuit this year.

Czech Republic vs. Australia

Meanwhile the Czechs will try to reclaim the crown they ceded to the Swiss last year, but they too might have a bit of trouble. While rising star Jiri Vesely and one-time giant killer Lukas Rosol could certainly deliver, they are without their biggest stars, Melbourne semifinalist Tomas Berdych and doubles specialist Radek Stepanek. And the men from Down Under could take advantage of those holes -- players like Sam Groth and a resurgent Bernard Tomic have been rallying of late. And while veteran Lleyton Hewitt is far from his career highs, he's more than proven he can never be counted out. With a little more star power on the Aussies' side, they could stop the Czech's comeback cold.

Canada vs. Japan

We could see some fireworks in the match-up between a couple countries that haven't had a lot of experience in Davis Cup. Canada and Japan have combined for just a dozen years in the World Group -- but in this rematch of last year's first round they're both out to prove they belong. Kei Nishikori climbed to a career high #4 in the world after reaching the final in Acapulco and is coming off what's easily been the most prolific twelve months of his career. He'll be joined by Tatsumo Ito, who beat Stan Wawrinka last year in Tokyo and might be primed for another upset. The Canadians are slightly more armed, though -- Milos Raonic has always had tough matches against Nishikori, but he won their last meeting in Brisbane in three tight tiebreaks. And he'll have back-up from Vasek Pospisil, a man who's beaten John Isner already this season and made a nice run to the Washington semis last year. He's also an accomplished doubles player and might just be called on, with veteran star Daniel Nestor, to serve as a ringer.

Kazakhstan vs. Italy

And in the final tie being contested this weekend, a relatively inexperienced Kazakh team goes up against the long-time also-rans. The Italians have a lot to be proud of -- Andreas Seppi scored an enormous win over Roger Federer at the Australian Open, Simone Bolelli stunned Milos Raonic in Marseill and recently struggling Fabio Fognini pulled off a huge upset of defending champion Rafael Nadal in Rio. While none of these players is quite at their best, they certainly seem to have a little momentum on their side. There could be some surprises this weekend -- Andrey Golubev did take out Stan Wawrinka last year in Davis Cup and veteran Mikhail Kukushkin has had his moments in the past -- but this is really Italy's battle to lose. And there's no reason they shouldn't live up to expectations.



Whether this weekend's Davis Cup ties rekindle old rivalries or start to flame new ones, there's more than enough potential for some combative contests. And whoever emerges as the victors will have to recover quick -- this is just the beginning of what could be a long, drawn-out war.

January 7, 2015

Picking Up Where They Left Off

It may feel like a while since the final balls of the 2014 tennis season were hit, but it sure looks like a couple players kept busy during their time off. In just the first few days of action in the New Year, we've already been treated to thrilling matches and major upsets. But if we were really paying attention the last few months, maybe we shouldn't be so surprised to see who's shining as bright as they are -- and who may still need to dust off the cobwebs a little.

It might not be too shocking to see Victoria Azarenka struggling a bit on her return to tournament play. The former world #1 has played just a handful of events over the past year and was defending runner-up points in Brisbane -- she was under a lot of pressure this week. And though she held match points against Karolina Pliskova in their opener Monday, she wasn't able to convert and ultimately lost the three-plus hour marathon. Slightly more troublesome was the performance of last year's finalist in Melbourne -- Dominika Cibulkova lost to Madison Keys in her first round in Brisbane, notching her thirteenth event in twelve months without a win. One-time Roland Garros #2 Sara Errani didn't fare any better -- she's only won one match since the U.S. Open and this week in Auckland lost in straight sets to veteran Daniela Hantuchova. Fifth seed Svetlana Kuznetsova put up a bit more of a fight, but after taking the first set off qualifier Lucie Hradecka she ultimately couldn't hold off the underdog.

It wasn't all bad news for the ladies, though. Young Ana Konjuh who reached the quarters in Limoges and the semis in Istanbul last year pulled off an upset of eighth seeded Mona Barthel in Auckland before ultimately losing to Elena Vesnina. Over in Shenzhen Aleksandra Krunic, who very nearly defeated Victoria Azarenka in New York last year, is making the most of her qualifying ticket to the main draw, reaching the quarters with a win over Anna Schmiedlova today. And at the mixed-team, round-robin Hopman Cup, under-appreciated Lucie Safarova continued her success from last year -- the Czech was the only player to hold match point against Aussie champ Na Li in Melbourne, reached her first Slam semi at Wimbledon and scored wins over Sam Stosur, Ana Ivanovic and Caroline Wozniacki during the season. This week in Perth she's already stunned Genie Bouchard and notched an impressive win over Flavia Pennetta to help her team to a perfect 2-0 so far.

A couple guys have been able to carry over their strength into the new year too. Andy Murray, who fell briefly out of the top ten in 2014, cut his ranking in half with three titles to end the season. He hasn't had as tough a draw in Perth, but he did score his third straight win over Jerzy Janowicz, a man who stunned him two years back in Paris. And David Goffin, who won four Challenger and three ATP-level titles all in the back half of last year, hasn't slowed down either. The fourth seed in Chennai survived a challenge in his opener, but with the help of twelve aces ultimately dispatched Ricardas Berankis to make the quarters. Young Borna Coric on the other hand, a man who ended 2014 with one of the biggest wins of his nascent career, may not have been able to get the win over defending champ Stan Wawrinka today, but he did manage an upset over veteran Robin Haase in his first round. And wins like that could be just what he needs to make a real dent in his ranking.

It hasn't all been good news for the men though. American #1 John Isner hasn't done much of note for quite some time -- he'd only scored one win over a top twenty player since Roland Garros before making the trip to Perth. There he battled through three tight sets in his defeat of Fabio Fognini but then fell in straights to a still-uncertain Vasek Pospisil. And former U.S. Open semifinalist Mikhail Youzhny has struggled a bit over the years and started this season out of the top forty for the first time since 2009. He showed some promise of a comeback the last few months, defeating Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in Cincinnati and Ernest Gulbis in Shanghai, but he also lost to Nick Kyrgios in New York and to #74 Mikhail Kukushkin in his hometown Moscow. This week in Doha he was stunned by little known Georgian Nikoloz Basilashvili in straight sets, his sixth loss to a sub-#100 player in the past year. But of course the big shocker came when Rafael Nadal took the court for his first ATP match since undergoing surgery this past fall. But even pre-appendectomy the Spanish star seemed out of form, losing to two teenagers in the past six months, and his troubles continued in the New Year. Against world #127, veteran qualifier Michael Berrer on Tuesday, Rafa squandered a 6-1 first set and couldn't convert any of five break points in the decider. After two hours on court the defending champ in Doha was sent packing, marking his earliest loss in a season since 2004.

Of course, not everyone started the season the way they ended the last. Peter Gojowczyk had become a virtual nonentity on Tour in the back half of 2014 -- after a stunning Cinderella run to the Doha semis last year and a defeat of Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in Davis Cup play, the twenty-five year old German couldn't qualify for the last three ATP events of the season and only managed an 8-9 record on the year. He seems to have found his stride again though -- he only lost one game to Alejandro Falla this week in Chennai and could be about to turn his luck back around. And even more surprising was the groggy performance of world #1 Serena Williams in Perth. With a 31-3 record since Wimbledon and four titles to boot, you can understand why she'd be a little tired. But this week she actually called for a coffee during her three-setter against Pennetta and then was wholly drubbed by Eugenie Bouchard yesterday. Whether she can rally to get the U.S. into the Hopman Cup semis remains to be seen, but something tells me she'll figure things out once she hits the big leagues again.

Hopefully the players who've put themselves on the right track to start this year will keep things going deep into the season -- and the rest will take this as an opportunity to right themselves. With just over a week left before things get really serious on Tour there's not a lot of time of everyone to show us exactly what they're made of.

January 2, 2015

3...2...1...


The ball may have already dropped to ring in the New Year, but we're still a couple days away from the official start of the 2015 tennis season. And with last year's champions looking to continue their momentum, former greats hoping for a successful return and a couple newbies seeking their big breaks, you know we're going to see some top-notch action from the start.

Of course it won't be full steam ahead for everyone -- Juan Martin Del Potro delayed his comeback and pulled out of Brisbane, while a couple players who entered exhibitions at International Premier League events ultimately withdrew from early tournaments too. And even those who did hit the court again struggled -- Rafael Nadal, playing his first match since an appendectomy in November, won just two games off Andy Murray at the Mubadala World Tennis Championships this week. Results like these could open the door to plenty others.

The only woman who's ever won the title in Shenzhen won't be back to defend, of course, and top tier champs like Simona Halep and Petra Kvitova will be eager to fill her spot. But they're not the only ones -- last year's runner-up Shaui Peng had a strong end to her 2014 season and could get a nice boost from homecourt advantage. And Zarina Diyas, who quietly climbed to #33 in the world, got to the final in Osaka in October and could take a couple in the field here by surprise. But I'm going to keep an eye on Vera Zvonareva, whose comeback last year was half-hearted at best. If she's fully recovered now, she might be ready to cause some of the damage we all know she's capable of.

The women's bracket in Brisbane is a little more intimidating with eight top twenty players hitting the courts in Australia. Singapore qualifiers Maria Sharapova and Ana Ivanovic lead the pack but the biggest surprises could come from some unseeded spoilers. Hometown favorite Sam Stosur launched a late-season comeback last year, reaching the semis in Beijing and taking her third title in Osaka, and 2014 runner-up Victoria Azarenka, who's coming off her first trophy-less season since 2008, will look to make up points right off the bat. But perhaps the player with the greatest chance of shaking things up is Karolina Pliskova who won the Girls' title in Melbourne back in 2010 -- in September she made the final in Hong Kong and followed up that run with titles in Seoul and Linz. She was an alternate at the Tournament of Champions in Sofia and lost the only match she played, but with wins over players like Andrea Petkovic, Angelique Kerber and Ana Ivanovic over the last twelve months, she certainly has the talent to take out the big guns.

There's plenty star power in the men's draw too -- Roger Federer, my player of the year, Kei Nishikori and Milos Raonic all are coming off breakthrough seasons, but potential threats lurk even deeper in the draw. Alexandr Dolgopolov, whose own stellar 2014 was cut short by knee surgery in July, will be back in action -- he only won one match since his return in Tokyo last September, but it was over an always-tricky Gilles Simon, and he might finally be up for even bigger challenges now. And native son Lleyton Hewitt snatched this title from Fed last year -- he may be well off his career high ranking at #50 in the world, but he's one of those guys that never gives up. Perhaps the same can be said for compatriot Bernard Tomic, who briefly fell out of the top hundred last year after a second round loss at Wimbledon. He may not be at the top of his game these days, but he did manage a runner's-up finish in Sydney in 2014 -- admittedly one win short of his previous result -- and he shocked everyone with a title run in Bogota over the summer. Somehow, it seems, every time we write him off, he manages to pull off a big win.

Over in Chennai, Stan Wawrinka will look to reclaim the crown that launched him into the sport's elite, but players like 2014 standoutRoberto Bautista Agut and comeback kid David Goffin will be out to derail his plans. So will some of last year's most promising young guns -- Jiri Vesely had quite a strong start to last season, and Borna Coric who stunned Rafael Nadal last year in Basel, is just a hair out of the top hundred now and seems primed to climb much higher. But I'd like nothing more than to see Feliciano Lopez to make a big run here. The likely-second seed is coming off a banner 2014 season, reaching a career-high #14 ranking and notching wins over Nadal, Tomas Berdych and Milos Raonic -- he hasn't won a hardcourt title since 2010, but the thirty-three year old veteran has shown he has what it takes to put an end to that stretch.

More than a couple stars made their way out to Doha too -- defending champion Rafael Nadal and world #1 Novak Djokovic may headline, but a couple former top ten players could also make a stand. Fernando Verdasco finished 2014 at his lowest year-end ranking since 2006 and will look to turn things back around, and fellow Spaniard Nicolas Almagro, playing his first event since pulling out of his French Open first round, could rack up a couple of much needed points to improve his #71 ranking before heading down to Melbourne. But also look out for Ernests Gulbis, whose shoulder injury kept him off the alternate list in London -- he really slowed down after his surprise semifinal appearance at Roland Garros, but he's got the kind of game that can really catch the favorites off guard, and it might just be the perfect time to show us exactly what he can do.

It's hard to say who'll ultimately come out on top this tennis season, but the good thing about each new year is that everyone starts off with a clean slate. Whether the old favorites continue their reigns or some upstarts make a push into the elite, we're certainly in for some great action over the coming months. And it all kicks off in just a few more days...

December 9, 2014

The 2014 Tennis Spin Awards: The Gentlemen


Man, if you thought things got intense for the ladies in 2014, you ain't seen nothing yet!

After years with a select few dominating the Majors, we got not one, but two first time Slam champions this season. We had records set, breakthroughs made, comebacks staged and upsets of all kinds. And when all was said and done there were plenty of contenders in all of these categories.

So, without further ado...

Hottest NewcomerMost Improved
One to WatchBest Comeback
Greatest LetdownMost Overlooked
Biggest SurpriseGutsiest Win
Greatest UpsetBest Slam Match
Doubles Team of the YearPlayer of the Year


Hottest Newcomer

During a season in which so many young stars emerged on the ATP Tour, it's hard to pick a winner in this category. All these guys made huge strides this year, caused some unlikely upsets and climbed up the rankings. While none of them has completely broken into the elite just yet, all their performances show they've got a lot still to give. And hopefully we'll see them continue their momentum into the New Year.

The Nominees

Jiri Vesely certainly started the year with a ton of promise -- having won six Challenger and Futures titles in 2013, the now twenty-one year old Czech was named the ATP Star of Tomorrow, and he was in a hurry to prove his worth. In his first Australian Open main draw he took the first two sets off twenty-first seed Kevin Anderson, before ultimately succumbing in the nearly four-hour long match. He wasn't discouraged by his loss though -- several weeks later he took Andy Murray to three sets in Indian Wells, then won his first Major match at Roland Garros and stunned Gael Monfils at Wimbledon. Vesely's slowed down a bit since then -- he lost in the first round of all but one of the ATP level events he played after London, but he has climbed to #66 in the world, just a hair off his career high ranking. And as he really starts to gain his footing at the Slams I expect that number to get even smaller.

Austria's Dominic Thiem had an even more successful rise up the rankings this year, finishing the season at #39 in the world, a full hundred spots higher than where he started it. The twenty-one year old had to qualify for most events early on, but wins over Gilles Simon in Indian Wells and Lukas Rosol in Miami put him on the map. His biggest victory, though, came on the clay of Madrid where he came back from losing the first set to Monte Carlo champ Stan Wawrinka to notch the first top-ten win of his career. In the weeks to follow he would reach the final in Kitzbühel and defeat twelfth seed Ernests Gulbis on his way to the fourth round in his U.S. Open debut. He's only won a couple matches since then, but I expect him to come back strong at the start of 2015, ready to add a couple more scalps to his take.

The Winner: Nick Kyrgios

The young Australian may not have climbed as high up the rankings as his contemporaries, but he sure made a louder splash than either of them. In his debut at his homeland's Major, the nineteen-year-old wildcard not only won his first match, but also took the opening two sets twenty-seventh seed Benoit Paire in the second round. He spent the next couple months on the Challenger and Futures circuit, but roared back onto Tour at Wimbledon. Still ranked well out of the top hundred, he weathered three long, grueling matches before stunning top seed and two-time champion Rafael Nadal in the fourth round. If that wasn't enough he took out Mikhail Youzhny in New York, becoming the first teenager to beat seeds at back-to-back Slams since Novak Djokovic did it in 2006.


Most Improved

The Nominees

Sam Groth has been around for ages, going pro some eight years ago, but never came close to cracking the top hundred until this summer. The six-foot-four Australian had actually spent most of his career all the way down on the Futures circuit, only winning his first Challenger event this March in Canada. But he started finding his footing on the ATP Tour as well -- he got to the quarters at his season opener in Brisbane and played his first Grand Slam main draw since 2009 -- only his second ever -- in Melbourne. He did well outside his homeland too -- on the grass of Newport, he stunned defending champion Nicolas Mahut to make the semis, and later in the summer he finally won his first Major match in New York. He did well in doubles too, partnering with Andrey Golubev to make the semis at the French Open and with compatriot Chris Guccione to pick up his only Tour title in Bogotá. Now #81 in the world, he could get direct entry to the big events now, which could give him a great opportunity to climb even higher. And with so many players thriving so late in their careers these days, he might just be hitting his prime now.

At twenty-two Jack Sock is a little bit earlier on in his career, but the 2010 Junior champion at the U.S. Open has arguably been on the radar much longer. Back in 2011 he won the mixed doubles title in the Big Apple with Melanie Oudin and he made my list of players to watch in 2013. But he languished mostly outside the top hundred in singles, cracking double digits for a brief period last year, but still ending the season at #104 in the world. He seems to have made a big leap into the higher levels this year -- Sock beat then-#12 Tommy Haas in Auckland and countryman John Isner in Newport. He put up a nice fight against top-ten players too, forcing third sets against the likes of Grigor Dimitrov and Milos Raonic, even taking out Kei Nishikori at a Masters event in Shanghai. If that wasn't enough, he teamed with Canada's Vasek Pospisil to win the doubles title at Wimbledon, stunning legendary champions Mike and Bob Bryan in the final. Whether his biggest successes are reserved for the paired discipline or he can achieve anything on his own is yet to be seen, but with a climb into the top fifty now he has a better shot than ever to prove his worth on all courts.

The Winner: Roberto Bautista Agut

It's easy to have been unaware of the Spaniard before the start of the season -- the twenty-six year old only broke into the top hundred in late 2012, amassed a losing 29-34 record during his career and only picked up three Challenger titles over the years. He started to gain a little footing last year, beating Tomas Berdych on his way to the Chennai final and notching a win over Grigor Dimitrov in Beijing. But he still ended the year outside the top fifty, in danger of dropping quickly if he didn't defend points off the bat.

RBA rose to the task, of course, and then some -- after reaching the semis in Auckland he stunned Juan Martin Del Potro in the second round of the Australian Open. He kept going from there, too, taking out Berdych again in Indian Wells, reaching the semis in Madrid and picking up his first Tour-level titles in Den Bosch and Stuttgart. Now ranked at #15 in the world, he fell just short of taking an alternate slot for the year-end championship and is a legitimate threat to the top players. While he certainly now has more to lose when the new season starts in a few weeks, something tells me he's going to come out swinging right out of the gate.


One to Watch

The Nominees

Don't be surprised if you haven't heard much about twenty-one year old Guilherme Clezar. Ranked just out of the top two hundred at the start of the year, he only played three ATP-level matches all season, losing the two first rounds he played in Rio and Sao Paulo and putting the only loss on the board in Brazil's Davis Cup Group 1 win over Ecuador in April. He spent most of his time on the Challenger circuit, and while he couldn't win a title this year -- he'd claimed two in his homeland the prior two years -- he was rewarded a wildcard spot in the Challenger Tour Final for the second straight year. As the lowest, eighth seed in the field in 2013, he notched an opening round robin win over top seed Teymuraz Gabashvilli -- this year, the underdog again at #331 in the world, he got two top-hundred wins over Blaz Rola and Joao Souza to reach the semis and then saved three match points in the three tiebreak, three-plus hour match against veteran Victor Estrella Burgos. He ultimately fell to Diego Schwartzman in the final, the only man who'd beaten him in the early rounds, but with a steadily improving results and a couple more matches under his belt, it might not be long before he starts getting some wins on the Big Boys' Tour too.

France's Lucas Pouille also flew under the radar for most of this season, but the twenty year old had a couple more chances to show us what he's got. While he spent the balance of the year at lower profile events, and did miss what could have been a great chance in Australia -- the wildcard in Melbourne opened against qualifier Dusan Lajovic and fell in four tight sets -- he got in some solid results at the Challengers early on. Later in the year he started getting traction, too, reaching the semis at events in Romania, the Slovak Republic and Poland before finally breaking into a final in Morocco. And though he still had to qualify for Tour-level tournaments, he finally took advantage of an opportunity at his hometown Masters. In Paris he effected four big upsets, notching wins over big-serving Ivo Karlovic and former world #13 Fabio Fognini before losing to Roger Federer in the Round of Sixteen. He hasn't yet cracked the double digits himself, but if he takes his momentum into the new year, it might not be long before he does.

The Winner: Borna Coric

Having just turned pro, the eighteen year old Croat wasn't on anyone's radar at the start of the year -- 2013's Boys champion at the U.S. Open was ranked outside the top three hundred at the end last season and spent most of the early part of this one at Futures events. But he showed promise from the start -- he took a set off veteran Michael Berrer in his ATP debut in Zagreb, reached the quarters and semis in subsequent events in his hometown and then beat then-#21 Jerzy Janowicz in Davis Cup action. He fell in early qualifying rounds over the summer but finally got a couple Tour-level wins in at Umag, beating top-fifty player Edouard Roger-Vasselin and former Viña del Mar champ Horacio Zeballos in the process. But he really hit his stride in the early fall, upsetting Lukas Rosol in his New York opener as a qualifier and reaching the semis in Tashkent. A couple weeks later in Basel he stunned an admittedly injured Ernests Gulbis and an appendicitis-afflicted Rafael Nadal, notching the biggest wins of his still young career. Of course, it remains to be seen whether he can pull off such victories when his opponents are at the top of their games, but it might not be long before we get to see him try -- now at #91 in the world and surely climbing, I'd expect him to make a much bigger statement at the big events in the new year.


Best Comeback

The Runner-Up: Viktor Troicki

The long-time Serbian #2 was ranked as high as #12 in the world at his peak, and in the first half of last year he scored wins over the likes of Marin Cilic and then-#14 Janko Tipsarevic. But after failing to submit a sample during drug testing in Monte Carlo, he was forced to serve a suspension which pulled him out of the game for twelve months. As points started falling off this July he dropped precipitously, first out of the top fifty, then out of the top hundred, bottoming out over the summer at #847 in the world. When he returned to Tour after Wimbledon, though, he put in some big man-hours on court -- he got to the quarters in Gstaad, banged through qualifying rounds at Challengers, even winning a couple titles on that circuit. By the time autumn rolled around he had gotten much of his groove back, taking out David Ferrer in Shenzhen, Mikhail Youzhny in Beijing, and reaching the semis in Vienna. He's now ranked just outside the top hundred, but any success in the early months of the New Year will send him soaring, and it might not be long before he's back contending with the big guys on the big stages once again.

The Nominees

The Winner: David Goffin

We might pay more attention to what happens on the ATP circuit, but you can't ignore what a player does at the Challenger level -- results may not give them a ton of ranking points or prize money, but it sure gives athletes some much-needed match play. And the young Belgian certainly was able to parlay what he learned at smaller events into big things on the main stage. The erstwhile wunderkind got all the way to the Roland Garros fourth round in 2012 as a qualifier and even put up a fight at Wimbledon, taking out then-#28 Bernard Tomic in their opener. But he fell way off the radar after that -- the now twenty-four year old lost in the first round of seven straight Majors, dropped as low as #113 in the world and notched just one top-twenty win over the next two years.

But after losing to Andy Murray at the All England Club this year, something in him switched. He won three Challenger events back-to-back during the summer, and then stunned the world for his first Big Boys' title in Kitzbühel. His stretched his win streak to twenty-five straight games, qualifying for and reaching the quarters in Winston-Salem and even put up a nice fight against Grigor Dimitrov in the third round at the U.S. Open. And he didn't slow down from there -- loyal to the courts which spring-boarded him to the big leagues, Goffin picked up another Challengers' trophy in Mons, beat Jo-Wilfried Tsonga on his way to his second career title in Metz, and scored his first top-ten win, beating Milos Raonic on the way to the final in Basel. His ranking now stands at #22 in the world, a far cry from the sub-hundred spot he occupied at the start of the year, and well higher than his previous peak in the mid-forties. And I don't think he'll let himself lose his grip so easily this time around.


Greatest Letdown

The Runner-Up: Fabio Fognini

The brash Italian didn't fall completely off his game this year, picking up his third career title in Viña Del Mar in February, reaching the final in Buenos Aires and finishing the season at #20 in the world. He even pulled off an impressive, straight-set victory over then-#8 Andy Murray in their Davis Cup quarterfinal. In March he hit a career high ranking of #13 in the world.

But his temper and on-court antics sure seemed to garner more headlines than his quality of play. At times it made sense -- his clash with an umpire in Indian Wells seems largely justified -- but also had some less appropriate outburts, melting down during a loss to Alexandr Dolgopolov in Madrid, incurring a fine almost as large as his winnings from his first round Wimbledon win, and actually flipping off the crowds after being defeated by world #533 Chuhan Wang in Shanghai. He only has one win since the U.S. Open and hasn't notched a single victory over anyone in the top-forty since July -- not the first time he's lost steam toward the end of the season -- so he certainly hasn't put up the numbers to excuse his behavior. And having shown so much promise over the years, it's high time Fognini proved he can be consistent in areas that have a little more to do with his talent and ability and less with his attitude.

The Winner: Benoit Paire

The twenty-five year old Frenchman had quite an impressive season in 2013 -- he scored wins over the likes of Marin Cilic, Gilles Simon, Milos Raonic and top ten players Stan Wawrinka and Juan Martin Del Potro. He reached the final in Montpelier and the semis in Rome and by the French Open had risen high enough to merit a twenty-fourth seed.

This year, however, was a bit of a different story. After eking out a win over Nick Kyrgios at the Australian Open, he notched three opening round exits during the spring, retiring from matches in Barcelona and Madrid. He didn't do much better during the summer, winning just three main draw matches between Roland Garros and the U.S. Open. He had to qualify for Masters events in Toronto and Cincinnati, and though he did manage a win over Julien Benneteau in New York, he skipped the rest of the season with a knee injury. His #118 ranking is a far cry from where he peaked last season and he could have a hard time getting into the tournaments that once made him a star. But hopefully he'll be able to recover and rebound when the new season starts -- otherwise his time among the elite could be more short-lived than he could ever have expected.


Most Overlooked

While plenty of players grabbed headlines this year -- both good and bad -- a couple lesser known names were slogging away on both the ATP and Challengers' Tours and racking up a bunch of always-significant ranking points. Sam Querrey, who struggled against the big guys most of the year, sneakily managed to claw himself back to #35 in the world on the heels of a trio of smaller titles. And Argentina's Diego Schwartzman finished the season at a career high #61 after winning the Challenger Tour Finals in São Paulo. And they're not the only ones who've flown under the radar.

The Nominees

Santiago Giraldo may be the highest-profile name on the list -- he reached his second career final in Barcelona with wins over clay-court specialists like Fabio Fognini and Nicolas Almagro and then stunned Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and Andy Murray on his way to the Madrid quarters. He still hasn't done much at the Majors -- his third round appearance at Wimbledon is the only the second time he's won two matches at a Slam, but he did earn his first seed at the U.S. Open, ultimately falling in four sets to Teymuraz Gabashvili in his opener. Still he seems to have a lot of potential, especially on clay. And hopefully in the coming season he'll be able to harness that talent and finally make a big statement.

Portugal's Joao Sousa also put up some solid results this year, and across all surfaces. He scored an upset of Gilles Simon on the Miami hardcourts, reached the semis in Den Bosch as a qualifier and finished runner-up on the dirt of Bastad. After a couple early exits over the summer, he rebounded in the fall, taking out former champion Gael Monfils before finally losing in the Metz final to David Goffin. He's struggled a bit since then, winning just one match in a tight three sets in Beijing, but like Giraldo he's shown some promise and could be primed for big things in the new year.

The Winner: Pablo Cuevas

Unlike these other guys, the twenty-eight year old Uruguayan has a little bit of bling to show for his efforts this year. Ranked outside the top two hundred at the start of the year, he made a big push to return to double digits during the clay court season. He picked up a couple Challengers' trophies in Barranquilla and Mestre but then really hit his stride over the summer -- he went on a fourteen match winning streak after Wimbledon, quietly adding his first two ATP-level titles in Bastad and Umag, notching wins over Fernando Verdasco, Fabio Fognini and Tommy Robredo. He picked up two more smaller trophies to end the season, scoring enough points to finish the year at #30 -- a huge improvement from where he started. Like with these other guys who thrive most on clay, he's so easily overshadowed by one man who dominates the surface, but Cuevas certainly poses a threat to the favorites and it might not be long before he puts that ability to good use.


Biggest Surprise

I always find it difficult to award prizes in this category -- a "surprise" can take so many forms, after all. It can highlight a great achievement from an unexpected source, the precipitous fall of a long-time great, or really anything strange that happens on -- or off -- the court. And this year's candidates really run the gamut.

The Nominees

Feliciano Lopez has long been an also-ran in this sport -- though he'd previously peaked in the top twenties a few years ago, by and large he spent his time in the mid to low double digits and almost never reached the second week of a Major. And at thirty-three years of age, you had to think the handsome Spaniard's best playing days were behind him. But things seemed to fall into place somehow this year -- always a grass court specialist, Lopez stunned former Wimbledon finalist Tomas Berdych on his way to the Queen's Club final and rebounded quickly to take the title in Eastbourne. He only made the third round at the All England Club, but took out marathon man John Isner and put up a nice fight against Stan Wawrinka in the process. Feli even extended his success to the hardcourts -- he reached the semis at the Rogers Cup and in Shanghai, adding a couple more top-ten wins to his resume by beating Milos Raonic and Rafael Nadal. He ends the year at a career high #14 in the world and accepted a second alternate's ticket to the Barclays World Tour Finals. We may be in an era of veteran success these days, but to see a man play his best so late in his career is really something to admire.

Andy Murray, on the other hand, has been at the top of his game for years, picking up a couple Major titles, scoring Olympic Gold in his homeland and rising as high as #2 in the world. Back surgery at the end of last year put him at a big of a disadvantage at the start of this season, and he briefly fell out of the top ten in the early fall. But he really got himself back on track after the U.S. Open -- he won his first title of the year in Shenzhen, beat New York champion Marin Cilic in Beijing and added a couple more trophies in Vienna and Valencia. His late season surge was enough to qualify for the year-end championships and seemed to suggest momentum was on his side. That's why his meltdown during the last round robin match was so unexpected -- with a chance to reach his fourth semi at the World Tour Finals he should have been able to put up a fight. Instead he won just one game against Roger Federer, not even notching a point on his opponent's first serve and after less than an hour was sent home. He did get to play an exhibition match against eventual champion Novak Djokovic after Roger pulled out of Sunday's final, but it was clearly not the ending he wanted after the comeback he'd launched over the last few months. Hopefully, though, he'll be back and kicking in 2015 -- it would certainly be a shame to have all the effort be for naught.

The Winner: U.S. Open Semifinals

As I've alluded to above, there used to be a time -- especially in the men's game -- where experience meant something. Before the start of this year, three players had won thirty-two of the previous thirty-six Majors. Just two men combined to with twenty-six of them. A championship hadn't been contested by two newbies since Rafael Nadal met Mariano Puerta at the 2005 French Open.

So when five-time Big Apple champion Roger Federer and 2011 winner Novak Djokovic -- who, just two months prior, had put on a classic display at the All England Club -- made it to the semis at this year's U.S. Open, it seemed inevitable we were in for another battle between the two greats.

But that, of course, was not meant to be. Then-world #11 Kei Nishikori, who'd spent his last eight-and-a-half hours on court upsetting both Milos Raonic and Australian Open champ Stan Wawrinka, seemed to rebound effortlessly to take out Djokovic in four fairly straightforward sets. A few hours later Marin Cilic, who started the year ranked all the way down at #37, took the court against Roger, who'd won each one of the pair's five earlier meetings. But Fed had been pushed to the limit by Gael Monfils in the quarters and couldn't put up much of a fight for a spot in the final. With their wins we were guaranteed a second first-time Major winner this season, and the first time since 2002 neither Slam finalist was ranked in the top ten.

Of course, it was Cilic who eventually walked away with the title, but while both men went on to make their year-end championship debuts, Nishikori ended up with the better season, picking up titles in Tokyo and Kuala Lumpur before reaching the semis in London. Still, no matter how well these guys did all year, no one would have expected both to pull off equally unlikely upsets on the same day. And their achievements might just have set a new tone for the start of the upcoming season.


Gutsiest Win

The Runner-Up: Gilles Simon d. Marin Cilic, Australian Open Second Round

Do you remember how hot it was at the Australian Open this year? With high temperatures in Melbourne climbing well into triple digits and on-court thermometers clocking in above 120°, multiple matches were halted and a couple players were forced to retire mid-play. So when some players stayed on court for three hours or more -- even as the sun began to set -- you have to give them props. And former world #6 Simon and then-unseeded Cilic fought out the longest match on the hottest day of the tournament.

Neither man was playing his best at the time -- The Frenchman had notched losses to players like world #111 Alejandro Falla and #147 Marius Copil in recent matches and had just endured a four-and-a-half hour marathon against Dustin Brown in his Aussie opener. The soon-to-be crowned Grand Slam champ, meanwhile, was still coming back from a four-month suspension and had gotten precipitously close to falling out of the top fifty. He'd squeaked through his own five setter in the first round, coming back from two sets down versus a higher-ranked Marcel Granollers to get the win. And both were unwilling to concede this match.

Cilic was the first to draw blood, nabbing the only break in the first set, but his opponent was able to even the score, taking the second in a tiebreak. Both men struggled on serve in the next set, each winning three games on return before the Croat finally took the lead with another breaker. But Simon was revitalized from there -- with Cilic only getting six first serves in during the fourth set and winning just two of them, Gilles was the tougher through the final hour -- ultimately closing out the match 6-2 in the decider. His run wouldn't go much farther -- he lost to Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in straight sets in the next round -- but he did manage a couple top-ten wins on his way to the Shanghai final this fall, and while he's still a ways off his career high ranking, but if he can deliver a few more wins in similarly tough situations, it might not be long before he's back in the mix again.

The Nominees

The Winner: Andy Murray d. Tommy Robredo, Valencia Final

How frustrating must the veteran Spaniard be? Robredo, who hit his peak ranking of #5 in the world way back in 2006, had been climbing his way back into relevance the last few years, stunning Roger Federer at the U.S. Open last summer and taking out Novak Djokovic this past August in Cincinnati. Earlier in the fall he'd made his way to the final in Shenzhen, took the first set and, against all odds, earned five match points versus two-time Grand Slam champion and heavy favorite Andy Murray. But he ultimately couldn't convert, getting breadsticked (breadstuck?) in the final set and falling in the two and a half hour match.

So you can imagine when the pair met again a few weeks later in his homeland, Robredo was out for revenge -- and he got off to a good start. With the crowd's support he denied six break opportunities in the opening set and converted his own to get the early lead. He earned himself another couple match points in the second set breaker, but was again pushed to a third when the Scot powered through. Robredo wasn't through yet, though -- in the deciding set of what would become the longest non-Slam final of the year, he again got the first break. But Murray came out swinging when he was under the most pressure -- capping off an amazing late-season surge, he evened the score again and saved another three championship points in yet another tiebreak -- that's ten in all during those two matches -- finally closing out the match after three and a third hours of play. After a fight like that, you can understand Robredo's "salute" at the net:


The win, of course, should have been routine for the one-time world #2, but facing a motivated and inspired opponent and coming out ahead took more than a higher ranking and more hardware in his trophy case. The match featured some of the best play we've seen outside the Grand Slams this year and, though only one contender walked away with the title, you could argue that both were winners that day.


Greatest Upset

The Runner-Up: Lleyton Hewitt d. Roger Federer, Brisbane Final

Lleyton Hewitt is one of those players who just refuses to go away. Though he hasn't been a force at the Majors in years, he's nevertheless not someone any of the favorites wants to see in his section of the draws -- last year he got another win over Juan Martin Del Potro at the U.S. Open and this year he pushed both Andreas Seppi and Jerzy Janowicz through five long sets. And while he's still hovering in the mid double-digit rankings, he can still bring it against the top guys when he wants to.

Such was the case this year in Brisbane where the unseeded Australian took out Feliciano Lopez and Kei Nishikori on his way to the final in his homeland. There he met a slightly slowed-down but still heavily favored Roger Federer who, ranked #6 in the world at the time, had made at least the semis of the last three events he played. The pair had played twenty-six times before, with the great Swiss holding a commanding 18-8 lead, and Hewitt had only one win in the last ten-plus years. But the underdog took command early, running away with the first set easily and yielding his only break of serve in the second. After just over two hours, Hewitt was left the victor, earning his first trophy since 2010 and his biggest win since defeating then-#3 Nikolay Davydenko in Hamburg five years ago. He went on to win a title in Newport over the summer, making this his most prolific year in a decade. And while he may not have done a lot with the back half of his season, I wouldn't be surprised to see him come out and cause a little more damage once the new year starts.

The Winner: Alexandr Dolgopolov d. Rafael Nadal, Indian Wells Third Round

To be sure Rafa notched a lot of losses this year to players you'd never expect to put up a fight against the reigning year-end #1 -- Dustin Brown in Halle, Martin Klizan in Beijing, not to mention those two teenagers ranked outside the top hundred -- but this was his first big reality check of the year. Despite a shocking upset in Melbourne, the defending champion at the BNP Paribas Open had put together a more-than-solid year, reaching the final of every event he played, and even taking out Dolgo for the Rio title.

The man from Ukraine, on the other hand, was trying to claw himself back into relevance -- a stone's throw from the top ten about three years ago, he struggled to hold onto form in 2013, losing his opening match at thirteen events. He started this year at #57 in the world, wasn't seeded at the Australian Open and only scored one full win over a top hundred player early in the season. He seemed to get his footing on clay, though, beating David Ferrer in Rio and reaching the semis in Acapulco. Still, no one thought he'd give Nadal any trouble in the desert -- in their five previous meetings he'd never even won a set. But this time things were very different -- Dolgo got off to an early lead and though Rafa was able to force a decider, he stayed stronger in the third set tiebreak. He rode his momentum all the way to the semis, beating Fabio Fognini and Milos Raonic along the way, and then made the quarters in Miami, briefly cracking the top twenty again in June.

It's been a struggle for both men since then, of course. Nadal was injured again (and again), missed the U.S. Open and had to pull out of the season-ending championships after appendix surgery. And Dolgopolov had his own knee operation late in the summer, winning just one match since his return to Tour in September. Hopefully we'll see both return to form in the New Year -- after all, knowing what they're capable of, everyone would benefit from seeing more of what they've got to show.


Best Slam Match

The Runner-Up: Ernests Gulbis d. Roger Federer, French Open Fourth Round

The young Latvian has had a roller coaster of a career, first breaking into the top thirty in 2010 with his maiden crown in Delray Beach, scoring wins over Mikhail Youzhny and Roger Federer that season, but then losing early at events a year later, citing fatigue or illness as causes for defeat. At the end of 2012 he'd fallen out of the top hundred, had to qualify for events in Cincinnati and Winston-Salem, and needed a lucky loser entry to get into a Challenger tournament in Eckental, Germany. He spent much of last season rebuilding, reclaimed the trophy in Florida and picked up another in St. Petersburg. By the time this season started he was ranked back in the top thirty, and he continued to climb -- he beat Juan Martin Del Potro in Rotterdam and Grigor Dimitrov in Indian Wells. By the time he made it to Roland Garros he'd claimed the eighteenth seed, his best yet at a Major.

Still I'm not sure anyone would have predicted the results he got -- after losing his first set in Paris, he rolled through the next nine without breaking much of a sweat to set up his first meeting with Roger since his breakout 2010 season. They split the first two sets in tiebreaks but Gulbis roared back in the third to take the lead. The far less-experienced Latvian also stayed strong after the great Fed evened the score, securing the only break of the deciding set, and after nearly four hours of play reached his first Slam quarterfinal since 2008. It might have been Roger's most surprising loss of the year, but more importantly it could have been Ernests' most inspiring -- he went on to score his fifth top ten win of 2014 by beating Tomas Berdych and even took a set off Novak Djokovic in the semis, by far his best showing at a Major to date. His performance brought him to within a stone's throw of a single-digit ranking, but unfortunately more injuries hampered his results the rest of the year -- he declined an alternate's ticket to the London final to nurse his shoulder. Still, he ends the year at #13 in the world, and if he's fully recovered when the new season starts, there's no reason to believe he won't climb even higher.

The Winner: Stanislas Wawrinka d. Novak Djokovic, Australian Open Quarterfinals

There were a lot of players who turned the tables on long-time rivals in Melbourne this year -- Ana Ivanovic, who'd lost all four of her previous meetings with Serena Williams, pulled off a stunning three-set victory in the fourth round; Wawrinka ultimately got his only win to-date over Rafael Nadal in the final. But this match might have trumped them all.

Stan had met Nole a round earlier the year before in a match that lasted over five hours, went 12-10 in the final set and was still going strong deep into the early-morning hours, New York time. It was the closest the Swiss had come to beating the world #1 in years -- his only two victories came way back in 2006 before either really had established a presence on Tour, and he hadn't managed to take even a set off him since 2009 -- but fans were on the edge of their seats until the end of this one. And a couple months later they were treated to yet another display between the two powerhouses -- at last year's U.S. Open they went another five sets, another four hours, before Djokovic was again awarded the win. So when the pair split the first four sets this year Down Under, there was a feeling we were in for a doozy.

They did not disappoint.

Djokovic came into this match more than the on-paper favorite -- he'd barreled through early rounds, spending less than two hours on court in his each of his first four matches while Wawrinka had been pushed to tiebreaks by both Alejandro Falla and Tommy Robredo. He was better rested, though, benefiting from a retirement in his opener and a walkover in the third round, so this time he might have had the advantage. After losing the first set, he came back to take the lead and overcame a break in the decider after Nole had evened the score -- at almost midnight in Australia, while the Serb was serving to stay in the match, Stan broke again, his fifth time during the meeting, and finally, after fourteen straight losses to his opponent, finally came out the winner.

Wawrinka went on, of course, to make his first career Grand Slam final and take home that all-important maiden Major. He rose to a career high #3 in the world after the Open, went on to score a win over compatriot Roger Federer in Monte Carlo and came ever so close to reaching the final at the year-end final in London. And I can't help but wonder if any of it would have been possible if he hadn't reversed the course against his long-time rival.



Doubles Team of the Year

The Runner-Up: Vasek Pospisil and Jack Sock

This might be a controversial choice since these two weren't an exclusive couple this year and, like with the ladies who won this category, together they fell just a bit short of qualifying for the year-end tournament of champions. Still, for a couple guys still looking for their first big break on the singles circuit, they sure got things done when they teamed up.

Sock, of course, had tasted success in the past -- in 2011 he teamed with one-time darling Melanie Oudin to win the U.S. Open Mixed Doubles title and picked up a couple smaller trophies last year with my dear James Blake. This year he also reached the final in Stockholm with the Philippines' Treat Huey. Pospisil had some nice results with other partners himself -- he and veteran Nenad Zimonjic claimed a crown in Basel while London semifinalist Julien Benneteau helped him to a runner-up finish in Beijing. But their biggest successes by far came together.

Unseeded at Wimbledon -- Pospisil was ranked #94 in doubles at the time -- the team took out some heavy hitters during their run. First the Indo-Pak powerhouse of Rohan Bopana and Aisam-Ul-Haq Qureshi, then second seeds Alexander Peya and Bruno Soares, multiple Major winners Leander Paes and Radek Stepanek, and finally to cap off an amazing fortnight they went five sets and three-plus hours against the legendary Bryan Brothers, ultimately winning the match 7-5 in the decider. They repeated most of those wins in Cincinnati, adding a Benneteau/Edouard Roger-Vasselin scalp to their kitty, but fell this time to the Bryans in the final. Still the pair's meteoric rise over the year -- they end the season as the tenth best team -- and the high-profile victories they logged along the way show what they're capable of. And you can't help but feel that the more time they spend together, the higher and higher they will climb.

The Winner: The Bryan Brothers

Bob and Mike Bryan have a much longer history together, of course -- thirty-six years, to be exact. And with at least four doubles titles a year in each of the last fourteen, theirs has been one of the most prolific partnerships in sports history. Since 2005 they've ended eight seasons ranked at the top of the game, never dropping below #3 in the world in almost a decade. This year they added ten trophies to their mantel -- six of them at Masters 1000 events -- notched title number one hundred together appropriately at the U.S. Open, bringing their Grand Slam total to sixteen, and capped off their run by taking the doubles crown at the World Tour Finals -- their fourth year-end championship, but surprisingly their first since 2009. Sure, they had some surprising losses over the course of the year -- to Pospisil and Sock at Wimbledon, to otherwise unseeded teams in Tokyo and Toronto -- but when you consistently play your best tennis against the very top players in the discipline, you far and away establish yourselves as the pair to beat at any event you enter. And the way these guys are going, I wouldn't expect them to concede that reputation any time soon.


Player of the Year

The Runner-Up: Novak Djokovic

Like for the women in this category, the year-end #1, despite all his accomplishments and accolades, only came in second in my eyes. And also like for the women, that's not meant to take anything away from what Nole acheived this year.

While he may have failed to capture his fourth straight Australian Open title, he nevertheless laid claim to seven crowns this season -- one Grand Slam, four Masters 1000s, and yet another year-end championship. He was dominant against the brightest stars in the sport, winning a stunning nineteen of twenty-four matches against top-ten players, and his biggest "upset" was in Cincinnati at the hands of then-#20 Tommy Robredo, a man who's been pretty amazing all year long. Djokovic hasn't lost before the quarterfinals at any Major in over five years and has now gone four straight adding at least one big trophy to his mantle -- that's the second longest active streak going today.

And, not that this has anything ostensible to do with his on-court successes, but Nole also hit two major (small "m") life milestones this year, wedding long-time girlfriend Jelena Ristic just days after winning his second Wimbledon title and welcoming baby boy Stefan to the family days before heading off to Paris to finish the rest of the season unbeaten. Now a husband, a father and a year-end #1 for the first time in his career, he might have some sort of superpower that propels him even further in the new year -- as if he didn't already have one before!

The Winner: Roger Federer

Okay, okay, I know he only finished the year #2 in the world, but again, like with the ladies, the man who will likely go down in history as the Greatest of All Time, he pulled off so much more than what ranking points suggest. Roger started the year "all the way down" at #6, his lowest ranking in eleven years, and fell ever so briefly two spots below that. On top of that he was coming off a year in which he'd only won one title all season -- his least prolific result since 2001. At thirty-three years of age it was easy to think King Fed was inching closer to the exit and that it might not be long before he's fully out the door.

But Roger was quick to silence the critics this year -- after a surprising loss to Lleyton Hewitt in Brisbane and a loss in the Melbourne semifinals, he got a big win over Novak Djokovic on his way to the title in Dubai, reached finals at Masters events in Indian Wells and Monte Carlo and put on a stunning performance in the Wimbledon final -- his first Major championship match in two years. And it got better from there -- he pulled off an amazing come-from-behind victory over Gael Monfils in New York, picked up his twenty-second and twenty-third Masters titles in Cincy and Shanghai and went an impressive 3-0 during round robin matches at the year-end championships. Clearly he was saving his best for the very last moments of the year.

To be fair, when Roger pulled out of the London final with a back injury and got demolished in his first, albeit exceedingly uncertain, Davis Cup rubber I very nearly demoted him to runner-up in this category. But his stepping up to get the doubles win and clinching the trophy with a Day Three singles victory over an always-tough Richard Gasquet proved to me he was nowhere near losing steam. And with just a couple events worth of points separating him from the top spot, I wouldn't be surprised to see him make a big play for it as soon as the new year starts.

After all, is there anyone on the planet you think would be more capable of pulling something like that off?


And so that does it for this year's action on the ATP Tour. With so much going on, of course it's impossible to capture everything, even in a post as long as this. So let me know who you think has claim to top billing in these categories, and be sure to check out which ladies took home this year's awards.

With just a few weeks left before the new season starts, it's time for all these guys and gals to gear up for another round of drama. And after the efforts and performances they put up this year, you can bet they'll all come out swinging in 2015 -- which gives next year's awards the potential to be even more exciting than we could ever expect.