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Belgian Blockx Casper’s Madrid repeat dream

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Casper Ruud’s Madrid Masters title defence was laid to waste on Thursday as the Norwegian found his way impeded by Belgian outsider Alexander Blockx 6-4, 6-4.

The world No. 69 winner powered into the smei-fibals on the clay of the Spanish capital, posting one of the biggest wins of his career.

Blockx is new to clay success, never winning a match on the surface until a fortnight ago when he booked into the Monte Carlo quarters where he lost to Alex de Minaur.

Prior to his upset loss, Ruud had dropped just five games at the Caja Magica in his first two matches before outlasting Stefanos Tsitsipas in a struggle of three tiebreak sets.

The loss sends Ruud out of the ranking top 20 for the first time in five years.

Blockx added the two-time Roland Garros finalist to a Madrid upset list which also includes Felix Auger-Aliassime.

“I’m just happy with being here. I barely escaped in the first round, and I was happy about that already. 

“Semi-finals is something I wouldn’t have even dreamed of to begin with,” Blockx said. .

“I’m proud of how I’ve played these past couple of matches. I think the conditions suit me well here. I feel like it’s clay which is slow, so I have time to settle and hit my shots, go for my shots.”

Ruud lost in 96 minutes; Blockx will wait for a  semi-final opponent as second-seeded two-time Madrid champion Alexander Zverev faces Italy’s Flavio Cobolli.

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De Minaur revives teenaged rivallry at Queen’s

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Alex de Minaur extracted delayed grass-court revenge from Canadian Denis Shapovalov on Wednesday as the top seeded Australian advanced to the Queen’s club quarter-finals  

De Minaur lost to Shapo a decade ago in the Wimbledon junior final, but levelled that particular rivallry with a 6-4,6-1 result to keep a perfect record at the ATP level with the North American.

De Minaur advanced in 63 minutes as he won his sixth in a row in the series and lined up a quarter-final with Brandon Nakashima.

The quick victory was in contrast to de Minaur’s success in the opening round, when he needed two hours to put away Canada’s Gabrille Diallo

“We (he and Shapovalov have grown up together and played plenty of matches on the Tour. That one [at Wimbledon] was a special one,” the top-seeded winner said.

“I would have loved to have gotten that (2016) win, because it would have given me the World No. 1 junior ranking.

“But here we are 10 years later, and I’m still enjoying myself.”

De MInaur, the 2023 finalist against Carlos Alcaraz here, broke Shapo five times as he takes aim at a third career title on grass.

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RG champ Zverev survives as seeds tumble in Halle

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Alexander Zverev was tested to the limit  on Tuesday on the ATP Halle grass as the new French Open champion squeezed out a 6-3, 4-6, 6-2 opening win over Czech Vit Kopriva.

“I’m very pleased and happy to play my first match as a Grand Slam champion in Germany, but I don’t think that affected me too much,” the 29-year-old  Zverev said. 

“It (his problem) was really the change of surface, and my opponent was really good today. 

“I’m very pleased with the win, it  was a difficult match, a difficult opponent, and for the first grass-court match, it was not too bad.”

While the German top seed and world No. 3 was going about his business, a pair of lesser seeds hit the exits in northern Germany, with seventh seeded two-time titleholder  Alexander Bublik  going down to Italy’s Mattia Bellucci 7-6 (6), 6-1.

The Kazakh seed won the trophy here in 2023 and a year ago.

Bellucci is only the second man to upset a reigning champion in the opening round at the venue and set up a second-round encounter with qualifier Raphael Collignon, who defeated  Australian Alexei Popyrin 6-4, 6-2.

No. 8 seed Andrey Rublev was defeated by Poland’ Hubert Hurkacz 6-3, 6-2,

Main photo:-Alexander Zverev with his maiden Grand Slam Trophy in Paris – by Roger Parker/ISF Ltd

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Outlaw Kyrgios makes late Halle pullout

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Nick Kyrgios on Monday pulled the plug on any chances of a summer grasscourt revival as the temperamental Aussie withdrew on the first day of the pre- Wimbledon Halle event.

The former Wimbledon singles finalist played only his second match of the season last week in Stuttgart, winning a round and later withdrawing from doubles.

Any speculation that the 2022 Wimbledon runner-up currently ranked just inside the top 1000 might receive a wild card singles entry to the All England club event was out to rest on Monday when the list was released.

Kyrgios and Alexander Bublik were granted free entry in doubles, with singles cards going to retiring Swiss three-time Grand Slam champion Stan Wawrinka  and Bulgarian crowd-pleaser Grigor Dimitrov along with the usual cluster of local Brits.

Roland Garros finalist Maja Chwalinska got a free entry on the women’s side.

In Halle before he withdrew, the 31-year-old Kyrgios had paid tribute to French Open champion Alexander Zverev, one of the few players born in the 1990s “lost generation” to win a major.

But before any compliments, Kyrgios had to pat himself on the back::

“I’ve realized that I’ve been more successful than most athletes, not just in tennis but in any sport and practically any field. 

“That’s why I’m confident enough to know when my time was, but also humble enough to understand that now it might be someone else’s time.”

He added: “Seeing Sascha (Zverev) finally overcome that barrier has been incredible. A lot of people forget that that terrible injury he suffered ends the careers of 99 per cent of players. 

“He could have been content with everything he’d already achieved, but he had the ambition to come back, regain his form, surpass it, and even become a better player. Honestly, I find that pretty terrifying.”

Main photo:- Nick Kyrgios injures his wrist at Indian Wells by ATPTour

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