Stuttgart
Marathon Masters events draw fire from Rybakina
Former Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina is leading a charge against the expanded 12-day format of Masters 1000 events which players say are turning tournaments into endurance tests.
In what many consider a money grab, almost all of the ATP-WTA joint events stretch to almost two weeks – the length of a Grand Slam with proportionally less reward at the end,
Rybakina, for one, has had enough.
“These tournaments becoming so long is not very helpful, I would say, because if you’re fit, you’re fit,” the Kazakh said.
“But to stay in one place for almost two weeks, and it’s not like here you finish and you go rest. You go and you play another mandatory one (Rome starting next Wednesday).
“That’s definitely not making it easy.”
Rybakina complained that making the Masters-level tournaments required for top players imposes a big physical burden given the crowded season calendar with few rest days part of the scenarios.
“We have a lot of mandatory stuff where you cannot really choose and pick what you want to play..
“At some point it’s fair enough that people choose what they want to play; if the Tour is good for everyone, then people will want to play.
“Everyone is chasing rankings and everyone is chasing points and so on. If you want to play, you play. If you don’t want to play, you don’t play.”
Main photo:- Elena Rybakina won title in Stuttgart last month – by WTATennis.com
Indian wells
Mystery injury to keep Sabalenka from Stuttgart
An undisclosed injury will prevent Aryna Sabalenka from fronting up in Stuttgart as the WTA begins the spring clay season at its traditional indoor venue on Monday.
The world No. 1 who lifted the Miami Masters title in March to conclude the so-called American “Sunshine Double”, said that she would not be competing at the German venue, but revealed few specifics.
“Unfortunately, I suffered an injury after Miami and even though I tried everything to recover in time, I’m not ready to compete,” she said on Instagram
“I always love coming back to Stuttgart. The atmosphere, the fans and the support I feel there are so special to me, and of course, I was really hoping to have another chance to fight for that Porsche.”
Sabalenka has played and lost four finals at the event which awards a Porsche to the champion.
Main photo:- Aryna Sabalenka completed the Sunshine Double – by ISF Ltd
ATP
Demon can still dream of Turin SF after knockout of Fritz
Alex de Minaur won the first ATP Finals match of his career on Thursday with a gutsy defeat of 2024 finalist Taylor Fritz, with the Aussie still in with a chance for the semi-finals after winning 7-6 (3), 6-3.
The Demon came to the court with losses in all five of his previous contests at the elite year-ender, but played well from the start to unsteady a seemingly nervous and anxious Fritz, the world No. 6.
He took revenge for a loss to the American in the group phase here in Turin a year ago.
Despite round-robin losses this week to world No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz and a narrow defeat at the hands of Italian Lorenzo Musetti, de Minaur has mathematical chances to qualify into the Saturday semis.
He will need Alcaraz to defeat Musetti in the evening match.
De Minaur seemed stunned by his perhaps unexpected success in 94 minutes after Fritz saved a match point in the penultimate game before the Australian threw down an ace for a second chance and then delivered a service winner to clinch victory.
“I’ve dealt with a good bit of heartbreak recently, it’s good to finally get a win in Turin,” he said. “I’ve worked really hard and it’s good to get some positive feedback or a reward for all that.
“I’m very happy with the performance today – it was a good match from the start to the end,”
De Minaur added that he is looking forward but seemed in some doubt as the eracuity of his chances to reach the weekend final four.
“I didn’t do much thinking about the what-ifs. I just committed to what I needed to do.
“There were some tough moments today but I backed myself. If it worked or if it didn’t I was going to leave everything out there.
“I’ve made my peace with that mindset. I put my best foot forward and I’m pleased with that.”
Fritz was burdened with 33 unforced errors in a lacklustre showing and ended his season 53-23 with titles on grass in Eastbourne and Stuttgart.
Main photo:-Alex de Minaur winning his first ever Masters Finals – by ISF Ltd
ATP
Zverev on the brink of Stuttgart grass success
World No. 3 Alexander Zverev must pass a finals test against Taylor Fritz after moving closer to the first grass court title of his career at home in Stuttgart on Saturday.
The German will play his first final on the lawns since 2017, when lost the Halle final to Roger Federer, a year after a similar result at the North German venue against Florian Mayer.
“I’m super happy to be in the final, it’s my first grass-court final since 2017,” the winner said.
“It’s been eight years. I actually really like playing on the surface. I’m happy to be in the final in Germany again, I’m looking forward to it.
Top seed Zverev, a winner in two hours over Ben Shelton 7-6 (8), 7- 6(1), finished with 36 winners and did not face a break point.
Fritz, three times an Eastbourne grass-court champion, booked his spot at the Weissenhof club, beat Canada’s Felix Auger-Aliassime 6-4, 7-6 (5) in their semi-final.
He leads Zverev in their series 7-5.
The American will be competing in his first final since November, when he lost to Jannik Sinner at the year-end championships in Turin.
After a miserable clay season, Fritz sank to seventh in the world.
“The clay-court season wasn’t the best for me, so I came here more motivated to start the grass season off well,” he said. “I’m super happy that I’ve been able to start it off with a final.
“I’m locked in and ready to go. Once I start winning a couple of matches on grass and start feeling good, all the other things start clicking for me.”
Fritz is riding a four-match win streak over Zverev who last won against the Californian in Rome last season on clay.
Main photo: Aleaxander Zverev winning in Stuttgart by Boss Open
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