ATP
No fly on the wall series
SO the recent Netflix series Break Point wasn’t as fly on the wall as it advertised.
Sunday Serve has read that Iga Swiatek has complained over one episode’s portrayal of her and Aryna Sabalenka has confirmed that players had the power to go back and change things they didn’t like.
Such a revelation may not be shocking or even worth noting had it not been for the fact the series was widely touted by Netflix as ‘the warts and and all’ documentary on tennis that would rival the highly successful F1 series.
Swiatek opened up about her dismay at some editing choices made in the documentary, in Cincinnati last week, complaining the producers had left out her charity event ‘Iga Swiatek and Friends for Ukraine’.
“They were in Krakow, and it’s shame that they didn’t show it, but maybe it’s better to ask them why,” she said, pointing the finger at Netflix.
Then the world No.1 complained about the portrayal of her relationship with her psychologist Daria Abramowicz, who was shown managing her ring for a haircut.

Apparently, there was a ‘huge’ social media backlash – one that never appeared in any mainstream media, but one Swiatek thought was wrong.
“There were some things that I thought they edited it, and people kind of misunderstood sometimes few situations in the episode,” she said.
“We already kind of spoke to Netflix about these things. I wish it could be done a little bit differently. When we watched before the premier, we couldn’t have any influence on how they edited some stuff.”
Sabalenka responded last week, insisting the players were allowed to see their episodes before they aired and make adjustments accordingly.
Proving this series was not a warts and all tell all behind the scenes show, more a ‘let’s put on a nice promo movie to boost our earning appeal’.
It would have been nice to have been told all episodes would be edited, censored, call it what you may, before the series aired.

Photo: Roger Parker International Sports Fotos Ltd
MEANWHILE, Swiatek also hit out at tennis governing bodies during the week, complaining they were too business-centric.
“I think it’s harder and harder. Tournaments, if they are longer, we have less time in between tournaments to recover,” she said.
“I think it’s going to be pretty extreme next year if all the 1000 tournaments are going to be almost two weeks.
“So I don’t think it’s a coincidence. I think it’s a sign for WTA and ATP to kind of take it easy on us. On the other side, there’s a business that they need to take care of.”
“Our season is actually going to get longer. I guess we are the ones that should be kind of responsible and know when to take a break and not really push because it’s a race and it’s a pretty long one. We have to be smart and your team has to be smart to make the right decisions.”
She has a point, to a degree.

Yes, players need time to recover from events and from matches and the ludicrous late night matches as seen in Paris and New York in recent years playing the US summer hard-court swing with very little rest time is tough.
And the weather in Montreal didn’t help.
But the sport has to develop commercially and with that comes pressure. From sponsors and broadcasters all wanting more to justify their spend.
Without that income the WTA and ATP don’t survive – and neither do ever increasing demands for more tournament prize money.

SOMETIMES it takes a change of outfit to turn your fortunes. It did for Iga Swiatek in Cincinnati last week.
The world No.1 was advised by her coach Tomasz Wiktorowski to change her outdate after losing the first set of her match to Qinwen Zheng.
She took a timeout and underwent a wardrobe change and went on to win the next two sets and the match 3-6, 6-1, 6-1 to progress from the third round of the 2023 Cincinnati Open.
“Honestly, it’s because of my coach, he told me a couple of months ago that after losing a set, it might be a good idea to change your outfit so that you can kinda reset and go into the second set on a different vibe,” Swiatek said.
“I thought this was bullsh*t but I tried this time and it worked, so thank you coach.”
BIZARRE – or should that read Buzz-arre…
Stefanos Tsitsipas asked the umpire to remove a fan who was trying to interrupt him by imitating a bee at the Cincinnati Open.
“There’s a person imitating a bee behind me. It’s a buzz right before I serve,” he said in a video posted on social media.
“It has never happened in my career. I know they’re supporting the [other player]. It’s the lady over there, I want her out. She needs to go… when I’m about to serve, all I hear is [bzzz].”
The lady apologised and Tsitsipas went on to win his match 7-6, 7-6.
AND stranger still … Aryna Sabalenka took matters into her own hands and dried the court during a rain delay in her third-round match against Daria Kasatkina in Cincinnati.
As rain fell Sabalenka took the initiative to assist in drying the court while waiting for the match to resume.
Armed with a towel, she meticulously attended to the spots that had been overlooked by the drying machines.


ON his return to the US last week Novak Djokovic won his first match on American spoil in two years, beating Spain’s Alejandro Davidovich Fokina.
Djokovic said he missed playing in the biggest tournaments in the United States and was thrilled to be back.
“Time flies. Four years seems like it was yesterday. So it’s definitely nice to be back,” said Djokovic. “I’ve had some really nice memories from this tournament.
“Winning it in 2018 obviously is a highlight for me, because it was the only Masters I hadn’t won for years. I think I lost four or five finals, mostly to Roger (Federer).
“But I played well in the past and was really glad to have a chance to come back to the States. It’s been two years. I missed it. Some of the biggest tournaments in our sport are played on American soil. I’m just excited to play some tennis.”

WHO says old men can’t play tennis?
Just ask Stan Wawrinka.
At 38 years of age, the Swiss maestro is still performing, albeit through injury sometimes, as wa shown in Cincinnati last week.
Wawrinka outclassed world No. 10 Frances Tiafoe in the second round at the 2023 Western and Southern Open on Wednesday, winning straight sets, 6-3, 6-4.
“Old man can still play,” Wawrinka tweeted.
AND finally ….
With all eyes on the US and world No.1 Iga Swiatek, don’t forget there are a few others in contention at Flushing Meadows.
Even though it seems she has been on tour for years Coco Gauff is still only 19, and her 7-6 (2), 3-6, 6-4 win over Swiatek in Cincinnati overnight has caught the attention of American fans, keen to see one of their own victorious in New York.
Gauff had never won a set against Swiatek in seven previous meetings, but she finished off the upset to the delight of a large crowd and vociferous home-town crowd.
Swiatek, as already reported here, feels there is too much tennis on the US swing.
“My tank of fuel is pretty empty. I’m happy to have some days off,” she said after the defeat.
As for Coco? She’s fired up and ready for what New York will throw at her.
An outside bet for the US?
She thinks so.
“I still think that I’m not even to the peak of my game,” she said.
Gauff became the fourth teenager to reach the final in Cincinnati during the professional era and first since Vera Zvonareva in 2004.
The last teenager to win there was 17-year-old Linda Tuero in 1968.
ATP
Roland Garros 2026 Men’s Day 10
Alexander Zverev cooled the jets of a teenaged tearaway on Tuesday, schooling Spaniard Rafael Jodar 7-6 (3), 6-1, 6-3 to power to his fifth career semi-final at the French Open.
The world No. 3 German finished runner-up in Paris two years ago and is still seeking his first trophy at one of the majors.
Zverev has been a consistent presence at the business end of the event here, figuring iin five of the past six semis.
But the achievement doesn’t amount to much for the seed, who has his eye on the big prize.
“I want to keep going. I don’t really care so much about a semi-final,” he said. “I want to win all the matches in front of me.
“Today was a tough test against a good player – that’s it for now.”
The 29-year-old who becomes the ninth man to play five Paris semi-finals, got away slowly as the 19-year-old Jodar showed his intentions with an early break..
But the seed began turning the tables on his young opponent while trailing 5-2 in the opening set after dropping serve in the eight-minute opening game.
Jodar’s unravelling began as he served for the first set leading 5-4 but was unable to close it out.
From then on, Zverev was in control.
The German won the opener in a tiebreaker and dominated the second to claim that chapter also.
In the third, he broke the fading youngster in the first and last games of the set
before closing out the win with a running forehand down the line on match point.
“He had perfect rhythm in the first set and I didn’t,” the winner said. “I was playing too short and too defensive.
“The ball was also not bouncing as high as it did in (last week’s) heat, I had to flatten out my shots.
“He outplayed me at the beginning of the first, but I managed to come back.
he seemed a bit nervous when he served for (the set).
“I took my chances, it was a good match for me.”
Main photo:- Alexander Zverev in control at Roland Garros – by ATPTour.com
ATP
Roland Garros 2026 Men’s Day 9
Matteo Berrettini took Italian revenge on Monday against the Argentine who knocked out Jannik Sinner with a 6-3, 7-6 (2), 7-6 (6) fourth-round demolition of Juan Manuel Cerundolo at the French Open.
Former top 10 player Berrettini, now mended after several seasons of intermittent injury absences sent the South American packing in a solid clay display.
The Italian saved three Cerundolo set points in the third-set tiebreaker, with Berrettini claiming a match point on an inside-out forehand, and following up with a serve winner..
“I feel great,” Berrettini said. “I’m happy with the support in a full stadium.
“This is why we train and fight, I’m enjoying the atmosphere with my team and family.”
Fourth seed Felix Auger-Aliassime booked the last eight as he put out another South American in Canadian-born Chilean AlejandroTabilo 6-3, 7-5, 6-1.
FAA becomes the first Canadian man to complete the set of quarter-finals at all four Grand Slam tournaments.
The 30-year-old Berretini from Rome is competing at Roland Garros for the first time since 2021 when he also reached the last eight here.
The current No. 105 is the lowest-ranked men’s quarter-finalist in Paris since in 2007.
Cobolli lost his first set of the tournament as he ran up against an American with negligible experience on clay, defeating Zach Svajda 6-2, 6-3, 6-7 (3), 7-6 (5).
The 10th-seeded Italian’s victory put him into his second Grand Slam and his first in Paris.
“I was a little bit nervous to close the match today,” the winner said. “It means a lot, this tournament, for me.
“Sometimes it’s not easy when you have to close, especially when you are up in the score like I was today.
“But also Zachary played a really good match today after the second set… tennis is like this. At the end, I was happy, and that’s the important thing.”
Svajda came to the major with only one career match win on clay. He began correcting that in the third round by beating Francisco.Cerundolo.
Cobolli cruised through the first two sets but his perfect set record took a dent in the third as Svajda forced a tiebreaker and saved a match point after closing the Italian’s 5-1 lead and forcing a tiebreaker.
It took a tiebreak fourth set to settle the outcome after more than three and a quarter hours.
ATP
Roland Garros 2026 Men’s Day 8
Alexander Zverev stayed on track for a possible fourth Grand Slam final as the highest seed remaining in the men’s draw at the French Open moved efficiently into the quarter-finals on Sunday.
The German who has finished runner-up at the Australian and US Open plus Roland Garros, defeated qualifying lucky loser Jesper de Jong 7-6 (3), 6-4, 6-1.
With this week’s second-round losses by world No. 1 and top seed Jannik Sinner and 24-time Grand Slam singles champion Novak Djokovic, Zverev could have one of his best chances at lifting a major trophy.
The 29-year-old reached his eighth Roland Garros quarter-final as he beat his Dutch opponent on de Jong’s 26th birthday.
He needed a tiebreak to secure the opening set but picked up momentum before crushing it in the third set to get off court in a relatively quick two and a quarter hours.
“I had some early difficulties but he started well,” the winner said. “But once I found my rhythm I felt comfortable on the court.
“That is important for my game. It’s (his game) is there, I just have to show it on the match court.”
With the recent 10-day heatwave now gone, temperatures dropped into the mid-20s Celsius, which should make for more comfortable conditions.
But Zverev is not so sure: “To be honest, I like the heat, I prefer it. My ball flies a lot faster through the air and opponents struggle a bit more.
“I also spend a lot of time in Florida so I’m used to the heat. But we have to make the best of it, things can change within one day.”
Zverev will bid for the semi-finals in a matchup against Rafael Jodar, the prodigy who won an all-Spanish fourth-rounder 4-6, 4-6, 6-1, 6-2, 6-2 over Pablo Carreno Busta.
The fightback took nearly three and three-quarter hours and put the 19-year-old into his first last-eight spot in only his second Grand Slam appearance.
He has reached the last eight here for a sixth straight year.
Jodar, ranked No. 707 a year ago, is the fifth man this century to reach the quarters in his main draw debut at the event.
The youngster made a 4-1 start in the opening set but soon found himself in a five-set dogfight against a 34-year-old dealing with a shoulder injury.
The winner of a clay title in March has now taken victory in 19 of his last 22 matches.
“He’s young and incredibly talented,” Zverev said of his next opponent. “He came onto the clay scene in two months.
“He will be a difficult challenge but I’ll be ready for it.”
Main photo:- Favourite Alexander Zverev wins third round match – by ATPTour.com
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