ATP
On another planet
IS Nick Kyrgios for real?
Flat earth, pyramids made by aliens … what has he been smoking?
His hometown of Canberra has been long known as a liberal-lefty enclave where free thinking thrives, but really, to this level?
Is he deliberately winding the media up – or did he miss high school completely?
On the Egypt pyramids, Kyrgios said: “I don’t think the pyramids are man-made.
“The doors are pretty big, and we as humans don’t need doors as big as those ones.”

Or has April Fool’s day come 34 days early this year?
Appearing on boxer and Youtuber Logan Paul’s ‘Impaulsive’ podcast, Kyrgios told Paul the Earth could be flat.
Sad to think his childish stupidity has gained more traction than his other comment, more relevant to tennis, that he would have quit the game if he had beaten Novak Djokovic at Wimbledon last year.
“I think I would have retired at least for a year or two,” he said.
“I think I can win a grand slam. Wimbledon I was right there. I was two sets away. I won the first set and I thought this is it. And then I just didn’t stay in the moment and he stayed super composed.”
“I feel like I could do that. It’s weird, but I feel like it’s not even for me though. I feel like it’s for everyone else. All the haters as well. I could finally just rest. I could just go home and sleep in my bed and not deal with the s***.”

Then, to confuse the audience even more, the focus shifted to who the greatest tennis player of all time was.
And Kyrgios compared Roger Federer to … wait for it … Michael Jordan.
That’s Michael Jordan the basketball star, not erm, Michael Jordan the tennis Grand Slam winner.
“Federer and Jordan are very similar, but I think Novak (Djokovic) is statistically better,” he said.
He then dismissed the likes of Pete Sampras, John McEnroe and Andre Agassi as not in the same league.
Quite a few would disagree there.

EMMA Raducanu could use fellow teenage Grand Slam champion Carlos Alcaraz for inspiration as the Spanish world No 2 spoke about three setbacks that followed his US Open win last September.
In an interview for Vogue magazine Alcaraz was asked about the most difficult time in his career.
“I had a bad period after I won the US Open,” he said. “That sounds like I’m making it up.”

Alcaraz said he struggled to comprehend what he had achieved in New York and said it was hard, adding that no one on his team was enjoying life.
“Juanki (coach Juan Carlos Ferrero) wasn’t, seeing me so shut down and lacking in spark. I thought, Where do I go now?”

Alcaraz’s dip continued, but he kept believing and despite losses and injuries, he returned at the Argentina Open last week and won the tournament.
His tale could offer some hope to Raducanu, who has slid down the rankings with a dramatic loss of form since her US Open triumph.
Alcaraz, meanwhile, is a nominee for the 2023 Laureus World Breakthrough of the Year Award.

He is among the six nominees, along with Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina.
Alcaraz had an incredible season in 2022, starting the season from outside the top-30 and finishing as the youngest No.1 in ATP history.

ATP Chief Executive Andrea Gaudenzi has repeated the organisation’s opposition to any ban on players from Wimbledon on the basis of their nationality.
The ATP Tour allows Russian and Belarussian players to compete but only under a neutral flag.
But the men’s tour is totally opposed to the banning Russian and Belarussian players from any tournament, as happened at Wimbledon last year.
The ATP even slapped them with a fine and stripped the tournament of rankings points.

“I want to reiterate that we always condemn and will condemn war,” Gaudenzi said.
”I know it’s obvious to say this, but it’s important to repeat and reassure because we send this message very clearly.”
“I think we (the ATP) are very much in line with the guidance of the IOC. Our players cannot play under their flags in team competitions like any other sport.”
Gaudenzi insists that it isnt the ATP’s place to intervene in politics or the personal expression of players.
Neither the ATP or the WTA, who are equally opposed to bans, has made it clear what sort of punishment will await Wimbledon and British tennis should another ban be instituted this year.

QUOTE of the week … “He doesn’t know the gender yet, only I do.”
Naomi Osaka confesses to knowing the gender of her baby, but boyfriend Cordae doesn’t.

FORMER world No.1 Victoria Azarenka has called for a “deserving” venue to host the WTA Finals, after the poor end of season event in Texas last year.
The tournament, which features the top eight singles players and doubles teams, was to be held in Shenzhen, China until 2028 but had to be cancelled in 2020 due to COVID-19, moving to Guadalajara, Mexico in 2021.
The event was set to return to Shenzhen last year, but the WTA suspended tournaments in China due to the disappearance of Peng Shuai.
Fort Worth, Texas hosted the tournament last year and drew sparse crowds.
“We need something that is deserving of the Finals, Azarenka said in Dubai last week.
“In the last couple years with such short announcements, absolutely no time for marketing – in my opinion – it’s been undervalued.”
HIGHLIGHT OF THE WEEK:

ARE Canada’s latest crop of players great underachievers. Promising so much but delivering little?
Not according to tennis legend John McEnroe.
Montreal’s Felix Auger-Aliassime is getting good reviews from Mac, who was speaking in Vancouver last week to promote the Laver Cup there in September.
“I think he’s going to win a major in the next year, 18 months at the most,“ McEnroe said. ”I think he’s made great progress.
“Back in my day, you’re like ‘I hope I play a Canadian.’ Not the case anymore.“
Dennis Shapovalov is another player that McEnroe believes could be in for bigger wins.
“Denis is hugely talented. He’s a good kid, he works at it,” McEnroe said.
” At times, he’s a little bit like a chicken with his head cut off — you don’t know exactly what you’re going to get from him, which is difficult to play against.
“Now, I firmly believe he could be in the top 10.

AND finally …
Please Boris. Shut up.
Disgraced German Boris Becker told the London Financial Times last week he was treated harshly during his time in jail last year.
And Becker, who has become a serial complainer, blamed advisors for his demise and then claimed jurors in his fraud case were too young to understand.
Once sentenced to two and a half years for deliberately hiding assets after being declared bankrupt in 2017, Becker was, as is the norm, sent to a London ‘holding’ jail, before processing saw him moved on to a lower risk prison in Oxfordshire.
Becker described Wandsworth Prison as a ‘shithole’ where he spent time teaching other inmates outside his cell rather than having to be locked up for hours on end.
He told the FT he taught maths – which is quite ironic given his sentence was for financial fraud.
The German then said his time at Huntercombe Prison in Oxfordshire was “surrounded by murderers, drug dealers and people smugglers.
“The British justice system is brutal,” he moaned.
Try the US system Boris, that’s brutal.
Can’t do the time, then don’t do the crime.
At his sentencing at London’s Southwark Crown Court, Judge Deborah Taylor said he had shown “no remorse and no humility”.
It seems like nothing has changed.
ATP
Ruud survives a scare to secure Gstaad quarters
Two-time champion Casper Ruud had to work for more than two and a half hours to overcome Jaime Faria, the Portuguese who put out Stan Wawrinka in the first round at the Gstaad Swiss Open on Thursday.
Faria was riding the momentum from Tuesday’s defeat of three-time Grand Slam winner Stan Wawrinka, set to retire this season and beaten in an opening match at his home venue.
Faria had his eye on a second upset as he faced Ruud, who lifted the trophy at this elite alpine village in 2021 and 2022.
Ruud ahd to dodge a bullet and mount a comeback to get through the second-round test against the Portuguese.
After dropping the opening set in a tiebreaker, Ruud played patiently as Faria saved five break points in the sixth game of the second set before failing on the sixth.
Ruud then pulled away for a 6-7 (1), 6-4, 6-2 victory, his first since Roland Garros.
“Sometimes it is hard to say when you get a good feeling and you start to win some games in a row,” the winner said.
“You try from the first game to the last, but suddenly something clicked in the middle of the second for me, luckily.”
He added: “I had to really fight hard and if I played one bad game in the second and he serves well, it could be over and it would be time to go home. But luckily I can extend the stay.”
The Scandinavian could join Spaniards Sergi Bruguera and Alex Corretja as three-time winners in the Alps, with Ruud now standing 10-1 here over his career.
ATP
Tsitsipas finishes off Kym after overnight pause
Stefanost Tsitsipas said he slept soundly prior to finishing off a darkness-interrupted match on Thursday as he eliminated local Jerome Kym at the Gstaad Swiss Open.
The Greek who once cracked third in the world and the 186th-ranked Swiss returned to the clay after darkness on Wednesday night left them hanging at 5-all in the third set.
Tsitsipas revved up his game from the resumption to emerge into the quarter-finals 6-4, 6-7 (2), 7-6 (5).
The second seed now standing 85th in the world after several poor seasons and a split with his father as his coach, said getting his rest was not a problem after the interruption.
“It was strange going to bed and not being finished. I visualised what I wanted to do, my shot patterns.
“It worked out pretty well.
“I had a good night’s sleep, I was not too stressed and I recovered to get ready for the continuation.”
After saving break points in the first game on Thursday, Tsitsipas triumphed in the final-set tiebreaker
“I’m relieved I was able to save a couple of break points.. I put my game together and made it )victory) happen again.”
The Greek now faces off against Frenchman Arthur Rinderknech for a semi-final spot.
“I’m expecting a lot of big serves, the altitude (1050m) helps. I’ll try to build consistency around my own serve.”
ATP
Darkness reprieve for fading Tsitsipas in Gstaad
Stefanos Tsitsipas was handed a reprieve due to fading light with his second round match at the Swiss Open Gstaad stopped with the Greek deadlocked with local Jerome Kym 6-4, 6-7 (2), 5-5.
The math had to be halted as night fell and electronic linecalling computers could not read the path of the ball on the clay in contrast to humans who could have carried on for a few additional minutes..
The 27-year-old Tsitsipas was taking the worst of it in the concluding stage after a promising start.against a journeyman opponent ranked 186.
Tsitsipas, his ranking down to 85th after once standing third in the world, lashed out verbally in the last few games, apparently frustrated with his racquet reactions.
The Greek was quick to make his point of an overnight stoppage to the chair umpire while Kym – who reached 5-all with a love service hold – left the court with a defiant fist pump for his public in this alpine resort village.
The cutoff came after just over two hours of play, with the contest to be concluded on Thursday. The winner reaches the Friday quarter-finals.
Tsitsipas produced his last notable result in April with a fourth-round showing at the Madrid Masters,
He is aiming for his second quarter-final of the season after Doha in February and his 2025 Barcelona 15 months ago.
Tsitsipas stands 10-1 vs. players ranked outside the top 100 this season with a sole loss to No. 104 Italian Matteo Arnaldi at the Roland Garros second round.
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