ATP
US Open 2024 Men’s Day 2
Top seed Jannik Sinner shrugged off a slow start, with the Italian accelerating to a 2-6, 6-2, 6-1, 6-2 win to start the US Open on Tuesday.
The top seed who has been embroiled in a spring inadvertent doping case in which he has been found innocent, needed to gather his concentration to take down Mackenzie McDonald.
Sinner now leads the series 4-0 and sets the pace on the ATP this season with 29 hardcourt wins and four titles.
McDonald looked nothing like the underdog who defeated Rafael Nadal at the 2023 Aussie Open. Victory was the first for Sinner on the Ashe showcourt after three defeats.
Challenger Mcdonald may have sprinted off with the opening set – he won five straight games – but was reeled in by the reigning Australian Open winner from the German-speaking alpine part of the peninsula.
Sinner took control once he found his feet and raced away to the second round.
“I started not in the best way,” he said. “These first matches are never easy. He was playing well in the beginning. I tried to stay in mentally and get y rhythm
“I got it in the second set and just tried to keep going. I’m very happy to finally win on this court, it means a lot. I sill have room to improve.
Australian Thanasi Kokknakis scored an upset as he knocked out 11th seed Stefanos Tsitsipas in a 7-6 (5), 4-6, 6-3, 7-5 thriller which lasted for a shade under four hours.
Kokkinakis dropped 17 aces among 47 winners versus 46 unforced errors, tsitsipas, who has never passed the third round at the event, ended with 10 aces and more than 50 unforced errors.
Polish seventh seed Hubert Hurkacz, who retired in the Cincinnati quarter-finals less than a month after knee surgery, bounced back with a 6-3, 7-6 (4), 7-6 (3) opening win over Kazakh Timofey Skatov.
Canada’s Felix Auger-Alaissime took a surprise loss to Czech Jakub Mesnik, going down 6-2, 6-4, 6-2 for a second loss in a row this season at the first round of a major.
FAA was defeated at the opening hurdle at Wimbledon by Thanasi Kokknakia.
Czech Tomas Machac handed Italian veteran Fabio Fognini his eighth first round loss in New York, producing a 7-5, 6-1, 6-3 result.
Brit Jack Draper hammered out an opening win over Zhang Zhizhen 6-3, 6-0, 4-0 as the Chinese player retired.
Main photo Jack Draper.
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.
-
Berlin4 weeks agoSabalenka finds her “little tiger” to fend off Czech challenge
-
Top Story3 weeks agoRaducanu takes a kicking as injury-boot drama flares
-
Adelaide International4 weeks agoEx-Wimbledon champion slammed with anti-doping ban
-
ATP4 weeks agoDe Minaur ambushed by Queen’s outsider Nakashima
-
Berlin4 weeks agoEala stuns Rybakina in Berlin blitz
-
ATP4 weeks agoBadosa unloads on ex-tennis boyfriend Tsitsipas
-
ATP4 weeks agoFritz squeezes Sascha to book first-time Halle final
-
ATP4 weeks agoZverev to face his Fritz nightmare in Halle semis
