Tag: China Open Beijing

  • Sharapova Bests Beijing

    Sharapova Bests Beijing

    Maria Sharapova

    Injuries were the early news of the last Premier mandatory event of 2014: the top two seeds both pulled out after quarterfinal match wins due to injuries, but the other two top seeds delivered.

    In a final that featured the top Russian against the top Czech, Maria Sharapova defeated Petra Kvitova in a three set victory. Final score: 6-4, 2-6, 6-3.

    This was Maria’s first Beijing title.  It was also her first win on hard courts since 2013 in Indian Wells.  She now has four titles for 2014, which ties her with Petra, and only trailing Serena Williams, who has six.  The win also boosts Maria’s ranking to No. 2, the highest for the year, and ahead of Kvitova and Halep.

    In a match that featured lots of power hitting, but not many rallies, both players committed more unforced errors than they scored winners, both had five break of serves.  Sharapova only scored three more points than Kvitova in a contest that took 2 hours and 28 minutes.

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    Click here to read about Beijing 2014 in our discussion forum, which includes a complete list of daily scores.

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    Cover Photo (Creative Commons License): Marianne Bevis

  • Not In My House – Djokovic Wins a Fifth Beijing Championship

    Not In My House – Djokovic Wins a Fifth Beijing Championship

    Novak Djokovic

    Truly, it seems that with this fifth championship, Novak has made Beijing his home.  It was one of those matches where Berdych’s easy power was returned with interest as Djokovic was dialed in and hitting as well as any fan could hope.

    At 15-15 in the first game, he hit a backhand down-the-line return that was a portent of how the rest of the match would unfold.  Novak would return booming serves dropping them near (or on) the baseline.  There were some very good rallies early on, but just when you thought Berdych had a winner, it came back.

    Berdych ended the first set having landed only 48% of his first serves with two double faults.  There were few opportunities to find a foothold.  Down 0-3, he blistered a winner to get up on Djokovic at 0-30, but the Serb served his way out of trouble.  Then again at 0-4, 40-15 he had game points to get on the board.  Novak went into his Gumby defense (aided and abetted by the slower courts) and replied with a scorching backhand down-the-line winner off an excellent forehand crosscourt from Tomas.

    A few moments later he found himself down a break point, fought back to deuce, only to see it all slip away due to the laser-sharp shot-making of his opponent.  Outclassed and discouraged, Berdych’s error count surged, losing the first set without winning a game, and the first two games of the second set without winning one point.

    Berdych had his moments.  A beautiful backhand down-the-line shot at 0-3, 0-40.  In the fifth game, down 0-15, they had an incredible rally using every corner of the court.  Novak hit a sharply angled crosscourt forehand pulling Tomas off the court.  The Czech flicked his racquet for a beautiful forehand down-the-line winner to win the point.

    The people loved it.  I so appreciate the Beijing crowd.  They’re polite and attentive, but not at all jaded.  As these guys would rally, hitting one unbelievable shot after another, the oohs and aahs would get louder and louder — then they would explode when the point finished.

    Novak didn’t even blink, and fired more winners of his own.  Suddenly it was 5-0 in the second set, and Novak was serving for the championship.  Tomas was fighting to avoid eating two bagels, and managed to see his first break points of the match, capitalizing on the second to get his first game.  He then held serve for the first time all day, before Djokovic closed it out on his serve.

    It was an entertaining match for the most part, and the scoreline should take nothing away from Berdych’s play this week.  This was just one of those days when Djokovic was on his game; he even said later that it was the best final he has ever played.  It’s his house for another year.

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    Click here to the discuss the Djokovic/Berdych final in our Discussion Forum.

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    Cover Photo (Creative Commons License): Marianne Bevis

  • The Blue Shift

    The Blue Shift

    Beijing, Final

    (1) Djokovic d. (2) Nadal, 6-3, 6-4

    Until yesterday, the only hard-court tournaments that Rafael Nadal hadn’t won this year were ones he didn’t enter. It doesn’t take much to mar a perfect record – just one loss to a rampant Novak Djokovic – though falling short of perfection hardly precludes greatness, and Nadal’s 2013 season is nothing if not great. It isn’t done with yet; weeks remain in which it can become greater still.

    Consider this: Nadal has just reclaimed the No. 1 ranking despite accruing zero points at two Majors (Melbourne and Wimbledon), three Masters (Shanghai, Paris, and Miami), and the World Tour Finals. Staggering, indeed, and it suggests that the gap between him and his nearest rivals will widen to a chasm before it begins to close. Djokovic is already making the right noises about regaining the top spot, but he’ll need to win Shanghai, the World Tour Finals, and the Australian Open merely to maintain the points he has. Barring catastrophe or a precipitous waning of interest, Nadal will be No. 1 in the world for a long while yet.

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    Last week was Djokovic’s 101st at No. 1, which strands him one week short of Nadal at equal-eighth on the all-time list, though not for long. This week will be Nadal’s 103rd. (Next week will be his 104th. I think you grasp the sophisticated mathematics involved.) I do wonder how many men have lost the No. 1 ranking by winning a tournament, in the final defeating the very man who would supplant them. It cannot be that common. (Still, if it was going to happen, this would be the pair to manage it. They’ve now faced off something like fourteen thousand times. The ATP made a desultory effort to drum up some interest for yesterday’s final with yet another historical retrospective, but given that their previous encounter was a Major final, and that the new survey mostly reprised the last one, it was hard to get too worked up.)

    Nor, however, is it particularly significant. Rankings are based on twelve months’ of results, not two hours’ worth, and Djokovic in Beijing is coming to feel like Djokovic in Melbourne. Just arriving there lofts his form into low orbit. There’s no shame at all in losing to him, no matter what you’re ranked. This week he looked better than he has since January, savaging Richard Gasquet in the semifinals, and comprehensively shutting Nadal out of the final. Much has rightly been made of his serving, which was superb. But his returning was typically accomplished – Nadal won twenty-five percent of points behind second serve in the first set – and his groundstrokes reflected a boldness that is unfortunately atypical in this rivalry. The swift, low bounce didn’t hurt.

    Meanwhile, Nadal wasn’t overly convincing. Generous souls suggested he was experimenting with aspects of his game this week. Perhaps they’re right. He did take time to test just how far behind Fabio Fognini he could fall without looking in real peril of losing. It turned to be quite a long way: a set and 1/4. Conditions also did not favour him, though rather too much was made of this: conditions don’t favour most players most of the time. Whatever the cause, level-headed types had predicted Djokovic would take the final, though few predicted straight sets. The Serb has looked all tournament like he did in the second set of the US Open final, which is to say like the best hard-court player going around.

    But in order to be ranked as the best player one must sustain it for longer than a set, or even a week. Djokovic hadn’t won a tournament since April, and was on borrowed time. Those level heads were correct this week, but they’ve also been predicting losses for Nadal all year, and so far none had gotten it right. Broken clocks have a better rate of success. To be fair Nadal’s losses have been as unpredictable as they’ve been rare, and as curious. Who realistically believed that the third man to defeat Nadal in a clay court final would be Horacio Zeballos, contesting his first tour final, outmuscling the Spaniard in a deciding set? Or that Nadal’s only loss on European clay would come in Monte Carlo in straight sets, the first of which was very nearly a bagel? Or that Steve Darcis would remove him from Wimbledon in the first round? Or that . . . Or that there wouldn’t be any others, and none on a hard court?

    As much as the scarcity of the defeats, the comprehensiveness and plenitude of the victories have been telling. Nadal’s more ardent fans can fan themselves into orgasmic dread whenever he steps on court, and afterwards are eager to peddle the conceit that his victories are testament to an ineffable warrior spirit, but realistically there have been barely a handful of matches this year in which he has looked at all like losing. Mostly he wins because he’s better than everyone else. This is precisely as it should be for the world No. 1.

  • Serena Williams Beats Jelena Jankovic for China Open Title

    Serena Williams Beats Jelena Jankovic for China Open Title

    Serena Williams overcame some back troubles to best Jelena Jankovic 6-2, 6-2 for her 10th title of 2013, the 56th of her career.  While Williams looked in discomfort in the second set, it was Jankovic who received treatment for hip pain.  Despite the loss, the Serbian is having her best year since 2009, and will raise her ranking to world No. 8 come Monday.

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    Click here to discuss the Williams/Jankovic final in our discussion forum.

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  • Djokovic Wins Beijing, but Nadal Regains No. 1 Ranking

    Djokovic Wins Beijing, but Nadal Regains No. 1 Ranking

    Novak Djokovic lost his spot atop the ATP World Rankings, but played a nearly flawless match to beat Rafael Nadal for the title in China, his fourth, 6-3, 6-4.   He broke the Spaniard at the start of both sets, and never dropped his own serve.

    Nadal, however, will retake the No. 1 slot when the rankings come out on Monday.  This is his third climb to the top, since he lost it to Djokovic in July of 2011, and caps off an amazing return-from-injury season, when he came back at No. 5, his lowest ranking since 2005.

    Most weeks at No. 1:

    Roger Federer – 302

    Pete Sampras – 286

    Ivan Lendl – 270

    Jimmy Connors – 268

    John McEnroe – 170

    Bjorn Borg – 109

    Rafael Nadal – 102 (103, as of tomorrow)

    Andre Agassi – 101

    Novak Djokovic – 101

    Lleyton Hewitt – 80

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    Juan Martin Del Potro beat Milos Raonic to take the Rakuten Open in Tokyo, his third title of the year, and 16th career trophy. The win raises his ranking to #5.

    Credits: Cover Photo: Marianne Bevis (Creative Commons License)