Youzhny, Bogomolov advance at Zagreb Indoors
2012-01-31 02:55:00
ZAGREB, Croatia (AP)—Second-seeded Alex Bogomolov Jr. of Russia beat wild card Dino Marcan of Croatia 6-3, 6-1 to advance to the second round of the Zagreb Indoors on Tuesday. Bogomolov, a quarterfinalist here last year for the U.S., had little trouble with Marcan, who was making his debut on the ATP Tour.
In November, Bogomolov decided to play for the country of his birth, Russia, rather than the United States, where he has lived and trained since 1992. Another Russian, third-seeded Mikhail Youzhny, also advanced to the second round defeating 2008 champion Sergiy Stakhovsky of Ukraine 6-4, 7-6 (4). Youzhny wasted two match points at 5-4, allowing Stakhovsky to break and force a tiebreaker. Poland’s Lukasz Kubot defeated Matteo Viola from Italy 6-2, 6-1, while two-time finalist Michael Berrer of Germany ousted Marco Chiudinelli from Switzerland 7-6 (3), 6-1. Berrer next faces top-seeded Croat Ivan Ljubicic.
Berdych, Stepanek to face Italy in Davis Cup
2012-01-31 02:54:00
PRAGUE (AP)—Australian Open quarterfinalist Tomas Berdych and doubles winner Radek Stepanek will lead the Czech Republic against Italy in next week’s first round of the Davis Cup in Ostrava.Berdych lost to Rafael Nadal in the Australian Open quarterfinals while Stepanek won his maiden Grand Slam title in Melbourne when he teamed with Leander Paes of India to beat Bob and Mike Bryan of the U.S. in the doubles final.Lukas Rosol and doubles specialist Frantisek Cermak were also in the Czech squad named on Tuesday for the Feb. 10-12 tie on indoor hard-court at CEZ Arena.In their last Davis Cup tie, Italy won 4-1 in 1995.In 1980, the Czechs won their only Davis Cup title as Czechoslovakia, beating Italy 4-1.
Men's Final Chat: Djokovic vs. Nadal
2012-01-28 11:29:00
On Sunday, January 29 at 3:30 am EST, senior editor Richard Pagliaro will provide commentary and analysis of the men's final between Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal.Australian Open Men's Final Chat: Novak Djokovic vs. Rafael Nadal
Azarenka crushes Sharapova for title, No. 1 ranking
2012-01-28 11:27:00
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MELBOURNE, Australia (AP)—Victoria Azarenka started celebrating, then suddenly did a double-take to ask her coach, “What happened?” The answer: She had just produced one of the most lopsided Australian Open final victories to capture a Grand Slam title and the No. 1 ranking for the first time. Azarenka routed three-time Grand Slam winner Maria Sharapova 6-3, 6-0 in 1 hour, 22 minutes on Saturday night, winning 12 of the last 13 games after dropping her first service game and falling behind 2-0.
“It’s a dream come true,” she said. “I have been dreaming and working so hard to win the Grand Slam, and being No. 1 is pretty good bonus. Just the perfect ending and the perfect position to be in.” Azarenka had won 11 straight matches, including a run to the Sydney International title, and reached her first Grand Slam final. Her previous best performance at a major was a semifinal loss to Petra Kvitova at Wimbledon last year. Sharapova had all the experience, being in her sixth major final and having won three—dating to her 2004 Wimbledon title. But it didn’t unnerve the 22-year-old Azarenka, the first woman from Belarus to win a singles major. She’s also the seventh different woman to win a Grand Slam since Francesca Schiavone won the 2010 French Open, and the fifth different winner in as many majors.
Azarenka became only the third woman to earn the No. 1 spot after winning her first major title. She moved from No. 3 to No. 1 in the rankings, helped by Caroline Wozniacki’s loss in the quarterfinals. The third-seeded Azarenka set up championship point with a stunning forehand, her 14th clean winner, and sealed it when Sharapova netted a backhand. She dropped to her knees at the baseline with her hands over her face. She got up, held her hands up and jogged over to her coach, Sam Sumyk, in the stands to celebrate. “The best feeling, for sure,” Azarenka said. “I don’t know about the game. I don’t know what I was doing out there. It’s just pure joy what happened. I can’t believe it’s over.” And she paid special credit to her grandmother, “the person who inspires me the most in my life.” Azarenka has been a distinctive presence at Melbourne Park as much for her shrieks and hoots with each shot and seemingly boundless energy as for her white shorts, blue singlet and lime green head and wrist bands. Against Sharapova, she maintained the frenetic movement that has been the hallmark of her performance in Australia, her 25th consecutive major. She won the Sydney International title last weekend and is on a 12-match winning streak — the first player since 2004 to win a WTA tour event the week before winning a major. “She did everything better than I did today. I had a good first couple of games, and that was about it,” Sharapova said. “Then she was the one that was taking the first ball and hitting it deep and aggressive. I was always the one running around like a rabbit, you know, trying to play catch-up all the time.” Sharapova also won only three games in a 2007 final loss to Serena Williams, who also conceded only three games in the 2009 final against Dinara Safina. When Sharapova won the first two games, there was no indication of how lopsided the match would be. Azarenka took control after holding for the first time, breaking Sharapova at love and then holding again on a three-game roll. Sharapova held, finishing off with an ace, to level the score at 3-3 in the first set but then didn’t win another game. Azarenka started dictating the points, coming to the net at times, hitting winners from the baseline and forcing the 24-year-old Russian to the extremes on both sides of the court. Sharapova seemed barely able to move by comparison, and had 30 unforced errors in the match. The second set was completely lopsided and lasted only 36 minutes, with Sharapova winning only 12 points. “As in any sport, you have your good days, you have your tough days and you have days where things just don’t work out,” said Sharapova, who has now been on the losing end of two of the most lopsided scorelines in a final at Melbourne Park. In the men’s doubles final, Leander Paes and Radek Stepanek denied Bob and Mike Bryan their record 12th Grand Slam title, beating the American twins 7-6 (1), 6-2. The 33-year-old Bryans were attempting to secure their place as the most decorated doubles team since the Open Era began in 1968. They remain tied at 11 major titles with Australian duo Mark Woodforde and Todd Woodbridge. On Sunday, defending champion Novak Djokovic takes on Rafael Nadal in a men’s singles final featuring the top two players in the rankings. Djokovic won three of the four majors last year and beat Nadal in six finals in 2011 among his 70 match wins for the season. Azarenka had her best season in 2011, winning 55 of 72 matches to finish the year at No. 3. There was a time when she’d momentarily flirted with the idea of quitting the sport during a quick trip home to Minsk after a loss at Doha. But she was quickly set straight by her family, including her grandmother, who had reportedly worked three jobs until the age of 71. She couldn’t get through to her family immediately “because my phone is freaking out right now,” but she texted them from the court. “I made a pretty smart decision, not walking out, right? That was pretty special,” she said. “There’s always ups and downs, now I’m up.”
Sharapova: Azarenka deserves No. 1 ranking
2012-01-28 03:44:00
Maria Sharapova, who fell to Victoria Azarenka in the Australian Open final, says that the new No. 1 more than deserves the top spot. Azarenka has a 895-point lead over No. 2 Petra Kvitova and a 1025-point lead over No. 3 Sharapova. Caroline Wozniacki, who was No. 1 for 67 weeks, will drop to No. 4.'She's someone that's really been the one that's been working towards that goal and someone that everyone has had a lot of expectations on,' Sharapova said. 'Everyone expected her to win a Grand Slam. So, yeah, she certainly deserves that spot.'
Bryan brothers lose final, denied record 12th Slam
2012-01-28 00:59:00
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MELBOURNE, Australia (AP)—Leander Paes and Radek Stepanek denied Bob and Mike Bryan their record 12th Grand Slam doubles title, beating the American twins 7-6 (1), 6-2 in the final of the Australian Open. The Woodies could probably sleep a little easier Saturday night. The 33-year-old Bryans were attempting to secure their place as the most decorated doubles team since the Open Era began in 1968. The brothers remain level on 11 major titles with the Australian duo of Mark Woodforde and Todd Woodbridge, also known by their nickname the Woodies. “Obviously, it’s disappointing,” Bob Bryan said. “But you know, I thought we have had a great Australian swing, and we’re playing, at least I’m playing a lot better than I did last year already. It bodes well for the rest of the year.”
Paes and Stepanek are veteran doubles players but were teaming up for just the fourth time. Before partnering for a tuneup event at Sydney earlier this month, where they lost to the Bryan brothers, the Indian and Czech duo hadn’t played together for nearly six years. After Mike Bryan double-faulted on match point, Paes leaped into Stepanek’s arms and the pair swung around at midcourt. They both then reached up to stands to give high-fives to Martina Navratilova, with whom Paes won the mixed doubles trophy at the Australian Open in 2003. The Bryans have captured each major at least once, but they’ve been most dominant at Melbourne Park, where they’ve won three straight Australian titles and five overall. They hadn’t lost here since the quarterfinals in 2008. Bob Bryan has a special prize waiting for him at home. His wife was due to give birth to the couple’s first child on Saturday and he’s planning to catch a Sunday morning flight back home to Miami to try to be there in time. “I have something to look forward to going home, so my mind is going to get off the match a lot quicker than it usually would after a final like this,” he said. For the 38-year-old Paes, the victory marks a career milestone. By winning the Australian Open, he completed a career doubles Grand Slam, adding to his three French Open titles, two U.S. Open titles and one Wimbledon title. “It’s many years of hard work,” Paes said. “I put in many, many years. I have been in 25 plus years into the game of tennis, and it’s given me so much. The reason I can still win Grand Slams is, one, I know how to pick great partners; and, two, I’m very passionate about my daily schedule. “Every day I put myself on the line, and that’s a lot of fun.” It was Stepanek’s first major doubles title. The Czech player lost in his only other final at the 2002 U.S. Open. Paes and Stepanek dominated the first-set tiebreak, taking advantage of rare misses by the brothers and a couple of deft volleys by Paes to capture six straight points. The pair then broke the Bryans immediately in the second set on a Stepanek crosscourt volley winner to go up 2-0. The Bryans had a chance to break back at 2-4, but Paes saved it with another sharp volley. Paes, a former No. 1 doubles player, has a shot to pick up another trophy at Melbourne Park, too. He’s in the mixed doubles final with partner Elena Vesnina on Sunday, playing against Horia Tecau and Bethanie Mattek-Sands. The Bryans will have another shot at the Grand Slam record at the French Open in a few months. Even though one of them is soon to be a father, they don’t have plans to stop playing anytime soon. “We both feel young,” Bob Bryan said. “If we want to play this sport for another seven years, it’s going to be there for us if we stay healthy. “The singles game, as you see, is just incredibly physical. Guys, if they can get past 30, it’s amazing. But doubles, 40, 40 seems to be the age now.”
Wozniacki will fall to fourth in next week's rankings
2012-01-28 00:58:00
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP)—Victoria Azeranka’s win over Maria Sharapova in the Australian Open final on Saturday elevated her to No. 1 and also forced a shift in the women’s top 10 rankings. Azarenka moved from No. 3 to No. 1, passing Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova, who will remain at No. 2 after her loss in the semifinals. The 22-year-old Belarusian is the 21st player to hold the No. 1 spot since computer rankings were introduced in 1975. The WTA said Saturday that rankings which will take effect Monday show Sharapova moving up one spot to third and Caroline Wozniacki, who held the No. 1 ranking for nearly 67 weeks before losing in the quarterfinals to Kim Clijsters, dropping to fourth. U.S. Open champion Sam Stosur, who lost in the first round, moves up one spot to fifth despite the poor result at her home major, while Agnieszka Radwanska is a career-high No. 6. Marion Bartoli of France moves up two spots to a career-best seventh, while Vera Zvonareva is No. 8, French Open champion Li Na drops four spots to No. 9 and Andrea Petkovic, who withdrew from the Australian Open due to a stress fracture in her back, stays at No. 10. Li dropped from fifth after she lost in the fourth round to defending champion Clijsters. The Chinese star had a high number of ranking points to defend as a finalist last year. Clijsters, who lost in the semifinals to Azarenka this year, is projected to drop to about 30th from No. 11. Serena Williams, who lost in the fourth round, will remain at No. 12. “I’ve been loving coming to Australia since I was a junior, and I’ve had an amazing month and this is a dream come true,” Azarenka said She had a 55-17 win-loss record in 2011, winning three titles and finishing runner-up in two others. She started 2012 strongly, defeating three top 10 players in a row en route to her ninth career singles title at the Sydney International. She remains undefeated in 2012 with a 12-0 record. She is the third player to achieve the top ranking directly after claiming a first Grand Slam singles title: Martina Navratilova moved to No. 1 after winning Wimbledon in 1978 and Ana Ivanovic took top spot after winning the 2008 French Open.
U.S. 15-year-old Townsend wins girls' event
2012-01-27 22:36:00
MELBOURNE—A lot of cool things happened to 15-year-old Taylor Townsend on her trip to Australia this month. She got a few kangaroo souvenirs for her family, and a couple of koala bear trophies. She watched Roger and Rafa go at it—“I was in shock,” Townsend said of their rallies. She played inside Rod Laver Arena, made a Hawk-Eye challenge, and, for good measure, completed a rare sweep of the girls’ singles and doubles events. But all of that may have paled in comparison with her biggest find at Melbourne Park: four official Australian Open towels, sitting in the sun, unattended.
You must realize that these aren’t any old towels. The pros take them by the thousands each year. Rafael Nadal said today that he has 10 of them himself. So you can understand Townsend’s excitement when she stumbled upon them. “I was surprised I saw four towels,” she said, flashing her braces in a wide grin. “Like two towels on one seat, two towels on the other. I was like, ‘Whoa, I’m gonna snag these.
“That’s exactly what I did.”
It’s been a banner Aussie Open for Townsend in many ways. Seeded 14th and competing in just her second junior Grand Slam, she became the youngest winner of an junior singles title here since her friend Donald Young did it at the same age six years ago. The two prodigies share more than just that piece of trivia. Both are left-handed, both are African-American, both hail from Chicago, and both have trained with Young’s parents, Donald, Sr., and Alona, in Atlanta. That’s where Townsend says she learned the attacking game and accomplished net play that may set her apart from her peers in the future. “Ever since I was young,” the apparently not-that-young-anymore Townsend says, “when I started playing tennis, we always did volleys. Mr. Young and Ms. Young, they always taught me just to move forward.”
Townsend says with a matter of fact smile that she has “pretty good hands.” Those hands were in evidence in her three set win over Yulia Putintseva of Russia in today's girls’ final, a histrionical affair that ended with the loser smashing her racquet over and over and the winner falling to a scorched rubberized court before overflowing with that she called “tears of joy.” Townsend, who switched last year to the Prince EXO3 and began using the company's Beast brand of spin-producing polyester strings, won the match with powerful forehands and two-handed backhands, some well-timed, precociously savvy net play, and a heavy, cutting lefty serve. Its motion, perhaps not surprisingly, bears more than a passing resemblance to Young’s.
“She has a great feel for the game,” says USTA director of player development Patrick McEnroe. Townsend left Atlanta last year to train at the USTA’s center in Boca Raton, Fla. “She has that easy power you love to see, and more variety than most of the girls. I think it’s a game that should translate well at the pro level.”
McEnroe also likes the fact that she’s working with what he calls a “tight-knit group of girls at Boca.” That group includes 17-year-old Grace Min, last year’s U.S. Open junior champion, and 16-year-old Madison Keys. “I think it’s when you get those groups together that you see success at the higher level.” For U.S. tennis fans waiting for their next women’s champion, these are signs for cautious optimism.
“We practice together,” Townsend says of her days at Boca with Keys and Min. “We push each other.”
What’s next for Townsend? She seems ready for more, right away. A reporter asked her today if she was ready to “slow yourself down and not push success too fast?”
The outgoing Townsend didn’t hesitate with her answer. “No,” she said, “I mean, I’m just gonna keep doing what we’ve been doing. I’m playing a pro tournament in about a week. It’s a great opportunity, It’s a 100,000 [dollar tournament, in Midland, Texas], so I’m just gonna go there and do my thing.”
The fun stuff, the koalas and the kangaroos, is over fast, and the pro grind beckons. “You want a balance,” McEnroe says of how Townsend should proceed from here. “A mix of competition—play the big junior events and ease into women’s events, try to get into the Top 100 this year. The big thing is that she keeps playing her game.'
Townsend is currently ranked No. 426, so there’s work to be done in 2012. But after this Aussie Open, when she’s back sweating with her friends on the hot courts in Boca, she’ll know what she’s playing for and what a big title feels like. And she’ll have a few nice towels to keep herself dry.
Fish, Isner to lead U.S. Davis Cup vs. Swiss
2012-01-27 21:26:00
U.S. captain Jim Courier names Mardy Fish, John Isner, Mike Bryan, and Ryan Harrison to the Davis Cup team that will face the Swiss away in Fribourg, Feb. 10-12Mike’s twin Bob is skipping the tie as his wife Michelle is due to give birth to their daughter on January 29. Andy Roddick is injured and has declined to play.World No. 3 Roger Federer and No. 22 Stanislas Wawrinka lead the Swiss on indoor clay court.'We have the toughest you can have draw in Davis Cup,' said Courier. 'It’s the ultimate test. It’s going to be a big battle, but we have nothing to lose. We have to go out and lay it on the line and we know we are underdogs, but we’ll give it a rip.'No. 17 Isner has won a small clay court title and No. 8 Fish won two matches against Columbia on outdoor clay in a playoff match.'John likes the clay, likes the slow court,' Courier said. 'Mardy grew up in Florida and slides well. It’s not the surface we’d have chosen to pick, but I don’t think it’s a problem for us.'Federer has not played a main draw World Group match since 2004. He’ll lineup against Isner on the first day.'It's not a match he can wait to come to him, he has to take it to Roger and shorten points,” Courier said. “He needs to be explosive. That’s no mystery and certainly won’t be a surprise to Roger.'Courier added that it is unlikely that the teenager Harrison will play a live rubber. Sam Querrey was considered for the team, but is nursing a sore knee.—Matt Cronin
Nadal: Murray blew chance vs. Novak in 4th
2012-01-27 21:19:00
Rafael Nadal says that Andy Murray blew a sizeable chance in his 6-3, 3-6, 6-7 (4) 6-1, 7-5 loss to Novak Djokovic in the Australian Open semifinals.'He always played fantastic. He's unlucky not to win a Grand Slam yet,' Nadal told reporters. 'Yesterday he lost another very good opportunity. Because winning two sets to one, winning the third set, probably losing a lot chances, and then winning with 7-6 to win a tournament like this and to play against player like Djokovic, you cannot start the fourth set like this. It's the moment to play with more intensity than ever, not start with 3-0 down and two breaks in five minutes. That way you lose the match. You want to win the tournament, the other can beat you, but you cannot lose in the beginning… He was unlucky at the end, but the only negative thing for me in his match is the beginning of the fourth. When the other have more doubts, is in really trouble, you make for the opponent easier than what should be, no? For the rest, he can be No. 1 at the end of the season. The level is there. When you are able to play how many, five Grand Slams in a row playing semifinals or final, it's only a mental thing.'
Final Chat: Sharapova vs. Azarenka
2012-01-27 17:00:00
On Saturday, January 28 at 3:30 am EST, senior editor Richard Pagliaro will provide commentary and analysis of the women's final between Maria Sharapova and Victoria Azarenka.Australian Open Final Chat: Maria Sharapova vs. Victoria Azarenka
Djokovic edges Murray in five to reach final
2012-01-27 08:53:00
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MELBOURNE, Australia (AP)—Novak Djokovic overcome his breathing problems and fatigue to beat his old friend Andy Murray in an almost five-hour Australian Open semifinal Friday night and move into his third straight Grand Slam final.Standing between Djokovic and a record shared by some of the greatest players of all time will be No. 2-ranked Rafael Nadal, a man he beat in six tournament finals in 2011.Despite appearing tired and sore from the second set, Djokovic rallied to beat Murray 6-3, 3-6, 6-7 (4), 6-1, 7-5 in a rematch of the 2011 final at Melbourne Park.
After wasting a chance to serve out the match at 5-3 in the fifth and letting Murray back into the contest, Djokovic cashed in his first match point when the Scottish player missed a forehand after four hours, 50 minutes.“You have to find strength in those moments and energy, and that keeps you going,” he said. “At this level, very few points decide the winner.“I think we both went through a physical crisis. You know, him at the fourth set, me all the way through the second and midway through the third. It was a very even match throughout, from the first to the last point.”Djokovic dropped onto his back, fully laid out on the court. He got up and shook hands with Murray, before jogging back out onto the court like a boxer, dropping to his knees and crossing himself.It was already after 12:30 a.m. Saturday when he got up again and pumped his arms triumphantly.“Andy deserves the credit to come back from 2-5 down. He was fighting. I was fighting,” Djokovic said. “Not many words that can describe the feeling of the match.“Evidently it was a physical match … it was one of the best matches I played. Emotionally and mentally it was equally hard.”It was a bitter setback for Murray, who lost the previous two Australian finals.Djokovic finished last year at No. 1 after winning three of the four majors, including a straight-sets win over Murray in the Australian final. His only loss at a Grand Slam in 2011 was against Roger Federer in the French Open semifinals.It was phenomenal season after previously only winning one major—the 2008 Australian Open—and not returning to a final for 11 Grand Slams.“To be honest, I think I matured as a player. I started to believe on the court I could win majors,” he said. “Rafa and Roger are the most dominant players for the last seven, eight years. … It was very hard to take away the titles from them. They will not give you the titles. You have to earn it.”He is now aiming to be only the fifth man in the Open Era started in 1968 to win three straight majors—only Rod Laver, Pete Sampras, Federer and Nadal have achieved it before him, with only Laver going on to complete the Grand Slam by winning all four majors in a season.The Australian great was in the arena named in his honor to watch Friday night’s semifinal, as he had been when 2009 Australian Open winner Nadal came back from a set and a break down to beat four-time champion Federer in four sets the previous night.Djokovic’s 70-6 win-loss record in 2011 included those six wins over Nadal in finals—including Wimbledon and the U.S. Open.Both players had their form dips, but Djokovic’s were more obvious. He led by a set and a break before Murray started coming back at him. Then Djokovic started walking gingerly and appeared to be struggling for breath—just as he had been in his straights sets quarterfinal win over No. 5-ranked David Ferrer.At one point, he pointed to his nose and seemed to indicated to his support group that he was having trouble breathing.He stayed in the points, despite Murray scrambling and trying to get him involved in long rallies.“You try to get energized in every way,” he said. “A lot of liquids, try to eat something, as well, that gives you energy.”He put his breathing problems down to allergies, and said he’d seen a doctor for it.After losing a tight tiebreaker and virtually conceding the fourth set, Murray rallied again after slipping behind 5-2 in the fifth. He broke Djokovic at love when the Serb was serving for the match on a three-game streak that put all the pressure back on the defending champion.But Djokovic composed himself and seemed to be gathering energy as the match wore on. He held serve and then broke Murray to finish it off.“I’m extremely delighted to be in the final,” Djokovic said. “What can be a bigger challenge than playing against Rafa Nadal, one of the greatest players ever.“I’m going to try to recover. Obviously it’s going to be physical as well. So I need to do some push-ups tonight.”Despite being friends and childhood rivals, this was only the second meeting between Djokovic and Murray at a Grand Slam. Djokovic beat Murray in the 2011 Australian final and had a 6-4 lead in their overall head-to-heads at tour level.Murray won the Brisbane International and came into the semifinal on a 10-match winning streak and with new coach, eight-time major winner Ivan Lendl, in his support crew.The blue-and-white crossed Scottish flags fluttered in the crowd, held by fans with the flag painted on their faces and some wearing their tartan Tam hats. The support was evenly split at Rod Laver Arena, encouraging both players in the tense final set.The Maria Sharapova vs. Victoria Azarenka women’s final on Saturday night is being previewed in the local media as a battle of the two loudest grunters on the tour. Azarenka, who won the Sydney International title the weekend before the season’s first major, is bidding to continue her winning shriek.Sharapova has won three majors, but none since the 2008 Australian Open. Azarenka will be playing her first Grand Slam final.The winner will move to the top of the women’s rankings. Caroline Wozniacki, who came into the tournament as No. 1, will drop three places after her quarterfinal loss to 2011 champion Kim Clijsters.Russians Svetlana Kuznetsova and Vera Zvonareva won the women’s doubles final on Friday with a 5-7, 6-4, 6-3 victory over the Italian duo of Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci.Bethanie Mattek-Sands and her Romanian partner Horia Tecau advanced to the mixed doubles final with a 6-3, 6-3 win over Indian pair Sania Mirza and Mahesh Bhupathi.In the men’s doubles final Saturday, American twins Bob and Mike Bryan are aiming for a Grand Slam record 12th major when they take on Leander Paes and Radek Stepanek.
Murray upset with late-night drug testing
2012-01-27 08:52:00
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP)—Andy Murray had just spent nearly five hours on court in an Australian Open semifinal loss to Novak Djokovic that ran past midnight.Then he found out drug testers were looking for him.'Just a bit annoyed ... I know the players go on about it a lot, but they've changed these rules with the drug test,'' Murray said. 'I've just done the drug test, the urine test.''But there was more—a blood test.'They just told me I need to sit down for 30 minutes before I can give blood,'' Murray said. 'I want to get out of here, so I'm annoyed with that, which on top of losing a match like that, it's really a frustrating thing to have to go through at 1:00 in the morning.''It's not the first time Murray has criticized doping control officials.At the 2009 U.S. Open, he complained when drug testers visited his Manhattan hotel room at 7:15 a.m. on a day off to test him.He said at the same time that three days before Wimbledon that year, an anti-doping official came his house in Surrey near London after 9 p.m., even though he had put down 7 a.m. to 8 a.m. as his one-hour 'slot'' to be available to drug testers that day.'I just think it's a little bit in your face, the whole thing,'' Murray said then.
Murray thinks he's closing gap with Big 3
2012-01-27 05:18:00
Despite his 6-3, 3-6, 6-7 (4) 6-1, 7-5 defeat to Novak Djokovic in the semifinals of the Australian Open, Andy Murray believes he has made progress and can be a substantial threat to the top-ranked Serbian, No. 2 Rafael Nadal and No. 3 Roger Federer. Murray has yet to win a major, but has reached the final four of the last five Grand Slams.'Tonight's match was important for many reasons,' Murray told reporters. 'Obviously I wanted to win first and foremost. But also sort of after last year, the year that Novak's had, I think there's a very fine line between being No. 1 in the world and being 3 or 4. I think that gap, I feel tonight I closed it. My job over the next two or three months is to surpass him and the guys in front of me. So take a lot of hard work, and hopefully I can do it.'
Azarenka, Maria dismiss grunting concerns
2012-01-26 21:00:00
Victoria Azarenka and Maria Sharapova react strongly to suggestions that they should tone down their grunting. The two will meet in the Australian Open final on Saturday night with the No. 1 ranking at stake. Azarenka was unsure why the issue has come again when she has been playing full-time on tour for the past six years and Sharapova has been on the WTA since 2003. Australian host broadcaster Channel 7 has been using a grunto-meter to detect the volume of their screams.'I guess some people are just bored. They created that machine that can measure it. So I mean, money well spent, huh?' Azarenka said while holding two thumbs up in the air.The issue is old hat to Sharapova, but she was surprised that No. 8 Agnieszka Radwanska said that her grunting bothered her, while the Pole’s friend Azarenka didn’t. 'I've heard it a few times over my career,' Sharapova said. 'You've watched me grow up, you've watched me play tennis. I've been the same over the course of my career. No one important enough has told me to change or do something different.'Azarenka did admit that when she and Sharapova play each other that she is aware of her rival’s grunting. The two have split six matches.'I'm not deaf,' she said. 'Of course I hear her. I'm sure she hears me. And about another 15,000 people hear us maybe even further away It doesn't bother me. I respect every opponent. Whatever they do, they try to do their best job. I think that's fair enough.'—Matt Cronin
