Saturday, June 28, 2014

John McEnroe’s five-step manifesto to fix tennis

YOU can look at it in one of two ways.

One, tennis has enjoyed a golden era over the past decade with some of the greatest players of all time battling out.

Or two, the same four guys — Federer, Nadal, Djokovic and Murray — keep winning all the time and it’s getting dull.

Either way, John McEnroe thinks it’s time for a shake up.

“You can’t just stand on your heels and do nothing. We’ve got to keep trying to do things, in my opinion, to grab fans,” McEnroe says.

The original Superbrat, courtesy of The Guardian, has devised a manifesto to make tennis “edgier” — and you won’t be surprised to hear it has a fair bit to do with the umpiring. Here is McEnroe’s five-point plan.

1. NO UMPIRES, NO LINESPEOPLE

“You’d have a system where the players would call their own lines. All of a sudden things would get a whole lot edgier. But you could challenge it. Say the guy was, like, blatantly cheating and you challenge, people would be, like: ‘Boo!’ People would get way more into it. And then you’d be, like: ‘See this guy? This guy is such a cheater!’ It would be unbelievable for tennis, I promise you. The problem is, there’s no way in hell they’ll do it. But I guarantee you that tennis would be like 30 per cent more interesting.”

read more: http://www.news.com.au/sport/tennis/john-mcenroes-fivestep-manifesto-to-fix-tennis/story-fndkzym4-1226967591030

Friday, June 27, 2014

Wimbledon 2014: why a tennis serve is faster than a rubber bullet

 The first serve is one of the most deadly weapons in any tennis player's arsenal - and there are solid scientific reasons why.

Dr Simon Foster, an astrophysicist at Imperial College London, uses figures from Wimbledon and the Association of Tennis Professionals to show the colossal forces involved.

A tennis ball flying from the fastest first travels faster than a rubber bullet - and briefly experiences acceleration fifty times that of the Sun's gravity.

Serves are getting faster, with a scientific paper in 2009 concluding: “Serve speeds are now higher than they have ever been and the number of aces continues to rise.”

In fact, they are getting so fast that most players will not have time to react to the quickest. 

read more: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/tennis/wimbledon/10928021/Wimbledon-2014-why-a-tennis-serve-is-faster-than-a-rubber-bullet.html

Thursday, June 26, 2014

Murray relieved after comfortable win

Andy Murray said he was grateful for a quick win as he cruised through to the third round at Wimbledon with a convincing straight sets defeat of Blaz Rola.

The defending champion was too strong for his Slovenian opponent, dismissing him in imperious fashion with a 6-1 6-1 6-0 victory.

"I played well today, but this is the first year he's played on grass," Murray said. "He's just come out of college and broken into the top 100, so it was tough for him today. But he'll keep improving because he's got a good game.

"I just had to concentrate on my side of the net today. I took care of my serve pretty well for the majority of the match and thought I played well."

Murray admitted he was relieved to be able to complete the win in just 84 minutes after enduring several marathon matches at last month's French Open.

"I feel like [expending energy] cost me a bit at the French Open," Murray said. "Not necessarily that I would have beaten Rafa in the semis even if I had felt perfect, but I played a lot of long matches there.

"If you can finish matches as quickly as possible, it definitely helps in the long run."

Forced out to a sun-drenched No.1 Court after his first round victory over David Goffin on Centre, Murray wasted little time in dismantling Rola, breaking the World No. 92 in the opening game.

Rola, who said his motivation was "off the charts" ahead of the second-round clash, threatened to unleash a big first serve against the British No.1, but Murray looked far more at home in front of the SW19 crowd.

After flying through the first set in just 28 minutes, Murray survived the minor distraction of losing a ball from his pocket mid-rally in first game of the second set to make another early break of the Rola serve.

Murray went on drop just one game in the second set, although he repeatedly chastised himself for even the smallest of unforced errors.

Playing in just his third senior tournament on grass, former American college champion Rola had little answer to the pace and accuracy of Murray's serve and the defeat is the latest in a poor run of results against British opponents this year.

Rola was knocked out of both French Open qualifying and the first round at Queen's by Murray's Davis Cup team-mate James Ward, who before the match admitted to giving Murray's hitting partner Dani Vallverdu tips on how to deal with the left-hander.

Whatever advice Ward gave certainly appeared to work as Murray again set about breaking his opponent in the first game of the third set. To his credit, Rola survived two break points, but Murray completed the job at the third attempt before breaking Rola again in the fifth game to take the third set 6-0.

Murray will meet Roberto Bautista Agut in the third round on Friday after the No.27 seed defeated Jan Hernych 7-5 4-6 6-2 6-2.

source: http://www.espn.co.uk/tennis/sport/story/318839.html

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Wimbledon 2014: The tennis girls who’ve got balls

 Naomi Broady’s win at Wimbledon on Monday caused quite a sensation. Not just because she was a British woman progressing to the second round, but because she was a very particular woman – the so-called “bad girl” of British tennis – who had been stripped of her Lawn Tennis Association funding seven years ago.

Her heinous crime? Posting a picture of herself on the Bebo website showing her posing, in a rather skimpy dress, in the loos during a girls’ night out. The LTA suspended her, accusing her of unprofessional behaviour.

Broady said this week that she struggled to see why the incident became such a “big deal” – and to be fair, looking at some of her fellow players who put the wild in wild card, one is inclined to agree. 

 For while the image of the women’s game may be of sets in the sunshine, fuelled by nothing stronger than lime juice and barley water, in reality the circuit has been dogged by sex scandals, tax evasion and tantrums.

The traditional way to get a name as a bad girl in tennis is by what you wear – or, rather, what you don’t. “Gorgeous Gussie” Moran caused outrage in 1949 and 1950 with her ruffled lace-trimmed knickers, leading the All England Club to accuse her of bringing “vulgarity and sin into tennis”. Yet her transgression was pretty mild compared with Anne White’s skintight bodysuit in 1985; or the exploits of Natasha Zverera, who shocked the Australian Open crowd in 1995 by flashing her bra to celebrate a win.

Suzanne Lenglen, who played at Wimbledon in 1920, used to sip cognac between points. She at least confined herself to a quick drink; her tennis descendants have been caught out using harder substances. While Mary Pierce transformed her game via the perfectly legal supplement creatine, others turned to illegal drugs. The teenage prodigy Jennifer Capriati was charged with possession of marijuana, while former world number one Martina Hingis quit tennis in 2007 after testing positive for cocaine – though she insisted she had never taken drugs.

And then there’s sex. For every Steffi Graf and André Agassi, who’ve been together for more than a decade, there’s a Chris Evert or Jimmy Connors whose tempestuous engagement has been called off. Martina Navratilova made the news when she had to pay out $3 million to her former girlfriend, Toni Layton; while Anna Kournikova’s relationship with pop star Enrique Iglesias made as many headlines as her game. 

read more: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/tennis/wimbledon/10923004/Wimbledon-2014-The-tennis-girls-whove-got-balls.html

Friday, June 20, 2014

The New Faces of Women's Tennis

For the upstarts of women's tennis, it was a moment that said: "We have arrived."

At the French Open earlier this month, Serena Williams was clobbered. Li Na, the Australian Open champion, was bounced in the first round. And Maria Sharapova needed three of the gutsiest performances of her career to turn back three rising stars on the way to winning the title.

Though Sharapova won in Paris against 22-year-old Romanian Simona Halep, Halep and a group of young women born in the 1990s announced their presence. Now, with Wimbledon set to begin Monday, women's tennis has finally found its future. This generation is the one women's tennis fans have been waiting for, the one that can carry the sport after the last of the legends born in the 1980s—Serena and Venus Williams and Sharapova—retire.

The new kids are big hitters and fast movers. They're brash. They don't cower when facing past champions. They're relentless. They're creative and play to the crowd. And they don't just bash tennis balls; they hit drop shots and volleys and slices and sharp angles. They're so fun to watch that the final between Halep and Sharapova, which lasted a little over three hours, felt like it ended too soon.

"They're young, they're hungry and they're full of potential," said Tracy Austin, the former No. 1 player.

Coming up alongside Halep is Eugenie Bouchard, a 20-year-old Canadian who reached the semifinals at both the French Open and the Australian Open in January. Tennis experts rave about her attacking style, poise and instincts.

"I definitely feel like I can play with the best girls in the game," Bouchard said.

Garbiñe Muguruza, a 20-year-old of Spanish and Venezuelan descent, handed Serena Williams the most lopsided defeat of her Grand Slam career in the second round of the French Open, 6-2, 6-2.

"I like to play on big courts, center courts, against amazing players," Muguruza said.

Halep, who played in her first Grand Slam final in Paris, has climbed to third in the world rankings from 53rd at the end of 2011. Her match against Sharapova was the first French Open final to last three sets since 2001.

"She pushed me to the limit," Sharapova said.

Other up-and-comers include 21-year-old American Sloane Stephens; Croatia's Ajla Tomljanovic (21); last year's junior Wimbledon champion, 17-year-old Belinda Bencic; Anna Schmiedlova (19), who beat Venus Williams at the French Open; Ukrainian Elina Svitolina (19); and Taylor Townsend, an 18-year-old American who was given a wild card into Wimbledon on the strength of her two victories at the French Open, the first Grand Slam tournament of her career. Townsend combines the power game of the present with the touch volleys of the past.

read more: http://online.wsj.com/articles/the-new-faces-of-womans-tennis-1403226964

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Novak Djokovic, Serena Williams top seeds for Wimbledon

Novak Djokovic and Serena Williams were seeded No. 1 for Wimbledon on Wednesday, while defending men's champion Andy Murray was bumped up two spots above his world ranking to No. 3.

Djokovic, the 2011 Wimbledon champion, is ranked No. 2 but was given the top seeding by the All England Club ahead of top-ranked Rafael Nadal.

Nadal, a two-time Wimbledon champion who is coming off his ninth French Open title, is seeded No. 2 for the grass-court Grand Slam, which starts on Monday.

Murray last year became the first British player to win the Wimbledon men's title since 1936.

Seven-time champion Roger Federer is No. 4, while Australian Open winner Stan Wawrinka is down two spots from his world ranking at No. 5.

Tomas Berdych, David Ferrer, Milos Raonic of Thornhill, Ont., John Isner and Kei Nishikori round out the top 10.

Among the 32 seeded players, Jerzy Janowicz received the biggest boost, going up nine spots from his No. 24 ranking to No. 15. The big-serving Polish player reached the Wimbledon semifinals last year, losing to Murray in four sets.

Wimbledon takes a player's grass-court record into account in assigning the men's seedings.

The women's seedings, however, stick to the WTA rankings.

That means five-time champion Williams is No. 1, followed by Li Na, French Open runner-up Simona Halep, Agnieszka Radwanska and Maria Sharapova.

Sharapova, who won her first Grand Slam title at Wimbledon 10 years ago, is coming off her second French Open championship. She is considered Williams' top challenger at Wimbledon, despite the No. 5 seeding. They could end up on the same side of the draw.

Petra Kvitova, the 2011 Wimbledon winner, is No. 6, followed by Jelena Jankovic, Victoria Azarenka, Angelique Kerber and Dominika Cibulkova.

Eugenie Bouchard of Westmount, Que., was 13th.

read more: http://www.cbc.ca/sports/tennis/novak-djokovic-serena-williams-top-seeds-for-wimbledon-1.2679304

Monday, June 16, 2014

Dimitrov wins thrilling final against Lopez at Queen's

The 23-year-old Bulgarian fourth seed recovered from a set down and saved a match point in the second to register his fourth career title, all of them since last November.

Dimitrov, a former Wimbledon junior champion, is now the first player this year to win titles on three different surfaces after winning on the hard courts in Acapulco and the clay of Bucharest.

"It was amazing," Dimitrov said during the presentation of the trophy - one of the biggest in the sport.

"It's been amazing coming here every year and playing that tournament means a lot to me. I'm really happy to go through that match in such a way.

"There's some good matches ahead to Wimbledon and I'm excited for the time ahead.

"I knew it was not easy to break Fel. Especially in moments like that he's been serving so well all week. He's been tremendous all week. It was a great fight."

The first set was tense affair with neither player able to break serve on the way to a tiebreak.

Lopez looked to have gained the ascendancy leading 5-2 in the breaker but a series of unforced errors gifted Dimitrov a route back into the set.

The Spaniard had four set points but it wasn't until the fourth when the Bulgarian slipped and hit his attempted passing shot into the net to hand the 10th seed the first set.

Dimitrov was on the brink of defeat in the 10th game of the second set but he saved a match point and held his nerve to stay in the contest and force a deciding set with a dominant display in the second set, offered up only one point.

Again Dimitrov found himself up against it in the third set but his fighting spirit was evident as he recovered from a break down, although a double fault from Lopez helped.

Inevitably a third tiebreak was required to separate the two players and it was Dimitrov who edged it, leaving left-hander Lopez disconsolate.

"I was one point away from the victory," he said. "It's very disappointing but this is tennis and you have to accept it."

"It was a tough match to lose like this but it's definitely great preparation for Wimbledon.

"I played five or six matches this week. It's a beautiful place and there is no better preparation."

source: https://uk.eurosport.yahoo.com/news/tennis-dimitrov-downs-lopez-win-title-queens-151838299--ten.html

Friday, June 13, 2014

Rafael Nadal and Andy Murray falter on bad day for big stars

(CNN) -- Rafael Nadal, the man who stood on top of the tennis world after winning his ninth French Open title last weekend, was brought back to earth with a bump Thursday.

The world No.1, so dominant on the clay at Roland Garros, was beaten in the first round of the ATP grass-court event in Halle, Germany, by a player ranked 84 places below him.

German Dustin Brown required less than an hour to win 6-4 6-1 on the grass to send Nadal crashing out of the tournament.

The Spaniard, playing his first match on grass since he was stunned in the opening game of last year's Wimbledon, appeared to struggle with the transition.

At Wimbledon 12 months ago, Nadal was beaten by Czech Lukas Rosol who was ranked 100 at the time in a five-set thriller.

And any hopes he would be given the chance to warmup for a return to SW19 were given short shrift by home favorite Brown.

Brown had only ever beaten one top-10 player, John Isner, and this result ranks as his best yet.

Nadal wasn't the only star to falter Thursday -- Andy Murray, who is set to start the defense of his Wimbledon title later this month, was beaten at Queen's Club in London.

Murray was beaten by veteran Czech Radek Stepanek 7-6 6-2 in his second match since appointing former women's No. 1 Amelie Mauresmo as his new coach.

The 27-year-old, who won the Queens title in 2009, 2011 and 2013, had won his past 19 matches on grass.

"I have only got myself to blame that I lost the first set," the Scot told the ATP website.

"I don't know how many set points I had, but quite a lot of them were on my serve.

"On this surface especially you shouldn't really be losing sets like that. For me, that's what's disappointing really about the match. Then, unfortunately, got broken in the first game of the second set. I couldn't quite get it back."

The 35-year-old Stepanek's reward is a quarterfinal clash with South African Kevin Anderson.

Meanwhile, seven-time Wimbledon champion Roger Federer survived a scare in Halle before booking his place in the quarterfinals with a 6-7 6-4 6-2 win over Joao Sousa.

The Swiss ace, who has won this tournament on six occasions, will face Taiwan's Yen-Hsun Lu for a place in the semifinals.

"It was slightly frustrating at times clearly, but nevertheless I served well and kept on doing my thing," said fourth-ranked Federer, who lost in the last 16 at Roland Garros.

"It was important to stay calm and actually I think it gives me more confidence winning this way.

"I had to stay calm, fight through the match and find a way and then the last set and a half were much better. So, I'm actually pretty happy now."

source: http://edition.cnn.com/2014/06/12/sport/tennis/rafael-nadal-andy-murray-tennis/index.html?hpt=hp_t3

Thursday, June 12, 2014

Andy Murray serves up a sharp new look for new tennis coach Amelie Mauresmo

 Andy Murray’s new French coach Amelie Mauresmo appears to be giving him tips on personal grooming as well as sharpening up his game on the tennis court.

On Tuesday, the British No. 1 looked more surfer than tennis star as he practiced his volleys looking unshaven with an unruly mop of curly hair during training at Queen’s Club.

But the following day, Murray had undergone a dramatic image transformation for his new coach, as he appeared on court clean shaven with a tidy new haircut.

Whether or not it was the presence of a female coach, Murray’s girlfriend Kim Sears kept a close eye on the Scotsman as he won his first match of the grass court season against Paul Henri-Mathieu.

The Olympic and Wimbledon champion disclosed his girlfriend does not attend many of his tournaments, as he claims being away from one another was "good" for their relationship. 

read more: www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/tennis/andymurray/10893032/Andy-Murray-serves-up-a-sharp-new-look-for-new-tennis-coach-Amelie-Mauresmo.html

Monday, June 9, 2014

Tennis: Nadal wins ninth French Open

Trying to beat Rafael Nadal at the French Open is, without a doubt, the toughest task in tennis. Indeed, must be among the greatest challenges in all of sports.

The pressure he applies, from set to set, game to game, point to point, shot to shot. That bullwhip of a high-bouncing, topspin lefty forehand. Those quick-reflex returns that help him break an opponent's serve - and his will.

Doing what he does so well on the red clay of Roland Garros, a surface and site he dominates so completely, the No. 1-seeded Nadal wore down No. 2 Novak Djokovic 3-6, 7-5, 6-2, 6-4 today to win his ninth French Open championship and fifth in a row, both records.

"For me," Nadal said, "playing here in Roland Garros is just unforgettable, forever."

It is also his 14th Grand Slam title overall, tying the 28-year-old Spaniard with Pete Sampras for the second most by a man, behind only Roger Federer's 17.

That includes two trophies for Nadal at Wimbledon and one apiece at the U.S. Open and Australian Open, proving he can beat the best on grass and hard courts, too. But it's on the clay of Paris where Nadal reigns supreme: He has won 66 of his 67 career matches at the French Open.

And since his only defeat, against Robin Soderling in the fourth round in 2009, Nadal has won 35 consecutive matches at Roland Garros.

"It's not impossible, but it's very, very difficult to stay with Rafa in this court, throughout the whole match, on the highest level of performance," said Djokovic, who was broken in the final game of each set, including with an anticlimactic double-fault on match point after fans shouted during the Serb's service motion. "It's normal that you have ups and downs."

Nadal ensured that he, not Djokovic, will be ranked No. 1 on Monday. And in the process, Nadal once again prevented six-time major champion Djokovic from completing a career Grand Slam.

"Sorry for him today. I think he deserves to win this tournament," Nadal said. "I am sure he will do it in the future."

Djokovic had won their four most recent matches, including on clay in the best-of-three-set final at Rome last month, but beating Nadal in the best-of-five format at the French Open is a whole other matter.

Nadal also beat Djokovic in the 2012 final, and the 2013 semifinals. In all, Nadal leads Djokovic 6-0 at the French Open, 9-3 at major tournaments, and 23-19 in total. No other pair of men has played each other as often.

For 3 1/2 hours Sunday, when the sky was crystal clear and the temperature touched 80 degrees (27 Celsius), Djokovic gave everything he had, even spitting up on court in the final set.

"I played at the maximum of my power, my strength, and my capability," Djokovic said, "but Rafa was the best player on the court."

Using his backhand to great effect against Nadal's forehand early, Djokovic grabbed the first set, and got to 5-all in the second. That is when everything changed. Knowing that overcoming a two-set hole might be too much even for him, Nadal raised his level, taking 20 of 26 points to claim that set and a 3-0 lead in the third.

When a down-the-line forehand winner ended the second set, Nadal leaped and shook both fists, his first sign of real emotion. Djokovic, meanwhile, was his usual animated self. He rapped his knuckles on his temple. He chastised himself aloud. He spiked his racket, drawing whistles from spectators.

"The momentum went (to) his side," Djokovic said. "I started playing quite bad and didn't move as well. Struggled a little bit physically throughout that third set."

That was apparent. His cheeks were flushed. He put his hand on his heaving chest. He wobbled and nearly fell over while sitting on his changeover bench. Later, he dumped water on his head and arms.

Still, after trailing 4-2 in the fourth, Djokovic made one last stand. As skilled a retriever as his formidable foe - Djokovic won 10 of the first 15 points that lasted at least 10 strokes - he came up with a desperation defensive lob that landed right near the baseline, drawing a netted overhead from Nadal to earn a break point. When Djokovic produced a terrific return that led to an errant forehand, he looked skyward. Now it was 4-all.

But Nadal steadied himself to hold to 5-4, then broke one last time. Soon enough, he was clutching the French Open trophy, his trophy.

source: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/sport/news/article.cfm?c_id=4&objectid=11270263

Friday, June 6, 2014

Ex-tennis doubles star Bob Hewitt charged with rape

Mr Hewitt, who will go on trial in February 2015, has denied the three charges, Alwyn Griebenow told the Associated Press news agency.

The charges relate to his time coaching children in South Africa in the 1980s.

Mr Hewitt, 74, won nine Grand Slam doubles and six mixed doubles titles in the 1960s and 1970s.

The Australian-born former tennis star appeared at Boksburg Magistrate's Court, Johannesburg, for the first time on Friday.

He told the court he understood the charges, his lawyer told AP, adding that his client would plead not guilty to all three charges - two of rape and one of indecent assault - at his trial.

South African media report that Mr Hewitt appeared frail in court and was aided by a walking stick. 

source: www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-27738159

Thursday, June 5, 2014

French Open: Eugenie Bouchard’s star power helping tennis development in Canada

The new president and CEO of Tennis Canada flew to Paris to get a quick taste of the French Open, but wound up staying on account of rising star Eugenie Bouchard.

“She played brilliantly,” Kelly Murumets told the Star over the phone from France.

The 20-year-old Canadian tennis player beat Spain’s Carla Suarez Navarro in three sets in the quarter-finals, convincing Murumets to spend another day in Paris.

If Bouchard is able to defeat her one-time idol and four-time Grand Slam winner Maria Sharapova in the semifinals Thursday, Murumets will rebook her flight again without hesitation.

It’s just a small scale example of the power Bouchard holds.

“There is no question that Genie’s going to have a huge impact in our country,” Murumets said.

In many ways, she already has.

In January, Bouchard’s first Grand Slam semifinal at the Australian Open (which she lost in straight sets to Li Na) was the most-watched broadcast for that Grand Slam in Canadian history, said Vijay Setlur, sport marketing instructor at York University’s Schulich School of Business.

And even though she’ll play Sharapova on a weekday morning at 9 a.m. ET, Setlur said he could “still see it drawing in the millions.”

read more: http://www.thestar.com/sports/tennis/2014/06/05/french_open_eugenie_bouchards_star_power_helping_tennis_canada.html

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Sharapova holds off Muguruza, will face Bouchard in French Open semifinals

PARIS (AP) -- This is what Maria Sharapova does. She digs herself a big hole in a match, then figures a way out, no matter what it takes.

She hits shots left-handed. Takes her time between points. Pumps her fists and screams ''Come on!'' after her opponent's mistakes. And wins.

Did it in the fourth round at the French Open, turning things around by winning the last nine games. Did it Tuesday, too, reeling off nine of the last 10 games to put together a 1-6, 7-5, 6-1 victory over 35th-ranked Garbine Muguruza of Spain that put 2012 champion Sharapova in the semifinals at Roland Garros for the fourth consecutive year.

''When you just don't feel like anything is going your way, you want to try to find a little door to get into,'' Sharapova said. ''Once you start feeling, you know, like you got your foot in the door, then it's a little bit easier.''

After beating one 20-year-old, Sharapova now faces another, 18th-seeded Eugenie Bouchard of Canada, who earned a semifinal spot for the second straight Grand Slam tournament.

source: http://www.tennis.com/pro-game/2014/06/sharapova-advances-to-french-open-semifinals/51652/#.U4-f9ij57jt

Monday, June 2, 2014

French Open: Milos Raonic, Bouchard advance, Federer out

Milos Raonic and Eugenie Bouchard made history for Canada on Sunday as both powered into the quarter-finals of the French Open.

Eighth-seeded Raonic, from Thornhill, Ont., dispatched Spain's Marcel Granollers 6-3, 6-3, 6-3, while Bouchard cruised past Germany's Angelique Kerber 6-1, 6-2.

"I'm not surprised to make by first Grand Slam quarter-final but I would not have thought I would have done it first here on clay," said Raonic. "I've always felt I could play well on clay.

"The key is not making much of a change in my game just for the clay. I've been trying to keep what I've been doing on the hardcourts.

Raonic will be the first Canadian man to play a Grand Slam quarter-final since Mike Belkin at the 1968 Australia Open. He is also the fourth Canadian man in history to reach the last eight at a major: Robert Powell (1908, 1910 and 1912 Wimbledon), William Johnston (1922-23 US Championships) and Belkin.

read more: http://www.cbc.ca/sports/tennis/french-open-milos-raonic-bouchard-advance-federer-out-1.2661187

Thursday, May 29, 2014

Think U.S. Men's Tennis Is in a Slump? Look at Post-WWII France

With every major tennis tournament come the lamentations over the sorry state of American men’s tennis.

 
With the French Open getting underway this week, right on cue came the all but inevitable “pre-mortem” inquest into the lowly rankings of the American men: No American has won a Grand Slam event singles title since Andy Roddick in 2003 at the U.S. Open, and with no American men ranked in the ATP’s top 10 (Switzerland and Spain each have two) and only one—John Isner, ranked number 11—in the top 60, Christopher Clarey’s status report in The New York Times was appropriately headlined "Once a Force in Tennis, Now Enduring a Grand Slam Drought.”

 
It made for especially dispiriting reading on the 25th anniversary of Michael Chang's upset French Open victory in 1989, one of the true highlights of the American experience on the red clay courts of the Stade Roland Garros. And the reasons given for the American fall from the top ranks of men’s tennis suggest that a quick recovery is not likely. (Serena Williams aside, the picture is not much brighter for American women—and Williams herself lost her second-round match this week.)
 
As Clarey wrote, coaches and former players, including Jim Courier, winner of the French Open in 1991 and 1992, “see a lack of world-class work ethic and toughness in too many of the young Americans. … ‘There are plenty of talented players who are not getting the most out of their talent,’ Courier said.” Jose Higueras, a Spanish player who won 16 tour titles and reached two French Open semi-finals, and who now is involved in player development work for the United States Tennis Association, has expressed similar sentiments:. “We are lacking competitiveness in our players,” he said. “They’ve got good backhands and forehands and serves, but they lack an understanding of how the game needs to be played. We have good coaches, but the culture of our players needs to improve.” 

read more: http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2014/05/think-us-mens-tennis-is-in-a-slump-look-at-post-wwii-france/371753/

Friday, May 23, 2014

Sweet 16: It's time for tennis Grand Slams to ditch the 32-seed draw


In 2001, the four tennis Grand Slams doubled the number of seeds at their respective tournaments, from 16 to 32. Whereas the old system could have pitted the No. 1 player in the world against No. 17 in a first-round match, the new way ensured that none of the top-32 players in the draw would meet before the third round.

The balanced draw, which theoretically leads to better matches in the later rounds, has worked out fine. It’s neither been a boon nor a disaster. Whether it’s better for the sport, however, is open for debate.

When the French Open draw was unveiled Friday, the lack of compelling first- and second-round matches was immediately apparent. Diehard tennis fans may enjoy Richard Gasquet vs. Bernard Tomic or Ana Ivanovic vs. Caroline Garcia, but there’s no matchups to capture the interest of the casual fan. The only way the non-tennis world will hear about the opening days at Roland Garros will be due to a massive upset or Venus Williams wearing another revealing dress. By protecting the later rounds, tennis has made the opening rounds irrelevant.

How much are the early rounds really protected? Were top players losing so much that they needed more breathing room in the first two rounds?

Not at all. Even before the seeding change, the best in the world rarely exited Grand Slams early. It’s not as if there were giant killers lurking in the lower reaches of the top 20 and biding their time for the perfect first-round upset.

 

Thursday, May 22, 2014

David Beckham team to reveal soccer stadium design for Miami boat slip site

One of David Beckham's chief investors and their representatives plan to make public Thursday preliminary designs of what a Major League Soccer stadium would look like if it were built on what is now a downtown Miami deep-water boat slip.
Billionaire Marcelo Claure and Beckham's real-estate adviser are expected to present the images at a noon news conference at the InterContinental Hotel on Biscayne Boulevard, down the street from the proposed stadium site.
The release of the drawings is intended to give the public an idea of how the structure could look if the water basin nestled between Museum Park and AmericanAirlines Arena were filled.

Already, proponents have circulated their own amateur designs of a possible stadium to drum up support. More troubling for Beckham's group, opponents have done the same thing, to show a stadium they consider out of place.
No one expects the drawings to resemble the relatively detailed renderings that Miami Beckham United had put together for the first stadium site the group eyed at PortMiami. Those designs, by renowned Miami firm Arquitectonica, and other analysis of the port location cost about $2 million, Beckham representatives have said.

read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/05/22/4131088/david-beckham-team-to-reveal-soccer.html

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Consulting Firms Kalypso, Integware Merge


 BEACHWOOD, Ohio — Continuing its growth as the firm approaches its tenth anniversary, Kalypso announced today that it has merged with Integware, a consulting firm with expertise in product lifecycle management (PLM).

Kalypso delivers a comprehensive set of services that enable innovation, including objective PLM technology strategy and implementation services. With the addition of Integware, the combined firm can provide clients with a broader set of capabilities to drive real business results from PLM.

“Kalypso and its seasoned leadership team have done a fantastic job building a solid and successful operation that provides superior innovation services to the market,” said Chris Kay, CEO of Integware and new partner at Kalypso. “I’m confident that by merging the two firms we can deliver a more comprehensive solution to our clients.”

Integware, known for its PLM expertise particularly in the life sciences industry, has served a global customer base with strategy, consulting, deployment, support and training services. In addition to life sciences, the merger expands the firms’ presence in the aerospace and defense, automotive, and energy industries. Together, the two firms have extensive knowledge of, and implementation experience with, all of the leading PLM and product innovation software providers, including Oracle, PTC, Dassault Systèmes, Siemens, Autodesk and Aras.

“We are thrilled to have the Integware team join the Kalypso family. With this combination, we believe that we are the only firm in the market with legitimate technical depth on every major PLM platform,” said Bill Poston, managing partner of Kalypso. “We want to be the world’s most respected provider of objective PLM technology advisory and implementation services. Integware takes us a big step closer to realizing that vision.”

read more: http://www.heraldonline.com/2014/05/21/5984909/consulting-firms-kalypso-integware.html?sp=/100/773/385/