Tag Archives: Mardy Fish

summer fun begins

The US Open Series kicked off in Atlanta last week and now comes the part of the year where we are promised a final every Sunday.  Also, new this year, the addition of a tournament in Winston Salem.  Both ESPN and Tennis Channel are giving coverage of these events.

They call it Hotlanta, but the way the weather is in most of the country it’s not especially notable this July.  Still, Hotlanta did deliver heat and humidity and the oncourt temperature for the final yesterday was over 110 degrees.  Both John Isner and Mardy Fish are Floridians, Mardy grew up there and John lives there, so I’m not sure why Isner wilted in the heat, but he did and it lost him the match.

He won the first set 6-3, got a break in the second which Mardy got right back and would usually win the tiebreak that was to decide it.  And how many times does Isner lose a set when he’s up 5-1 in the tiebreak.  Isner even had the match on his racquet at 6-4 in the tiebreak, but Mardy won the next four points and denied him.

The third set and the match went to Mardy, an easy 6-2.  Gotta hand it to Fish, some very clutch tennis. And he takes home this title for the second year in a row; his opponent last year was Isner as well.

Mardy is currently the highest ranked American, taking the mantle from Roddick who held it for over a decade,  and he’s number 9 in the world.  What we get to watch now is him owning it and I think there was a bit of that yesterday in Atlanta.  Coming up with the goods when it really mattered, showing the kind of confidence you rightly possess at the top of the game.  He’s got the shoes on now, he just needs to get comfortable in them.

In Europe, the end of clay.  Almagro vs. Simon in the final in Hamburg and Simon took it in a match that had a few momentum shifts and went three sets.  Gilles now becomes number 11 in the world and he started the year at 44.  Last week he had to beat Stakhovsky, Niemenen and then Monfils to get to the final, tough tennis all the way.

This week it’s Los Angeles for the men and Stanford for the women.  The buzz on the latter is a predicted match between unseeded Serena Williams and sixth seed Julia Georges, a second round match.  Adds some interest, to be sure.

Thanks for reading Cupcakes and Tennis, the tennis blog with a sweet spot.  See you soon!

down to the wire

Okay, let’s start right up front with the men’s semi-finals decided just moments ago by the outcome of the Nadal/Berdych match played in front of a totally packed house.  Nadal won in three sets.  The first he played like a maestro, and then he had to fight for the rest of the match.  It looked like maybe he had the same stiff neck after the first set that prevented Gilles Simon from playing his full match against Roger this afternoon (he retired at 3-0 in the first set to the great displeasure of the crowd; they booed as he left the court which I thought was bad form, the guy would not have left the court if he could have played).  Still, Rafa won, whatever the physical difficulty was, and tomorrow night I will be there along with thousands of others to watch Rafa and Roger play for the first time in North America since 2005.  This is real tennis excitement.

And I love that of the final four, you’ve got Rafa, Roger, Novak Djokovic, the top three players in the world and who else?  Number fourteen, Mardy Fish!  Go Fish.  Love Mardy.  I don’t think he’ll win against Novak, who is unbeaten this year.  That’s right. Twenty matches, twenty wins.  Or is it twenty one?  That kind of winning streak does not happen often.  John McEnroe had a 39 match winning streak, and someone else almost as many, not remembering right now.

I do have to say that Brad Gilbert is truly impressive when it comes to knowing tennis history.  Last night, when Cliijsters was down 1-5 in the second set against Azarenka, Mary Joe Fernandez was asking about other consecutive match dig outs (Kim had saved five match points the night before against Ivanovic.) and Gilbert came up with some pretty obtuse information and he was right.

Kim lost last night.  She seemed flat after her late match the previous day and only at the end when defeat seemed a short step away did she rally.  There comes a point in many matches when the loss is nearly inevitable and it’s always interesting to watch how the almost defeated player just loosens up and goes for his or her shots, what the hell, and often it can turn a match around.  One thing I think is clearer when you are watching tennis live is the mental game.  You can follow that thread more easily, you can see the players during the changeovers, you can see a lot of things you don’t/can’t see on television.  You can just read that story in a way you can’t otherwise and tennis is such a mental game, it’s a huge part of it to be able to know what’s going with the players internally.

Back to Mardy Fish for a moment.  I didn’t give him much of a chance against Del Potro and he pulled that out, so who knows?  Still, I love it that Mardy is in the semis.  If he wins tomorrow, he’ll be in the top ten, a major goal of his.  I don’t know what the weather conditions will be for their afternoon match.  Today it was just plain a bitch for Sharapova and Petkovic.  The wind was constant and strong, it was extremely hot and humid.  Petko played a great first set and then just went away.  So Maria is in the final, and will be in the top ten for the first time in over two years.

She’ll play either Azarenka or Zvonareva who are doing battle as we speak.  God help us if it’s Victoria because she shrieks as loud as Maria.  Vera is quiet.  Please win Vera, tonight and Saturday.

The stadium looks different on television than it does in person.  On tv, it looks huge and kind of stretched out.  Actually, it’s a good size but still feels intimate.  As I wrote earlier, I like it the best of the three large tennis stadiums in the U.S.

I’m going to check on Vera and Victoria, then catch some sleep.  Big tennis tomorrow.

tennis and traffic

A lot more traffic going to the tennis today.  It kept feeling like a Saturday.  The skies were blue, nary a cloud and after a few hours, boy, you’re toast under the strong sun.   But the tennis was fun.  The best match I saw was between James Blake and Thomas Bellucci, a Brazilian player.   I didn’t necessarily think it would be much, but I was comfortably ensconced in the higher bleachers of Court 2, having just watched Mardy Fish play a second set and win his match, and so I stayed on, chatting with a woman from Milwaukee who was there with her grown daughter, the two of them grabbing some time together.

The line-up today on Court 2 was almost all Americans.  First Mardy, against Benneteau.  Then James against the Brazilian.  After that, Wawrinka and Granollers, no Yanks there.  Next Sam Querry.  Finally, John Isner.

Blake and Bellucci played to a packed crowd, bleachers on all four sides of this court.  I thought James would have a distinct hometown advantage, but this is Miami, it’s half Latin and South American.  There were so many Brazilians, it sounded like World Cup.  And without Hawkeye, there were a number of disputed calls that got the crowd riled.  Those Brazilians know how to whistle and boo, wave a flag and throw down a cheer.  It made for a great atmosphere.

And after losing the first set, Blake won the second, but barely.  The third set went to a tiebreak and at 6-3, James had three match points, the last on his serve, and he failed to convert any of them.  He secured another match point at 7-6 and brought it home.  It was just what you want from a match, excitement, great hitting from both players, some stakes.  I don’t know Bellucci’s story, but Blake is competing on a wild card entry, no longer within the top 100.  He’s a former number four player, I think.  I could be wrong about that, maybe not quite that high, but high.  So this is a comeback story and you could see how much it meant to him when he managed to close the door on match point number four.

But, prepare to go home, James.  I don’t think he’ll beat Novak Djokovic, his next opponent.

From where I was sitting on Court 2, you get a good view of the action on Court 8 as well.  Dominique Cibulkova was playing Tamara Bacsinksky of Switzerland.  I’ve written about Dominique before, tiny and feisty, and there she was with her long single blond braid down her back, scrambling all over and giving game.  The match seemed to go on forever and I couldn’t see the scoreboard clearly so I just kept watching even though I had no idea where they were.  Clearly it was close, clearly it had gone to a third set.  And then, finally, I saw Dominique hit a volley into the open court and the match was over.  Glad to see her win.

I wanted to see Milos Raonic play today, but it was at the same time as Mardy Fish’s match and you can’t get a seat in the Grandstand court with your back to the sun, those are preferred (duh).  And I won’t get a chance to see him play here because he lost to Devvarman, the Indian player who is on a winning streak.  And Soderling nearly lost early in the day as well.  He was down 4-0 in the third to a Croatian player named Dodig but fought back to win it.  I figured something had to have kicked in there, that kind of I’m not going down to number 60 in the world, not going to happen thing.  I like to see Soderling play so I wanted him to win.  He’ll play either del Potro or Kohlschreiber next, at the moment those two are in a decisive third set.  I hope it’s Delpo so we can see Robin and him in a huge forehand to forehand slugfest.

Tomorrow the biggest guns.  Federer on court for the first time, against Stepanek who can and may give him trouble.  Nadal on court at night.  And I hope to see Baghdatis against Olivier Rochus, that has to be entertaining.

More from Miami later.

and the hits just keep on coming

I fell asleep last night to the sound of David Ferrer and Alexander Dolgopolov battling out a semi-final match in Acapulco.  Ferrer is the defending champion and is not called the pit bull for nothing.  I love the guy.  Dolgopolov has been getting noticed slowly last year and really came up for air at the Aussie Open.  I cottoned on to him during the summer hard court season last year.  He’s a fascinating newcomer.  If Raonic is the gentle giant, Dolgopolov is like a bouncy road runner and apparently just that crazy as well.  Andy Roddick played him for the first time in Brisbane in January prior to Melbourne and said he’s aggressive to the point of psychosis.  Now what other player would give you that kind of accuracy and wit?   I really hope Andy commentates after he hangs up his racquets.

Back to this young 22 year old Ukrainian.  Friends call him Sasha, on the tour he is known as Dolgo, or, even shorter and easier, the Dog.  Unlike Raonic, who is even younger, this fellow does show the inconsistency of a newcomer.  But then he produces jaw dropping brilliance and completely befuddles his opponents and the spectators.  You really don’t know what’s coming or when.  In a tight first set, the Dog won it by serving and volleying on a second serve.  No one does that.

He speaks English well, having lived in New Jersey for awhile.  He may still live there, I’m not sure.  He looks like he wouldn’t be able to hit ten balls off a backboard, he’s so small, petite even.  I suspect his hair is half way down his back when it’s loose.  And when he was playing Wawrinka the night before, it was hard to say which face was more pockmarked.

Ferrer did win the match, got on top in sets two and three and took them 6-1, 6-1, so that’s the difference in this case between steady persistence and the hand of experience vs. flamboyance and it’s all new to me land.  But keep your eye on this guy, he’s fun to watch.  I’ll be looking for both his and Raonic’s matches in Miami, and I’m sure a lot of others will join me.

Tonight Ferrer will face Almagro in the final, not a match to miss.  Almagro is having a fantastic year, on a twelve match winning streak.  I remember seeing him play on one of the outer courts at Wimbledon, when he was still chunky and kind of playing at things and I wasn’t sure if I liked him or not.  But he’s a top notch player especially now that he slimmed down and decided to take it seriously.  Tough to call the winner.

Over in Dubai, Roger Federer never seemed to quite put it together in the final against Novak Djokovic.  You kept thinking, hoping he would ignite, pull out in front and never look back.  But Novak is really playing exceptionally well; for every crappy serve he made last year, he’s throwing in an amazing bomb now.  When you follow the sport over some years and the players over some years, it really is interesting to see the patches they go through, the ups and downs and how they manifest themselves, in the serve, in the ground game, in the mental game.  Dinara Safina was number one for a time, not so long ago, and now she has fallen into the two hundreds I believe.

Ferrer won the final in Acapulco and that was no gimme.  Almagro had a 5-2 lead in the first set and then David fought back and took it to a tiebreak which he won.  He broke Nico in the first game of the second set, but then Almagro woke up, got out of his funk over having lost the first set, a set he should have won, and went on to take the second in another tiebreak.   Ferrer never gives up and now that the crowd was satisfied they would get a third set, they stopped chanting for Nico so much (he’s a lot of work, that guy, it was exhausting to get him to dig in for the second set…)and got behind Dabeeed a little more.  Anything Ferrer wins, he deserves to win.  He’s one of the hardest working players, his forearms look like rope, and if there is one guy to learn from when it comes to steady as she goes and keep your mental focus, David is it.   He took the set 6-2 and won the championship for a second year in a row.

There was tennis in Delray Beach and that’s where Juan Martin del Potro was playing.  His semi-final match against Mardy Fish was his biggest comeback test so far and he won.  Mardy apparently thought a strategy of hold my own serve and wait for a few mistakes from Delpo would get the job done but after losing the first set, he reconsidered and got more aggressive.  It wasn’t enough, and I’m always sorry to see Mardy lose, another of my favorites.

Juan Martin faced Janko Tipsaravic in the final and here came one of those frustrating odd matches.  Neither player had it going.  Del Potro couldn’t seem to move around the court and for the big guy that he is, he usually does move quite well.  He wasn’t firing forehand missiles either.  Janko was out of sorts in his own way.  Neither one seemed to have any energy.  Tipsaravic should have won the first set about a half hour before he lost it 6-4.  It seemed to go on and on, frustrating and painful to watch and finally I threw up my hands and said enough.  I changed the channel to E! for pre-Oscar red carpet coverage and it was a lot more interesting.  Suffice it to say, DelPotro won the match and the championship 6-4, 6-4.

Whatever else happens this year, we all want Juan Martin to regain his former glory and go further.  Prior to his wrist injury that took him off the tour for the entire year, a very long time in tennis, he was the biggest threat to the top players and a guy you could watch play all day long.  His game is a lot like Soderling’s and it’s worth going to see one or the other or both just to hear the sound of their forehands.  Even Roger doesn’t create that much power.  When Delpo won the US Open in 2009, he had to beat both Rafa and Roger, the obstacle course any challenger has to face and no one can successfully maneuver, and not only did he beat them both, he pretty much gave them a lesson.

Over in the Middle East, the women were in Doha after Dubai last week.  Wozniacki and Zvonareva made it to the finals and Vera played some fantastic tennis to take the title.  She deserved it and I was happy for her since she has lost in finals the last two times she played there, once to Venus and another time to Sharapova.  Caroline looked like she didn’t know what hit her, she’s gotten used to winning in finals.

Most of the tennis energy is focussed forward to Indian Wells in another week.  But there’s Davis Cup this week for the men (US in Chile), and the women are in Monterrey Mexico and Kuala Lumpur.

Stay tuned.  And starting in Miami,  I’ll have a new I Phone and will be tweeting.  You will be able to follow me on Twitter and/or right here at WordPress.com.  Once I set it all up, the tweets will show on the blog page and if you follow on Twitter there’ll be a link to the blog.  The age of connectivity.  Plus, I’ll have my camera in Miami, so look for on and off court visuals from that colorful city.