3 former champions return to 2024 Dubai Tennis Championships

3 former champions return to 2024 Dubai Tennis Championships
Daniil Medvedev poses with the the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships trophy after his triumph last year. (Supplied)
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Updated 03 February 2024
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3 former champions return to 2024 Dubai Tennis Championships

3 former champions return to 2024 Dubai Tennis Championships
  • Reigning champion Daniil Medvedev, 2022 winner Andrey Rublev, 2017 champion Andy Murray will compete at ATP 500 event from Feb. 26 - March 2
  • Dubai women’s event, recently awarded permanent WTA 1000 status, will run 1 week prior to ATP event, from Feb. 18-24

DUBAI: The Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships will welcome three former champions for the ATP 500 tournament later this month.

Reigning champion Daniil Medvedev – a recent Australian Open finalist – and 2022 winner Andrey Rublev will be joined in the emirate by Andy Murray, a two-time Wimbledon champion and Olympic gold medallist.

Medvedev will have his eye on more success in Dubai, with Italian sensation Jannik Sinner stunning the Russian with an epic five-set comeback win to clinch his first Grand Slam in Melbourne last month.

Medvedev, 27, will be looking to build on a remarkable 2023 season, during which he won five titles, reached two Grand Slam finals, and ended the year as world No. 3.

Rublev, meanwhile, reached the 50-wins mark for the third straight season in 2023, while breaking new ground by claiming his first ATP Masters 1000 title in Monte Carlo. The 26-year-old also lifted the Bastad trophy with a straight sets victory over Casper Ruud, the third time in four years that he has claimed multiple tour-level crowns.

It is two years since Murray’s last appearance in Dubai and seven since he became the first Briton to win Dubai’s annual tennis showpiece. He will join three of the world’s top 10 ATP players when the tournament’s 32nd edition takes place from Feb. 26 to March 2.

Murray, the Scotland-born three-time Grand Slam winner, is set to make his eighth appearance at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Stadium, with world No. 8 Hubert Hurkacz, the 2021 Wimbledon semi-finalist, also part of the experienced line-up.

Colm McLoughlin, executive vice chairman and CEO of Dubai Duty Free, said: “We are thrilled to have three former champions in Andy, Andrey, and Daniil participating, further underlining the regard in which this tournament is held.”

Other notable names who will feature in the men’s tournament include last year’s Australian Open semi-finalist and current world No. 18 Karen Khachanov, five-time ATP Tour singles title winner Adrian Mannarino, currently ranked No. 17 in the world, and former Wimbledon finalist and Australian Open semi-finalist Milos Raonic.

Salah Tahlak, joint chief operating officer of Dubai Duty Free and tournament director of the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships, said: “We’re delighted to welcome Andy, Andrey, and Daniil back to Dubai this year.

“They are all extremely popular figures among the tennis fraternity, so having these types of players competing in the tournament is great news for us.”

Meanwhile, a star-studded Women’s Tennis Association line-up will see 17 of the world’s top 20 players descend on Dubai for the 24th edition of the WTA Tour tournament – recently awarded permanent WTA 1000 status.

Nine of the world’s top 10 female players will be in the emirate for the latest instalment of the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships; world No. 1 Iga Swiatek, No. 2 Aryna Sabalenka, fresh from securing her second successive Australian Open crown, and No. 3 Coco Gauff lead the impressive pack.


World No. 1 Jannik Sinner out of Paris Masters with ‘virus’

World No. 1 Jannik Sinner out of Paris Masters with ‘virus’
Updated 29 October 2024
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World No. 1 Jannik Sinner out of Paris Masters with ‘virus’

World No. 1 Jannik Sinner out of Paris Masters with ‘virus’
  • World number one replaced in the draw by Frenchman Arthur Cazaux, who was drafted in from qualifying
  • Organizers say Jannik Sinner was ‘suffering from an intestinal virus contracted before he arrived in Paris’

PARIS: World number one Jannik Sinner has withdrawn from the Paris Masters indoor event due to an “intestinal virus,” the tournament organizers announced on Tuesday.
Sinner, assured since mid-October of finishing the year top of the rankings for the first time in his career at the age of 23, has been replaced in the draw by Frenchman Arthur Cazaux, who was drafted in from qualifying.
Cazaux will face either his compatriot Corentin Moutet or American Ben Shelton in his second round opener on Tuesday.
Organizers said Sinner was “suffering from an intestinal virus contracted before he arrived in Paris.”
The major objective at the end of his season, the Masters in Turin, which brings together the eight best players of the year, is scheduled for November 10-17.
He is then expected to take part in the Davis Cup finals the following week in Malaga, Spain. Italy are the defending champions.
Sinner enjoyed a sparkling 2024 season, winning his first two Grand Slam titles, at the Australian Open and the US Open.
In all, he has won seven tournaments since the start of the season, including three Masters 1000 titles, in Miami, Cincinnati and Shanghai.
However he is under the threat of suspension in a doping case that came to light several weeks ago, following an appeal by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).
Sinner has a chequered history with the Paris indoor tournament — a year ago, he withdrew before his second match.


Olympic champion Zheng wins in Tokyo for third title of year

Olympic champion Zheng wins in Tokyo for third title of year
Updated 27 October 2024
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Olympic champion Zheng wins in Tokyo for third title of year

Olympic champion Zheng wins in Tokyo for third title of year
  • The win extended world No. 7 Zheng’s impressive run of form this year
  • She also won in Palermo and finished runner-up in Wuhan and at the Australian Open

TOKYO: Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen won the Pan Pacific Open in Tokyo on Sunday for her third title of the year, beating Sofia Kenin 7-6 (7/5), 6-3 in the final.

China’s Zheng, the tournament’s top seed, kept her cool to edge a tight first set despite two rain delays, before pressing home her advantage to take the second comfortably.

The win extended world No. 7 Zheng’s impressive run of form this year after she became the first Chinese player to win an Olympic singles tennis gold when she triumphed in Paris.

She also won in Palermo and finished runner-up in Wuhan and at the Australian Open.

Kenin, the 2020 Australian Open champion, was in doubt after retiring from her doubles semifinal on Saturday with a leg injury.

The American played the final with heavy strapping on her upper leg but showed no outward signs of discomfort.

It was world No. 155 Kenin’s first final of 2024.

She was looking to end a title drought that stretches back more than four years.

Neither player was allowed to get into a rhythm early in the match as rain twice brought play to a halt in Tokyo.

The roof was eventually closed and Zheng edged ahead with the slimmest of margins to take the first set in a tiebreak.

Backed by a large contingent of Chinese fans, the 22-year-old took control of the second set early.

She hit a total of 16 aces in the match and closed it out when Kenin hit a return long.


Former Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin advances to the WTA tournament final in Tokyo

Former Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin advances to the WTA tournament final in Tokyo
Updated 26 October 2024
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Former Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin advances to the WTA tournament final in Tokyo

Former Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin advances to the WTA tournament final in Tokyo
  • American Sofia Kenin won the Australian Open in 2020 and was a French Open finalist the same year

TOKYO: Former Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin has advanced to the final of the Pan Pacific Open with a 6-4, 6-4 win over ninth-seeded Katie Boulter on Saturday.
Kenin, who won the Australian Open in 2020 and was a French Open finalist the same year, broke the British player’s serve in the seventh game of the second set and the American served out to win the match for her best tournament performance of the season.
Later, No. 1 seed and Paris Olympic gold medalist Zheng Qinwen was scheduled to play Diana Shnaider for a place in Sunday’s final against Kenin.
The 25-year-old Kenin was ranked as high as No. 4 early in 2020, but a series of injuries, including ankle and quadricep ailments, has seen her WTA ranking drop to its current 155.
Boulter, ranked 33rd, had not lost a set during the Tokyo hard-court tournament.
Kenin beat Boulter in the only other time they have played but it was when Boulter retired with an injury in the second set while trailing 4-1 to Kenin after losing the first set in Acapulco in 2019.
Boulter beat 2019 US Open champion Bianca Andreescu on Friday in the quarterfinals.


Maria Sharapova and the Bryan brothers are elected to the International Tennis Hall of Fame

Maria Sharapova and the Bryan brothers are elected to the International Tennis Hall of Fame
Updated 25 October 2024
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Maria Sharapova and the Bryan brothers are elected to the International Tennis Hall of Fame

Maria Sharapova and the Bryan brothers are elected to the International Tennis Hall of Fame
  • Sharapova won at least one championship at each of her sport’s four most prestigious events, making her one of 10 women in tennis history to complete a career Grand Slam
  • She was the first Russian woman to reach No. 1 in the WTA singles rankings
  • The Bryan brothers also compiled a career Grand Slam and spent 438 weeks at No. 1 in the ATP doubles rankings

NEW YORK: Maria Sharapova, a five-time Grand Slam singles champion known for plenty of on-court grit and off-court attention, and Bob and Mike Bryan, twins who won a record 16 major titles in men’s doubles together, are first-ballot selections for the International Tennis Hall of Fame.

The Newport, Rhode Island-based Hall announced the Class of 2025 on Thursday.

Sharapova won at least one championship at each of her sport’s four most prestigious events, making her one of 10 women in tennis history to complete a career Grand Slam, and she was the first Russian woman to reach No. 1 in the WTA singles rankings. She retired in 2020 at age 32 after a career that included 15 years in the spotlight, a 15-month doping ban and multiple operations on her right shoulder.

In a message posted on social media, Sharapova called herself “incredibly grateful to receive this honor.”

The Bryan brothers also compiled a career Grand Slam and spent 438 weeks at No. 1 in the ATP doubles rankings. They won a gold medal at the 2012 London Olympics and helped the United States win the 2007 Davis Cup title; Bob is currently the captain of the American team that will go to Malaga, Spain, for next month’s finals to compete for the country’s first triumph in that competition since then.

Mike Bryan — he’s right-handed, and his brother is a lefty — is the career leader with 18 major men’s doubles trophies overall; he got two with Jack Sock while Bob was injured in 2018.

“We are truly humbled and grateful to receive this honor. Though making it to Newport was never our goal, being included among so many of our idols and role models is incredibly special,” Bob Bryan wrote in a text message to The Associated Press on Thursday. “Mike and I continue to be best friends, and we feel lucky to have been able to ride this tennis rollercoaster together.”

Sharapova became an instant star when she won her first major title at Wimbledon in 2004 at age 17 by beating Serena Williams in the final, then collected the trophies at the US Open in 2006, the Australian Open in 2008 and the French Open in 2012 and 2014.

Sharapova helped Russia win the team competition now known as the Billie Jean King Cup in 2008, and she claimed a silver medal in singles at the 2012 Olympics, losing to Williams in the final.

All the while, Sharapova earned millions of dollars more in endorsement deals than prize money.

“There are a couple of sides of me,” Sharapova said in an interview with the AP in 2006, shortly before she won the title at Flushing Meadows. “There’s the Maria that’s a tennis player. There’s the Maria that is a normal girl. And there’s the Maria who’s a businesswoman. And that’s where the ‘Maria Sharapova brand’ comes into play.”

At the 2016 Australian Open, Sharapova tested positive for the newly banned drug meldonium and initially was handed a two-year suspension. After appealing to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, Sharapova was given a reduced penalty when it was determined that she bore “less than significant fault” in the case and could not “be considered to be an intentional doper.”

The Bryans and Sharapova will be inducted in August.

“We are thankful to so many people who supported us along the way, and we look forward to sharing this moment with them next year,” Bob Bryan wrote. ”Our parents created a magical environment at their club and made tennis fun for us. They helped us fall in love with the game, so tennis never felt like work; it was always play.”

Daniel Nestor, a Canadian who won 12 Grand Slam titles in men’s or mixed doubles, did not receive the 75 percenet of the vote required to qualify for the Hall in balloting among members of the media, historians, Hall of Fame members, industry experts and fans. This was his third — and final — year as a candidate.


Wawrinka outlasts Mannarino at Swiss Indoors and Rublev advances

Wawrinka outlasts Mannarino at Swiss Indoors and Rublev advances
Updated 24 October 2024
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Wawrinka outlasts Mannarino at Swiss Indoors and Rublev advances

Wawrinka outlasts Mannarino at Swiss Indoors and Rublev advances
  • Playing in front of a home crowd, the 39-year-old Wawrinka earned his first win over Mannarino after having lost to the Frenchman three times
  • Two-time defending champion Felix Auger-Aliassime defeated Sebastian Baez 7-5, 6-1

BASEL, Switzerland: Stan Wawrinka became the oldest match-winner in the Swiss Indoors tournament history when he outlasted Adrian Mannarino 6-3, 3-6, 7-5 on Wednesday.

Playing in front of a home crowd, the 39-year-old Wawrinka earned his first win over Mannarino after having lost to the Frenchman three times.

Wawrinka will next face 22-year-old Ben Shelton for a spot in the quarterfinals.

Also Wednesday, top-seeded Andrey Rublev beat Alejandro Tabilo 7-6 (3), 6-1 to reach his 13th quarterfinal of the season.

Roberto Bautista Agut beat second-seeded Casper Ruud 6-3, 3-6, 6-3.

Two-time defending champion Felix Auger-Aliassime defeated Sebastian Baez 7-5, 6-1.

David Goffin and Pedro Martinez also advanced.