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CricketWeb Tennis - Season I

SirBloody Idiot

Cricketer Of The Year
CW OPEN SEMI-FINALS PREVIEW
Nixonstown, CWLand
by ATP Staff | 02.09.0I

Tennis fans are in for a treat in Nixonstown on Thursday and Friday as two Grand Slam champions, both former World No. 1s, and the top three seeds feature in semi-final action.

[1] Jason Hall (USA) vs. [3] Radek Špidlá (CZE), Thursday, Centre Court

Jason Hall
, the Australian Open champion and top seed, takes a 2-1 record against third seed Radek Špidlá into Thursday's first semifinal. In their first meeting, Hall came from a set down to claim the Australian Open crown, whilst Špidlá got his revenge in the final of Queen's Club in June. However the most decisive win came in Montréal where Hall proved too good in straight sets for the Czech giant.

Hall has been in superb form as of late; since losing in the semifinals of Wimbledon he holds a record of 16-1 and has dropped just two sets. In Nixonstown, he has not dropped a set, but has been taken to 7-5 on three occasions in his impressive run. Dropping service just four times from fifteen points, Hall has beaten Justin Williamson, Roberto Santos, Heath Davis, Dwayne Murdoch and Jefferson Drake.

Despite his exit to Hall in the semifinals of the Canada Masters, Špidlá completed his warm up by winning his first Masters Series title in Clowich. Searching for his first Grand Slam title, Špidlá has dropped just one set in his run which has included victories over Wayne Boyd, Li Ming-Wang, Björn Donaldson, Randy Smeltz and finally Rick Henson. Despite his impressive serve seeing him dominate with a tournament leading 63 aces, his season record in tiebreakers is less impressive at 11-8.

VERDICT: Both men looked unstoppable in their quarterfinal matches against formidible opposition, and this has all the makings of a classic semifinal. Many suggest the winner of this match takes the tournament, and that it is a shame that Špidlá was drawn in the top half. That being said, Hall is a tough man to bet against and is such a good returner that Špidlá's serve might be weakened. Radek still holds scars from his Grand Slam failures this year, but I think he can still take it the journey. Hall in 5 sets.

[2] Daniel Páez Blanco (ESP) vs. Oneil Stewart (JAM), Friday, Centre Court

French Open champion Daniel Páez Blanco comes into Friday's final with a 1-0 career record over Jamaica's Oneil Stewart after their only meeting at Roland Garros. There Blanco crushed Stewart in the quarterfinals 6-1, 6-3, 6-1 en route to his victory in the final over Sven Oxenstierna.

Blanco came into the tournament under an injury cloud, but has managed to do enough to win all five of his matches without being taken to a fifth set. Blanco has never made a semifinal at a hard court event (though, he did make one on the grass of Halle), however was unstoppable on clay this season with eight titles and a record of 43-0. He has dropped four sets this fortnight in his run that saw him defeat José Navarro, Jason Bradley, Morgan Carter, Henry Charles and József Boros.

Stewart is another surprising semifinals on hard courts having most of his success on clay. Despite this, he had made an appearance in the semifinals in Johannesburg. Stewart is the first unseeded player to make the semifinals of a Grand Slam, having taken victories over Radivoj Daneu, Niko Ulemek, Jojo Mustard, David Champion and Rasmus Olesen.

VERDICT: Both men have proved many of their critics wrong with their gutsy wins over the last week on a surface they have had little success on. Whilst Stewart has become a cult figure for his style, Blanco has accumulated wins without fuss and has put to bed early concerns about his fitness. Whilst Stewart has beaten some big names, he will have to overcome the mental scars from the thrashing he received in Paris. It would be fitting to end the Grand Slam year with the first official meeting between a world No. 1 and a world No. 2. Blanco in 4 sets.
 

cricketboy29

International Regular
Singh's schedule...
Week 38:
Week 39: Metz (Indoor Hard - 175)
Week 40: Challenger (TBD)
Week 41:
Week 42: Challenger (TBD)
Week 43:
Week 44: Lyon (Indoor Carpet - 225);
Week 45: Challenger (TBD)
Week 46:

Cheers.
 

SirBloody Idiot

Cricketer Of The Year
CW Open
Day 11 - Thursday - Nixonstown (CWLand)


Men's Singles (Seeds - Finals - Section 1 - Section 2 - Section 3 - Section 4 - Section 5 - Section 6 - Section 7 - Section 8)
Men's Doubles (Seeds - Finals - Section 1 - Section 2 - Section 3 - Section 4)

  • World No. 1 Jason Hall is through to his second Grand Slam final after surviving a five-set tussle with third seed Radek Špidlá of the Czech Republic. Having not dropped a set all week, Hall's record was overturned in the first set as the powerful central European looked to arrest his losing record to Hall by taking the opening set 6-4. In an intriguing affair that saw the two exchange periods of momentum, Špidlá looked in pole position to take out the overwhelming tournament favourite as he raced through the third set 6-2 to take a two-sets to one lead. But Hall wasn't done, and he managed to snare a rare break of the world No. 3's service in the fourth set before charging towards home base to secure a 4-6, 6-3, 2-6, 6-4, 6-2 victory.

  • Seeded players out:
    Radek Špidlá.
  • CWLand's sixth seeds Heath Davis & Jojo Mustard have won through to their maiden ATP level final with a dominant victory over top seeds Hayden & Ross Onwye of Morocco. The top ranked team, who have yet to claim a Grand Slam crown, we shell-shocked from the outset as a fired up Davis and Mustard shut them out of the first set completely with some great tennis. The Onwye managed just two points on their opponent's service, and only a handful more on their own as in just 25 minutes the underdogs had taken a stunning 6-0 lead. The bewilderer top seeds then set about getting on the board in the second - doing so by way of back-to-back aces from Hayden - and actually brought up a break point on the Davis serve. But the big man held his nerve, and the second set meandered on service with a much improved Moroccan duo not giving an inch. But just as the set looked destined for a tiebreaker, the home team struck; breaking the service of Hayden Onwye to the delight of the Centre Court crowd. It was upon Davis to serve out the match, and he thought he had it at 40-15 as Hawkeye ruled in favour of the sixth seeds for an ace. The chair umpire however had the point replayed, and Davis botched first match point with a double fault. However he only had to wait one minute longer as Mustard put away an overhead smash to secure a magnificent 6-0, 6-4 boilover. Whilst Davis and Mustard will prepare for the biggest match of their careers, the Onwye brothers will rue what might have been as they were again caught short of Grand Slam glory.

  • Seeded players out:
    Hayden &
    Ross Onwye.


Maaassive upset and will go a long way to securing a World Tour Final spot for Davis/Mustard.
 

Magrat Garlick

Global Moderator
And Ox, I'll go easy in the DC singles, not consistent enough and likely to lose both on a poor streak. Plus I've played way more tennis than you this season.
No probs. Up to the challenge.

Mind, the doubles final looks like a play-off for mine.

Stewart :blink:

And the Onwyes :lol:

Was about to say Hall would win in three. Clearly fixed. :p
 

HeathDavisSpeed

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Incredible victory! Not just beating the Onwyes but giving them a severe lesson - in the first set at least. Fingers crossed for an all CWLand final now.

Sounds like a superb match followed us onto centre court. I'll have to watch the replay on TV, I was too busy celebrating with El Mustardo.
 

Jamee999

Hall of Fame Member
Great job by CW :)

I will be looking for a CWer to join me in playing mainly clay-court doubles next year, allthough I will probably dabble in other surfaces if they want, but I'd be looking for a clay specialist, ideally.
 

Magrat Garlick

Global Moderator
Great job by CW :)

I will be looking for a CWer to join me in playing mainly clay-court doubles next year, allthough I will probably dabble in other surfaces if they want, but I'd be looking for a clay specialist, ideally.
Would be up for a pairing at French Open + clay masters (Rome, Madrid, Monte Carlo) + a couple of July tournaments.
 

Mister Wright

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Freakin' fantastic. Great to reach the final with Davis. After disappointing singles returns this season, that will all be made up for with a doubles Grand Slam crown. Here's hoping we can do it against a CW Land team in the final.
 

Simon

Request Your Custom Title Now!
Great job by CW :)

I will be looking for a CWer to join me in playing mainly clay-court doubles next year, allthough I will probably dabble in other surfaces if they want, but I'd be looking for a clay specialist, ideally.
Might be interested in this depending on Banks' situation with his ranking and the tournaments he looks like frequenting.
 

Blewy

Cricketer Of The Year
thinking about it you are probably better teaming up with Jamee, as you are both clay courters...

Ill have to try and find myself a good hard court partner...
 

SirBloody Idiot

Cricketer Of The Year
Pekao Open
2nd Round - Szczecin (Poland)


Men's Singles (Finals - Top Half - Bottom Half)
Men's Doubles (Draw)
  • Suryakant Singh has suffered a disappointing conclusion to his Szczecin campaign after a straight sets loss to 23-year old Italian Michael De Kinsele. The seventh seed came into the danger match following a tough three-set affair in the first round, but started better than the CWLander to snatch an early break of service. Both players struggled on serve with five breaks in the first set, but it was the Italian who got the best of his opponent in the first set 6-4. The second saw Singh attempt to work his way into the match, but he again struggled for momentum on service as the Italian returned well; easing home to a 6-4, 6-4 win.

  • Seeded players out:
    Martin Reiter.
  • There was better luck for Singh in the doubles as he and Gurpreet Rao advanced to the second round after defeating Danish pair Kasper Buur & Jesper Overgaard. After an unsuccessful CW Open campaign, Singh and Rao played confident tennis in the first set before losing all control in the second as the Danish duo struck back well. In the match tiebreaker, the Indian-born pair found that extra leg as they came from 6-8 down to steal a 6-1, 3-6, 10-8 win. They face second seeds Ivo Nikolić & Vilmos Petričević in the second round.
  • In one of the bigger boilovers of the doubles year, Belgian top seeds Mark Harmel & Yves Parmentier were stunned in straight sets by little known Polish brothers Dariusz & Radaslaw Marzec. After being seeded 11 at the CW Open, the Belgian duo were well below their best as the Marzecs stole a 7-5, 6-3 win.

  • Seeded players out:
    Ozren Dimitrijevic &
    Tobias Grote;
    Mark Harmel &
    Yves Parmentier.
PEOPLenet Cup
2nd Round - Dnepropetrovsk (Ukraine)


Men's Singles (Finals - Top Half - Bottom Half)
Men's Doubles (Draw)
  • In Dnepropetrovsk, Randy Banks won the battle of CWLand against Matt Bre to earn his first quarterfinal appearance at Challenger level. Banks has struggled to break through in his few months on the new circuit, but the CWLand acquisition finally seems to be repaying the faith as he came from a set down to upset Bre. The world No. 179 took the first set, but struggled for consistency from there on as Banks counterattacked well and came to the net to great effect as he secured a surprising 4-6, 6-3, 6-1 win. It gets very hard now, though, as Viktor Vuriak - ranked 56 in the world and in his home country - awaits following his 6-4, 7-6(3) win over under-achieving Czech Václav Zeman.
  • The world No. 51 was a bridge too far for David Briggs as he ran out of steam in his match against top seed Atthaphol Sae-ul. The CW Open second rounder was tested in the first set by the talented Briggs who looked to build on the form that saw him qualify for his home Grand Slam. But with the scores at 5-5, he pulled free to take the first set 7-5 and then eased home in the second 6-1 in his push back to the world top 50.

  • Seeded players out:
    Julian Day.
  • They may have been singles opponents, but doubles unit Randy Banks & Matt Bre did enough to earn a spot in the second round after a 6-3, 6-4 upset of Shyam Sequiera & Artit Wanna. The Indian-Thai pair would have been considered favourites against the CWLand pair, but were outplayed by the makeshift duo who advanced 6-3, 6-4. They will face a stiff task in the quarterfinals, though, as third seeds Ivars Emsis & Sam Lazzeri come into the clash on the back of a 6-2, 6-1 thrashing of Pat Hewitt & Atthaphol Sae-ul.

  • Seeded players out: None.
 

Blewy

Cricketer Of The Year
A massive day for Banks... To make his 1st ever singles 1/4 final is a massive achievement...

Well done son...
 

vic_orthdox

Global Moderator
Week 39: Metz (Indoor Hard - 175)
Week 41: Challenger (TBD)
Week 42: Challenger (TBD)
Week 44: Vienna (Indoor Hard - 250);
Week 45: Basel (Indoor Hard - 250)
 

vic_orthdox

Global Moderator
Never want to play doubles again. Rivers works alone.

Oh, and cop that Altman. Would have posted, but have been drinking since I won.
 

SirBloody Idiot

Cricketer Of The Year
CW Open
Day 12 - Friday - Nixonstown (CWLand)


Men's Singles (Seeds - Finals - Section 1 - Section 2 - Section 3 - Section 4 - Section 5 - Section 6 - Section 7 - Section 8)
Men's Doubles (Seeds - Finals - Section 1 - Section 2 - Section 3 - Section 4)

  • The amazing run of Oneil Stewart has will culminate in Sunday's final after he stunned world No. 2 Daniel Páez Blanco in four sets in the second semifinal. Aiming to rob the CW Open of a showdown between the two two seeds, the Jamaican cult hero knew he needed a fast start. And that is what he got as he avoided the crushing defeat of the French Open by breaking the Blanco service twice to seal it 6-3. The Spaniard would regain his composure in the second, but despite going a break ahead, Stewart still managed to claw his way back into the set and edge a tight tiebreaker to edge toward the edge of a dramatic Grand Slam final. But Blanco had other ideas, and in 35 minutes took the third set 6-1 and looked set to pull off a dramatic turnaround. However it was Stewart's day, and he fought back valiantly to break service early and cling onto the slender lead to secure a 6-3, 7-6(5), 1-6, 6-4 win and his place in history as the first non-seed to make a Grand Slam final in the Open Era.

  • Seeded players out:
    Daniel Páez Blanco.
  • Hopes of an all-CWLand doubles final vanished in the day's earlier semifinal as fourth seeds Jefferson Drake & Martti Korpinen bowed out in three sets to Roland Garros champions Hugh James & Ralph Robinson. The second seeds had accounted for Drake and Korpinen in the Paris semifinals in straight sets, and continued their good touch in the first set by taking it 6-3. In front of a home crowd, Drake and Korpinen hit back in the second with Drake playing a a classy shot past a net-bound James to earn a 3-1 lead. Whilst the second seeds struck back immediately, the fourth seeds broke service again as they levelled the match at a set each. In a tense deciding set, both pairs exchanged breaks of service but found themselves level at 5-5. Serving to stay in the match and send it to a tiebreaker, the home pair soon found themselves staring down defeat as Robinson threw the kitchen sink at a Korpinen second serve to move the score to 15-40. Whilst both match points were saved, the second seeds produced another and this time made no mistake as they secured a 6-3, 3-6, 7-5 win.

  • Seeded players out:
    Jefferson Drake &
    Martti Korpinen.


---

A couple of surprising results there. Bit of a shame Blanco didn't win, but Stewart has had a pretty stunning run so may test Hall in the final.

Drake/Korps losing makes Davis Cup selection a lot more difficult. Had they made the final, they probably would have got the Davis Cup doubles tie regardless of whether they won or lost the final. Now that they are out, that might need to be reconsidered if Davis/Mustard take the final or go close.
 

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