Tuesday, 13 March 2012

Federer defeats Raonic to reach fourth round

INDIAN WELLS, Calif. (AP)â€"Roger Federer outlasted hard-serving Milos Raonic 6-7 (4), 6-2, 6-4 under the lights in the fourth round of the BNP Paribas Open on Tuesday, extending his run of winning 35 of 37 matches since last year’s U.S. Open.
 
Rafael Nadal didn’t have as much trouble in sunny conditions, beating countryman Marcel Granollers 6-1, 6-4.
 
It was similarly easy on the women’s side for top-ranked Victoria Azarenka and No. 2 seed Maria Sharapova, who won their matches in just more than an hour to reach the quarterfinals.

Raonic came into the match having won 16 of his previous 18 matches this year, but he fell to 0-7 against top-eight players with the loss. Federer broke to open the second set and broke again in the seventh game to even the match. In the third, he broke Raonic to go up 4-3. Raonic held at love to get to 5-4 before Federer won four straight points to close out his 73rd consecutive win against a player outside the top-20.
 
Nadal, ranked second in the world, has won his past 10 matches against fellow Spaniards, and 22 of his past 23 sets against them. Granollers, who has risen from 50th to 26th in the rankings over the past year, cracked a 132-mph serve during the match, but he couldn’t overcome Nadal’s quickness and touch.
 
Nadal served out the match in a deuce game, then drew cheers from female fans when removed his shirt and toweled off courtside before donning a warm-up jacket.
 
“I didn’t play my best in the second,” he said. “I had a few mistakes, especially for the backhand. But I am happy that I finished the match well.”
 
Nadal plays No. 21 Alexandr Dolgopolov in the quarterfinals.
 
Azarenka, a 6-3, 6-1 winner over Julia Goerges, moved on to play fifth-seeded Agnieszka Radwanska, who advanced when American wild card Jamie Hampton retired with cramping in the third set trailing 3-6, 6-4, 3-0. Azarenka (20-0) and Radwanska (20-3) have the most match wins this year on the WTA Tour.
 
Sharapova, who lost to Azarenka in the Australian Open final, beat Roberta Vinci 6-2, 6-1, and next plays an all-Russian quarterfinal against either 20th-seeded Maria Kirilenko, who beat No. 30 Nadia Petrova 6-1, 5-7, 6-2.
 
“I was pretty solid and I think my pace didn’t allow her to come forward as much as she would have liked,” Sharapova said about Vinci.
 
Defending champion Caroline Wozniacki played a late match at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden.
 
On the men’s side, fifth-seeded David Ferrer lost for just the second time this year, 6-4, 6-3 to Denis Istomin of Uzbekistan. Ferrer had already won three titles this season, and was seeking his 20th match win.
 
Istomin set himself up for a fourth-round match against No. 9 Juan Martin del Potro, who defeated Fernando Verdasco 6-2, 7-6 (6). Verdasco failed to convert on six break points in the match.
 
“Verdasco is a really difficult opponent, especially in the beginning of the big tournaments,” Del Potro said. “He’s very, very tough, very dangerous, and I think I made a good match. I got lucky in the second set when I save five set points, and then in the tiebreak he made the double fault to give me the first match point.”
 
David Nalbandian defeated 10th-seeded Janko Tipsarevic 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, while Thomaz Bellucci advanced when Nikolay Davydenko withdrew because of illness. There was no immediate confirmation whether Davydenko was suffering from the same viral illness that has knocked eight players out of the two-week tournament.
 
Azarenka next will try to equal Serena Williams’ consecutive victories streak of 21-0 to begin 2003.
 
“If I relax my butt a little bit, somebody’s going to come and kick it,” she said, laughing.
 
Azarenka, who has won two other titles this year, is 3-0 against Radwanska this year, with two of their matches going to three sets.
 
“She’s someone who always comes up with something different,” Azarenka said. “She’s a little magician, if you can call it that.”
 
Azarenka beat Radwanska in straight sets last month in Doha, during which Azarenka injured her ankle. She kept playing, but appeared to be in pain and was visibly distraught. Radwanska later said she “lost a lot of respect” for the 22-year-old Belarusian because her behavior wasn’t a good image for women’s tennis.
 
“I actually never had a problem with her,” Azarenka said Tuesday. “She’s a great player, great girl, so nothing there is to discuss.”
 
Hampton earned her first win against a top-20 player when she beat Jelena Jankovic in the second round and the 22-year-old from Auburn, Ala., was having her best tour-level results yet when she fell down early in the third set.
 
“She was really hitting the ball very well, very consistent, good serve and moving very well,” Radwanska said. “I just noticed when she fell down. It’s always tough, especially that you can’t really have medical timeout for that. It’s tough to come back.”
 
Other winners were No. 6 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga; No. 7 Marion Bartoli; No. 8 Li Na; and 18th-seeded Angelique Kerber, who beat American Christina McHale in a third-set tiebreaker.

Visa, Microsoft enter Formula One

Two major sponsors have snuck into Formula One just ahead of the season opening race in Australia this weekend. Microsoft and Visa have dipped their toe int eh luke-warm waters of F1 and it’s a good sign all around. MICROSOFT Microsoft is no stranger to technology. Their new Lync Unified communication products are challenging even

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VIDEO: Schumacher explains his successful starting procedure

As 2011′s most successful starter in Formula One, Mercedes AMG Petronas thought they’d ask Michael Schumacher to explain his starting routine. Let’s be honest, before you offer your quip, consider that fact that Mark Webber, who has never shared much high praise for the German 7-time champion, would do well to watch this as his

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Hampton joins players out with stomach flu

Nikolay Davydenko and Jamie Hampton joined Petra Kvitova, Vera Zvonareva, Gael Monfils, Vania King, Jurgen Melzer, Philipp Kohlschreiber, Andreas Seppi, Francesca Schiavone, and Magdalena Rybarikova as players affected by the stomach virus that has been circulating around Indian Wells.

Davydenko withdrew from his third-round match with Thomaz Bellucci. Hampton retired while writhing with cramps when down 6-3, 4-6, 3-0 to Agnieszka Radwanska. The American said her illness started right after she upset Jelena Jankovic in the first round, when she returned to her hotel and began to vomit. She did not eat on Sunday, when she defeated Jarmila Gajdosova in three sets. She began to feel better on Tuesday, but despite feeling a little better on Wednesday morning, she could not maintain her energy level against Radwanska.

"At the end of the second [against Radwanska] it hit me and I knew it was coming," said Hampton, who has cramped five times in her career, including at the 2011 U.S. Open. "I knew it wasn’t going to be pretty."

Hampton said that she hydrates and eats the right way, and will go see a specialist about her frequent cramping.

World No. 1 Victoria Azarenka said she caught the big on the way to Indian Wells from Dubai. "I heard like few players right before the tournament had it, and me, the same thing. It was just so awful. I guess I'm the lucky one that I had only before the tournament."

Officials, coaches, ball kids, and journalists have also fallen prey to the bug, including the LA Times’ Diane Pucin, USA Today’s Doug Robson and Fuebuena’s Jorge Viale.

One coach told TENNIS.com that he had heard that the bug has afflicted around 30 players, coaches and trainers.

Nadal tops Granollers, gets Dolgopolov next

Rafael Nadal’s progress through the Indian Wells draw continues to be as smooth and unruffled as any flat and frictionless surface you care to name, as he defeated compatriot Marcel Granollers easily, 6-1 6-4, to move on to a meeting with Alexandr Dolgopolov.

Like Nadal, Granollers is 25, from Spain and favors clay, but it was apparent from the beginning that the similarities end there. A double-fault and a forehand carried out by the netcord gave the 26th-ranked Spaniard 15-30 in Nadal’s first service game, but it was the closest he came to leading. After holding, a couple of testing points and some nervous errors gave Nadal the break, and he breezed through the set from there, breaking the court open with the big cross-court forehand and hitting into space in effortless fashion.

Granollers, by contrast, looked bewildered. Hampered by only making 33 percent of his first serves in the first set, it seemed that being Nadal’s compatriot had not prepared him for the experience of facing the world No. 2 across the net. Struggling to hold serve at 0-2, Granollers traded baseline blows with Nadal, only for yet another of those big cross-court forehands to whistle and whip into the corner. The double-take Granollers gave the mark, compounded of shock and disbelief that someone could hit with that pace and accuracy from off the back foot and behind the baseline, was an understandable, even endearing reaction. They may both play Davis Cup for Spain, but this was clearly another ballgame altogether.

Leading 3-2 in the second set, however, Nadal seemed to take his foot off the gas (not uncharacteristic after a swift first set). Caught off-balance by a delightful dropshot from Granollers to go 0-30 down and possibly unbalanced further by a time violation from umpire Fergus Murphy, a forehand error saw him give up two break points. The first was squandered in an understandably over-eager fashion by Granollers and the second saved with a big serve, but Nadal never quite recovered the aura of the first set, making some erratic errors and looking uncharacteristically tentative with the ball in the air. Two match points came and went on Granollers’s serve, then two more on Nadal’s own before he closed out the match with an emphatic ace down the T.

Still, a slightly sluggish second set does not detract from a thoroughly strong victory over a seeded opponent, and indeed, seemed in keeping with the sleepy atmosphere of the late afternoon match. Nadal joins the last sixteen having expended minimal amounts of energy and shaken off whatever rust he accrued during February. He will be chomping at the bit at the prospect of a stiffer test.

â€"Hannah Wilks

Abused fans say ATP too light on Llodra

Tennis fans Daniel Lee and Alex Lee Barlow think Michael Llodra got off too lightly for allegedly throwing racial taunts their way during his win over Ernests Gulbis at Indian Wells.

Canadian journalist Tom Tebbutt, who was at the match, reported that Llodra hit a ball out of court, threw his racket, and called Alex Lee Barlow a "f--king Chinese."

"He was looking directly at me," Barlow told the New York Times. "He didn't yell it particularly loudly. He was turned toward the baseline, toward us, and he looked right at me and said this comment."

The ATP fined Llodra $2,500. L'Equipe reporters said that Llodra thought the fine was too high and that it should not have been considered worse than swearing.

Lee Barlow was told that she would receive a call from Llodra on Monday, but Daniel Lee told TENNIS.com that as of 8 pm EST on Tuesday, he had not called her.

Daniel Lee thinks the ATP should come down harder on Llodra.

"I definitely don't think $2,500 is enough,” the Los Angeles-based Lee told TENNIS.com in an email. "It's just a slap on the wrist. One thing that isn't being stressed enough is that we were paying spectatorsâ€"tennis fansâ€"essentially giving him, a professional, money to watch him play. And in exchange for that, we were abused. It is entirely a different situation than a player abusing a line judge or an official, or a spectator abusing a fellow spectator. The last thing any tennis fan expects sitting down to watch the sport they love so much and have paid to see is for a player to target them with racial slurs. Another piece of information that is being misrepresented is that we are not Chinese! We are Americans of Korean decent. Alex was rooting for Gulbis in English, the only language she knows how to speak. We're lucky the slurs didn't come from a player we actually support, like [Rafael] Nadal or [Juan Martin] del Potro. Of course, neither one of them would ever act like Llodra did.

"Although it was a terrible experience, we managed to, at least in part, set it aside to try and enjoy the tournament (including Llodra's doubles match against Nadal/Lopez). I'm not giving up on tennis or on Indian Wells, but I believe that ATP should issue a formal statement condemning Llodra's actions and levy harsher penalties than what amounts to a token fine."

Llodra did speak to the Chinese news site SINA.com, in which he attempted to apologize. "My words were not aimed at China," Llodra said. "I love Chineseâ€"I can totally make love with a Chinese girl."â€"Matt Cronin

Austin GP gets mainstream coverage that asks: Will it happen?

You have to realize that if the mainstream media in America is going to touch the United States Grand Prix, it’s going to do so only if there’s something, well, newsy about the story. (I’m not counting the Austin American-Statesman, which is covering the heck out of the Circuit of the America’s construction. It’s doing

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Australia preview quotes - Ferrari, Force India, Williams & more

After months of preparation and weeks of testing, it is almost time for the 12 teams and 24 drivers that make up the 2012 FIA Formula One World Championship to show just what they can do. The Formula One fraternity looks ahead to this weekend's season opener in Melbourne's Albert ParkÂ…

Australia preview quotes - Force India, Williams, Lotus & more

After months of preparation and weeks of testing, it is almost time for the 12 teams and 24 drivers that make up the 2012 FIA Formula One World Championship to show just what they can do. The Formula One fraternity looks ahead to this weekend's season opener in Melbourne's Albert ParkÂ…

Australia preview quotes - Williams, Lotus, Marussia & more

After months of preparation and weeks of testing, it is almost time for the 12 teams and 24 drivers that make up the 2012 FIA Formula One World Championship to show just what they can do. The Formula One fraternity looks ahead to next weekend's season opener in Melbourne's Albert ParkÂ…

Free 'lite' version of official 2012 App now available

With the 2012 FIA Formula One World Championship due to get underway in Melbourne, Australia, this weekend, a free 'lite' version of Soft Pauer's official F1 Timing and Track Positioning App is now available via iTunes and the Android Market place, with the option to upgrade to the full version in-App

Sharapova crushes Vinci to reach quarters

Nobody present in the Indian Wells Tennis Garden, or watching on television, would have confused the work done by Roberta Vinci with that of her fellow Italian whose surname is so similar.

Maria Sharapova's 6-2, 6-1 win over the 29-year-old from Taranto was a work of art only in the sense that it provided deprived fans of Sharapova (she hasn't won a major title since February of 2008) with a utopian vision of their idol's game. It was almost like Vinci was the set-up guy, recruited to bring out all that is effective and impressiveâ€"while hiding all that is weakâ€"in the game of the statuesque Russian.

You don't need to be a da Vinci to be familiar with the concept of contrast or, if you want to get all fancy, chiaroscuro. But the concept describes Sharapova's game neatly. When she gets a good look at a ball and doesn't have to move a lot, and when she can force an opponent back on her heels with her big serve, she looks like she ought to win three majors a year (rather than owning just three majors for her career).

However, when she's taken out of her comfort zone (see "A" for "Azarenka, Victoria"; or "S" for "Serena Williams"), Sharapova can appear wooden, overly effortful, and stone-handed. Now that's chiaroscuro, or contrast, and the odd thing about today's match was that Vinci is a player who is capable of tapping into the darker elements in Sharapova's game. She has a tricky, sliding sliced backhand, a solid volley, and good instincts for using the entire court.

But for some reason, Vinci tried to out-rally and out-hit Sharapova, a strategy that can bathe the No. 2 WTA player's game in a warm, bright glow.

Forgive me if I'm sounding a mite pretentious here. How about you try to get 600 or 700 words out of a match in which the loser won but one point on a second serve early on, and didn't win another until she was serving to stay in the match at 0-5 in the second set? Vinci ended up with a 4-for-24 conversion rate on second-serve points for the match; that's a paltry 17 percent.

Part of the problem, of course, is that Vinci's second serve is a puffball; she's in no danger of frying the speed gun with those 70 MPH offerings, but you have to wonder why she so often and effectively put them right into Sharapova's wheelhouse. She ought to have known by now that Sharapova loves teeing off on balls that are in her strike zone, and today she did it so aggressively that not long after the start you felt obliged to avert your eyes whenever Vinci had a second serve to hit.

And it wasn't like Vinci knew right from the get-go that she had no shot. The two games she managed in the first set were both Sharapova breaks, and they extended Sharapova's two-match inability to hold to four games. But Vinci helped Sharapova work her way into a confident frame of mind by offering her a regular and predictable diet of sliced backhands. That hasn't worked since the heyday of Steffi Graf, and it only worked then because of Graf's superior athleticism.

I suppose there was an outside chance that Sharapova might have had trouble handling the low bounce and lack of pace; it's not the worst calculation, given her history and well-documented love of pace. But if your efforts in that regard do little but get the ball shoved back down your throat, point after point, game after game, you need to think about a Plan B.

Vinci's reluctance to take chances hurt her as well. Desperate times call for desperate measures, so when you've got your feet planted and trading punches does nothing more than leave you woozy, you need to do something different. Vinci never got the memo.

So let's review the gory details. After breaking Sharapova twice, Vinci would not win another game until she held for the first time at the match, while trailing 2-6, 0-5.

Actually, let's forget the gory details, because they're redundant. This was an old-fashioned blow-out, and you just can't cast it in a more favorable light.

â€"Pete Bodo

Codemasters win race to drive new official F1 games

Codemasters will remain the home of official Formula One games following confirmation that they have extended their partnership with Formula One World Championship Limited. The multi-year agreement will see Codemasters continue to develop and publish multiple titles for video game consoles, personal computers, mobile devices and online platforms. Â"Codemasters has created some of the best and most successful Formula One games to date,Â" said Formula One group CEO Bernie Ecclestone. Â"We and the teams work closely with them and look forward to creating more award-winning games together in the future.Â"

Azarenka now 20-0 in 2012; Istomin upsets Ferrer

INDIAN WELLS, Calif. (AP)â€"Top-ranked Victoria Azarenka needed barely more than an hour to beat Julia Goerges 6-3, 6-1 and reach the quarterfinals of the BNP Paribas Open on Tuesday.

Azarenka moved on to play fifth-seeded Agnieszka Radwanska, who advanced when American wild card Jamie Hampton retired with cramping in the third set trailing 3-6, 6-4, 3-0. Azarenka (20-0) and Radwanska (20-3) have the most match wins this year on the WTA Tour.

No. 2 Rafael Nadal and No. 3 Roger Federer played later matches at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden.

On the men’s side, fifth-seeded David Ferrer lost for just the second time this year, 6-4, 6-3 to Denis Istomin of Uzbekistan. Ferrer had already won three titles this season, and was seeking his 20th match win.

Istomin set himself up for a fourth-round match against No. 9 Juan Martin del Potro, who defeated Fernando Verdasco 6-2, 7-6 (6).

Thomaz Bellucci advanced when Nikolay Davydenko withdrew because of illness.

Istomin Ends Ferrer's Win Streak; Del Potro Awaits

Denis Istomin upset World No. 5 David Ferrer in the third round of the BNP Paribas Open on Tuesday, handing the Spaniard just his second loss of the year with a 6-4, 6-3 win.

[[More Tennis News on ATPWorldTour.com]]

Alonso: We will have to grit our teeth and work hard

After a frustrating winter, Ferrari's Fernando Alonso has warned that the first few rounds of the 2012 season could prove difficult for the Italian team. Alonso, however, is confident they can resolve their development struggles and reverse their fortunes before it is too late. Â"We definitely still need to improve a lot, working on our understanding of the F2012, adapting my driving style to a new car which, with the loss of aerodynamic downforce at the rear and the new Pirelli tyres, is a bit harder to drive,Â" explained the Spaniard in his blog on Ferrari's official website.

Verdasco squanders chances vs. del Potro

INDIAN WELLS, Calif.â€"Life as a professional tennis player: Sometimes you claw your way back into a match you seemed destined to lose and sneak out a win. Andy Roddick had that experience on Saturday in his win over Lukasz Kubot.
 
But sometimes you claw your way back into a match and find a even more painful way to lose. That was Fernando Verdasco's story today, at the end of his 6-2, 7-6 (6) loss to Juan Martin del Potro.
 
Like del Potro, Verdasco enjoyed a breakthrough year in 2009, rising as high as world No. 7. Today, he was the lower ranked player, No. 19 to his opponent's No. 9. Verdasco hasn't performed well over the last year in big tournaments, earning a single round-of-16 berth in all his Grand Slam and Masters 1000 attempts. He started today's first set poorly, gifting a break on a forehand error followed by a double fault (remember that sequence), and a second break on a huge forehand shank. Del Potro seemed content to allow his opponent to self-destruct.
 
Verdasco tightened up his game, and his serve, in the second set. As Fernando Gonzalez heads into retirement, Verdasco is a potential candidate for most feared, if erratic, thermonuclear forehand. My notes for the set read: "V big FH winner...and another!...Big FHs V, 15-15....Big V drive FH, forced error..."
 
The match was on serve in the second set until 5-4, when Verdasco earned three set points at 0-40. Now his real nightmare began. The first set point was saved with an unreturnable serve, the second with a superb forehand transition by Del Potro. Del Potro also took control on the next point and forced an error with a cross-court backhand. But a brilliant Verdasco return set up a fourth set point. The Spaniard couldn't have been faulted for the way he'd played the first three, but this time he dumped an open, mid-court backhand into the net. He beckoned for the ball and slowly rolled it over, but del Potro had slipped out of the trap.
 
The two traded holds and started a tiebreak. At 4-4, Verdasco took control with a flashing forehand winner and a brilliant return. His fifth set point was snuffed out by a big serve, but then, at 6-5, he had his first opportunity on his own serve. To Verdasco's dismay, a wild forehand shank ended his advantage, and on the next point his 84 M.P.H. second serve fluttered softly into the net. Now with his own match point, del Potro calmly took control of the rally and forced a final backhand error from Verdasco to progress to the next round. He'll face Denis Istomin, who upset David Ferrer, 6-4 6-3, on Stadium 3.
 
If you're a professional tennis player you have to accept painful losses. Sometimes the other guy's just too good on the day. But sometimes, you start off poorly, give yourself a sliver of hope, then snuff it out yourself. That's the story of Fernando Verdasco's not-very-good day today.
 
â€"Andrew Burton

Petrova confirms U.S. citizenship application

Russia's Nadia Petrova confirms that she has applied for U.S. citizenship. The 29-year-old, who owns a home in Miami, says that she feels comfortable in South Florida. 

"I like the lifestyle. I like the weather. It's just a perfect place for tennis,” she said at the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells. "Everything's so easy. You just come, you need to go to the pharmacy, drug store, it's 24 hours open. Everything is here just for the people, you know. I just feel very comfortable here, relaxed atmosphere, and I don't have to stress. I don't have that crazy traffic like it is in Russia. I don't have those cold winters."

Li: If I tell truth, some people hate me

China's Li Na says she play tennis for herself and that her open personality sometimes gets her in trouble, but she won't stop being true to herself.

"I'm only tennis athlete. I'm not here for the country," she told reporters at the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells. "I just play my tennis. I just doing my job to try the best. If sometimes I lie, I mean, I was feeling uncomfortable, and also I always believe if you lie one time you have to use 10 time(s) to recover this one lie. So I didn't want do that. I know if I say real so many people hate me, but doesn't matter. I'm happy."

Radwanska tops Pennetta in night match

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Sock may have suffered groin tear

American teenager Jack Sock may have a tear in his groin, and is facing the prospect of having to undergo surgery, TENNIS.com has learned. Sock, who lost his opening match at the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells, had an MRI while in the desert and will have a second one this week on the east coast. The first MRI did reveal what appeared to be a tear, but his regular physician wants to have another one done so he is clear as to how to proceed. If the 19-year-old does have to undergo surgery, he could be out for a few months. Sock, who is currently ranked No. 334, won the 2011 U.S. Open mixed doubles title with Melanie Oudin.

Saturday Preview - Djokovic, Murray Highlight Day 3 Schedule

Media notes for the BNP Paribas Open, an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event.

[[More Tennis News on ATPWorldTour.com]]

Djokovic wants to play exo vs. Sampras

World No. 1 Novak Djokovic says if he could face one player in a fantasy match, it would be 14-time Grand Slam champion Pete Sampras. "I would love to return that serve. He has been my idol, and I had that privilege to meet him couple of times and discuss tennis," the Serbian said at the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells. "He gave me some really great advice, from his own experience when he became No. 1 and what it took him to stay there for a long time. We have kind of a similar careers rankings-wise, and so it was a very valuable experience for me to sit down and chat with him. Unfortunately never had an opportunity to hit with him and to play an official match. But I would love to. At least an exhibition match would be a satisfaction."

Tuesday Preview - Nadal, Federer, del Potro Lead Action-Packed Schedule

Media notes for the BNP Paribas Open, an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event.

[[More Tennis News on ATPWorldTour.com]]

In-Form Ferrer Cruises Through Opener

David Ferrer continued his hot run of form Sunday at the BNP Paribas Open, dismissing Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov 6-2, 6-2 in 66 minutes.

[[More Tennis News on ATPWorldTour.com]]

Croatia Confirms World Team Cup Participation

Croatia is the latest nation to confirm its participation at the 2012 Power Horse World Team Cup in Dusseldorf, joining Serbia, Czech Republic, and Germany. The Croatians will be represented by Marin Cilic, Ivan Dodig and Ivo Karlovic.

[[More Tennis News on ATPWorldTour.com]]

Wozniacki survives Arvidsson

Caroline Wozniacki kept herself occupied during changeovers by testing her strings with a tension monitor. If a device for monitoring the stress level of her supporters existed, it might well have resembled an EKG reading as the fourth seed stared down a one-set, 4-5 deficit to Sofia Arvidsson.

Managing spiking stress levels calmly and running down nearly everything her opponent struck, Wozniacki responded by reeling off nine of the last 11 games in rallying for a 3-6, 7-5, 6-2 victory.

The defending Indian Wells champion responded to her predicament doing what she does best: Scrambling, hustling, and defending with determination to draw errors from Arvidsson, who had won eight of her last nine matches, including the Memphis final.

The 56th-ranked Swede cites Bruce Springsteen as her favorite musician, and she played the role of the boss in breaking Wozniacki in the opening game and again in the seventh game for a 5-2 lead. Arvidsson possesses more power than Wozniacki and was effective changing direction and driving the ball down the line off both wings. The longest rally of the 43-minute opening set spanned 29 shots, ending with Arvidsson stabbing a defensive forehand from behind the baseline that coaxed an errant forehand from Wozniacki.

The Dane broke to open the second set, and the pair traded three straight breaks midway through. Arvidsson struck shots with authority, but if she watches a tape of this match, she'll surely reflect on some of ill-timed drop shots she hit that sat up as if placed on a tee against one of the quickest players in the Top 20. Wozniacki raced forward to pounce on a lame dropper and crack a forehand winner to break at love for a 6-5 lead, and when Arvidsson drove a forehand beyond the baseline soon after, the match was level.

Wozniacki dispatched another inviting drop shot to break in the first game of the third set, staved off a break point to survive a lengthy second game, and broke again for a 3-0 third set lead. Wozniacki, who often played deep drives down the middle to minimize her opponents angles, was winning the war of attrition, but Arvidsson, who's seven years older than her 21-year-old opponent, refused to relinquish the fight, closing to 2-3 with a forehand winner down the line. That would prove to be her last stand. Arvidsson had won her last two matches against Top 5 opponents, but could not dent the defense of Wozniacki. The former No. 1 won 12 of the final 15 points. Fittingly, Wozniacku ran down yet another dropper and smacked a forehand winner to end a physical two hour, 37-minute enounter.

"I've known Sofia since I was 12 and I knew it was gonna be a tough match," Wozniacki said afterward.

Will Wozniacki pay the price for some of the punishing rallies she won tonight? Next up for her is former Indian Wells champ Ana Ivanovic, whom she beat in Dubai last month.

â€"Richard Pagliaro

Petrova tops Stosur in marathon

A stomach virus circulating throughout Indian Wells forced seven players to withdraw or retire from the field. Nadia Petrova arrived in the desert dealing with a different sort of illnessâ€"she was sick and tired of losing. The former world No. 3 had not won a singles match since the Australian Open, and was on a six-match losing skid to Top 10-opponents. So when Petrova, who blew a match point in a second-set tiebreaker today, dropped serve to hand Samantha Stosur a 6-5 lead in the final set, it seemed her season of futility would continue.
 
But the Russian had other ideas. The No. 30 seed found a remedy in her serve and resilience, firing 15 aces to edge Stosur, 6-1, 6-7 (6), 7-6 (5), in a two-hour, 46-minute emotional tug of war to reach the fourth round of Indian Wells for the fifth time.
 
It was Petrova's first win over a member of the Top 10 since she beat, of all people, Stosur, at New Haven in 2010. Stosur avenged that loss at the 2011 U.S. Open with a 7-6 (5), 6-7 (5), 7-5 decision that spanned three hours and 16 minutesâ€"the longest women's match at Flushing Meadows since the introduction of the tiebreakâ€"but couldn't edge out another win today.
 
Petrova pounded three consecutive aces to close out the 30-minute opening set in emphatic style. The Moscow native won 16 of 20 points played on her serve in the first set, and claimed nine of the first 11 games before Stosur, whose slice backhand was more of an uncommitted poke at the outset, began to find her range while Petrova's lofty service level started to dip.
 
Like Serena Williams, the champion Stosur vanquished in the U.S. Open final last September, the Aussie does not call for on-court coaching, preferring to solve her own problems. Whatever she told herself, it worked: Petrova served for the match at 5-4, only to squander a 30-15 lead. Then, after hitting a stinging serve winner down the middle to earn a match point at 6-5 in the second-set tiebreaker, Petrova wouldn't win another point in the overtime. Stosur smacked a serve winner to stave off elimination, and two points later sent a two-handed backhand return down the line to draw an error and take the second set. Stosur's backhand, which had been the weak link all day, delivered in a massive moment.
 
A topsy-turvy decider saw Petrova clank three double faults to gift wrap a break and a 3-2 lead, but she broke right back when Stosur flailed a forehand five feet wide. Ultimately, the match was decided by nerve and serve: Petrova held at love in her next two service games, but gagged in blowing a 40-15 lead and dropping serve in the 11th game. Stosur stepped up to serve it out, but like Petrova in the previous set, couldn't seal the deal. Petrova broke back at 15 to force the decisive tiebreaker.
 
A fine forehand volley winner gave Petrova a 4-2 edge, and when Stosur netted yet another backhand, the underdog had two more match points. Stosur sent a forehand wide, concluding the struggle as Petrova exhaled in relief.
 
â€"Richard Pagliaro

Roddick, Fish out in IW; Harrison, Sharapova win

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INDIAN WELLS, Calif. (AP)â€"Top-ranked Novak Djokovic defeated Kevin Anderson 6-2, 6-3 to reach the fourth round of the BNP Paribas Open on Monday, while American men had mixed results, with No. 8 Mardy Fish and Andy Roddick knocked out and John Isner winning.

Djokovic broke Anderson’s serve once in each set playing in the heat of the day at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden, where he won in 2008 and last year when the Serb claimed three Grand Slam titles and went 70-6. Djokovic successfully defended his Australian Open title to open the year.

Anderson, the 29th seed from South Africa who won last week’s tournament in Delray Beach, Fla., managed one break in the first set. Five games went to deuce, including five deuces before Djokovic held to lead 3-2 in the first. Djokovic beat Anderson in straight sets for the fourth straight time.

“He’s very aggressive on the return games,” Djokovic said. “He has a great serve, as you can imagine for his height, so I had to return well, I had to just be patient, and wait for my chances. I haven’t served well in the opening set, but then it all came down to his service games. I served well and put a lot of pressure on him and returned really, really good.”

In the day’s biggest upsets, No. 6 seed Sam Stosur lost to 30th-seeded Nadia Petrova 6-1, 6-7 (6), 7-6 (5) in a rematch of their three-set U.S. Open marathon last year. That was the longest women’s match since the tiebreaker was introduced, with Stosur winning on her way to claiming the title.

On the men’s side, Fish was beaten 6-3, 6-4 by qualifier Matthew Ebden of Australia, with Fish getting penalized for hindrance. Roddick lost to No. 7 Tomas Berdych 6-3, 4-6, 6-2. Roddick, seeded 30th, fell to 5-5 on the year, having lost 13 of his last 14 matches against top-10 players.

Roddick had never before dropped a set against Berdych when playing in the U.S. Roddick has been bothered by a right hamstring and right ankle injuries this season.

“I said three or four weeks ago I was going to try not to address it on a daily basis. If you play, you’re fine,” he said. “I played, I competed, and he beat me.”

Big-serving Isner moved on, as did young American Ryan Harrison, who beat Guillermo Garcia-Lopez of Spain 6-4, 7-5 in night’s last match.

No. 2-ranked Maria Sharapova defeated Simona Halep of Romania 6-3, 6-4 in their first career meeting. Sharapova is one of three former winners remaining in the field, with Caroline Wozniacki and Ana Ivanovic also in the bottom half of the draw.

Ivanovic rallied to beat Ksenia Pervak, 6-7 (8), 6-3, 6-2 and set up a fourth-round match Tuesday against Wozniacki, who outlasted Sofia Arvidsson 3-6, 7-5, 6-2 in a match that lasted more than 2 1-2 hours. She broke Arvidsson three times in the third set, then closed it out with a forehand winner off the Swede’s drop shot.

After a slow start, Sharapova picked up her game in the second set.

“Almost too good, where I felt like I was going for a lot and making a lot of shots. Then felt like I almost started going for a little bit too much,” she said. “Instead of being patient, putting a few more balls back, I just hit a few errors that I shouldn’t have made. I got it together in the end.”

Francesca Schiavone became the eighth player to withdraw because of a viral illness sweeping the Coachella Valley.

The Italian retired after losing the first set 6-2 to Lucie Safarova of the Czech Republic. The tournament’s medical provider says the virus causes nausea, vomiting, fever, and diarrhea and is being transmitted by air and direct contact. It is not food-related. Vera Zvonareva also withdrew with a different viral illness.

“Definitely washing my hands as much as possible,” Petrova said. “I’m going to have a sanitizer in my racket bag. I’m trying to eat outside of the site, so trying to take as many precautions as possible. Gotta be careful.”

Sharapova said she had a similar virus a few years ago.

“It’s a great diet, but other than that it’s horrible, especially for an athlete,” she said.

Asked if she was taking precautions, Sharapova joked, “… (if) I have a few extra interviews, I’ll be like, `Nah, you know that virus. Might not make it.”’

Petrova had more winners, 15-2, and 15 aces despite not serving as well as Stosur, although the Russian had a pile of unforced errors.

“It was tough battle in the third set, and I was really pumped when I broke her at 6-5 when she was serving for the match,” Petrova said. “I knew this was my time to win the match.”

Fish was hit with the hindrance rule for yelling, “Come on!” before Ebden got to the ball after Fish’s volley winner in the next-to-last game of the match. It was the same penalty that sent Serena Williams into a rage against an official during the U.S. Open final she lost to Stosur.

Stosur had lunged at a shot but Williams yelled the same thing as Fish before the ball landed. Ebden threw up his hands, clearly annoyed by Fish’s outburst.

“It was right under the umpire’s nose, so it was pretty clear what happened,” Ebden said. “I did get there in reasonable time to hit the ball. I still had a decent play on it.”

The International Tennis Federation rule can be interpreted either by giving the point to the opponent if the hindrance was considered deliberate or by replaying the point if the hindrance was considered unintentional. By giving the point to Ebden, chair umpire Felix Torralba interpreted Fish’s yell as deliberate interference. Fish refused the traditional post-match handshake with Torralba.

“I don’t think it had an effect on him making or missing the shot. But I feel like maybe (play) a let there, unless he hits the shot in. Then that’s different,” said Fish, who was serving. “I’ve never done that before on tour in my life. I was just trying to fire myself up.”

Other winners Monday were: No. 7 Marion Bartoli, No. 20 Maria Kirilenko, No. 21 Roberta Vinci, No. 12 Nicolas Almagro, No. 13 Giles Simon, and Pablo Andujar.

Top-ranked Americans Bob and Mike Bryan survived a marathon second-round doubles match, beating the Spanish duo of Marcel Granollers and Feliciano Lopez 6-7 (2), 7-6 (4), 17-15.

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