Wednesday, 28 March 2012

Nadal holds off Tsonga in quarters

A match that began as a comedy of errors ended in much the same fashion, as Rafael Nadal withstood second-set nerves and the haphazard talent that is Jo-Wilfried Tsonga to progress to the semifinals, 6-2, 5-7, 6-4.

I’ve heard that Albert Einstein’s definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. That could also serve as a neat description of Tsonga’s stubborn adherence to the same tactics tonight. He started the match broken from 40-0 up, going for outrageous first-strike winners, coming into net behind sliced backhand approach shots that were fodder for Nadal’s passers, and playing slipshod drop-shots that rarely cleared the netâ€"and were swiftly cleaned up by Rafa when they did. He ended the match nearly three hours later doing precisely the same things.

It takes two to get properly tangled in each other’s tennis, however, and while there is no denying that Tsonga’s performance was woeful for the first set and a halfâ€"he racked up 55 unforced errors for the matchâ€"much of that had to do with the relentless depth that Nadal kept on his groundstrokes during that period. It forced Tsonga to go for far too much from deep behind the baseline, or risk net approaches, because he knew as well as anyone that a long rally would only end in Nadal’s favor.

As the second set progressed and the wind picked up, Nadal’s level dropped and his shots began to land consistently shorterâ€"an average of one meter shorter than the first setâ€"allowing Tsonga to play from inside the court. Nadal served for the match at 5-4, but played a poor game, and the subsequent break acted as a much-needed fillip to the Frenchman’s confidence. His ripped groundstrokes began to land in, and with Nadal one point from a tiebreak at 5-6, Tsonga hit three great returns, the last a clean winner which stole the set from under Nadal’s nose.

Whether or not Nadal is developing a troubling habit of letting leads slip, he has a much more deeply ingrained habit to fall back onâ€"that of digging deep, battling, and ultimately winning. Attended by the trainer on changeovers for a problem with his left knee, he nevertheless hung grimly on to his serve in the third set, saving a break point at 2-3 and weathering the storm. At 4-4 on Tsonga’s serve, Nadal opened the game with one of his trademark curving forehand passing shots that had been barely in evidence thus far. It proved to be a good omen; he broke serve and served out the match at the second time of asking, rescuing himself from a hole at 15-30 with an astonishing display of agility at net.

Nadal had a stroke of luck when Tsonga broke a string returning a weak second serve on break point, but the final result had little to do with the vagaries of fortune. It was an effort of will and grim determination not to let go of a match which came very close to slipping through his fingers.

â€"Hannah Wilks

Azarenka suffers first loss of season to Bartoli

KEY BISCAYNE, Florida (AP)â€"Victoria Azarenka’s 26-match unbeaten streak across the first three months of the year was ended Wednesday by Marion Bartoli, who beat the world No. 1 in straight sets in the quarterfinals of the Sony Ericsson Open.

Azarenka’s streak, which included her Australian Open title, was the best on the women’s tour since Martina Hingis went 37-0 to begin 1997.

Bartoli’s semifinal opponent on Thursday will be Agnieszka Radwanska, who beat a tired Venus Williams 6-4, 6-1.

In the men’s quarterfinals, 2009 champion Andy Murray overcame an upset stomach and early deficit to beat No. 9-seeded Janko Tipsarevic 4-6, 6-3, 6-4.

Azarenka’d unreliable serve and atypical mistakes from the baseline doomed her against Bartoli.

“I’m a human, not a superwoman, and I wish I could be, but I’m not,” Azarenka said with a smile. “I feel disappointed, sure. Who wouldn’t be after the loss? But what I’ve done in the last couple of months, I have to be really proud of myself.”

The steady Bartoli took charge of rallies by playing inside the baseline.

“Sometimes I took the ball extremely early,” she said. “It was almost table tennis.”

Seeded No. 7, Bartoli advanced to the Key Biscayne semifinals for the second time in three years.

The other semifinal will be between Caroline Wozniacki and Maria Sharapova, a three-time Key Biscayne runner-up.

Williams was weary after winning three consecutive three-set matches in her comeback tournament. It was her first tournament since the U.S. Open last August, where she withdrew after being diagnosed with a fatigue-causing autoimmune disease.

“It was disappointing not to be able to feel my best today,” Williams said. “I was able to keep it close in the first set and try different strategies, but it was definitely a mental battle, and today I didn’t conquer the mental part of it.”

“It has been a great tournament,” she said. “I’m disappointed and would have liked to have gone further, but it’s a great start.”

Eager to keep points short in the heat, Williams charged the net often but frequently had to lunge for shots. She committed 38 unforced errors to 10 for Radwanska, and won only five of 26 points on her second serve.

Radwanska, ranked a career-best No. 4, is 0-4 this year against Azarenka and 24-0 against everyone else.

Murray lost six straight games after leading the first set 4-2, but fought back to clinch a semifinal berth against the winner of Wednesday’s late match between Rafael Nadal and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga.

“Today’s match was really important for me to get through after how it was going, (fighting) back after being a break down a few times in the second set,” Murray said.

Karthikeyan slams Vettel for ‘idiot’ comment

We have discussed the incident between Sebastian Vettel and Narain Karthikeyan here and for today’s update, the HRT driver has hit back with his own name-calling: “For a World Champion to say things like that is really shameful,” Karthikeyan told the Hindustan Times. “It is really unprofessional. For a driver who has achieved so much to

Share and Enjoy

FacebookTwitterDeliciousDiggStumbleUponAdd to favoritesEmailRSSLinkedIn

Why Red Bull is right in opposing FIA-enforced RRA

We’ve asked this before, how does a racing series like Formula One enforce a Resource Restriction Agreement (RRA)? It seems that all the teams except Red Bull Racing have signed a letter asking for the FIA to have a greater role in doing just that. According to Sky Sports, teams have signed a letter asking

Share and Enjoy

FacebookTwitterDeliciousDiggStumbleUponAdd to favoritesEmailRSSLinkedIn

Rafa resigns as VP of ATP Player Council

KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP)â€"Rafael Nadal has resigned as vice president of the ATP Player Council, saying he can no longer give the job the attention it needs.

“I don’t have enough energy,” Nadal said Tuesday. “I cannot still put in my 100 percent there.”

Nadal pushed unsuccessfully for a two-year ranking system, a proposal opposed by other players, including council president Roger Federer.

Nadal and Federer were in agreement on other issues, arguing the major tournaments are too powerful and players need a stronger voice in decisions. Both were critical last year of the U.S. Open schedule.

Nadal, who has complained the tennis calendar puts too many demands on players, acknowledged there are unresolved issues.

“I am not frustrated,” he said. But he added, “I believe that we can do much more things than what we have done. … My feeling is a great opportunity to improve the sport, because today the players are very unified.”

Nadal spoke after winning his fourth-round match at the Sony Ericsson Open.

Knowles to coach Fish and continue playing

Mardy Fish has hired former top-ranked doubles player Mark Knowles to coach him. The 40-year-old actually won the 2012 San Jose doubles title in February with Xavier Malisse, and competed as recently as the week before last at the Dallas Challenger. He knows Fish from their days training together in Florida. Knowles will continue to compete on and off.

"He's a huge help," Fish told reporters. “He's got his work cut out for him the past month or so trying to get me back on track. He's got a great tennis mind. He's been around for a long time. He's played in this era; obviously still plays. We played doubles in 2010 together. He helped me a ton at that time, as well, just sort of mentally on the practice court and things like that. I thought sort of getting sort of a new voice would be beneficial. I still train with the USTA in L.A. and with [coach] David Nainkin still and spend a lot of hours on the practice court with him, those guys, so I'm still fully vested in the USTA, as well ... I've always thought, and a lot of the guys in the locker room think, that [Knowles] is one of the best tennis minds out there. He reminds me a lot actually of Justin Gimelstob just how he knows this era, knows, watches so much."

Strategic changes key Roddick over Federer

Andy Roddick scores just his third win over Roger Federer in 24 meetings last night at the Sony Ericsson Open, and said afterward that tactical changes played a role in the upset. "It was kind of a game of chess," Roddick told reporters. "I stayed back on the returns, which is something I have not done with him often early on. I think he might have been a little bit surprised by it. He made the adjustment like he does because he's Roger. Started coming in a lot and putting the pressure on me, and it was, down 6-1 in the second and love-40 early in the third. It was apparent that that wasn't going to work much longer. So I said, ‘Well, all right. Let's kinda go over the top aggressive.’ I was able to get out of that game and play that really good game to break, and then my serve held up from there."

Roddick added that he was thinking of his recently deceased, longtime agent Ken Meyerson during the match. He pointed to the sky after the win. "My agent was from here and his wife was here," Roddick said. "I felt like I was a crazy person because I think I was having full dialogues with him the last 30 minutes of the match. I was just letting him know that I heard him and I was equally crazy tonight."

Fish may not play in London Olympics

Mardy Fish says he’s unsure as to whether he will compete in the London Olympics this summer. A silver medalist at the 2004 Athens Games, Fish did not go to the 2008 Games in Beijing.

The top 56 players automatically qualify; currently ranked No. 8, Fish is pretty much a lock if he decides to play. The U.S. can only send four singles players to London. No. 10 John Isner, No. 34 Andy Roddick and No. 46 Donald Young would also qualify if the ranking cutoff deadline was today. It ends after Roland Garros.

No. 69 James Blake and No. 73 Ryan Harrison also have a shot to qualify. The top-ranked Bryan brothers will go in doubles, and No. 33-ranked doubles player Eric Butorac also has an outside shot to qualify if a couple of the U.S. singles players decide not to play doubles.

"I have a lot of great memories from the Olympics, and I have a lot of tough memories from the Olympics, as well," Fish told reporters. "I haven't decided yet. It sounds amazing. My memories from Athens I'll always have. So we'll see."

Fish said that the reason is primarily scheduling. "Staying closer to home, playing tournaments that I'm comfortable in,” he said. “I think it comes up against Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., and Los Angeles I ride my bike to UCLA right now, so I'm pretty close there."â€"MC

Djokovic downs Gasquet in straights

No one has better balance on the tennis court than Novak Djokovic, and the defending Miami champion needed every bit of his equilibrium in the first set of today's two-set, fourth-round match to hold off Richard Gasquet, 7-5, 6-3.

The 26-year-old Frenchman broke Djokovic at 1-all and had the elastic Serb stretching, sliding. and flinching, as Gasquet played the aggressor, often finishing points at net with an exquisite inside-out backhand volley. Djokovic loves rhythm, and the 17th-ranked Gasquet gave him none of it, using his one-handed backhand slice to shorten points. At 5-all, 15-40, Gasquet had two break points, but played it safe instead of going after two second serves. He hit a backhand return into the bottom of the net and missed a forehand wide into the alley. It was the turning point, as Djokovic rolled from there.

In facing the mercurial Gasquet, Djokovic matched up against a player whose style of game contrasts greatly with his own. The world No. 1 had no problems with him in the past (the Frenchman's only win in six matches was back in 2007), but today in Miami, Gasquet looked the sharper of the two in the first set. Djokovic was coming off facing two opponents (Marcos Baghdatis and Viktor Troicki) who both suited his style of playing long, back-court rallies. But Gasquet chose not to engage Djokovic in that kind of brutal warfare, and instead diced and powered his way to seven break point chances. Unfortunately for Gasquet, he only converted on one. There was some exhilarating shotmaking, particularly with Gasquet serving at 4-5, 15-30. In the best point I've seen so far this season, Djokovic made sliding saves on both his backhand and forehand sides, only to have Gasquet hit a three-quarter court, running, forehand swinging volley that led to an overhead slam.

Djokovic broke early in the second set and made that one break stand (he only converted on two of six break point chances) in running off 16 of the first 22 points. But Gasquet continued to battle even as his footwork slowed down. The Frenchman is trying to make a push to the very top of the game with former No. 5, Sebastian Grosjean, as his coach. He reached the Round of 16 at the Australian Open and three quarterfinals in the European indoor circuit, and he had a chance, at least in the first set, to claim his biggest scalp of the season. But Djokovic doesn't give away many sets, and certainly not many matches (the Serb is 17-2 so far this year). He ran down every ball Gasquet artfully sent his way, and in the end, was too strong and resolute.

Next up for the top seed is the winner of the Juan Martin del Potro-David Ferrer match.

â€"Dan Markowitz

Sharapova routs Li to reach semis

The pink-and-peach ensemble Maria Sharapova wore on court was reminiscent of the Art Deco structures on South Beach, but by the time Sharapova was finished deconstructing Li Na's forehand with bruising efficiency, a black-and-blue color scheme might have been more appropriate. Sharapova stopped a four-match losing skid to Li in stirring style, winning eight straight games to seal a 6-3, 6-0 beatdown and storm into the Miami semifinals for the fourth time in seven appearances.
 
The second-seeded Russian, who had lost eight straight sets to Li, beat the reigning Roland Garros champion for the first time since the 2009 French Open. Shrugging off the 11 double faults she committed against Ekaterina Makarova in Monday's fourth round, Sharapovaâ€"whose coach, Thomas Hogstedt previously coached Liâ€"came out with a clear game plan: attack the forehand relentlessly until the No. 8 seed bled errors.
 
It was a scratchy start as the pair traded successive love breaks in the fourth and fifth games. By that point things were so ugly on serve, the server had won just three points through five games, as the receiver won 11 consecutive points. To put that in perspective, Venus Williams and Ana Ivanovic combined for six breaks in three sets last night; Li and Sharapova matched that in nine games today. To be fair, the 2 p.m. start meant both women were squinting into the sun on serve and trying to blink back the blind spot on their first shot. When Sharapova fired a forehand winner down the line she mercifully ended the serving struggles, registering the first hold 21 minutes into the match to take a 4-2 lead. A surging Sharapova won eight straight points to end the opening set in 33 minutes.
 
Li is an intelligent womanâ€"she took time off from tennis to attend collegeâ€"but she brain-cramped with some mind-numbing shot selection, including on set point, when she tried to hit her forehand down the line off a deep Sharapova drive, missing the mark by five feet. Li was either spooked by Sharapova's power or simply unwilling to grind and defend a bit and use her athleticism to try to drag the three-time Grand Slam champion into longer rallies. Watching Li's forehand deteriorate was almost as painful as scratching severe sunburn with sand paperâ€"she made 41 unforced errors compared to Sharapova's 18.
 
The three-time Miami finalist won 12 of the first 15 points to take command of the second set, 3-0, draining any remaining drama. The 68-minute match ended when Li's forehand trickled off the top of the tape and dribbled wide.
 
"I lost to her the last few times, so I was eager to go out there and play smarter and better," said Sharapova, who reached her third semifinal in four events this year.
 
Every time Sharapova has contested a quarterfinal in Miami, she's gone on to reach the final. She will face either five-time champion Serena Williams, who has won seven of their nine meetings, or fourth-seeded Caroline Wozniacki, whom she leads 4-3 in their head-to-head series.
 
â€"Richard Pagliaro

Murray stops Simon in fourth round

Andy Murray was a walkover winner in the third round and found himself getting the runaround today. Clever counter puncher Gilles Simon squeezed shots inside the lines to earn three break points in the opening game. The baseline duel dragged on and on before Murray finally held serve after 17 minutes of play. The fourth-seeded Scot asked for an ice towel during the ensuing changeover; you wondered if smelling salts would be next.

Ultimately, Murray drew on his patience and physicality to grind down the slender Frenchman, 6-3, 6-4, and advance to the Sony Ericsson Open quarterfinals. It was Murray's ninth straight win over Simon, whose style is sometimes described as "Murray Lite." While it's often an oversimplification to brand one player in the image of another (though I've always believed former Miami finalist Thomas Muster modeled his heavy topspin game on his childhood hero, Guillermo Vilas) the similarities between the pair are clear: Both men are brilliant ball strikers on the run, both are at their best on the counter-attack, both wear adidas apparel and swing Head racquets, and both have soft handsâ€"and sometimes lapse into ornery outbursts.

The 6'3" Scot is four inches taller and about 33 pounds heavier than his 27-year-old opponent, and imposed his size and strength advantageâ€"as well as his fitness-honed training in the Miami heatâ€"to eventually push Simon out of position on pivotal points. Murray, who was a bit cautious at the start after seeing Simon whip a few running winners past him, began to assert his authority in rallies, which often spanned more than 20 shots in the first set. Murray won a 19-shot rally to break at love for a 3-1 lead, winning 10 consecutive points in stretching the lead to 4-1. After a demanding opening game, Murray never faced another break point and sealed the 54-minute first set with a second-serve ace down the middle.

Beneath his thick thatch of brown hair, Simon has the youthful face of a choir boy, but changes speeds with the shrewd sense of a con man. At his best, Simon casually lulls opponents into a false sense of security with off-pace shots before suddenly striking with flat darts down the lines. The problem for Simon, who served just 41 percent, is that Murray is well aware of his strengths and was largely effective at muting them. The bigger problem is that everything Simon does, Murray can do a bit better.

Though Simon gamely worked out of triple break point to hold for a 3-2 second-set edge, Murray immediately applied pressure in his next service game, breaking at 15 for 4-2. Simon's best shot to get back on serve came in the eighth game, but Murray sliced an ace wide for 40-30, then scraped a fine forehand lob into the corner to hold for 5-3.  The 2009 Miami champion closed in style, cracking his fourth ace to end a one hour and 46 minute match. Next up for Murray is a quarterfinal clash with Janko Tipsarevic. Murray has won four of seven meetings with the ninth-seeded Serbian.

â€"Richard Pagliaro

Murray tops Tipsarevic in three

A nauseated Andy Murray took treatment for an upset stomach while trailing Janko Tipsarevic by a set and a break today. The third-seeded Scot reflexively reached for his stomach as if trying to suppress lunch from introducing itself to the court. Ultimately, Murray calmed both his churning stomach and queasy shotmaking to tame Tipsarevic, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, and advance to the Miami semifinals.
 
This was a topsy-turvy match in which two Top 10 players took turns playing hit-and-miss tennis, combining for 11 service breaks and 89 unforced errors. You seldom see Murray miss his trusty two-hander as badly or as often as he did in the first set and a half today, but even that normally rock-solid shot seemed afflicted by a bug. A resourceful Murray relied on his will as much as his shot-making skill, and cleaned up his act considerably as the match wore on, squeezing errors from the ninth-seeded Serbian's weaker forehand wing.
 
The pair had split their four prior hard-court meetings and offered immediate indication this could be a long day, trading breaks at the outset. Typically, Tipsarevic is quicker to pull the trigger on down-the-line drives, but that habit got him into trouble in the sixth game as he flat-lined four errors into net to hand Murray the break and a 4-2 advantage. Shrugging off that lapse, the man behind the sports shades narrowed his focus, reduced his errors and reeled off five consecutive games. Tipsarevic, who serves bigger than his 5'11" frame suggests, slammed successive aces to seize the first set despite a 48 percent first-serve percentage and 15 errors.
 
When the 27-year-old Belgrade baseliner broke for a 1-0 second-set lead, Murray called for the doctor, saying "I can't take any fluid. Every time I take fluid I want to throw up." Supplied with what appeared to be antacid tablets, Murray got back to work. Murray scored the third straight break at love midway through the second set for 3-3. Two games later, Tipsarevic slid a slice backhand into net to hand Murray his third straight break and a 5-3 lead. Murray won nine of the last 11 points, finishing the set with a crisp wide serve and forehand into the open court to level the match.
 
After his weekend win, Roger Federer referenced the old adage that you're only as good as your second serve. That was evident in this match, as Tipsarevic won just 11 of 34 points (32 percent) played on his second serveâ€"including just five points on his second delivery during the last two setsâ€"as Murray found the range on his return. Tipsarevic's forehand also let him down, as he frequently flattened that shot into the top of the net when trying to change direction. Murray converted his third break point when Tipsarevic scattered a backhand down the line long for a 2-1 edge. Erasing the only break point he faced in the final set with a 134 MPH ace, Murray held for 5-3 and closed on a Tipsarevic error.
 
The 2009 champion will face Rafael Nadal or Jo-Wilfried Tsonga for a spot in the final.
 
â€"Richard Pagliaro

Murray tops Tipsarevic to reach semis

A nauseated Andy Murray took treatment for an upset stomach while trailing Janko Tipsarevic by a set and a break today. The third-seeded Scot reflexively reached for his stomach as if trying to suppress lunch from introducing itself to the court. Ultimately, Murray calmed both his churning stomach and queasy shotmaking to tame Tipsarevic, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, and advance to the Miami semifinals.
 
This was a topsy-turvy match in which two Top 10 players took turns playing hit-and-miss tennis, combining for 11 service breaks and 89 unforced errors. You seldom see Murray miss his trusty two-hander as badly or as often as he did in the first set and a half today, but even that normally rock-solid shot seemed afflicted by a bug. A resourceful Murray relied on his will as much as his shot-making skill, and cleaned up his act considerably as the match wore on, squeezing errors from the ninth-seeded Serbian's weaker forehand wing.
 
The pair had split their four prior hard-court meetings and offered immediate indication this could be a long day, trading breaks at the outset. Typically, Tipsarevic is quicker to pull the trigger on down-the-line drives, but that habit got him into trouble in the sixth game as he flat-lined four errors into net to hand Murray the break and a 4-2 advantage. Shrugging off that lapse, the man behind the sports shades narrowed his focus, reduced his errors and reeled off five consecutive games. Tipsarevic, who serves bigger than his 5'11" frame suggests, slammed successive aces to seize the first set despite a 48 percent first-serve percentage and 15 errors.
 
When the 27-year-old Belgrade baseliner broke for a 1-0 second-set lead, Murray called for the doctor, saying "I can't take any fluid. Every time I take fluid I want to throw up." Supplied with what appeared to be antacid tablets, Murray got back to work. Murray scored the third straight break at love midway through the second set for 3-3. Two games later, Tipsarevic slid a slice backhand into net to hand Murray his third straight break and a 5-3 lead. Murray won nine of the last 11 points, finishing the set with a crisp wide serve and forehand into the open court to level the match.
 
After his weekend win, Roger Federer referenced the old adage that you're only as good as your second serve. That was evident in this match, as Tipsarevic won just 11 of 34 points (32 percent) played on his second serveâ€"including just five points on his second delivery during the last two setsâ€"as Murray found the range on his return. Tipsarevic's forehand also let him down, as he frequently flattened that shot into the top of the net when trying to change direction. Murray converted his third break point when Tipsarevic scattered a backhand down the line long for a 2-1 edge. Erasing the only break point he faced in the final set with a 134 MPH ace, Murray held for 5-3 and closed on a Tipsarevic error.
 
The 2009 champion will face Rafael Nadal or Jo-Wilfried Tsonga for a spot in the final.
 
â€"Richard Pagliaro

Nadal beats Nishikori for QFs

In a match that by and large failed to deliver on its initial promise, Rafael Nadal put in a performance that was well below par, but still won in straight sets against Kei Nishikori, 6-4 6-4.

Like many of us, Nadal does not seem to enjoy an early start to his working day, and there was a sluggish quality to his performance which never fully went away. In contrast, Nishikoriâ€"currently at his career-high ranking of No. 16â€"started in sprightly fashion, earning four break points in a 13-minute service game with which Nadal opened the match. Nadal struggled to find his first serve and persisted in serving his second softly to Nishikori’s backhand, allowing the Japanese No. 1 to dominate and dictate with his stronger wing, and showcase some exceptional cross-court returns. After two more break points went begging in Nadal’s next service game, a forehand error allowed Nishikori to take the lead.

It was Nishikori’s best opportunity to capitalize on Nadal’s slow start, and it’s hard not to conclude that the poor service game he played in failing to consolidate lost him the match right there. Nadal steadily raised his level from that point on, serving better for two straightforward holds while putting Nishikori’s serve, never the strongest aspect of his game, under increasing pressure. Nishikori was forced to save two break points at 3-4, but when he found himself a break and set point down in his next service game, he was unable to escape, hitting a short forehand wildly long in his eagerness to put the ball somewhere Nadal could not get to.

Although it was Nadal who needed a medical time-out before the last game of the first set to have his left knee taped up, it was Nishikori who deflated rapidly and fatally in the second, double-faulting to hand his opponent a 2-0 lead. As Nadal’s service percentage climbed a few crucial points, he increasingly targeted Nishikori’s weaker forehand while imposing his own. It did not help the 16th seed that he failed to challenge on several occasions where an incorrect call cost him the point; when he finally used Hawkeye, it was with Nadal serving at 5-3 and the definite feeling that anything Nishikori did was going to be more of a last-ditch effort than a game-changer. So it proved: Nishikori broke back, but as in the first set was unable to hold serve at 4-5, broken for the match as Nadal targeted his forehand to elicit another error.

It was a dispiriting end for Nishikori, who demonstrated some successful tactics but was unable to execute consistently or well enough to make significant inroads, even when Nadal’s tennis was poor. Nadal, on the other hand, can draw almost the opposite conclusion; even when he was playing poorly, he never seemed in any real danger of losing the match, and his tennis only improved as time went on, ending on a respectable 24 winners to 25 unforced errors. Look for his level to rise dramatically in the quarterfinals, where he will face either Jo-Wilfried Tsonga or Florian Mayer.

â€"Hannah Wilks

An explanation of Mercedes front-wing F-duct

I’m merely and entirely passing this one on, as it is about three pay grades above my salary. From the official Formula 1 site: With the basic workings of their innovative, DRS-operated ‘F-duct’ rear wing having been revealed in Australia, Mercedes have since been careful to keep the system’s front wing detail hidden. They even

Share and Enjoy

FacebookTwitterDeliciousDiggStumbleUponAdd to favoritesEmailRSSLinkedIn

Remember the last time Massa was this down? Domenicali does

Stefano Domenicali seems to have reassuring and supportive words for the faltering Felipe Massa. Seems, as always, is the operative word. His comments — from a Ferrari website post – are among those that are open to interpretation: “I well remember that, four years ago, in fact right after a Malaysian Grand Prix, which was

Share and Enjoy

FacebookTwitterDeliciousDiggStumbleUponAdd to favoritesEmailRSSLinkedIn

Marussia joins Force india in Team Caterham/Aerolab row

As we mentioned last week, Force India had been awarded 25,000 Euros by the high court in a legal battle that alleged Aerolabs had used the teams intellectual property when working with Team Lotus (now Team Caterham) in 2010 to develop their car. They were also told to pay the outstanding 850,000 Euros in past

Share and Enjoy

FacebookTwitterDeliciousDiggStumbleUponAdd to favoritesEmailRSSLinkedIn

Venus weary in quarterfinal loss to Radwanska

KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP)â€"Venus Williams sagged in the wooden changeover chair as if it were a cushy recliner, her head tilted back, her tank on empty.
 
She rose slowly to play the final two games and lost both, but grinned as she walked to the exit, perhaps because she was headed for a well-deserved rest.
 
Weary after winning three consecutive three-set matches, Williams was eliminated Wednesday by Agnieszka Radwanska in the quarterfinals of the Sony Ericsson Open, 6-4, 6-1.

“It was disappointing not to be able to feel my best today,” Williams said. “I was able to keep it close in the first set and try different strategies, but it was definitely a mental battle, and today I didn’t conquer the mental part of it.”
 
Williams’ serve lacked its usual velocity, and by the final game she wasn’t even chasing shots in the corner. The tournament was her first since the U.S. Open last August, where she withdrew after being diagnosed with a fatigue-causing autoimmune disease.
 
“It has been a great tournament,” she said. “Obviously I’m disappointed and would have liked to have gone further, but it’s a great start.”
 
Eager to keep points short in the 85-degree sunshine, Williams charged the net often but frequently had to lunge for shots. She committed 38 unforced errors to 10 for Radwanska, and won only five of 26 points on her second serve.
 
“It was pretty hot out there,” Radwanska said. “Maybe that was why she didn’t look that good.”
 
Venus was the second Williams in 18 hours to be eliminated. Younger sister Serena lost Tuesday night to former No. 1 Caroline Wozniacki.
 
Venus needed a wild card to enter the tournament because she’s ranked 134th. The three-time Olympian’s goal has been improve her ranking enough to qualify for the London Games, and she’s projected to climb next week back into the top 90.
 
In the past, the cutoff for making the Olympics has been around 68th. Teams will be chosen based on rankings in early June.
 
Radwanska, ranked a career-best No. 4, advanced to the Key Biscayne semifinals for the first time. She’s 0-4 this year against top-ranked Victoria Azarenka and 24-0 against everyone else.
 
She beat Williams in 2006 but had since lost five consecutive meetings.
 
“Of course she had some time off last couple of months,” Radwanska said. “But she’s still a great player. I really had to play very well today to beat her.”
 
Williams overcame a match point in the third round against Aleksandra Wozniak on Sunday night, and said she was up until 4 a.m. afterward. She recovered to beat No. 15-seeded Ana Ivanovic on Monday.
 
Williams said her ailment requires her to save all her energy for tennis, but she strayed from that approach with a day off Tuesday.
 
“I should have rested more probably,” Williams said. “After a while you start to feel like maybe everything’s behind you. I definitely learned maybe if you’re doing something right, don’t change it.”
 
Her energy reserve appeared low from the start of the quarterfinal, and she lost the first seven points. Radwanska took advantage of Williams’ lethargy by hitting several drop shots for winners and pouncing on weak second serves.
 
When Williams had a chance at an easy overhead, she walked up to the ball flat-footed. Facing break point early in the second set, she mustered only a 72-mph first serve, well below her norm of 110 or more.
 
Williams lost the final six points, dumped her last shot into the net and began looking ahead to the clay-court season. She plans to play next week at Charleston, S.C.
 
“I’ve definitely learned a lot about ways maybe I could prepare during the tournament,” she said.

Fish fights back to beat Almagro

There was bound to be testiness out on a hot Grandstand court today in Key Biscayne. Mardy Fish couldn’t have been happy there; again the top-ranked American had been shunted off the big stadium in his native land. And his opponent this day, Nicolas Almagro of Spain, has been known to get under people’s skin, with his sporadic grunting and sporadic shots fired in their direction. A couple of months ago, the man who beat Almagro at the Australian Open, Tomas Berdych, wouldn’t even shake his hand.

But for a good set and a half today, there was no tension at all, and not much competition. Fish, who seems to have put his dismal start to 2012 behind him in Miami, was in total control. He won the first set 6-3 and went up 4-2 in the second. But even that scoreline made it sound closer than it was. Deep into the second set, Fish still hadn't lost a point on which he’d made his first serve. The American controlled the action from forecourt and backcourt.

If all that seemed a little too easy for a match between two guys in the Top 12, it was. Almagro came to life at 2-4 in the second, winning three straight games and burning Fish with brilliant backhand winners along the way. He also brought out the testiness we’d been waiting for. At game point at 4-4, Almagro stopped a rally and challenged a call on his baseline. So confident was he of his challenge that he strode all the way to the other side of the net for the changeover. You knew, at that point, that he was going to be wrong. He was. But credit Almagro, despite his disbelief, for walking back, winning the next two points to hold, and a few minutes later ripping through Fish 7-2 in the tiebreraker to even a match that had looked to be all but over.

Now it was Fish’s turn to get testy. After one of Fish's volley misses, Almagro growled in celebration; Fish shot him a look and growled right back. Temperatures were starting to rise, and it appeared that Fish would be the one to boil over. He struggled with errors and began to flail on defense. In each of his first three service games of the third set, he was forced to stave off a break point. He smacked the court with his racquet and even took a swipe at his shoes.

But staving off those break points was the key. It not only kept Fish even on the scoreboard, it made Almagro think about opportunities he’d blownâ€"the Spaniard missed an easy backhand on his first break chance. At 3-4, it all caught up with him. Up love-30 on Almagro’s serve, Fish slid a silky backhand down the line for a winner for triple break point. At 30-40, Almagro netted an easy forehand to give Fish a 5-3 lead.

Some big serves, big forehands, and a love hold later, Fish had a 6-3, 6-7 (2), 6-3 win and was into the quarters, where he awaits the winner of Andy Roddick and Juan Monaco. It’s the first positive result Fish has had this season outside of Davis Cup; maybe his bottoming-out press conference two weeks ago in Indian Wells did him some good, got some expectations off of his back. At each turn, his win today brought us the unexpected, and that stayed true even at the handshake. After looking like they might get into it on this hot day, Fish and Almagro gave each other a hug instead. “Good battle,” Fish told him.

â€"Steve Tignor

Sauber is proof that each point counts

Sauber’s second place finish in the Malaysian Grand Prix was a big deal. So big that the team were keen to remind outstanding driver Sergio Perez to not lose his head int eh waning laps and throw the race away trying to make a daring pass for the lead. The reason?  money…what else is new

Share and Enjoy

FacebookTwitterDeliciousDiggStumbleUponAdd to favoritesEmailRSSLinkedIn

Formula One finances…why the new loan?

An interesting statement on Formula One’s website today touted the re-financing of the long-term structured debt that owners CVC Capital Partners posses.  The deal would reclassify the long-term note for an additional four years.  Here is the statement: Formula One Group has launched a process to extend its current financing facilities. This will involve raising $2.27bn of new facilities

Share and Enjoy

FacebookTwitterDeliciousDiggStumbleUponAdd to favoritesEmailRSSLinkedIn

Bernie says he’s got no worries about Bahrain

Bernie Ecclestone says there’s nothing to worry about ahead of Formula 1′s return to Bahrain, despite ongoing protests in the Arab nation that linger since last year — when they and more serious unrest forced the race to be cancelled. “Not at all,” he told the BBC in response to a question about whether he

Share and Enjoy

FacebookTwitterDeliciousDiggStumbleUponAdd to favoritesEmailRSSLinkedIn

Azarenka 26-0 in 2012 after close call

Get Adobe Flash player

KEY BISCAYNE, Florida (AP)â€"Top-ranked Victoria Azarenka lost 10 of the first 11 games, then rallied to remain unbeaten this year by overcoming Dominika Cibulkova 1-6, 7-6 (7), 7-5 Monday in the fourth round of the Sony Ericsson Open.

Azarenka won her 26th consecutive match, a streak that began at the start of this year. Her start is the best on the women’s tour since Martina Hingis went 37-0 to begin 1997.

In the second set, Azarenka fell behind 4-love. She found herself two points from defeat five times but swept the last three games and converted the first match point when Cibulkova sailed a passing shot long.

Azarenka has won her four previous tournaments this year, including the Australian Open for her first Grand Slam title. She seeks her third Key Biscayne title.

Serena Williams matched a career high with 20 aces to beat Samantha Stosur 7-5, 6-3 and advance to the quarterfinals.

“My serve was hot,” Williams said. “I was like, `That’s pretty cool.”’

Williams avenged a loss to Stosur when they last met in the U.S. Open final in September.

“That wasn’t in my mind,” Williams said. “I just thought, `This is a new game.”’

Also reaching the quarterfinals was No. 2 Maria Sharapova, who overcame 11 double-faults to beat Ekaterina Makarova 6-4, 7-6 (3). Sharapova won despite committing 52 unforced errors and losing her serve four times.

No. 1 Novak Djokovic advanced to the men’s fourth round by beating No. 27-seeded Viktor Troicki 6-3, 6-4. Djokovic is bidding for his third Key Biscayne title and second in a row.

No. 8-seeded Mardy Fish assured he’ll remain the top-ranked American man by beating No. 28 Kevin Anderson 6-4, 6-3. Fish has yet to play in the stadium this tournament and instead faced Anderson at 11 a.m. on the grandstand court, but he said that was fine because prefers an early start.

In other women’s play, former No. 1 Caroline Wozniacki defeated No. 23 Yanina Wickmayer 7-6 (6), 6-0. Reigning French Open champion Li Na rallied past Sabine Lisicki 3-6, 6-4, 6-2, and No. 5 Agnieszka Radwanska defeated 18-year-old Garbine Muguruza Blanco 6-3, 6-2.

The No. 10-seeded Williams lost only six points on her first serve against the No. 6-seeded Stosur, but had to rally after being broken in the first game of each set.

Williams failed to convert her first seven break-point chances, then muscled her way back into the match. She also showed finesse, such as when she chipped a forehand drop shot that barely cleared the net for a dainty winner.

Williams is playing in her first tournament since January after being sidelined by a left ankle injury. She hasn’t won a title since August, and seeks a record sixth Key Biscayne championship.

“I’m really trying so hard,” she told the crowd. “My mom gave me the ultimate pep talk last night, so thanks, Mom.”

Her sister Venus was to face Ana Ivanovic in the last fourth-round match Monday night. Venus is playing in her first tournament since withdrawing from the U.S. Open last August after being diagnosed with a fatigue-causing autoimmune disease.

“We both have been through a lot,” Serena said. “And each match, whether we’re beating top-10 player or a top-80 player, we really thoroughly enjoy it and want to do really well.”

Wozniacki beats Serena in straights

Get Adobe Flash player

KEY BISCAYNE, Florida (AP)â€"Serena Williams’ bid for a record sixth Key Biscayne title ended Tuesday night when she lost in the quarterfinals of the Sony Ericsson Open to former No. 1 Caroline Wozniacki, 6-4, 6-4.

“I made her run,” Wozniacki said.

Wozniacki served well and was content to keep the ball in play from the baseline, using her retrieving skills to extend rallies until Williams would make a mistake. Williams hit 34 winners to 12 for Wozniacki, but also committed 36 unforced errors to the Dane’s 13.

“Everyone I play always plays the match of the year,” Williams said.

Williams, seeded 10th, was playing in her first tournament since January after being sidelined by a left ankle injury. She hasn’t won a title since August.

“I probably played about 20 percent,” Williams said. “I just made a tremendous amount of errors. There’s no reason for that. I’m older and I shouldn’t do that. There’s no excuse. I’ve just got to stop that. It’s silly.”

Rafael Nadal swept five consecutive games midway through his match, propelling him to a 6-4, 6-4 win over Kei Nishikori to reach the quarterfinals.

The victory was by far Nadal’s most taxing of the tournament, and he took a medical timeout late in the opening set for treatment of his troublesome left knee. Even so, he’s one round closer to his first Key Biscayne title.

“I am not probably in perfect condition today with the left knee,” he said. “But the important thing is to try to win as many matches as possible. For me this is an important tournament, and every victory has very, very big value for me, especially without being perfect.”

Nadal, a three-time runner-up at Key Biscayne, lost the final last year to Novak Djokovic, and they could meet again Sunday. The top-ranked Djokovic reached the final eight by beating No. 17-seeded Richard Gasquet 7-5, 6-3.

No. 2 Maria Sharapova became the first semifinalist when she drubbed reigning French Open champion Li Na 6-3, 6-0. Sharapova had lost their previous four meetings.

“I just really wanted to change that,” she said, “so I was extremely focused and, you know, looking forward to the match.”

Like Nadal, Sharapova seeks her first Key Biscayne title. She lost the final in 2005, 2006 and last year.

Nadal has been bothered by his knee since Indian Wells, where he lost to Roger Federer in the semifinals two weeks ago. Nine games into his match against Nishikori, Nadal called a medical timeout and had a trainer tape his leg.

That’s when the momentum swung. In the next game, Nadal took the opening set with a service break when Nishikori sailed an easy forehand long. The Spaniard broke again as he raced to a 3-love lead in the second set.

“At the end of the first set, I felt that I started to win my serves easier than him,” Nadal said. “I had more the control of the game.”

Nadal improved to 16-3 this year. He’s seeking his first tournament title since the 2011 French Open.

No. 4 Andy Murray, No. 5 David Ferrer and No. 6 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga also won in straight sets.

No. 8 Mardy Fish edged No. 12 Nicolas Almagro 6-3, 6-7 (2), 6-3. Fish was relegated to the grandstand court for the third consecutive match rather than the stadium, even though he’s the top-ranked American man, but the slight didn’t faze him.

Less than 24 hours after his upset win over Federer, Andy Roddick endured a drubbing against Juan Monaco, 7-5, 6-0.

Monaco, a patient baseliner seeded 21st, was unfazed by Roddick’s big serve, and the match became a succession of long rallies. Roddick began to look weary as the match progressed and stumbled after several shots as the match slipped away.

For Roddick, the performance was a big comedown after he beat Federer for only the third time in 24 tries, temporarily silencing critics who say he should consider retirement.

Roddick loses bagel set in loss to Monaco

KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP)â€"The buzz Andy Roddick got from beating Roger Federer turned into a hangover Tuesday, when Juan Monaco became a real headache.
 
Less than 24 hours after his upset win over Federer, Roddick endured a drubbing against Monaco, 7-5, 6-0.
 
Monaco, a patient baseliner seeded 21st, was unfazed by Roddick’s big serve, and the match became a succession of long rallies. Roddick began to look weary as the match progressed and stumbled after several shots as the match slipped away.

Roddick said he’s not in peak condition after being sidelined by right hamstring and right ankle injuries earlier this year.
 
“I just didn’t have it physically,” he said. “I got to about 4-all, and I wasâ€"you know, I’m out of shape. That’s it.”
 
The loss was a big comedown after Roddick beat Federer for only the third time in 24 tries, temporarily silencing critics who say he should consider retirement.
 
Roddick’s ranking has slipped to 34th, his lowest since 2001. He might return to the top 30 next week, and he said his game is headed in the right direction entering the clay-court season.
 
“My tennis has come around a long way in the last two weeks, maybe three weeks,” he said. “Now I feel good enough where I feel like I can put in the work away from the court and get my legs back under me as far as strength and fitness.”
 
No. 2-seeded Maria Sharapova became the first semifinalist when she routed reigning French Open champion Li Na 6-3, 6-0. Sharapova had lost their previous four meetings.
 
“I just really wanted to change that,” she said, “so I was extremely focused and, you know, looking forward to the match.”
 
Sharapova seeks her first Key Biscayne title. She lost the final in 2005, 2006 and last year.
 
In other men’s fourth-round play, No. 2 Rafael Nadal swept five consecutive games midway through his match and beat No. 16-seeded Kei Nishikori 6-4, 6-4.
 
The victory was by far Nadal’s most taxing of the tournament, and he took a medical timeout late in the opening set for treatment of his troublesome left knee. Even so, he’s one round closer to his first Key Biscayne title.
 
“I am not probably in perfect condition today with the left knee,” he said. “But the important thing is to try to win as many matches as possible. For me this is an important tournament, and every victory has very, very big value for me, especially without being perfect.”
 
Nadal, a three-time runner-up at Key Biscayne, lost the final last year to Novak Djokovic, and they could meet again Sunday. The top-ranked Djokovic reached the final eight by beating No. 17-seeded Richard Gasquet 7-5, 6-3.
 
No. 4 Andy Murray and No. 6 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga also won in straight sets.
 
No. 8 Mardy Fish edged No. 12 Nicolas Almagro 6-3, 6-7 (2), 6-3. Fish was relegated to the grandstand court for the third consecutive match, even though he’s the top-ranked American man, but the slight didn’t faze him.
 
“I certainly want to play on stadium court,” Fish said. “But they’ve got to put someone out on the grandstand, and who’s that going to be? Are you going to put Federer out there, or Djokovic, or Nadal, or Serena? I’m not going to go ahead of those guys as far as people coming to watch them play. You’ve got to go where you’ve got to go.”
 
Monaco’s victory spoiled a potential quarterfinal matchup between former high school teammates Fish and Roddickâ€"not that fans seemed disappointed. Thanks to Miami’s large Argentine population, Monaco enjoyed strong support from the stadium crowd, with fans singing in Spanish between points.
 
The victory by the 27-year-old Monaco wasn’t a shock. He has played well this year, winning Vina del Mar last month for his fourth career title and first since 2007.
 
Roddick had only eight winners and 37 unforced errors. He hit just two aces and lost serve five times.
 
“When you have to make a quick recovery, it will expose you if you’re not in shape,” he said.
 
Nadal’s not at a physical peak, either. He has been bothered by his knee since Indian Wells, where he lost to Federer in the semifinals two weeks ago.
 
Nine games into his match against Nishikori, Nadal called a medical timeout and had a trainer tape his leg. That’s when the momentum swung.
 
In the next game, Nadal took the opening set with a service break when Nishikori sailed an easy forehand long. The Spaniard broke again as he raced to a 3-love lead in the second set.
 
“At the end of the first set, I felt that I started to win my serves easier than him,” Nadal said. “I had more the control of the game.”
 
Nadal improved to 16-3 this year. He’s seeking his first tournament title since the 2011 French Open.

Gloucestershire granted council loan

Gloucestershire are to receive a bridging loan of £400,000 from Bristol City Council while they await the outcome of their appeal over the planning application for the redevelopment of their Nevil Road ground

Ferguson stumped by United's Euro failure

Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson says he is at a loss to explain the Red Devils' poor form in Europe this season which ended with a comprehensive defeat against Athletic Bilbao.

Davies joins Kent ranks

Kent have signed Mark Davies, the former Durham and England Lions fast bowler, on a one-year deal. Davies, 31, has been with Kent on trial for the last few weeks and took part in the club's pre-season tour to Antigua.

Al-Wasl beaten, Ajman move up

Ricardo Oliveira scored a late winner for Al-Jazira to condemn Diego Maradona's Al-Wasl to defeat, while there were also victories for Ajman and Bani Yas over Al Wahda and Al-Emirates respectively.

MCC considers Afghanistan tour

The MCC is contemplating a tour of Afghanistan. The commitment has come from Phillip Hodson, the MCC president, who will follow up his official visit to Afghanistan by a personal visit to Pakistan.

Jayawardene blames top order for loss

Mahela Jayawardene, the Sri Lanka captain, has blamed the failure of the top order for the defeat against Pakistan that has left them on the brink of elimination from the Asia Cup

England are favourites - Swann

Graeme Swann believes England are "just favourites" to pull off their highest ever run chase and secure a come-from-behind victory against Sri Lanka in Galle after battling through the final session of the third day with eight wickets intact.

Clarke possible target for Pune Warriors

Michael Clarke, the Australia captain, is being considered as "one of the options" to fill the 11th and last overseas players' slot at Pune Warriors for the fifth season of the IPL

London calling in Oceania

Hosts New Zealand are ranked as strong favourites as Oceanian aspirants prepare to battle for continental glory over the coming week, with passage to London 2012 the prize on offer.

Redknapp: There's a job to do at Spurs

Harry Redknapp has said he believes the next England manager needs to be English and cut a more experienced figure, however, has assured that he is focused on achieving success with Tottenham.

Herath torments England as Sri Lanka take hold

The batting frailties that cost England so dear in the UAE were exposed once again on the second morning as the tourists struggled in reply to Sri Lanka's first innings total of 318

Buffon: Juve’s success is down to Conte

Antonio Conte’s determination and ambition has been the key to Juventus’s revival according to Gianluigi Buffon, who has admitted he has been surprised by the club’s unbeaten run.

Cech hails perfect result

After their 1-0 win over Benfica last night, Petr Cech has called Chelsea's trip to Portugal a "perfect game" after a solid performance which sees them return to Stamford Bridge with a clean sheet and away goal in hand.

The heartbeat of Il Grande Torino

An exceptional and alluringly complete player, Valentino Mazzola was the captain and inspiration of Torino’s all-conquering side of the 1940s until the tragedy of Superga. FIFA.com recalls his marvellous career.

Jovanovic proud, Mourinho full of praise

Coach Ivan Jovanovic has said his APOEL Nicosia side have no chance of making the UEFA Champions League semi-finals after their 3-0 defeat to Real Madrid in Cyprus, while opposite number Jose Mourinho was full of praise.

Kaliningrad ponders stadium concepts

This week Kaliningrad has begun its plans to develop itself into one of the 2018 FIFA World Cup Russia™ host cities by assessing six different plans for its stadium site and the city's festivities at a two-day forum.

Thiago Silva: Milan have an immense pedigree

Thiago Silva speaks to FIFA.com about how AC Milan can beat Barcelona, the class of Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Lionel Messi, the pressure on Brazil to win in style and the possibility of representing his country at the London Olympics.

FIFA acknowledges Teixeira resignation

FIFA has taken note of the official confirmation of Ricardo Terra Teixeira’s resignation from his functions as chairman of the LOC for Brazil 2014 and president of the CBF.

Kohli and Gambhir build solid platform

The departure from Australian pitches to friendlier "home" conditions in Bangladesh should have given India's batsmen some respite, but the top order had to work hard against an inspired Sri Lankan outfit

Nacional bag point, Benfica edge ahead

Nacional grabbed a point in a thrilling 4-4 draw at Olhanense, while Sporting thrashed Guimaraes 5-0 to move fourth, and Benfica edged into second place with a 2-1 win at Pacos Ferreira.

Spot-kicks, a stalwart and a centurion

Cristiano Ronaldo's most recent goal-scoring feat and Real Madrid's predatory prowess takes centre stage in FIFA.com's latest stats review, as well as Braga's victorious streak and an unwelcome weekend for Cologne.

Di Matteo: Job only half-done

Despite securing a 1-0 win in Portugal, Chelsea manager Roberto Di Matteo believes their UEFA Champions League quarter-final tie remains wide open with Benfica impressing on the road this season.

Marseille selection woes as Bayern loom

Marseille coach Didier Deschamps today announced goalkeeper Elinton Andrade will be filling in for Steve Mandanda in the UEFA Champions League tomorrow, while also stating he believes Bayern Munich are favourites.