London; Warsaw; Halle (2R/1R/1R) - June 8-15, I
AEGON International
Second Round - London
Qualifying (
Draw)
Men's Singles (
Seeds -
Section 1 -
Section 2 -
Section 3 -
Section 4)
Men's Doubles (
Top Half -
Bottom Half)
Eighth seed
Jefferson Drake will headline the CWLand contingent in the third round of the AEGON Championships after a decidedly poor day for the nation. After four players joined Drake in the second round yesterday, the same four fell out in disappointing fashion in a frustrating day of tennis. Drake had little trouble in dispatching American
Samuel Thorpe in straight sets; Drake's explosive brand of tennis proving all too much for Thorpe as he raced to a 6-0, 4-1 lead. Whilst Thorpe managed to edge back into the contest, Drake merely lifted a gear to secure a
6-0, 7-5 mauling. His opponent will not, however, be fellow CWLander
Heath Davis after the world number 43 was edged out in straight sets by
David Champion. As expected, it was an ace-a-thon on court three as they combined for a total of twenty-six aces in just 22 games. But it was Davis who dropped service at the most crucial times as the Aussie sounded out a warning to the rest of the circuit with an impressive match - the tenth seed sealing a third round clash with Drake
7-5, 6-4.
Elsewhere, French Open quarterfinalist
Jojo Mustard fell to a surprise defeat against Russian workhorse
Dmitry Orlov. With many heralding Mustard as the "dark horse" in the clay season, he found himself troubled early by the world number 38. Orlov broke service early in the first set to surge to a 3-1 lead; a lead Mustard was unable to claw back despite his best efforts. Lacking a monster serve like some of the others in the draw, Orlov relied heavily on some superb placement to undo the fourteenth seed; a late break in the second set sealing a big
6-3, 6-3 win. Orlov now faces fourth seed
Miroslav Brdar in the third round, and will see himself as a real chance of stealing a win after the Croat struggled to a win against Morocco's
Hayden Onwye. Onwye brought up two set points in the first set tiebreaker, before dropping it 10-12; the Croat not finding his best form to start the grass season. Nevertheless, he managed to pull himself back from the brink again in the second set as he came back from 3-5 down to claim four games on the trot and a
7-6(10), 7-5 win.
Ninth seed
Rick Henson will face the truest test of his fitness in the third round after he cruised past controversial CWLand figure
Alex de Wet. De Wet played some exciting tennis in the first set as he surprisingly went a break up against the highly rated American. But Henson has shown again and again that he's one of the best players in the world with his back against the wall, and the Rotterdam champion fired back with a double salvo to seal the first set. From there, de Wet repeated his frustrating fade out at the French Open as Henson romped to a
6-4, 6-1 victory. His opponent will be local hope
Henry Charles, who, with the crowd firmly behind him, will undoubtedly test the injured calf of the 28-year old. The fifth seed overcame an early scare against The Ukraine's
Roman Dorogan to record an eventually straightforward victory
3-6, 6-0, 6-2.
Finally,
Spas Delev was unable to cause a boil over against
Oneil Stewart, but he did trouble the Jamaican eleventh seed in the sixty-six minutes they were on court. The French Open quarterfinalist is well known for his dogged nature, but he found himself in trouble against the lightening quick CWLander who made sure the Jamaican would be forced to play that one extra shot. Trailing 2-4 in the first, Stewart managed to break back to return the set to a level footing before stealing another break as a result of Delev putting a simple forehand volley straight into the net. The second set followed a similar path to the first, only this time it was Delev who got the immediate break back against the Stewart serve. Despite that hiccup, the ultra-talented Jamaican had just enough about him to seal a
7-5, 6-4 win. His opponent in the third round will be Canadian
Davis Kennedy who started his tournament well with a straight sets win over Belgian prospect
Yves Parmentier. Parmentier showed glimpses of the form that makes him one of the most highly rated youngsters in world tennis, but couldn't sustain it against the always solid seventh seed. Kennedy served out the match with a pair of backhand winners to advance
7-6(4), 6-3.
In other matches, the two top seeds started their tournaments brightly with straight sets wins. Top seed
Jason Hall started slowly against
Paolo Mandonna, but eventually picked up the pace to get a measure of revenge for his second round exit in Madrid with a
7-5, 6-1 win. He will face giant Latvian wildcard
Ivars Emsis in the third round after he out-gunned
Oscar Highsmith in three sets after firing down twenty-eight aces. Meanwhile, second seed
Radek Špidla showed he will be a force to be reckoned with at Wimbledon as he smashed Dutchman
Sipko Wetzel in straight sets. Things get tougher from here, though, as thirteenth seed
Morgan Carter awaits; the American came from a set down to defeat his doubles partner
Wayne Boyd in three sets. In the upset of the round,
Zhijun Sun made a worrying return to competitive action as he bowed out in three to
Lee Inmin. In a bizarre clash, Zhijun looked like he hadn't missed a step after two months out in a dominant first set which lasted just twenty minutes. But Lee fired as Zhijun went back into his shell, and despite no obvious signs of his broken toe hampering his efforts, Zhijun fell to defeat. Lee's
1-6, 6-4, 6-3 win sets up an unlikely third round clash with French qualifier
Mikel Fosdike.
- Seeded players out: Jojo Mustard; Zhijun Sun.
In doubles action,
Spas Delev's couple of days just got a lot worse as for the second tournament in a row, he and partner
Roman Dorogan bowed out in the first round. To be fair to the CWLand-Ukraine pairing, they were given a horrid draw as the team once ranked as high as five,
Morgan Carter and
Wayne Boyd, handed them an early defeat. Showing no signs of tension ahead of their second round clash against each other, Boyd and Carter had little trouble in disposing of the underdogs who still look like they are getting used to each other's style of play. The
6-2, 6-2 win sets up a blockbuster second round clash against fifth seeds
Heath Davis and
Jojo Mustard.
Elsewhere,
Denis Isaev and
Evginiy Maximov combined well to smash wildcards
Henry Charles and
Michael Posinković. Maximov, minus regular doubles partner
Andrej Konc who surprisingly attempted to qualify in Warsaw, meshed well with his fellow Belarusian as they crushed the British number one and his partner
6-1, 6-0. Elsewhere,
Zhijun Sun managed to at least get a win on the board in one of his matches as he and
Hau Li-an combined to account for Uzbek pair
Rustam Toshpulatov and
Denis Inomov. The
Henson Brothers also paired up for the first time in an international tournament; signalling their Wimbledon intentions with a
6-2, 6-3 mauling of Indian brothers
Ashim and
Seby Kumar. The win sets up a mouth-watering clash with French Open finalists
Tal Cohen and
Raz Teper.
- Seeded players out: None.
Orange Warsaw Open
First Round - Warsaw
Qualifying (
Draw)
Men's Singles (
Seeds -
Top Half -
Bottom Half)
The
Orange Warsaw Open got underway without any major incident as seven of the eight seeds advanced to the final sixteen. Fourth seed
Jamee Hancianu bounced back from his finals loss in the Challenger tournament in Turin last week by accounting for Peruvian 25-year old
José Navarro. Whilst Navarro showed some of that South American flare, he was unable to really impose himself on the match as the 19-year old showed maturity beyond his years in pulling off a victory. In two tight sets, Hancianu broke the stalemate late in the piece on both occasions to sneak through to the second round
7-5, 6-4. Hancianu will be heartened by the fact that Navarro only had one opportunity to break service (he failed), and will need to take his solid first serve percentage into his second round clash with Portugal's
Valter Cordiero.
Elsewhere,
Randy Smeltz stayed on course for a possible quarterfinal showdown with his younger countryman as the 28-year old took a victory over Brazil's
Carlos Machado. With Machado's doubles partner,
Morton Blundell, competing with
Yves Parmentier in the interim in London, the Brazilian would have hoped to have advanced further into the draw. But Smeltz has been a tough cookie to crack in the early stages of clay tournaments this season (despite the showing in Pörtschach), and never really looked like giving Machado a sniff. In sixty-three minutes, the fifth seed advanced to the second round
6-3, 7-5 as he staved off a late charge from the Brazilian to seal victory.
His second round opponent will be
Zbiginiew Boniek after the Austrian survived a testing clash against youngster
Jarko Maxum. Maxum was certainly unlucky not to take a set off the Austrian after finding himself up 2-0 in the first set. But the Austrian number one proved just too physically strong for his younger opponent, and countered the speed and skill of Maxum with grunt and 'work' on the ball. In the second set tiebreaker, Maxum fell away completely as Boniek secured an unconvincing
6-4, 7-6(1) victory. Certainly, the path looks open for an all-CWLand clash in the quarters.
Elsewhere in the draw, seventh seed
Sergio Joaquin was a surprise loser in the first round as he gave up a one set lead to be beaten by another Austrian - qualifier
Martin Reiter. Reiter looked one step behind Joaquin in the first set, but the world number 39 bottled it completely against the man ranked some 150 spots lower than him. Elsewhere,
Tiago Matias escaped with a victory despite being given one of the highest ranked non-seeded players in the draw first up; world number 47
Ion Andueza. The Casablanca finalist put up a real fight, but could not pull off victory despite a dominant second set as Matias edged into the second round
6-4, 1-6, 6-3. He will hope that he can produce a more convincing showing in the second round as he faces local wildcard
Piotr Bak. Bak was a surprise winner against Brazil's
Roberto Santos; the world number 61 unable to stop Bak from taking a
6-4, 7-6(0) boilover.
- Seeded players out: Sergio Joaquin.
Gerry Weber Open
First Round - Halle
Qualifying (
Draw)
Men's Singles (
Seeds -
Top Half -
Bottom Half)
Second seed
Sven Oxenstierna will be thanking the tennis gods for opening the path for him to make a surprise appearance in a grass final in a blockbuster first day of action in the
Gerry Weber Open in Halle. The CWLander's great round started brightly as he dispatched Japan's
Ninteh Doh in a crushing victory to advance to the second round. Many have been sceptical over the clay court specialist’s ability on the quicker surface, but he never looked troubled against Doh as he smashed him
6-2, 6-0. His day got a lot better, though, as one of the favourites to take the tournament, third seed
Juan Moreno, sensationally crashed out in straight sets to local
Alex Peters. Peters, who surged into the top hundred last week after making the third round of the French Open, played out of his skin in front of a raucous crowd on centre court; outplaying the world number six in the hour-long clash. Moreno looked comfortable on grass, but it was Peters who took the initiative from the word go as he romped to a surprise
6-3, 6-4 win. Also falling was eighth seed
Almen Benaglio who was edged out in straight sets by Bulgaria's
Ivan Genov. The likely quarterfinal opponent for Oxenstierna was matched in all facets by the Bulgarian who has caused upsets right throughout the season when least expected. In two very tight sets, it was the Bulgarian who held his nerve against the Indian Wells finalist as he advanced to the second round
7-5, 7-6(2).
Rob Bowenburg was back in form in his first round clash as he had little trouble in beating German wildcard
Peter Seel. Despite a late fight back from Seel, he was never in with a shot against the confident CWLander who used the court brilliantly in his
6-0, 7-5 win. Bowenburg, whose ranking suffered in the clay season, prospered on the quickly courts as he let rip with twenty-four winners to overwhelm the German. He will hope to continue his form into the second round as he faces a showdown with fourth seed
Rasmus Olesen. The Dane likewise enjoyed the quicker surface as the shackles came off in a
6-2, 7-5 win over highly rated Croat
Nilikar Midid.
Scotland Rivers put in a brave performance, but it wasn't enough to pick up victory in his first ever ATP International Series match against Croatia's
Ivan Cesljar. Cesljar breezed through the first set in just twenty minutes, but found it much tougher in the second set as Rivers grew in confidence. But it was the experience of Cesljar which allowed him to pick up a confidence-boosting victory; breaking the Rivers serve late to advance
6-1, 7-5. His opponent in the second round will be Ivan Genov.
Perhaps overlooked after the massive upsets of the first round, world number one
Daniel Páez Blanco made a shaky start to his grass court assault as he stumbled over the line in his first round clash against
Maarten Berg. Gone was the swagger and the assertiveness on clay from Blanco's game, as he instead preferred to sit behind the baseline and try to slog it out against the Dutchman. Luckily for him, Berg has also played little tennis on grass and was unable to take advantage of the tentative top seed; Blanco scraping through to the second round
6-2, 4-6, 7-5. Mid-way through the second set, it looked as if he would get his first test against an experience hard-court performer as
Tom Vollan looked to have his first round match under wraps. Ahead
6-1, 4-0, Vollan suffered a strain which severely limited his ability to play his best tennis against qualifier
Anvar Juraev. Essentially on one leg, Vollan managed just four points on Juraev's service throughout the rest of the match as Juraev inexplicably advanced to a showdown with the world number one
1-6, 6-4, 6-2. In the match of the second round, Serbian
Danijel Micic will face off with French ace
Patrick Pascaul. Arguably two of the most underachieving players on the circuit, the pair will look to surge up the rankings with a quarterfinal showing here. Elsewhere, sixth seed
Carlo Amato will do battle with powerhouse
Kim Vollan of Norway after the world number 49 edged a tight victory over countryman
Haiku Morkel; backing up his surprise fourth round appearance in Paris with a gutsy
7-5, 7-6(0) victory.
- Seeded players out: Almen Benaglio; Juan Moreno.