We have 12 hours of LIVE coverage today, including Roger Federer v Rafa Nadal. It all starts now w/ Kei Nishikori v Donald Young.Watch on Tennis Channel and tennischanneleverywhere.com
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We have 12 hours of LIVE coverage today, including Roger Federer v Rafa Nadal. It all starts now w/ Kei Nishikori v Donald Young.Watch on Tennis Channel and tennischanneleverywhere.com
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Check out Jon Wertheim's Stat of the Day! (hint: Federer v Nadal)
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Jim Courier shares his thoughts on Roger Federer v Rafa Nadal.Watch the match LIVE on Tennis Channel at 8PM ET.http://www.tennischanneleverywhere.com/
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12:24 PHOTOS: 2017 Indian Wells R4 Rafael Nadal vs. Roger Federer |
2017 Indian Wells R4 Rafael Nadal vs. Roger Federer 2/6 3/6 "In Australia it was a very close match," said Nadal. "I had good chances to win. Today, not. Today he played better than me. I didn't play my best match, and he played well. These kind of matches, when you're not playing your match, are impossible to win." "When Roger has the advantage, his serve is so good, he has a lot of confidence with his serve, he's able to play much more relaxed. The worst thing in that match for me was from the beginning I was at a disadvantage [with him] breaking the first game of the match, and then breaking the second game of the second set. That's so difficult to play against Roger this way." |
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So far in Indian Wells, things have gone as expected in the ‘quarter of death’ with Djokovic, Federer, Nadal, and Kyrgios all making the fourth round. Murray who had the easiest draw of them all, however, lost his first match against Pospisil.
Yesterday there were two big matches in the stacked quarter between Kyrgios vs Zverev and Djokovic vs Del Potro which Kyrgios won 6-3, 6-4 while Djokovic won 7-5, 4-6, 6-1.
They both played incredibly well and the result of the rematch is impossible to predict. Djokovic played better than he did in Acapulco but so did Kyrgios. Kyrgios was basically toying with Zverev putting his unlimited talent on full display and getting the double break to win the opening set.
One shot he hit through his legs surprised Zverev to such an extent that Zverev missed a sitter volley into the open court. That point pretty much summed up the match. Kyrgios was making Zverev look like an amateur.
The guy truly has unlimited talent. The only thing standing between him and multiple slams is his mind. I have gained some respect for him since his last meeting with Djokovic after he called Djokovic ‘the most complete player I have ever played‘.
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The 2017 Indian Wells draw is all about the bottom quarter which has been stacked with Djokovic, Nadal, Federer, Kyrgios, Zverev, and Del Potro. I think it will make things more interesting in the early rounds but I have to wonder how Djokovic can get this difficult a draw after what happened in Acapulco.
After getting Del Potro in his second match in Acapulco he gets him again in his second match in Indian Wells. The odds of that happening must have been very slim but then he also gets Kyrgios in his next match like in Acapulco.
It seems suspicious, especially with the following in mind:
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So Djokovic has been struggling to reach his former level of dominance ever since losing to Querrey at Wimbledon last year, who by the way defeated Obnoxious Nick 3-6, 6-1, 7-5 in the semis of Acapulco.
As usual, Kyrgios can’t follow through when he defeats a top player. Same as he did when he defeated Nadal and Federer. I guess he didn’t feel like winning. Querrey mustn’t be ‘good’ enough to deserve Kyrgios’ best effort.
To get back to Djokovic, I was wondering what it would take for people to feel like he is ‘back’, and what that means exactly. I mean it’s highly unlikely that he will return to his dominance of 2015.
That was insane dominance which had to end sooner rather than later. And once you lose a couple of matches and lose that edge it can be tricky to get it back. Tennis is a confidence game and winning is a habit.
We have seen Federer and Nadal having the same problems many times and finding confidence again. No player can dominate indefinitely. A tennis career is a series of ups and downs, of peaks and valleys.
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After Federer lost to Donskoy Wednesday Djokovic followed him in Acapulco yesterday when he lost 7-6(9), 7-5 to Kygios. I thought Djokovic played great except for the final game where he wilted under the pressure and dropped serve to love.
Up until that point, there was nothing in this very high-quality match. Kyrgios has now won his first match against Nadal, Federer, and Djokovic. Ever since I saw him play against Nadal at Wimbledon I knew he was a special talent.
I actually like his game a lot. The problem is his attitude stinks so much that he is impossible to like. He is the most obnoxious jerk you can possibly imagine. By far the most unlikeable tennis player I have ever come across.
And I’m not saying this because he beat my favorite player. I have disliked him for some time now. Who would ever forget the incident where totally disrespected Stan, one of the nicest guys on tour?
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World #116 and qualifier Evgeny Donskoy scored a sensational 3-6, 7-6(7), 7-6(5) victory over current Australian Open champion Federer yesterday in Dubai after saving three match points. Donskoy also came back from 2-5 in the second set tiebreak, 2-5 in the third set, and 1-5 in the third set tiebreak.
A truly remarkable turn of events after I assumed Federer would roll over Donskoy in no time. Kind of like I assumed Djokovic would roll over Istomin in Melbourne. But since when does Federer lose after having so many opportunities to finish his opponent?!
You can call it enormous choking from Federer or superb play from Donskoy when he was down. I guess it is a bit of both. But I was really impressed with Donskoy. He reminded me a bit of Djokovic the way he returned and played from the baseline.
He was fearless and stayed positive despite facing terrible odds. It was a fresh and entertaining changeup from the lower ranked players who usually implode in that situation against Federer. In fact, Donskoy was imploding until 1-5 in the third set tiebreak but then made a miraculous comeback.
Federer suffers first loss to a player outside the Top 100 since Delbonis in Hamburg 2013. First on hard since Indy 2000 to James Sekulov.
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Tendremos al ·¸2️⃣, al ¨¦4️⃣, al ª¸6️⃣, al ·7️⃣, al ¦¹8️⃣ y al §ª del #Top10. ¡El mejor cartel de toda nuestra historia! #AMT2017 pic.twitter.com/7Uylc6KkZK
— #AMT2017 (@AbiertoTelcel) February 23, 2017
Some good news here for Djokovic- and tennis fans in general although I’m not so sure it is good news for Nadal fans. Nadal will play in Acapulco too and has lost his last 15 sets against Djokovic, including the 7-5, 6-3, 6-1 beatdown at his favorite French Open.
I thought the break until Indian Wells will do Djokovic well but obviously, he feels he doesn’t need it. It sure makes things more interesting for next week!
Next week there is the Dubai 500 event as well where Murray and Federer will make their first appearances since Melbourne. Dubai and Acapulco will both be strong events. Here are the top eight seeds:
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The answer to this question is not a no-brainer which means that Djokovic fans will say the answer is Djokovic while Federer fans will say the opposite. That is just how the minds of fans work. It’s an annoying little thing in tennis called bias.
Everyone who is a fan of any particular player has it. I have it too, but unlike most fans, I admit that I am biased. And once you admit to bias you can’t really be biased because bias is in many ways a form of denial.
That said if you think I am not qualified to make this post because I am a Djokovic fan you are welcome to stop reading here. Or you can continue reading because I am a tennis expert and know what I am talking about.
Clay Court Resume | Djokovic | Federer |
French Open Titles | 1 | 1 |
French Open Finals | 3 | 4 |
Masters 1000 Titles | 8 | 6 |
ATP 500 Titles | – | – |
ATP 250 Titles | 4 | 4 |
Clay Court Titles | 13 | 11 |
Head-to-Head | 4 | 4 |
Head-to-Head vs Nadal | 7-15(47%) | 2-13(15%) |
As you can see the numbers are very close with Federer having the added French Open final but Djokovic has more Masters titles, more overall titles, and a significantly better head-to-head record against Nadal.
Djokovic also made four French Open semi-finals as opposed to Federer’s two, that 2013 semi-final being the most memorable one where he was a break up in the fifth against Nadal while Federer has never been able to stretch Nadal to five sets on clay.
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"I am having fun on the court"Roger Federer gives exclusive interview with Tennis Channel after his winWATCH:
Watch Roger Federer's post-match interview after a convincing 6-2, 6-3 win over Rafael Nadal in the fourth round of the BNP Paribas.Federer faces Nick Kyrgios next, who dethroned defending champ Novak Djokovic.
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Roger Federer stops by the Tennis Channel booth after his win tonight to talk about his racket, backhand, and more!
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Watch Pliskova v Muguruza LIVE now on Tennis Channel Plus!Go now to http://BuyTCPlus.com to subscribe
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Tune in to Tennis Channel Plus to watch Muguruza v Pliskova LIVE from the BNP Paribas Open!Subscribe now at BuyTCPlus.com
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