Wednesday, September 7, 2011

US OPEN 2011: Men's Quarterfinals and R16 Preview



A Man With An Umbrella Arrives

BY MAD PROFESSAH


Due to a complete rain out of play on Tuesday September 7 the men's draw has been thrown into disarray. Because the US Open is the only major which does not have a day off between the semifinals and final, losing a day in which quarterfinals were supposed to be played complicates things dramatically.

Last year I correctly predicted 4 of 4 2010 men's quarterfinals and 4 of 4 2010 women's quarterfinals.
My predictions for the 2011 women's quarterfinals are also available. Below are my predictions for the two of the 2011 men's quarterfinals hat are set (and four of the Round of 16 matches).

The plan for today, Day 10 of the 2011 US Open, is to both finish off playing the last four round of 16 matches (which just happens to feature three American players: John Isner, Donald Young and Andy Roddick) AND the first two men's quarterfinals, on the same day.

Novak Djokovic SRB (1) v. Janko Tipsarevic SRB (20). The World #1 has only lost two matches all year long, and is having one of the all-time great seasons, with a record of 61 win, 9 tournament titles (including 2 majors). It's true that Djokovic almost lost his first set of the tournament in difficult conditions against the funky game of Aleksandr Dologopolov but that does not reflect any diminution in his powers. Tipsarevic is a player whose game Djokovic knows well, since they are from the same country and are fellow Davis Cup team members. Tipsarevic is a very smart player and knows how to be dangerous but it is very doubtful he can end Djokovic's streak in his very first major quarterfinal appearance unless Novak is having a very very bad day. PREDICTION: Djokovic.


 Roger Federer SUI (3) v. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga FRA (11). This is the best potential quarterfinal match up and should probably be the best match of this action-packed day. Federer is in his jaw-dropping 30th consecutive major quarterfinal while Tsonga is in his 6th quarterfinal of his career, and his first in New York City, a major which Federer has won more times (5) than Tsonga has been in the draw (4). Because of his injuries and absences from the sport Federer and Tsonga have only met 7 times, 4 of which have come this year, with 2 wins each. However, Tsonga has won the last two times they played, including an amazing result at Wimbledon where he came from 2-sets down to beat Roger in 5, the first time ANYONE had ever done that at a major tournament, let alone on Roger's best surface of grass (which is probably also Tsonga's best surface). So clearly Tsonga now does have the game to beat Roger and can do it if he is playing his best while Roger is not. Happily for Federer, the Swiss showed that he still has some of his best tennis left in him when he dismantled Juan Monaco 6-1 6-2 6-0 in a late-night match prior to Tuesday's deluge. Federer also enjoys a challenge, as evidenced by his glee in handling Djokovic his first loss of the year in Paris to end the Serb's undefeated season. I believe tonight's match will be very close, almost definitely 4 or 5 sets, with Federer coming through for a rematch with Djokovic in the semifinals on Saturday. PREDICTION: Federer.


The following fourth round matches are also being completed today.

Gilles Simon FRA (12) v. John Isner USA (28). For the second round in a row French counterpuncher Simon is taking on a giant, huge serving player. Simon was able to dismiss 6'6" 2009 US Open champion Juan Martin del Potro in four sets on Sunday (which I watched from the fourth row courside in Armstrong) while 6'9" John Isner was able to overcome stiff resistance from speedy Alex Bogomolov, Jr. Simon is a much better player than Bogomolov and unless Isner plays very well, he will face the same fate as Del Potro.This is the match where Isner needs to prove he is not just (in the words of Roger Federer, about another huge-serving American) "a great server" but a great player. Having also seen Isner play close up (from first row courtside in Armstrong) I would say he is not yet a great player, though he is a great competitor. That might be enough against the Frenchman, but I doubt it. PREDICTION: Simon.


Donald Young USA v. Andy Murray GBR (4). Amazingly, the young African American phenom has a win this year over a player named Andy Murray. However, that Andy Murray was recovering from his 3rd consecutive major final loss and is not the same player who handed new World #1 Novak Djokovic only his second loss of the season a few short weeks ago in Cincinnati. Young has finally lived up to his potential to reach the last 16 of a major tournament for the first time, beating 2 seeded players Juan Ignacio Chela (24) and Stanislas Wawrinka (14). By reaching the 4th round Young will receive the largest paycheck of his career. Hopefully he uses it wisely to invest in his game so that his 2011 US Open results are just the beginning of good results and not a fluke. PREDICTION: Murray.


David Ferrer ESP (5) v. Andy Roddick USA (21). This is the toughest match for me to predict in this round. I have not been that impressed with Roddick'splay and I haven't seen a single point of Ferrer's. But I know the Spaniard is always a rough customer, and against Roddick he leads their career head-to-head 5-3 including two crucial Davis Cup wins for Spain over USA (one from 2011). Presumably, Roddick will try and turn this encounter into a home court advantage Davis Cup match as well, but can his 29-year-old game match up to Ferrer's feistiness? PREDICTION: Ferrer.


Gilles Muller LUX v. Rafael Nadal ESP (2). Nadal will be interested in making a statement about his fitness after the world saw him cramping up after a press conference after his last match. Muller will be lucky to win a handful of games in each of the three sets played. PREDICTION: Nadal.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

US OPEN 2011: Women's Quarterfinals Preview


Andrew Ong/usopen.org

By MAD PROFESSAH


Caroline Wozniacki DEN (1) v. Andrea Petkovic GER (10). Wozniacki was hand delivered a get-out-of-jail free card from Svetlana Kuznetsova, who was leading 7-6(6) 4-2 40-15 when suddenly the Russian had (another) one of her epic collapses, losing 11 of the next 13 games in a draining 3-hour-plus match. This was something of a repeat of their 2009 US Open 4th round encounter which Wozniacki had won 2-6 7-6 7-6 on her way to only major final. Her opponent Petkovic played a much less dramatic match against talented Spaniard Carlos Suarez Navarro, winning in straight sets 6-1 6-4. If  2-time major champion Sveta couldn't blast "Sunshine" off the court, what chance does Petkorazzi have of winning? Regardless of who wins this match to reach the semifinal, they have almost no chance getting to the final since they are in Serena Williams half of the draw. PREDICTION: Wozniacki.


Serena Williams USA (28) v. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova RUS (17). The young, talented Russian was finally able to outlast the Iron Woman herself, Francesca Schiavone of Italy, in a 5-7 6-3 6-4 win to reach her second major quarterfinal of the year, claiming revenge for the come-from-behind win Schiavone had eked out during her historic journey to the 2011 French Open final. Unsurprisingly, Serena is the lowest seeded player to be in the final 8, following her straight sets dismissal of #4 seed Victoria Azarenka and #16 seed Ana Ivanovic. It is extremely doubtful the hard-hitting Pavlyuchenkova playing in her 2nd career quarterfinal will be able to make much impact on the hardest-hitting player of her generation playing in her 32nd quarterfinal.The only thing that could stop Serena winning the tournament on Saturday is being hit by a bus. PREDICTION: Williams.


Flavia Pennetta ITA (26) v. Angelique Kerber GER. The mystery quarterfinalists. It's not surprising that two of the quarterfinalists are from Germany, but that one of those German quarterfinalists is Angelique Kerber is stunning. After going through a notable lull after the great Steffi Graf, Germany has had a recent resurgence with Julia Georges, Sabine Lisicki and Andrea Petkovic all having reached the Top 20 in the rankings. However, it is the #4 German player who is in her first major quarterfinal against Italy's #2, Flavia Pennetta. Pennetta relishes her reputation as a giant killer, and eliminated Maria Sharapova from the draw 2 rounds ago. It is an incredible opportunity for the Italian to reach her first major semifinal and perhaps become the second woman from her country ever to reach a major final, and shockingly, the second Italian player this year. PREDICTION: Pennetta.


Vera Zvonareva RUS (2) v. Samantha Stosur AUS (9). This should be the popcorn match of the round. Zvonareva has been in 2 major finals and is now an established hard-court force to be reckoned with, but no-one who has ever had the mental collapses Vera has exhibited can ever really be counted on to play up to their potential level when it counts. In Samantha Stosur she faces an opponent who has beaten her 6 times in a row, but who is also known to wilt under the pressure of an important moment. Stosur has been improving in this category, and battling back to win the third set convincingly after losing the longest women's tie-break in Grand Slam history (15-17) against Maria Kirilenko shows her strengthening mental fortitude. Zvonareva has tasted success on these courts before and that might be the difference in a 3rd set tiebreak. PREDICTION: Zvonareva.

Monday, September 5, 2011

USO: Week one Round Up





1) “The match that must not be named”

This one was so bad I still have hangover as I write this.


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Quite baffling to realise that up until this match I hadn’t seen very much of Robin Haase. I knew he was an edgy, flamboyant talent who’d been sidelined rather a lot by injury. Beyond that I had heard murmurings of his being a head case.

I now want to “unsee” him.

Not that Murray has anything to be proud of. Nothing these two can do will ever live this down.

We don’t need to analyse  sh*t like this unless we’re interested in what happens when the laws of nature and the moral fabric of the universe break down.

What happened in Ashe stays in Ashe.

2) “Donald not-so-Young”

I suspect my perspective on Donald Young’s journey (there’s a euphemism)  is somewhat different to most Americans. I’ve heard of the brattiness, the run-ins with the USTA, the complexities arising from his parental coaching relationship, of course, but it seems the impression left by this simply hasn’t been as affecting as it has for many on the other side of the pond. Only natural.


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Most of the time I simply couldn’t care less, figuring he’s either not worth bothering with or will come of age in his own time.

Amongst other things, this meant I was prepared to vouch for his game without having to disentangle myself from the politics and the snark that I guess is part and parcel of following (and being let down by)  a home grown talent – especially one that makes life so difficult for himself. What I don’t understand is snark for the sake of snark, particularly when it comes from those without any such domestic ties.

When he beat Murray earlier this year, he was mostly derided as ‘Donald Duck’. And Murray was ripped on for losing to ‘Donald Duck’. Few seemed to think it might have had anything to do with his game. 

He didn’t follow up. Very few expected him to. Heavens knows if he’ll do it this time  – I’m not completely sold on the “kid grew up” narrative, he may simply have had another good week. Besides, a 32-year old grinder isn’t the strongest competition.

But that defeat of Murray wasn’t a fluke. And neither is what we’ve seen this past week. And if (heaven forbid) he goes on to beat Murray again in R4, that won’t have been a fluke either.


3) “Dearth, not Death”

If you’ve been paying attention recently, you’ll have heard rather a lot on how tennis is supposed to be “dead” in all of the Grand Slam hosting nations, with the exception, I guess, of France. 


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I’m not gonna argue with that. That GB, Aus and the US are going through something of a dry spell talent-wise is common knowledge. Most of what you hear about it, however, is little more than blather. The kind of lazy, cliched blather that more usually goes along with talk of grunting, fist-pumping, and the rankings system.

A dearth is not the quite the same as death: of the 4 American WTA teenyboppers making noise this week, only one, Madison Keys, is ranked outside of the top 400 – two  others are ranked in the top 100 (McHale at #55) with Sloane Stephens hovering just outside at #106.

Were they not to have made a splash this week, were you not nerdy enough to know their rankings and were you to have gone on headlines alone, you simply wouldn’t have known that.

4) Venus Williams

By now we will all have heard that Sjogrens Syndrome is a chronic auto-immune disorder in which the white cells attack the body’s own moisture producing glands. Symptoms include debilitating fatigue and joint pain.

We also know that there is no cure.

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With a diagnosis as sobering as that, “Get Well Soon” well-wishes can seem woefully inadequate. A quick Wikipedia search will tell you that you don’t always “get well” from something like this – “symptom management” sometimes being the only option.

Venus has been an iconic feature of the tennis landscape for over a decade.

There’ll be hordes of melancholic fans whenever her career comes to end, whether that’s through ill health or it simply running its course.

Worth remembering, however, that we know next to nothing on how acutely she’s affected. Auto immune illnesses usually have a wide range of severity. Let us hope her case is moderate.

The other thing is that “symptom management” is not always as dreadful as it sounds.  True that this can entail coping with, rather than freeing oneself of, a chronic illness – but it’s also true that the effects of that illness may be mitigated by lifestyle adjustment in less severe cases.

The real question is whether that’s sufficient to compete as an elite athlete in the sport she loves. Doubtless many will desire precisely that. But like a certain 22-time Slam Champion says, her first priority must be to regain her health – with or without tennis. No true fan should wish for anything less.


5) Li No and Petra KvitOver

Never have I felt so wrong about being right :(

Petra-Kvitova-007
Anyone that had been following both players this past year knew there would be a certain amount of “decompression” following their respective Slam epiphanies. My own view was that they were unlikely to reach the quarters and would probably end up going out in an unspectacular tussle in some forgotten corner of week one.

Yes they're both hit and miss. Yes they're both still reeling from the after effects of winning a Slam. Still, a first round exit for two top 10 Grand Slam Champs is unacceptable.


6) Serena v Vika – Match of the tournament.

The first set of this was Serena at her uber-intimidating best. As always, she was out to make a statement – Vika was mere collateral damage and barely managed one game.

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The second set was likely the best you’ll see over the entire fortnight.

Some of Vika’s returns of serve may well go on to be remembered as the best tennis of her career. As always her fans are left to rue the fact that where others get serendipity, Vika gets…Serena Williams.

Try and think of the first player that came to mind as drawing the short straw when Serena’s #28 seeding was announced…..YEAH.

No, it doesn’t even surprise me anymore.

Sunday, September 4, 2011

US Open Day 7 Open Thread

It's the second week of the US Open and the most challenging round of the Slam for those who've never been this way before.



Who you got?



Order Of Play for Sunday, September 4, 2011



Arthur Ashe Stadium 11:00 AM



Men's Singles - 3rd Round

David Nalbandian(ARG) vs. Rafael Nadal(ESP)[2]

Not Before:1:30 PM

Men's Singles - 3rd Round

Andy Roddick(USA)[21] vs. Julien Benneteau(FRA)

This match may be moved to Armstrong Stadium.

Not Before:3:30 PM

Women's Singles - 4th Round

Maria Kirilenko(RUS)[25] vs. Samantha Stosur(AUS)[9]



Arthur Ashe Stadium 7:00 PM



Men's Singles - 3rd Round

Feliciano Lopez(ESP)[25] vs. Andy Murray(GBR)[4]

Women's Singles - 4th Round

Sabine Lisicki(GER)[22] vs. Vera Zvonareva(RUS)[2]



Louis Armstrong Stadium 11:00 AM



Women's Singles - 4th Round

Shuai Peng(CHN)[13] vs. Flavia Pennetta(ITA)[26]

Men's Singles - 3rd Round

Juan Martin Del Potro(ARG)[18] vs. Gilles Simon(FRA)[12]

Men's Singles - 3rd Round

Alex Bogomolov Jr.(USA) vs. John Isner(USA)[28]



Grandstand 12:00 PM



Men's Singles - 3rd Round

Gilles Muller(LUX) vs. Igor Kunitsyn(RUS)

Not Before:2:30 PM

Men's Singles - 3rd Round

Donald Young(USA) vs. Juan Ignacio Chela(ARG)[24]



Court 17 11:00 AM



Women's Singles - 4th Round

Monica Niculescu(ROU) vs. Angelique Kerber(GER)

Men's Singles - 3rd Round

David Ferrer(ESP)[5] vs. Florian Mayer(GER)[26]

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Face Of The Day: Donald Young

Donald Young of the U.S. celebrates his win over Stanislas Wawrinka  of Switzerland in their match at the U.S. Open tennis tournament in New  York, September 2, 2011.



I didn't think he could do it. Certainly not after gagging when serving for the match at 5-4 in the fifth set. But he regrouped, held serve to force that rare thing in professional tennis -- a deciding set tiebreak at a Grand Slam -- and then commenced to play the smartest tiebreak I've ever seen a player play.



It was like watching a genius completely deconstruct his opponent's game. Stanislas Wawrinka had no answer for the deep, high looping shots Young peppered his one-handed backhand with. When he saw an opening, Young flattened out a forehand or a backhand and put it exactly where he wanted it. Save the over-eager forehand that sailed long at 6 points to love, it was a flawless tiebreak that conjured up the king of tennis Martina Hingis used to employ that earned her a reputation for being the smartest player of her generation.



Well, Donald Young is a very smart tennis player. Yesterday, he showed he has heart and fight and guts and composure and resilience, too. Bravo.



::



Use this as your Day 6 Open thread. The farm stand was too busy today for me to get anything up till right now.



Marin Cilic just stole the second set from Roger Federer.



Order of Play for Saturday, September 3, 2011



Arthur Ashe Stadium 11:00 AM



Women's Singles - 3rd Round

Caroline Wozniacki(DEN)[1] vs. Vania King(USA)

Not Before:1:00 PM

Men's Singles - 3rd Round

Roger Federer(SUI)[3] vs. Marin Cilic(CRO)[27]

Not Before:3:00 PM

Women's Singles - 3rd Round

Victoria Azarenka(BLR)[4] vs. Serena Williams(USA)[28]



Arthur Ashe Stadium 7:00 PM



Women's Singles - 3rd Round

Sloane Stephens(USA) vs. Ana Ivanovic(SRB)[16]

Men's Singles - 3rd Round

Novak Djokovic(SRB)[1] vs. Nikolay Davydenko(RUS)



Louis Armstrong Stadium 11:00 AM



Men's Singles - 3rd Round

Tomas Berdych(CZE)[9] vs. Janko Tipsarevic(SRB)[20]

Women's Singles - 3rd Round

Jelena Jankovic(SRB)[11] vs. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova(RUS)[17]

Men's Singles - 3rd Round

Kevin Anderson(RSA) vs. Mardy Fish(USA)[8]

Women's Singles - 3rd Round

Akgul Amanmuradova(UZB) vs. Svetlana Kuznetsova(RUS)[15]



Grandstand 11:00 AM



Women's Singles - 3rd Round

Chanelle Scheepers(RSA) vs. Francesca Schiavone(ITA)[7]

Women's Singles - 3rd Round

Andrea Petkovic(GER)[10] vs. Roberta Vinci(ITA)[18]

Men's Singles - 3rd Round

Juan Monaco(ARG) vs. Tommy Haas(GER)

Men's Singles - 3rd Round

Jo-Wilfried Tsonga(FRA)[11] vs. Fernando Verdasco(ESP)[19]



Court 17 11:00 AM



Women's Singles - 3rd Round

Silvia Soler-Espinosa(ESP) vs. Carla Suarez Navarro(ESP)

Men's Singles - 3rd Round

Marcel Granollers(ESP)[31] vs. Juan Carlos Ferrero(ESP)

Men's Singles - 3rd Round

Alexandr Dolgopolov(UKR)[22] vs. Ivo Karlovic(CRO)

Friday, September 2, 2011

US Open 2011 Day 5 Open Thread

Order of Play for Friday, September 2, 2011



Arthur Ashe Stadium 11:00 AM



Women's Singles - 3rd Round

Anabel Medina Garrigues(ESP)[30] vs. Vera Zvonareva(RUS)[2]

Not Before:1:00 PM

Women's Singles - 3rd Round

Flavia Pennetta(ITA)[26] vs. Maria Sharapova(RUS)[3]

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Nicolas Mahut(FRA) vs. Rafael Nadal(ESP)[2]



Arthur Ashe Stadium 7:00 PM



Women's Singles - 3rd Round

Christina McHale(USA) vs. Maria Kirilenko(RUS)[25]

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Andy Roddick(USA)[21] vs. Jack Sock(USA)



Louis Armstrong Stadium 11:00 AM



Women's Singles - 3rd Round

MonMonica Niculescu(ROU) vs. Lucie Safarova(CZE)[27]

Not Before:1:00 PM

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Robby Ginepri(USA) vs. John Isner(USA)[28]

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Robin Haase(NED) vs. Andy Murray(GBR)[4]

Women's Singles - 3rd Round

Nadia Petrova(RUS)[24] vs. Samantha Stosur(AUS)[9]



Grandstand 11:00 AM



Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Juan Martin Del Potro(ARG)[18] vs. Diego Junqueira(ARG)

Not Before:12:30 PM

Women's Singles - 3rd Round

Shuai Peng(CHN)[13] vs. Julia Goerges(GER)[19]

Women's Singles - 3rd Round

Irina Falconi(USA) vs. Sabine Lisicki(GER)[22]

Not Before:5:00 PM

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

David Ferrer(ESP)[5] vs. James Blake(USA)



Court 17 11:00 AM



Women's Singles - 3rd Round

Alla Kudryavtseva(RUS) vs. Angelique Kerber(GER)

Not Before:12:30 PM

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Stanislas Wawrinka(SUI)[14] vs. Donald Young(USA)

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Rogerio Dutra Da Silva(BRA) vs. Alex Bogomolov Jr.(USA)



Court 13 11:00 AM



Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Denis Istomin(UZB) vs. Julien Benneteau(FRA)

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Ivan Ljubicic(CRO)[30] vs. David Nalbandian(ARG)



Court 11 11:00 AM



Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Guillermo Garcia-Lopez(ESP) vs. Gilles Simon(FRA)[12]

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Jean-Rene Lisnard(MON) vs. Florian Mayer(GER)[26]



Court 4 11:00 AM



Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Steve Darcis(BEL) vs. Juan Ignacio Chela(ARG)[24]



Court 6 11:00 AM



Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Igor Kunitsyn(RUS) vs. Jurgen Melzer(AUT)[17]



Court 7 11:00 AM



Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Ernests Gulbis(LAT) vs. Gilles Muller(LUX)



Court 8 11:00 AM



Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Feliciano Lopez(ESP)[25] vs. Vasek Pospisil(CAN)

Thursday, September 1, 2011

US Open 2011 Day 4 Open Thread

Order of Play for Thursday, September 1, 2011 - Singles Only



Arthur Ashe Stadium 11:00



Women's Singles - 2nd Round

Mirjana Lucic(CRO) vs. Francesca Schiavone(ITA)[7]

Not Before:13:00

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Roger Federer(SUI)[3] vs. Dudi Sela(ISR)

Women's Singles - 2nd Round

Michaella Krajicek(NED) vs. Serena Williams(USA)[28]



Schiavone almost double faulted her way out of the tournament in the first round. Will the comeback Croat find a say to finish her off? Let's see if the streaky Israeli has anything to challenge Federer with and I'm happy to see that the Dutch woman has won another Slam match. She'll win some points on her first serve, but I can't imagine Serena will be troubled.



Arthur Ashe Stadium 19:00



Women's Singles - 2nd Round

Caroline Wozniacki(DEN)[1] vs. Arantxa Rus(NED)

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Novak Djokovic(SRB)[1] vs. Carlos Berlocq(ARG)



If this young Dutch woman can hit Kim Clijsters off the court in a Slam, surely she can do the same to Wozniacki, no? I guess we'll find out. Djokovic cruises.



Louis Armstrong Stadium 11:00



Women's Singles - 2nd Round

Jelena Jankovic(SRB)[11] vs. Jelena Dokic(AUS)

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Juan Carlos Ferrero(ESP) vs. Gael Monfils(FRA)[7]

Not Before:15:00

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Malek Jaziri(TUN) vs. Mardy Fish(USA)[8]

Not Before:17:00

Women's Singles - 2nd Round

Victoria Azarenka(BLR)[4] vs. Gisela Dulko(ARG)



The battle of the Jelenas could get entangled. Happy to see Mr. Ferrero win a match and will Dulko's counterpunching trouble Azarenka's one dimension? Fish may have to play four.



Grandstand 11:00



Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Tomas Berdych(CZE)[9] vs. Fabio Fognini(ITA)

Women's Singles - 2nd Round

Andrea Petkovic(GER)[10] vs. Jie Zheng(CHN)

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Jo-Wilfried Tsonga(FRA)[11] vs. Sergei Bubka(UKR)

Women's Singles - 2nd Round

Shahar Peer(ISR)[23] vs. Sloane Stephens(USA)



What kind of drama will Fognini bring today or will Berdych blast the crap out of him? Stephens has a chance against Pe'er, but she can't get nervous at all. Tsonga and Petkovic should cruise.



Court 17 11:00



Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Radek Stepanek(CZE)[23] vs. Juan Monaco(ARG)

Not Before:13:00

Women's Singles - 2nd Round

Petra Cetkovska(CZE) vs. Ana Ivanovic(SRB)[16]

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Bernard Tomic(AUS) vs. Marin Cilic(CRO)[27]

Women's Singles - 2nd Round

Vania King(USA) vs. Jarmila Gajdosova(AUS)[29]



Stepanek might be the only comfortable winner on this court. I'd like to see Cetkovska and Tomic pull off the upsets and while I'm not sure where her form is at the moment, King does have a way of deconstructing the games of big, hard-hitting Aussies. We'll see.

Court 13 11:00



Women's Singles - 2nd Round

Alize Cornet(FRA) vs. Roberta Vinci(ITA)[18]

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Tommy Haas(GER) vs. Alejandro Falla(COL)

Women's Singles - 2nd Round

Pauline Parmentier(FRA) vs. Akgul Amanmuradova(UZB)

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Marsel Ilhan(TUR) vs. Fernando Verdasco(ESP)[19]



Haas is in the draw? Who knew?



Court 11 11:00



Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Philipp Petzschner(GER) vs. Janko Tipsarevic(SRB)[20]

Women's Singles - 2nd Round

Mona Barthel(GER) vs. Chanelle Scheepers(RSA)

Women's Singles - 2nd Round

Elena Baltacha(GBR) vs. Svetlana Kuznetsova(RUS)[15]

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Ivo Karlovic(CRO) vs. Richard Gasquet(FRA)[13]



Pertzschner could more than trouble Tipsarevic and if Karlovic has one more win in him, Gasquet better look out.



Court 4 11:00



Women's Singles - 2nd Round

Carla Suarez Navarro(ESP) vs. Simona Halep(ROU)

Women's Singles - 2nd Round

Petra Martic(CRO) vs. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova(RUS)[17]

Not Before:13:00

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Marcel Granollers(ESP)[31] vs. Mikhail Kukushkin(KAZ)

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Potito Starace(ITA) vs. Nikolay Davydenko(RUS)



Can Halep follow-up?



Court 6 11:00



Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Michael Llodra(FRA)[29] vs. Kevin Anderson(RSA)



Could be a long match, but Llorda should come out on top.



Court 7 11:00



Women's Singles - 2nd Round

Kaia Kanepi(EST)[31] vs. Silvia Soler-Espinosa(ESP)

Men's Singles - 2nd Round

Alexandr Dolgopolov(UKR)[22] vs. Flavio Cipolla(ITA)



Whatever will be will be.

 
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