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US Open Daily Preview: Four Major Champions Play Their Quarterfinals

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Carlos Alcaraz on Monday (twitter.com/usopen)

The singles quarterfinals conclude on Wednesday, with hot and humid conditions continuing in New York.

Wednesday’s singles quarterfinals each feature a Major champion against a player striving to achieve that feat for the first time.  Defending champion Carlos Alcaraz looks to avenge a painful loss from last year’s Roland Garros quarterfinals at the hands of Sascha Zverev.  2021 champion Daniil Medvedev plays close friend Andrey Rublev, who will fight to overcome an 0-8 record in Slam quarterfinals.

On the women’s side, we have two first-time meetings.  Reigning Australian Open champ Aryna Sabalenka faces 20-year-old Qinwen Zheng, who upset three-time Major runner-up Ons Jabeur in the last round.  And reigning Wimbledon champ Marketa Vondrousova takes on Madison Keys, a runner-up here in 2017.

Plus, Day 10 provides two extremely appetizing women’s doubles quarterfinals, featuring some of the WTA’s best singles and doubles players.


Qinwen Zheng (23) vs. Aryna Sabalenka (2) – 12:00pm on Arthur Ashe Stadium

Sabalenka has been completely dominant this fortnight, dropping just 16 games through eight sets.  She is now 48-10 on the year, and 28-5 on hard courts.  She will be the new World No.1 on Monday regardless of her results the rest of this week.  And Aryna is a perfect 6-0 in Major quarterfinals, as she vies for her seventh semifinal out of her last nine Slams.

This is a first Major quarterfinal for Qinwen.  After first reaching the second week of a Slam last year in Paris, her results had tapered off a bit.  But Zheng made a coaching switch this summer, hiring one of the WTA’s most successful and prolific coaches of the past 15 years, Wim Fissette.  And results have come rather immediately, with Zheng winning a WTA title on clay in Palermo before this impressive run in New York.

In a recent feature on usopen.org, Fissette describes Qinwen as “a raw talent,” and talks about helping her learn how to make better choices on court with her power.  That’s something Sabalenka has vastly improved on in recent years.  So while I’m quite curious to see how Zheng performs on this stage, and Aryna can become error-prone when tested, Sabalenka remains a significant favorite to advance.


Daniil Medvedev (3) vs. Andrey Rublev (8) – Second on Arthur Ashe Stadium

Is Rublev ready to conquer his quarterfinal scare tissue?  Throughout all eight of his previous matches at this stage of Majors, he’s only 3-24 in sets, dating back to his first quarterfinal six years ago at this event, when he lost to Rafael Nadal.  And further complicating matters for Andrey is playing such a close friend in his ninth quarterfinal.  He describes Medvedev as “family,” and Andrey is even the godfather to Daniil’s child.

By contrast to Rublev, Medvedev is a strong 6-1 in Major quarterfinals, with his only loss coming in his only one on clay.  On hard courts, he’s 5-0.  And Daniil has been the considerably better player in 2023, with a record of 53-11 and five titles, compared to Andrey’s record of 44-17 and only two titles.

Medvedev leads their head-to-head 5-2 at tour level, with all seven matches taking place on this surface.  Daniil claimed their first four, with Andrey taking the next two.  And most recently, six months ago in the final of Dubai, Medvedev thumped Rublev 6-2, 6-2.  Andrey can draw some confidence from how Daniil’s five titles all came within the first five months of the year, and his form his dipped this summer.  But Rublev himself arrived in New York on a three-match losing streak, and did not have to face a player ranked inside the top 70 to advance to this quarterfinal.  Medvedev should be strongly favored to reach his fourth semifinal out of the last five US Opens.


Marketa Vondrousova (9) vs. Madison Keys (17) – 7:00pm on Arthur Ashe Stadium

After easily winning her first three matches in straight sets, Vondrousova was forced to come back from a set down on Monday against another American, Peyton Stearns.  She’s now on an 11-match win streak at Majors, and is into her third Major quarterfinal.  However, Marketa has been nursing an elbow injury, and even pulled out of the women’s doubles event this week because of it.

Keys just crushed third-seeded Jessica Pegula on Monday, by a score of 6-1, 6-3.  She completely overpowered Pegula with both her serve and her return, winning 77% of first serve points, and breaking her in five out of Jess’ eight service games.  This is a 10th career Slam quarterfinal for Madison, and she is 5-4 previously in this round.

Based on Vondrousova’s injury, I lean towards Keys to be the victor on Wednesday evening.  Madison’s improved return will clobber Marketa’s serve if her arm cannot generate her usual speed and spin on her serve.  And as a Florida resident, the American won’t mind the warm conditions.


Carlos Alcaraz (1) vs. Sascha Zverev (12) – Last on Arthur Ashe Stadium

What will Zverev have left after his remarkably draining fourth round contest against Jannik Sinner?  They played for nearly five hours in excruciating humidity, and in a five-setter that went well beyond 1:00am local time on Tuesday morning.  It was a huge victory for Sascha in his comeback from a season-ending ankle injury from a year ago, but will it prevent him from having a chance in this quarterfinal?

And on Wednesday night, he faces a man who is 57-6 on the year, and has won his last three Major quarterfinals since losing to Zverev last season in Paris.  Alcaraz has also won his last 11 matches at Majors, as well as in New York.  However, while Carlitos has dropped only one set to this stage, and easily won his fourth round contest against Matteo Arnaldi, his left hamstring was taped up during that match, leading to questions regarding how that may impact his play as this tournament progresses.

Plus, Zverev is 3-2 against Alcaraz, and 2-0 on hard courts, though it’s worth noting both of those matches took place in 2021.  In 2023, Carlitos has evolved into one of the sport’s elite.  And considering what Zverev endured in the last round, Alcaraz should be favored to even their head-to-head and return to the semifinals.


Other Notable Matches on Wednesday:

Laura Siegemund and Vera Zvonareva (12) vs. Victoria Azarenka and Beatriz Haddad Maia – Siegemund and Zvonareva won this tournament three years ago, defeating Azarenka and then-partner Sofia Kenin in the championship match.  Azarenka and Haddad Maia won the Madrid Open earlier this year, in the first event of their partnership.

Coco Gauff and Jessica Pegula (3) vs. Su-wei Hsieh and Xinyu Wang (8) – Gauff and Pegula have won four titles together since last August, and were finalists a year ago at Roland Garros.  Su-wei has won the women’s doubles title at both of the last two Majors, with Xinyu as her partner this past June at Roland Garros.


Wednesday’s full Order of Play is here.

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Ons Jabeur Sheds Light On Knee Injections After Wimbledon Exit

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Ons Jabeur revealed that she uses PRP injections to help maintain the health of her knee after crashing out of Wimbledon.

Jabeur, who is a two-time finalist at The All England Club, was knocked out in the third round in straight sets by Elina Svitolina. A former world No.3 who reached the semi-finals of the tournament 12 months ago. It is a bitter pill for the Tunisian to swallow but she credits the performance of her rival. 

“She played a great match. I didn’t see the other matches, but I felt like even speaking with my team, it was a solid one.” Jabeur commented in her press confrence.
“I take a lot of positives because even though I feel like I didn’t play my best. I tried to come back in the second set, and I had my chance to come. That’s tennis. I hope I can learn from this one and be stronger in the second half of the season.”

Following her loss, Jabeur will take a couple of days off ahead of her next tournament. During that time she will have an injection into her knee which is something she does every six months or so. A procedure she started having this season following her recent struggles with injury.

The exact procedure the 29-year-old has is known as PRP which is a procedure which uses the person’s blood that is made up of plasma and platelets. it is used to help treat issues such as wound healing or joint injury. 

“Everything is natural. I don’t want to inject anything not natural just to keep the knee going.” She explained.
“Obviously the hard court season is coming. I need to really prevent the knee as much as I can. I’ve been doing a lot of exercise.
“It was the plan that I need a second injection for the second half of the season.”

Given that she is due an injection soon, did knee pain affect Jabeur’s performance in her latest match?

No. It’s the same old pain that I’ve been playing with for the past few matches. I wouldn’t say I lost because of my knee today.” She stated.

Jabeur’s win-loss for this season now stands at 17-12.

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Wimbledon Daily Preview: Andy Murray’s Last Match at Wimbledon?

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Andy Murray after his first round loss in men’s doubles on Thursday (twitter.com/wimbledon)

Day 6 at The Championships is scheduled to see the completion of third round singles play, and thankfully, the forecast for Saturday looks much better than Friday.

It’s not often a day of play at Wimbledon is headlined by a mixed doubles match, but that will be the case on Saturday, as two-time champion Andy Murray teams with fellow Brit and Major champ Emma Raducanu, in what may be Andy’s last match at The Championships.  They will face two accomplished doubles players in Marcelo Arevalo and Shuai Zhang.

Singles play on Day 6 sees the 2022 ladies’ singles finalists each face a formidable mom.  2022 champ Elena Rybakina takes on mother-of-two Caroline Wozniacki, while two-time runner-up Ons Jabeur plays mother-of-one Elina Svitolina.  And the only British man remaining in the gentlemen’s singles draw, 2022 semifinalist Cameron Norrie, squares off against two-Major finalist Sascha Zverev.

Other matches on Saturday feature Major champions Novak Djokovic and Iga Swiatek.

Throughout the tournament, this preview will analyze the day’s four most prominent matches, while highlighting the other notable matches on the schedule.  Saturday’s play is scheduled to begin at 11:00am local time.


Cameron Norrie vs. Alexander Zverev (4) – 1:30pm on Centre Court

With most pundits hyping Jack Draper as the next big contender in British tennis, Norrie made quite a statement on Thursday, defeating the impressive 22-year-old in straight sets.  Cam is just 17-14 in a season where he’s faced multiple injuries, but he looked really sharp against big-serving Jack.  Norrie attacked Draper’s second serve relentlessly, winning a superb 70% of second serve return points in the match.  As per Tennis Abstract, that was Cam’s first win over a top 25 player in six months.

Zverev has never advanced beyond the round of 16 at Wimbledon, though he’s played well through two rounds, averaging just 2.5 games lost per set.  Sascha is now 39-11 this season, and 5-2 on grass, after losing in the semifinals of Halle to Hubert Hurkacz. 

Their history has been completely one-sided, as Sascha leads Cam 5-0 at tour level.  All five of those matches occurred on hard courts, and the first four were straight-setters.  However, six months ago in the fourth round of the Australian Open, they contested an over four-hour five-setter, which Zverev won in a fifth-set tiebreak.  Norrie will need another big returning day in this one, but based on the way Sascha has been serving, the German should be favored to advance.


Ons Jabeur (10) vs. Elina Svitolina (21) – Second on Centre Court

Is Jabeur revving up for another deep run at The Championships?  A knee injury derailed the first few months of her year, and she arrived at Roland Garros with a record of just 6-9.  But Ons made a strong run to the quarterfinals in Paris, and is now 6-2 within the last few weeks on grass, having not lost a set in her first two rounds here. 

Svitolina was a surprising semifinalist here a year ago, in only her fifth tournament after maternity leave.  She defeated four Major champions during that fortnight (Venus Williams, Sofia Kenin, Victoria Azarenka, Iga Swiatek), losing to eventual champion Marketa Vondrousova.  However, Elina hasn’t played as well during the first six months of 2024, with a modest record of 20-12.  And she scarcely survived her opening round match against Magda Linette. 

Svitolina is 3-1 against Jabeur at all levels, though their only meeting within the last five years went to Ons in straight sets.  That took place three years ago on a hard court in Chicago.  And with Jabeur rediscovering her confidence on her best surface, she’s the favorite to prevail on Saturday.


Elena Rybakina (4) vs. Caroline Wozniacki (WC) – Third on No.1 Court

Rybakina is an excellent 37-7 on the year, though she arrived at SW19 with questions swirling regarding her condition.  She retired from Berlin a few weeks ago due to illness, then pulled out of Eastbourne last week due to a “change in schedule.”  In the last round, she was pushed to three sets by Laura Siegemund, who is a much stronger doubles player than singles.

Wozniacki came into Wimbledon only 9-9 this season, yet has played some great tennis to reach this third round contest.  She crushed Alycia Parks in the first round 6-2, 6-0, and overcame a stern test from Leylah Fernandez on Thursday, saving match point to win 7-5 in the third.  Caroline now looks to reach the fourth round of The Championships for the sixth time in her career.

In their first meeting, Rybakina must be considered a significant favorite, especially on this surface.  But if Elena is truly not 100% physically, and Wozniacki can back her off the baseline and make her hit extra balls, an upset would not be a complete shock.


Marcelo Arevalo and Shuai Zhang vs. Andy Murray and Emma Raducanu – Fourth on No.1 Court

As emotional as it was to watch Andy play doubles on Centre Court with his brother Jamie, Andy looked far from his best, and could be seen clutching at his injured back at multiple points both during and following the match.  He has admitted to playing through significant pain, but is determined to play as much as he can in his last year at his favorite event.  And on Saturday, he teams with an extremely in-form Raducanu, who easily dispatched of Elise Mertens and Maria Sakkari in her last two rounds of singles play.

Arevalo and Shuai were quarterfinalists in mixed doubles a month ago at Roland Garros.  And Arevalo won that tournament in men’s doubles, alongside Mate Pavic.  Shuai is a two-time Major champion in women’s singles, alongside Sam Stosur.

It will be a joy to watch Andy and Emma team up together for the first time, and how fun would it be to watch them win and play more?  But with Andy’s body failing him, and against two strong doubles players, it’s hard to consider the Brits the favorites.  But even if the Brits lose, this should serve as a nice sendoff for Sir Andy Murray.


Other Notable Matches on Saturday:

Danielle Collins (11) vs. Beatriz Haddad Maia (20) – Both players are yet to drop a set, though Haddad Maia only needed to play three games in her second round before her opponent retired.  While Collins has been the far better player in 2024, Haddad Maia owns two grass court titles, and has been the better player on this surface.

Iga Swiatek (1) vs. Yulia Putintseva – Swiatek is now 47-4 in 2024, and is currently on a 21-match winning streak.  Putintseva has already earned two solid wins this week, over Angelique Kerber and Katerina Siniakova.  Iga is 2-0 against Yulia, which includes two straight-set victories this season.

Taylor Fritz (13) vs. Alejandro Tabilo (24) – These are the champions of the two ATP grass court events the week before Wimbledon, so both are on six-match win streaks.  Fritz is 2-0 against Tabilo, having most recently defeated him in straights this past March in Indian Wells.

Alexei Popyrin vs. Novak Djokovic (2) – Djokovic looked a bit vulnerable on Thursday against British wild card Jaboc Fearnley, requiring four sets to advance in his second match back from knee surgery.  Popyrin has already played nine sets through two matches, and is 0-5 in the third round of Majors.  In the second round of this year’s Australian Open, Novak beat Alexei in four.


Saturday’s full Order of Play is here.

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Wimbledon Daily Preview: Carlos Alcaraz Faces Frances Tiafoe in the Third Round

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Carlos Alcaraz on Wednesday at Wimbledon (twitter.com/wimbledon)

Day 5 at The Championships is scheduled to host the beginning of third round singles play, as well as second round doubles play.  However, there is a lot of rain in the forecast for Friday.  With play only guaranteed on the two covered stadiums, today’s preview will focus on matches scheduled for Centre Court and No.1 Court.

Thankfully, the two main show courts provide plenty of interesting matchups on Friday, headlined by defending champion Carlos Alcaraz taking on Frances Tiafoe in a rematch of an excellent US Open semifinal from two years ago.  Plus, a pair of US Open champions, Bianca Andreescu and Emma Raducanu, will individually face top 10 seeds, in Jasmine Paolini and Maria Sakkari, respectively.  And two entertaining veterans, Grigor Dimitrov and Gael Monfils, will face off in the third round.

Other scheduled for Friday include Major champions Jannik Sinner, Coco Gauff, and Daniil Medvedev.

Throughout the tournament, this preview will analyze the day’s four most prominent matches, while highlighting the other notable matches on the schedule.  Friday’s play is scheduled to begin at 11:00am local time.


Jasmine Paolini (7) vs. Bianca Andreescu – 1:00pm on No.1 Court

What a breakthrough season this has been for Paolini.  Prior to 2024, she had never advanced beyond the second round of a Major.  But after winning her first WTA 1000 title in Dubai, the 28-year-old Italian advanced all the way to the championship match of Roland Garros, most notably upsetting Elena Rybakina in the quarterfinals.  She’s now 26-12 this season, and didn’t drop a set in her first two rounds this week.

Andreescu’s breakthrough season took place five years, when she came out of nowhere to go 46-7 at all levels, and to win Indian Wells, Toronto, and the US Open.  But unfortunately the last several years for Bianca have been filled with injuries, illness, and even depression.  Yet, having played just four events since last summer, she’s gone 8-3 across the past six weeks.  The Canadian also won her first two rounds in straight sets.

This is a rematch from the same round of Roland Garros a month ago, when Paolini prevailed in three sets.  But Roland Garros was Andreescu’s first tournament in nearly a year, and grass is a surface that better rewards her power and guile.  I give Bianca the slight edge on Friday.


Carlos Alcaraz (3) vs. Frances Tiafoe (29) – 1:30pm on Centre Court

These are two of the sport’s most electrifying and charismatic players, who share a mutual respect and liking for one another.  In the 2022 US Open semifinals, Tiafoe won a fourth-set tiebreak to even the match at two-sets-all, before eventually losing 6-3 in the fifth, after a nearly four-and-a-half hour battle.  Their only other meeting went to Frances, though that occurred over three years ago, while Carlitos was still ranked outside the top 100. 

Since winning this event last summer, Alcaraz has only won two titles, but they were both big ones: Indian Wells and Roland Garros.  So while his early-round loss two weeks ago at Queen’s Club to Jack Draper was not ideal preparation for his title defense, Carlitos has shown he can up his game when it matters most. 

Tiafoe has struggled mightily this season, as he was 13-15 heading into this tournament.  However, his opening round comeback from two-sets-down against Matteo Arnaldi may have been exactly what he needed to jump start his year. 

Yet considering how much higher Carlitos’ top level is compared to that of Frances, the American would have to maintain an extremely high level across five sets to defeat Alcaraz, and that feels like asking too much of a player lacking his best tennis.  Alcaraz is a strong favorite to advance to the round of 16.


Grigor Dimitrov (10) vs. Gael Monfils  – Second on No.1 Court

Like Tiafoe, Dimitrov was already only a set away from exiting this event, having to come from two-sets-down on Thursday against Juncheng Shang.  As impressive as 19-year-old Juncheng has been, it was quite a surprise to see Grigor lose the first two sets, as he’s been having one of the best seasons of his career.  Dimitrov is 31-10 in 2024, and has reached three tour finals.  He now focuses on reaching the fourth round of The Championships for the second straight year, and for the fourth time in his career.

Wimbledon has easily been the weakest Slam of Monfils’ career, as he’s just 19-12 lifetime, and has only once advanced to the fourth round.  He’s also only 18-14 on the year, though he’s actually found some good form on grass.  Gael was a semifinalist last week in Mallorca, and already earned two considerable victories this week, over Adrian Mannarino and Stan Wawrinka.

Monfils is 4-1 against Dimitrov, in a rivalry that dates back to 2011.  However, this will be their first match in over eight years, and Grigor is undeniably the better player at this stage of their careers.  On a surface where Dimitrov owns much stronger results than Monfils, Grigor should be favored to prevail.


Emma Raducanu vs. Maria Sakkari (9) – Second on Centre Court

Raducanu is currently playing the best tennis we’ve seen from her since the shocking run she made to the US Open title in 2021.  Last week in Eastbourne, she earned her first-ever top 10 win, over Jessica Pegula.  And on Wednesday, she crushed Elise Mertens by a score of 6-1, 6-2, in a match that saw the Brit striking winners from all over the court.  Emma is 2-0 in the third round of Majors, with both victories coming in the summer of 2021, including one here at Wimbledon.

Sakkari has actually never advanced beyond this round of The Championships, and she’s just 10-7 in eight appearances here.  But she easily secured her first two matches in straights, despite arriving at SW19 on a four-match losing streak.

Their only prior meeting was quite monumental, as Raducanu defeated Sakkari in the semifinals of the 2021 US Open on her way to the title.  Maria was a considerable favorite on that day, so she’d surely enjoy avenging that heartbreaking loss on Friday.  But based on recent form, and considering the surface, I like Emma’s chances to defeating Maria again, especially with a partisan Centre Court audience cheering her on.


Other Notable Matches on Friday:

Jan-Lennard Struff vs. Daniil Medvedev (5) – Medvedev has dropped just one set to this stage, while Struff has dropped two.  Medvedev leads their tour-level head-to-head 5-1, though they’ve split two meetings on grass. 

Marta Kostyuk (18) vs. Madison Keys (12) – On Thursday, Kostyuk outlasted Daria Saville in an over three-hour three-setter, saving a match point along the way.  Keys won her first two matches in straights.  Their only prior encounter took place a year ago in the same round of this same tournament, with Madison prevailing 6-4, 6-1.

Sonay Kortal (Q) vs. Coco Gauff (2) – Gauff has lost only three games in each of her first two rounds.  Kortal is a 22-year-old British qualifier who upset 29th-seeded Sorana Cirstea in the first round. 

Jannik Sinner (1) vs. Miomir Kecmanovic – Sinner overcame a big second round test in the form of fellow Italian Matteo Berrettini on Wednesday.  Kecmanovic has already played nine sets to this stage, though he upset 27th-seeded Tallon Griekspoor in the last round.


Friday’s full Order of Play is here.

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