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DUN I LOVE pisze:Hugo Gaston dziś na korcie (ur. 2000), podobno duży talent francuski.
Przegrał, szkoda. Lubię talenty.
Re: Roland Garros 2018
: 21 maja 2018, 16:15
autor: Damian
Ogarnął się Thanasi w następnych setach.
Felix set z przodu, na przeciwnym biegunie Kubler.
Re: Roland Garros 2018
: 21 maja 2018, 18:02
autor: yellowball1992
Stopa mowil ze jest juz plan dnia na jutro. Gdzie go szukac? Masakrycznie wyglada oficjalna strona RG w tym roku.
Re: Roland Garros 2018
: 21 maja 2018, 19:25
autor: Damian
yellowball1992 pisze:Stopa mowil ze jest juz plan dnia na jutro. Gdzie go szukac? Masakrycznie wyglada oficjalna strona RG w tym roku.
Pod wynikami na żywo, mamy wybór sekcji i wybieramy Schedule of Play: (Do południa tego nie było, ale na szczęście wreszcie dodali.) .
Spoiler:
Re: Roland Garros 2018
: 21 maja 2018, 20:06
autor: yellowball1992
Fajny jutro meczyk mamy na korcie nr 18. Robredo, czyli zwycięzca challengera w Lizbonie kontra wracający na dobre tory Bolelli. Ciężko tutaj faworyta wskazać, myślę, że mogą panowie długo pograć, a samo spotkanie powinno być zacięte.
Z tego co patrzyłem w program ES to od 12 do 16 będą kwalifikacje na żywo, więc sądzę, że właśnie to spotkanie będzie w TV.
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Bolelli 10 maja oddała mecz walkowerem w rzymskim challengerze. Ktoś zna przyczynę ?
Re: Roland Garros 2018
: 21 maja 2018, 21:35
autor: Damian
yellowball1992 pisze:Bolelli 10 maja oddała mecz walkowerem w rzymskim challengerze. Ktoś zna przyczynę ?
Zapraszam do lektury poświęconej tej rangi turniejom.
Miałem nadzieję, że Joao Domingues rozwinie się na tyle, żeby klepać ogórów w ceglanych CH i od czasu do czasu zagrać w MD kurnika. Chyba się przeliczyłem.
Peliwo i Bublik też już poza turniejem.
Re: Roland Garros 2018
: 21 maja 2018, 23:33
autor: Barty
QUALIFYING TEST FOR GULBIS AND ROBREDO
Spoiler:
Young guns Kokkinakis, Auger-Aliassime and Ruud also in RG qualifying draw.
There’s no shortage of players with impressive Roland-Garros credentials peppered throughout the men’s qualifying draw.
The 128-player event, which begins on Monday at Stade Roland-Garros, is headed by top seed Taro Daniel, who won the recent ATP clay-court title in Istanbul.
But it’s former top-10 stars Ernest Gulbis and Tommy Robredo whose names more readily catch the eye. There’s also former world No.17 Bernard Tomic in there, too.
Gulbis opens against 38-year-old French veteran Stephane Robert. The Latvian has twice gone deep at Roland-Garros, advancing to the quarter-finals in 2008 and the semi-finals in 2014, the latter run including a win over Roger Federer in the last 16. The result catapulted him into the top 10.
Four years on, Gulbis is now ranked No.190, having battled intermittent wrist injuries for the past three seasons. A successful path through three rounds of qualifying would see him embark on his 12th consecutive appearance in the main draw in Paris.
Read more
Qualifying rounds: roll on Monday!
Robredo, a former world No.5 who has made five Roland-Garros quarter-finals, has drawn 20th seed Simone Bolelli as his first-round opponent, while Tomic, who recently reached a clay-court final at the Aix-en-Provence ATP Challenger, faces Darian King of Barbados.
Also in the draw are some of the game’s most exciting rising stars. There is Tomic’s fellow Australian Thanasi Kokkinakis, who once reached the third round in Paris and who is on the comeback trail from a hairline kneecap fracture suffered in Monte-Carlo.
There’s Canadian 17-year-old Felix Auger-Aliassime – who opens against South Africa’s Lloyd Harris – and 19-year-old Norwegian Casper Ruud, who has drawn Brazilian No.5 seed Thiago Monteiro.
And there’s plenty of local interest, with 16 Frenchman taking to the courts in the qualifying draw. The highest-ranked home hope is 21st seed Quentin Halys, who opens against Argentina’s Andrea Collarini and is projected to meet No.10 seed Martin Klizan in the final round.
Men’s qualifying begins at 10am on Monday 21 May at Roland-Garros.
To crash out in the opening round of a Challenger event was the ultimate reality check for Taro Daniel only weeks after the euphoria of toppling Novak Djokovic at Indian Wells.
Departing the green clay courts of Sarasota, Florida without a match win in singles or doubles, the 25-year-old boarded a flight to Estoril ready to contest qualifying before a last-minute change of plans proved a masterstroke.
Daniel – who opened his Roland-Garros qualifying campaign on Monday with a win over Victor Estrella Burgos – decided to play the Istanbul main draw where he went on to land his maiden ATP tour title and a career-high ranking on the cusp of the Top 80.
“The Istanbul win is more like, OK my level is finally starting to come. With [beating] Novak, it’s more of a future potential,” Daniel said. “Confidence-wise, it was a very different feeling. The Novak win was a more beautiful, flashy experience. Istanbul was more complete.”
This is a player who epitomises the experience of riding the ebbs and flows of life on tour.
While his new ranking would typically have assured a main-draw start at Roland-Garros, it came after the cut-off date and meant he would commence his Paris campaign a week earlier as the top seed in qualifying.
The 25-year-old was tested on Monday before running away with a 6-4 4-6 6-0 victory over Dominican veteran Estrella Burgos to set a second-round date with Austrian Dennis Novak.
He became the first player to win a match on Roland Garros’s new Court 18, the sunken, intimate arena skirted by timber bench seats at the far reaches of the grounds.
“I think it was a really good match. The first two sets were really brutal, physically. In the third, I think he maybe tired and rushed a little bit and I was able to get away with it pretty quickly and I served a lot better,” Daniel said.
“It’s a great court. I wasn’t expecting that many people turning up there at 10 o’clock, but today’s a holiday here which helps, I guess.”
Young guns Kokkinakis, Auger-Aliassime advance
After vastly mixed fortunes in 2018, Thanasi Kokkinakis is another player not getting too far ahead of himself after a come-from-behind 1-6, 6-3, 6-1 win over French 18-year-old Jaimee Floyd Angele in the opening round.
The Australian – who next meets Estonian No.24 seed Jurgen Zopp – has already lost large swathes of his young career to injuries and after the elation of upsetting World No.1 and defending champion Roger Federer in the Miami second round in March, the 22-year-old’s misfortunes returned in Monte Carlo.
It was there, as a wildcard, he tripped over courtside signage during his loss to Karen Khachanov, a stumble which saw him sustain a hairline fracture of his kneecap and forced his withdrawal from Istanbul qualifying.
Read more
Au revoir, RG? Not yet, says Schiavone
“I haven’t played in a while, since I fell. I didn’t know how my knee was going to pull up after Monte Carlo. I wasn’t thinking of playing a couple of days ago so luckily I got through,” Kokkinakis said.
“It was tricky. I was really flat to start with. I found a way even though I didn’t play my best tennis so I’ll take it.”
Kokkinakis’s upset of Federer in Miami validated his persistence and potential.
“I’ve seen these guys for so long. I’ve known in practice I can play at a high level but I haven’t been able to be on the court enough to be healthy,” he said.
“Even last year was limited practice. I started to have some good results without really playing any tournaments so I think no one’s really doubting my level but I’ve just got to try and stay on the court and play some matches.”
The youngest player in men’s qualifying action, Felix Auger-Aliassime, made a winning start in his bid to be part of a Grand Slam main draw for the first time with a 6-4, 6-3 victory over 21-year-old South African Lloyd Harris.
The 17-year-old – a runner-up in the 2016 Roland Garros boys’ singles final – notched his first tour-level main draw match win in Indian Wells over Canadian countryman Vasek Pospisil.
He arrived for his Roland-Garros qualifying debut off a pair of Challenger-level quarter-finals on clay and will earn a shot at revenge against one of his conquerors, Jaume Munar, in the next round.
“Sometimes you expect to be nervous, to be tight, to not play your best tennis but I think from the first game I was serving well so that helps a lot because against good players, to help out physically, it’s always good to serve well,” Auger-Aliassime said.
“At the start of the year I played well at Indian Wells, now I’m playing good on clay. I won two [Challenger] titles on clay last year so I really think I can play well on any surface.”
Others posting first-round qualifying wins included 19-year-old Norwegian Casper Ruud over fifth seed Thiago Monteiro, No.2 seed Ilya Ivashka over Joao Domingues and 18-year-old Serbian Miomir Kecmanovic against Attila Balazs.