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Swoją drogą, grupy ewidentnie "polosowane" tak, żeby nie doszło do Fedovicia przed finałem.
Re: Nitto ATP Finals 2018
: 06 lis 2018, 17:03
autor: polo90
Nie gardźcie Federerem, nie nazywajcie dziadeuszem.
Pomyślcie lepiej że Roger jest najlepszym tenisistą w historii tenisa.
Ciekawe co napiszecie, gdy Federer, Nadal, Djoković i Murray zakończą kariery, może jeszcze przed 2023 rokiem.
Kogo będziecie podziwiać, tenisistę mysz - De Minour?
Re: Nitto ATP Finals 2018
: 06 lis 2018, 17:27
autor: DUN I LOVE
Na FB można w tej chwili obejrzeć końcówkę półfinału Del Potro vs Federera z 2013 roku. TennisTv prezentuje.
Re: Nitto ATP Finals 2018
: 06 lis 2018, 18:00
autor: Kiefer
W 2013-ym nie grali w półfinale tylko w grupie.
Re: Nitto ATP Finals 2018
: 06 lis 2018, 18:28
autor: DUN I LOVE
Tak, tak, nie wiem skąd mi to semi się wzięło. Dzięki za czujność.
Re: Nitto ATP Finals 2018
: 06 lis 2018, 20:38
autor: Del Fed
Re: Nitto ATP Finals 2018
: 06 lis 2018, 21:38
autor: Lleyton
Re: Nitto ATP Finals 2018
: 06 lis 2018, 21:47
autor: DUN I LOVE
A czy bukmacherzy mają już jakieś zdanie na temat faworytów?
Re: Nitto ATP Finals 2018
: 06 lis 2018, 21:50
autor: Kiefer
DUN I LOVE pisze:A czy bukmacherzy mają już jakieś zdanie na temat faworytów?
Wczoraj sprawdzałem, widzą to dokładnie tak samo jak ja, Djokovic - przerwa - Federer - przerwa - cała reszta.
2002 - SF
2003-04 - W
2005 - F
2006-07 - W
2008 - RR
2009 - SF
2010-11 - W
2012 - F
2013 - SF
2014-15 - F
2017 - SF
6 tytułów to bardzo dużo, ale patrząc na liczbę startów i fakt, że od 10 lat zawsze wychodził z grupy, ten procent zwycięstw końcowych mógłby być wyższy.
Re: Nitto ATP Finals 2018
: 08 lis 2018, 15:33
autor: arti
ATP Unveils New Sustainability Efforts At Nitto ATP Finals
Spoiler:
The ATP has today announced a wave of new initiatives that will ensure this year’s Nitto ATP Finals at The O2 is the most sustainable tournament since the prestigious season-ending event moved to London in 2009. The range of measures have been developed to significantly reduce the environmental impact of the 8-day event, in particular the amount of plastic used by players and fans.
For the first time, each player and their teams will be provided with optional re-usable bottles for their on-court drinks, while sealed glass bottles will be provided in the player locker rooms and bedrooms for the preparation of their on-court drinks.
Many of the ATP’s leading players have expressed support for the initiative, including Kevin Anderson, Vice President of the ATP Player Council, who stated: “As leading tennis players we have an important role to play in setting examples and being positive role models for future generations. We are in a fortunate position where we might be able to affect some positive change, no matter how small it might be. Protecting the environment and reducing plastic waste on the Tour is something that I am very passionate about, along with many of my peers. This is a really positive step forward and I encourage as many of my fellow competitors to embrace these initiatives.”
Water coolers and fountains will also be placed at various points backstage for tournament staff and media, along with the provision of reusable water bottles to reduce the number of plastic water bottles used over the duration of the tournament.
Additionally, for the first time at the season-ending event, The O2 are working in partnership with Stack-Cup to provide fans with reusable cups for alcoholic drinks purchased at the venue, which they can return or take home. This will significantly reduce the number of plastic bottles and single use plastic drinks containers sold, with an estimate 50,000 single use plastic cups being removed from the event waste stream.
Former World No. 3 Stan Wawrinka, who competed at the season-ending event from 2013-2016, added: “Protecting the environment is very close to my heart and I fully support what the ATP is doing with these changes. I know that many of my fellow players on the Tour feel the same way and I hope that these initiatives will be replicated at many of our tournaments on the Tour in 2019 and beyond. We can all do better and I’m committed to playing my part. Next year is the year for us all to make a difference and I’m looking forward to picking up the mantle and putting everything I have behind the initiative of the recycled bottle.”
Working in close co-operation with AEG, the operators of The O2, all waste on-site during the Nitto ATP Finals will be passed through the on-site waste compound which houses the latest recycling and waste technology. The O2 currently commits less than 1% of its 3,500 tonnes of waste per annum to landfill; segregating all oils, cardboard, wood, food, glass and Dried Mixed Recyclables on-site to reduce waste impact. In addition, an on-site wormery composts food waste and generates fertilizer.
John Langford, VP and GM of The O2, said: “Our vision is to reduce The O2’s environmental impact and build a sustainable, green business for our fans and staff. AEG is leading the way in the sports and live entertainment industries, and we are delighted to be working in partnership with ATP in delivering on this.”
In addition, at the end of the tournament the three courts used at The O2 (Centre and two practice courts) will be removed and stored so that they can be used again at the 2019 Nitto ATP Finals at The O2.
Chris Kermode, ATP Executive Chairman & President, said: “I believe that every organisation must operate in the most sustainable way possible – pioneering new ways to reduce environmental impact and encourage sustainable behaviour. Making advances in this area is absolutely vital and the changes we’ve introduced at The O2 this year will make a really positive difference by drastically reducing the amount of plastic used and wasted.”
The Nitto ATP Finals takes place at The O2, London, from 11-18 November. The tournament welcomes more than 250,000 fans to The O2 arena annually, as well as generating global viewership figures reaching an average of 95 million viewers each year, as the ATP’s best eight singles players and doubles teams compete over eight days at the biggest indoor tennis tournament in the world.
DUN I LOVE pisze:Ten turniej jak i cała kariera Rokera:
2002 - SF
2003-04 - W
2005 - F
2006-07 - W
2008 - RR
2009 - SF
2010-11 - W
2012 - F
2013 - SF
2014-15 - F
2017 - SF
6 tytułów to bardzo dużo, ale patrząc na liczbę startów i fakt, że od 10 lat zawsze wychodził z grupy, ten procent zwycięstw końcowych mógłby być wyższy.
2012-y zawalił, miał pierwszy jak i zarówno drugi set na widelcu z Djokovicem, No i finał 2005 to przecież 2:0 w setach, ale problemy z kostką i Nalbandian w życiowej formie. Warto byłoby utrzymać ten rekord, Novak jeśli się z nim zrówna po najbliższej edycji to raczej na pewno go przebije, jeśli z kolei Fed zwycięży to zamknie temat.
Mimo wszystko rekordy Federera związane z tym turniejem są mega kozackie, rekord tytułów, finałów, półfinałów, wygranych meczów, średnia na poziomie 80% też wybitna.
Re: Nitto ATP Finals 2018
: 08 lis 2018, 16:03
autor: DUN I LOVE
W 2005 to przede wszystkim było *6-5 i 30-0 przy serwisie na mecz.
Re: Nitto ATP Finals 2018
: 08 lis 2018, 16:06
autor: Kiefer
DUN I LOVE pisze:W 2005 to przede wszystkim było *6-5 i 30-0 przy serwisie na mecz.
Nawet nie wiedziałem, cały Roger.
To jest niesamowite, ale najbardziej utytułowany tenisista w historii jest przegrywem.
Re: Nitto ATP Finals 2018
: 08 lis 2018, 18:36
autor: Barty
Dominic Thiem: A Player In Transition
Spoiler:
The industrious Dominic Thiem has qualified for the Nitto ATP Finals for the third consecutive year
As Dominic Thiem and Rafael Nadal walked to the net, united in exhaustion and pain, their sweat-drenched shirts clung to their bodies. After four hours and 49 minutes of a five-set, instant classic night-match, which ended at 2:04 a.m. in a city that was already known for its all-nighters, there could only be one winner: Nadal, who offered a few words of consolation after all the running, hitting, sweating and battling. Their embrace over the net at the US Open, two months ago in New York City, remains one of the most evocative images of the year.
“It’s going to be stuck in my mind forever,” said Thiem, who will do well to store the ball-striking and industry from that day as an example of what’s possible this week at the Nitto ATP Finals, and also in the future. “I’m going to remember that match, for sure. Tennis is cruel sometimes.” Thiem’s hard-court performances at Flushing Meadows, against Kevin Anderson in the fourth round, and then against Nadal in the quarter-finals, were a major step in the right direction for a Top 10 player in transition.
Buy Your London Tickets
Having spent his childhood playing on red dirt, indoors or outdoors, Thiem has won eight of his 11 ATP World Tour titles on clay courts. Yet he has no intention of being categorised solely as a standout dirt-baller like his Austrian compatriot, former World No. 1 Thomas Muster, who won 40 of his 44 titles on clay.
The perennial goal of any elite tennis performer is to be consistent on every surface and Thiem, a member of the Top 10 in the ATP Rankings since June 2016, is no different. The word ‘improve’ is never far from the lips of Thiem or his long-time coach Gunter Bresnik. It’s a philosophy that has helped Thiem better his year-end position in the ATP Rankings in each of the past seven seasons, highlighted by a career-high of No. 4 shortly prior to last year’s Nitto ATP Finals.
Bresnik, who cut his teeth as a young coach to Boris Becker almost 30 years ago, said, “Every practice session has a purpose and we don’t focus on the ATP Rankings. The role of the coach is to encourage, help the player improve and realise his potential. If Dominic puts everything together he has the potential to be a Grand Slam champion.”
Thiem came close this season. With an ability to strike his backhand faster and with more spin on slower surfaces, he broke Nadal’s 50-match clay-court winning streak in the spring, en route to his second successive Mutua Madrid Open final (which he lost to Alexander Zverev), and once again performed strongly at Roland Garros, but fell to the Spaniard in his first Grand Slam final.
With the additional insight of Spain’s Galo Blanco in 2018, to complement Bresnik, Thiem’s performances are now on a higher plane, as is his approach to the sport. “As an elite performer, Dominic knows what he needs to do to play well, but he is also receptive to advice in order to improve and play well at every tournament he contests,” said Blanco.
By any standards, Thiem’s schedule remains relentless. For the second time in the past three seasons, the 25-year-old has broken the 50 match wins barrier, including an ATP World Tour-leading 30 victories on clay. He has contested more than 220 singles matches in the past three years, with a season-long total of 82 appearances in 2016, and 76 in 2017, and this year he will post another high number.
“Initially, I was completely exhausted, dealing with the jetlag, training and travel,” Thiem said of his globe-trotting. “But I got used to it quickly. I like to play matches, but now I [organise my] schedule better in order to play at my best level on every surface. It’s really, really tricky to go deep in every tournament you play, but that’s what I want to achieve.”
The confidence reaped two months ago at Flushing Meadows soon propelled Thiem to his first indoor hard-court title at September’s St. Petersburg Open. The triumph added to clay‑court trophies in 2018 at the Argentina Open in Buenos Aires and at the Open Parc Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes Lyon.
Yet Thiem was made to sweat on his Nitto ATP Finals qualification, the cherry on top of the cake for every player each season. In part due to injuries throughout the year, he didn’t secure his place for a third consecutive year until the final stretch of the season. He admitted, “I tried to block out the pressure and focused on winning matches. Although you always check out the results of the other guys in the ATP Race [To London], I felt fresher and was able to fight really hard because I had taken some time off during the year due to injuries.”
While he won’t have the luxury of time against his fellow elite performers at The O2 this week, something he traditionally needs early at tournaments to hit top form, Thiem will be hoping to add to his round-robin victories over Gael Monfils in 2016 and alternate Pablo Carreno Busta last year. “I’ve learned a lot in each of the past two years and it’s such a great event, with so many spectators and every session is sold out, which is absolutely amazing,” said Thiem, who has a 2-4 overall record at the season finale. “I’ve learned that I need to be 100 per cent from the very first ball. You don’t get any presents when you’re playing against the Top 8.
“I’ve had another great year and qualified for London, which remains a top priority at the start of each season. It means I’ve been really consistent, so I’m happy to be back again. I want to finish the year on a high and to take the lessons I’ve learned into 2019.”