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Rublev is the third Russian to achieve the feat in the past 16 months
Entering the 2020 season, Andrey Rublev had never cracked the Top 20 of the FedEx ATP Rankings. But today, the Russian becomes the eighth player from his country to make the Top 10 by ascending to World No. 10.
"I’m happy, of course. But it was not about [making the] Top 10. If you are 11 or 12 or 10, it’s the same thing. I think the main goal for me [is to test] if my level is really Top 10; if I can stay there, if I can be there, if I can improve more," Rublev said. "It's one thing to be there for one week or two weeks. It's another thing to deserve to be there. For the moment I don’t feel that I deserve to be there, but I will do my best to be able to compete, to be a better player and to improve more and more and more. I hope I will be there because I deserve it."
Before Karen Khachanov cracked the Top 10 on 10 June 2019, a new Russian hadn't broken into the elite group for the first time since Mikhail Youzhny on 13 August 2007. With Rublev’s accomplishment, three new Russians — Khachanov, Daniil Medvedev and Rublev — have reached the Top 10 in the past 16 months.
“I would like to take this opportunity to congratulate you for your Top 10 debut,” former World No. 1 and Russian legend Yevgeny Kafelnikov said in a message to Rublev. “We all know how difficult it is to break through, but it’s probably five times harder to stay there for a very long time. All I can say is that you’ve got the tools, you’ve got the energy to be there for a very, very long time, so keep up the good work. Well done.”
The 22-year-old is second on the ATP Tour this year with 29 tour-level wins, including titles in Doha, Adelaide and Hamburg. Rublev became the first player to triumph in the first two weeks of the season since Dominik Hrbaty in 2004. Before 2020, the Russian had only captured two ATP Tour trophies.
Rublev began his campaign with two fourth-round Grand Slam appearances in his young career. He made at least the Round of 16 in all three majors this year, including his second and third Slam quarter-finals at the US Open and Roland Garros.
In 2018, Rublev missed three months due to a lower back stress fracture, sending him as low as World No. 115. The Russian was frustrated during that time off, spending three hours per day at a clinic doing magnetotherapy, eating lunch and not doing much else.
“They were on tour and I was there on the sofa doing nothing,” Rublev said of his colleagues at the time. “It was a really tough moment… hopefully it’s never going to happen again.”
Rublev came back firing. Despite missing six weeks due to a wrist injury, he quickly regained his level, triumphing in Moscow last year to gain momentum leading into 2020.
“It was a little bit strange because during this pre-season, I was thinking, ‘I’m not working enough, I’m not working enough, I need to work harder, I need to work better.’ Every day it was like this. It was not enough,” Rublev told ATP Uncovered presented by Peugeot earlier this year. “I was thinking, ‘What is this? If I want to be on a good level, this is not the game. I need to do something better, I need to work harder, I need to have a better attitude, I need to play smarter.' The mood was never enough, never enough, never enough. But in the end, when I started the season, everything was good.”
Now, Rublev is among the 10 best players in the world. The Russian reached junior World No. 1 at 16 and in 2017 showed his professional potential by becoming the youngest US Open quarter-finalist since Andy Roddick in 2001.
“If he improves his quickness and footwork on the court as well as his first serve a little bit, he’s going to win many Grand Slams,” Kafelnikov said. “I have no doubt about it.”
Last year, six players broke into the Top 10 for the first time, the most since 2006. With today’s addition of Rublev and Diego Schwartzman to the elite group, there have been three so far this year. Denis Shapovalov accomplished the feat following his run to the Internazionali BNL d’Italia semi-finals.
Rublev is the third Russian to achieve the feat in the past 16 months
Entering the 2020 season, Andrey Rublev had never cracked the Top 20 of the FedEx ATP Rankings. But today, the Russian becomes the eighth player from his country to make the Top 10 by ascending to World No. 10.
"I’m happy, of course. But it was not about [making the] Top 10. If you are 11 or 12 or 10, it’s the same thing. I think the main goal for me [is to test] if my level is really Top 10; if I can stay there, if I can be there, if I can improve more," Rublev said. "It's one thing to be there for one week or two weeks. It's another thing to deserve to be there. For the moment I don’t feel that I deserve to be there, but I will do my best to be able to compete, to be a better player and to improve more and more and more. I hope I will be there because I deserve it."
Before Karen Khachanov cracked the Top 10 on 10 June 2019, a new Russian hadn't broken into the elite group for the first time since Mikhail Youzhny on 13 August 2007. With Rublev’s accomplishment, three new Russians — Khachanov, Daniil Medvedev and Rublev — have reached the Top 10 in the past 16 months.
“I would like to take this opportunity to congratulate you for your Top 10 debut,” former World No. 1 and Russian legend Yevgeny Kafelnikov said in a message to Rublev. “We all know how difficult it is to break through, but it’s probably five times harder to stay there for a very long time. All I can say is that you’ve got the tools, you’ve got the energy to be there for a very, very long time, so keep up the good work. Well done.”
The 22-year-old is second on the ATP Tour this year with 29 tour-level wins, including titles in Doha, Adelaide and Hamburg. Rublev became the first player to triumph in the first two weeks of the season since Dominik Hrbaty in 2004. Before 2020, the Russian had only captured two ATP Tour trophies.
Rublev began his campaign with two fourth-round Grand Slam appearances in his young career. He made at least the Round of 16 in all three majors this year, including his second and third Slam quarter-finals at the US Open and Roland Garros.
In 2018, Rublev missed three months due to a lower back stress fracture, sending him as low as World No. 115. The Russian was frustrated during that time off, spending three hours per day at a clinic doing magnetotherapy, eating lunch and not doing much else.
“They were on tour and I was there on the sofa doing nothing,” Rublev said of his colleagues at the time. “It was a really tough moment… hopefully it’s never going to happen again.”
Rublev came back firing. Despite missing six weeks due to a wrist injury, he quickly regained his level, triumphing in Moscow last year to gain momentum leading into 2020.
“It was a little bit strange because during this pre-season, I was thinking, ‘I’m not working enough, I’m not working enough, I need to work harder, I need to work better.’ Every day it was like this. It was not enough,” Rublev told ATP Uncovered presented by Peugeot earlier this year. “I was thinking, ‘What is this? If I want to be on a good level, this is not the game. I need to do something better, I need to work harder, I need to have a better attitude, I need to play smarter.' The mood was never enough, never enough, never enough. But in the end, when I started the season, everything was good.”
Now, Rublev is among the 10 best players in the world. The Russian reached junior World No. 1 at 16 and in 2017 showed his professional potential by becoming the youngest US Open quarter-finalist since Andy Roddick in 2001.
“If he improves his quickness and footwork on the court as well as his first serve a little bit, he’s going to win many Grand Slams,” Kafelnikov said. “I have no doubt about it.”
Last year, six players broke into the Top 10 for the first time, the most since 2006. With today’s addition of Rublev and Diego Schwartzman to the elite group, there have been three so far this year. Denis Shapovalov accomplished the feat following his run to the Internazionali BNL d’Italia semi-finals.
Khachanov/Rublev Save Match Point, Stun Top Seeds In St Petersburg
Spoiler:
Second seeds Peers/Venus advance in Sardinia
Karen Khachanov and Andrey Rublev pulled off a thrilling upset at the St. Petersburg Open in the early hours of Tuesday morning. The home favourites saved one match point to beat top seeds Jamie Murray and Neal Skupski 6-7(6), 6-3, 13-11, advancing to the second round.
Khachanov and Rublev hit 11 aces as a team and saved all three break points they faced to triumph after one hour and 37 minutes. The Russians faced match point at 8/9 in the Match Tie-break, but they held their nerve to oust the Brits, who began the week seventh in the FedEx ATP Doubles Team Rankings.
This is not the first time the singles stars have earned a big win on the doubles court. As a team, Khachanov and Rublev have reached ATP Masters 1000 finals at the 2018 Miami Open presented by Itau and the 2019 Rolex Paris Masters. They will next play Alexander Bublik and Reilly Opelka, who beat Nikola Cacic and Miomir Kecmanovic 2-6, 7-6(5), 10-8.
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Peers/Venus Advance In Sardinia
In the only doubles match Monday at the Forte Village Sardegna Open, second seeds John Peers and Michael Venus eliminated wild cards Marco Cecchinato and Andreas Seppi 6-3, 6-4. Peers and Venus will play Jonny O'Mara and Marcelo Arevalo or Andrey Golubev and Aleksandr Nedovyesov in the second round.
St. Petersburg: Rublev Rolls In First Match As A Top 10 Player
Spoiler:
Kecmanovic saves three set points in straight-sets victory
Andrey Rublev's time inside the Top 10 of the FedEx ATP Rankings is off to a good start.
Rublev defeated big-serving Canadian Vasek Pospisil 6-2, 6-4 on Tuesday to advance to the second round of the St. Petersburg Open and take a 2-1 lead in their ATP Head2Head series.
You May Also Like: Red-Hot Russian Rublev Roars Into Top 10
Pospisil is dangerous on hard courts, especially indoors. The World No. 79 made the fourth round of the US Open and the final at Marseille earlier this year, but he only won 52 per cent of his service points against the home favourite. Rublev earned four service breaks and won 87 per cent of his first-serve points to move on after one hour and 19 minutes.
On Monday, Rublev reached a career-high World No. 10 following his quarter-final run at Roland Garros. The third seed has won three ATP Tour titles this year and with his triumphs in Doha and Adelaide, he became the first player to lift tour-level trophies in the first two weeks of a season since Dominik Hrbaty in 2004.
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Rublev will next play Frenchman Ugo Humbert or Russian qualifier Pavel Kotov for a spot in the quarter-finals.
Elsewhere in his quarter, Serbian Miomir Kecmanovic held off Kazakhstani Mikhail Kukushkin 6-3, 7-6 (7). Kecmanovic recovered from 3/6 down in the second-set tie-break, saving three set points to earn a battle against Cameron Norrie in the second round. The Brit ousted eighth seed Taylor Fritz 6-4, 4-6, 6-3 on Monday.
Rockin’ Rublev: Andrey Rublev cracks the Top 10 in the FedEx ATP Rankings for the first time on Monday, following an incredible stretch in which he reached quarter-finals at the US Open and Roland Garros, with the biggest title of his career at Hamburg in between. The 22-year-old will try to maintain his momentum in St. Petersburg, where he has not yet advanced past the quarter-finals. Rublev won his first ATP Tour title on home soil last year in Moscow.
Nitto ATP Finals Contenders Rublev, Shapovalov Advance In St. Petersburg
Spoiler:
Shapovalov to next face Wawrinka
Andrey Rublev strengthened his chances of qualifying for the Nitto ATP Finals for the first time on Thursday by reaching the St. Petersburg Open quarter-finals.
Third seed Rublev improved to a 31-7 record in a career-best 2020, which includes three ATP Tour titles, with a 4-6, 6-4, 7-5 victory over Ugo Humbert of France in two hours and 13 minutes at the ATP 500-level event. He will next play Briton Cameron Norrie.
Rublev, who is currently No. 10 in the FedEx ATP Rankings, has 3,009 points in the battle to clinch one of the two remaining singles berths at the season finale, to be held at The O2 in London from 15-22 November. But No. 9-ranked Matteo Berrettini, who sits in the final automatic qualification berth, has 3,075 points and will lose 200 points on 9 November from a round-robin win at the 2019 Nitto ATP Finals.
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Shapovalov
Denis Shapovalov, who is also a contender for a first-time spot in London, is through to the St. Petersburg quarter-finals for the second time in three years after overcoming Belarusian qualifier Ilya Ivashka 6-1, 6-4 in 66 minutes.
The Canadian is currently No. 12 in the FedEx ATP Rankings with 2,740 points — 335 points behind Berrettini. Shapovalov will next challenge fifth-seeded Swiss Stan Wawrinka. The pair has a 1-1 ATP Head2Head record with Wawrinka winning their last match 6-4, 7-6(4) at the 2019 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament in Rotterdam.
Rublev To Meet Fellow Nitto ATP Finals Contender Shapovalov In St. Petersburg SFs
Spoiler:
Shapovalov beats 2016 finalist Wawrinka
Andrey Rublev and fellow Nitto ATP Finals contender Denis Shapovalov will meet in the St. Petersburg Open semi-finals on Saturday.
Third seed Rublev moved into the final automatic qualification spot for next month’s Nitto ATP Finals, to be held at The O2 in London from 15-22 November, after he beat Great Britain's Cameron Norrie 6-2, 6-1 in just 63 minutes.
The 22-year-old Russian rises to No. 9 on 3,109 points, 34 points ahead of 10th-placed Matteo Berrettini (3,075), in the battle to clinch one of the two remaining singles spots at the season finale.
Rublev trails Shapovalov 1-2 in the ATP Head2Head series, with his lone win coming in five short sets at the 2017 Next Gen ATP Finals in Milan.
The global COVID-19 pandemic has not halted Rublev’s momentum this season. He has a 32-7 match record in 2020 — 15-3 with two titles (the Qatar ExxonMobil Open and Adelaide International) prior to the five-month suspension, and 17-4 with one title (the Hamburg European Open) since the ATP Tour resumed on 22 August.
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Shapovalov now sits just 30 points behind No. 11 Gael Monfils (2,860 points) in the FedEx ATP Rankings after he battled past fifth seed and 2016 St. Petersburg Open finalist Stan Wawrinka of Switzerland 6-4, 7-5 in one hour and 41 minutes.
Shapovalov won 84 per cent of his first-service points, but won just seven of his 25 second-serve points. The 21-year-old Canadian is now 17-11 on the season, which includes a run to the Internazionali BNL d'Italia semi-finals in Rome (l. to Schwartzman).
Looking ahead to playing Rublev, Shapovalov, who has Russian heritage, admitted to fans, "Please, take pity on me!"
Jest finał w Sankt Petersburgu i awans na 8. miejsce w rankingu.
4. finał Andrieja w 2020, 8. w karierze (póki co 5-2).
Re: Andriej Rubliow
: 17 paź 2020, 16:10
autor: Kamileki
Re: Andriej Rubliow
: 17 paź 2020, 16:11
autor: Kamileki
Re: Andriej Rubliow
: 17 paź 2020, 16:29
autor: Damian
Rublev Claims Big Win In Battle For London, Reaches St. Petersburg Final
Spoiler:
Russian to face Raonic or Coric in final
Andrey Rublev claimed an important win in his bid to qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals for the first time on Saturday, beating fellow London contender Denis Shapovalov 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 to reach the St. Petersburg Open final.
The Russian saved five of six break points to recover from a set down for the second time this week. Rublev, who also trailed Ugo Humbert by a set in the second round, moves ahead of Diego Schwartzman into eighth position in the FedEx ATP Battle For London with 3,229 points following his semi-final win.
Just two qualification positions remain vacant for the Nitto ATP Finals, to be held from 15-22 November at The O2 in London. Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal, Dominic Thiem, Stefanos Tsitsipas, Daniil Medvedev and Alexander Zverev have already qualified for the elite eight-man event.
Rublev gains 120 FedEx ATP Rankings points for reaching his fourth final of 2020 (3-0). Shapovalov remains in 12th position with 2,830 points, 350 points behind ninth-placed Schwartzman who occupies the final qualification spot.
FedEx ATP Battle For London
Ranking Player Points
8 Andrey Rublev 3,229
9 Diego Schwartzman 3,180
10 Matteo Berrettini 3,075
11 Gael Monfils 2,860
12 Denis Shapovalov 2,830
The World No. 10 levels his ATP Head2Head series against Shapovalov at 2-2. Rublev entered the semi-final encounter on a two-match losing streak against the Canadian, having claimed his only previous victory against Shapovalov in a final-set tie-break at the inaugural Next Gen ATP Finals in 2017.
Rublev is attempting to capture his second ATP Tour trophy in Russia and his fourth crown this year. Last year’s Moscow champion has already claimed trophies in Doha, Adelaide and Hamburg this season and is in second place on the 2020 ATP Tour wins leaderboard with 33 wins this year. Only Novak Djokovic, who owns a 37-2 record in 2020, is ahead of Rublev in this category.
Rublev will face last year’s runner-up Borna Coric or 2015 champion Milos Raonic in the final. The 22-year-old is unbeaten in three ATP Head2Head matches against Coric and is yet to meet Raonic at tour-level.
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Shapovalov played with consistent depth and aggression to gain the only break of the first set at 3-3. The Canadian forced his opponent behind the baseline and fired multiple forehand winners up the line to take the lead. Shapovalov closed the set after 45 minutes, striking a powerful first serve into Rublev’s backhand.
Shapovalov gifted Rublev a route back into the match in the second set, committing four double faults in a single service game at 1-2. Rublev served well to maintain his advantage and moved forward to strike short balls and drag his opponent out of position.
The five-time ATP Tour titlist returned with depth and often struck early in rallies to gain the initiative in the deciding set. Rublev finished the match in top form and claimed victory on his second match point when Shapovalov drove a backhand into the net.