Tag: Frances Tiafoe

Shapovalov’s “Dream Come True” Moment Is Here

Don’t shoot the messenger! I am only quoting in the title what Denis Shapovalov said right after defeating Frances Tiafoe 6-7 6-4 6-2 on Thursday night at the Miami Open and earning the right to play Roger Federer in the semifinals on Friday. He also said: “I’ve been looking forward to this matchup, I think, my whole life.”

If you are a Shapovalov fan, you are probably feeling somewhere between happy and ecstatic, with good reason! Your player just won his second impressive match in a row, showing improvements not only in his game but in his mental fortitude. You can read my post-match report – click here – on his victory over Stefanos Tsitsipas on Tuesday, in what I believe to be the most thrilling match of the tournament so far on the men’s side. It was a shot-making festival of sorts, with each player responding to the challenges raised by the other, culminating in an electrifying final set that went to a tiebreaker.

Shapovalov in action at the 2018 Western & Southern Open
Photo: Matthew Stockman – Getty Images North America

Thursday’s match against Tiafoe was a slightly different type of conquest for Shapovalov in texture and content. As far as fans of Denis are concerned, the satisfying (or nerve-wrecking) part of this win is that the Canadian came out on top despite not performing nearly as well as he did on Tuesday. In fact, he blew a number of chances that turned out to be costly. Yet, he knew how to quickly stack those disappointing moments to the back of his head (probably to be revisited at a later point) and keep a clear vision on the target in front. When time arrived to ultimately grab the decisive lead, he did not flinch.

The first set was a straight-forward and entertaining affair, in that players dominated their service games not because they hit a slew of aces, but rather because they served efficiently by keeping high percentage on their their first serves and picking the right spots to hit in the service box. Simply put, if you wanted to argue that a server can cruise through his service games without striking ace after ace, the first set needed to be your exhibit A. Shapovalov served at 61% first serves with only two aces, and Tiafoe at 61% with three. Neither even came close to facing a break point until the last two games prior to the tiebreaker (one in each). Both players enjoyed a high success rate at the net until the tiebreaker, with Denis winning five out of six points in which he decided to approach the net, Frances four out of five**.

**Clarification: I count as “approach” any point at which the player decides to come to the net behind a strong shot. I include it in my count even if the opponent misses the next shot and he wins the point without hitting a volley. It’s the pressure applied to the opponent by coming forward that counts.

A key moment came when Tiafoe had a break-point chance at 5-5 and Shapovalov saved it with an ace (one of two in the set for him). In the very next game, he was the one with the break-point opportunity which also meant a set point at 6-5. Denis hit a routine forehand wide, a disappointing unforced error at an inopportune time. He was not even going for a winner. It was a loopy, topspin forehand aimed to Tiafoe’s backhand. Considering his style, one can wonder if Shapovalov would have been more likely to hit the ball in the court, had he unleashed on that forehand for a winner instead of going conservative.

Another disappointing moment came shortly after when Tiafoe led 3-2 in the tiebreaker and Shapovalov had another routine forehand from almost the exact same position as the one he missed on set point. This time, he struck it hard to the other corner for a winner and missed it badly. So, back to the question above, but in reverse: would he have avoided the error had he been more reserved and not gone for a flashy winner? You see how comfortable things can be in the peanut gallery?

The only valid answer to either of the questions above: it’s easy to theorize in retrospect.

That being said, there was nothing ambiguous about Denis’s third disappointing moment of the set. At 4-5 in the tiebreaker, Tiafoe hit a dismal drop shot that bounced high. Shapovalov got there without too much trouble and line up for a forehand. The deuce corner on Tiafoe’s side was wide open and Denis went there, but sailed it deep. Suddenly, he was down two set points. On the second set point, Tiafoe hit a spectacular backhand return smack to the baseline, one that the Canadian could not send back over the net.

Speaking of Tiafoe, I am deeply in awe of how much he has improved his overall game. Angles, he can hit. Drop shots, he can place. Volleys, he can put away. Returns, well, just see the set point. Add to the mix his ground strokes that have, over the last couple of years, upgraded in terms of velocity and accuracy, and you have a young player that has as much potential as the rest of the exciting up-and-comers making noise so far this year.

Tiafoe during the 2019 Australian Open
Photo: Cameron Spencer – Getty Images AsiaPac

When Frances went up 1-0 in the second and led 0-15 on Denis’s serve, thanks to a stellar forehand passing shot he hit on the run (and may I add, one hit with a semi-continental grip, thus somewhat scooped and flat), it looked as if the American was about to break free and sprint to the finish line.

Down 0-1, 0-15 on his serve, Shapovalov persevered. He hit four first serves in a row and quickly halted the down-slide by holding. This game also included a charming moment when he hit one of several amazing drop volleys showcased throughout the match by both. Tiafoe walked up to the net and gave him a congratulatory hand-slap. Then, Shapovalov broke his opponent’s serve for the first break of the match for either player, in a game that featured two high-octane returns by the Canadian on Tiafoe’s first serves.

Shapovalov, whose chances of winning were looking grim around 8 minutes ago, now caught fire. He hit 80% of his first serves in and won all five points on approaches during a four-game sequence that placed him at a 5-1 lead. He has two set-point chances in that game. Tiafoe saved the first one with a fine approach and a put-away volley. On the second one, Shapovalov had an easy forehand to hit inside the baseline, in the middle of the court, one that he should generally put away. He missed it in the net and Tiafoe held serve.

Tiafoe slowly closed the gap back to 5-4, but he fell short of stopping Shapovalov from winning the second set because the Canadian did not allow the disappointment of the blown forehand on set point back at 5-1 linger in his mind. It is not a secret that Shapovalov has squandered similar leads more than once in the past couple of years. I must confess that I thought he might get tight at that point, especially when I saw him jump around at the baseline trying to remain concentrated in the moment while Tiafoe was getting medical treatment during the extended 5-4 changeover.

Once again, Shapovalov did not falter. He started the game with two effective 1-2 punch combinations to go up 30-0 and served an ace at 40-0 (one of his two for the set) to send the match to a final set. Just like against Tsitsipas, Shapovalov figured out a way to rise to the occasion after losing the first set, and did not have any let downs for the remainder of the match.

Tiafoe, for his part, could never recapture his form from earlier in the match. He played his worst service game at 1-1 in the final set, committing three unforced errors from the baseline to fall behind a break. Another backhand unforced error in the 2-4 game put him down by two breaks. Shapovalov closed the match out on the next game.

For the record, Shapovalov finished the match hitting 69% of first serves in, while chipping in seven aces and one double fault. At least three of his seven aces that I can remember were on clutch points (two on break points, one to save a set point). Tiafoe did not fare as well in this department, serving at 62%, with five aces and six double faults.

Let me finish with a detail that should make fans of both Shapovalov and Tiafoe happy. Denis decided to approach 32 times and won 22 of those points. Frances approached 20 times, winning 14. These are fairly solid ratios, but I was looking for something else. In the past, I have seen Shapovalov and Tiafoe hit big shots from the baseline, put their opponents on the run, yet stay back at the baseline, thus allowing the opponent to loop the ball back and recover to the middle of the court.

So, this time I paid particular attention to their decision-making when they had their opponent scrambling. I looked for points where one had the other on the run, and instead of moving forward and putting more pressure on the opponent, he stayed back. I also looked for balls that came short and allowed either of them to step inside the baseline for a set acceleration shot. If the player in question did not hit that ball with the intention of coming to the net behind, I counted that against them. For one example of what I mean, consider the 5-2, 0-30 point in the second set. Tiafoe’s return falls short in the middle of the court. Shapovalov moves inside the baseline and has a chance to strike a forehand to one of the corners and move up to the net, which is something he has successfully done numerous times in this match. For some odd reason, he stays back on that occasion and engages in a rally. He misses a backhand several shots later and Tiafoe wins the point.

By my count, there was a total of six points (four by Denis, two by Frances) where they passed on an opportunity to approach. That is a low number considering that neither player’s plan A revolves around volleying. In other words, these guys are not afraid to approach, which also means that their net skills are bound to rapidly improve. Transition game is not something you master by studying or watching. Practice drills help, but ultimately, players committed to developing their transition game understand that in order to master that skill, they must literally do it under the pressure of the scoreboard. This is why fans of these two players should be excited. This match is one example of how both Shapovalov and Tiafoe have their eyes set on becoming the best all-around players that they can be.

As for Shapovalov’s “dream-come-true” match, Federer awaits him on Friday evening, “Not Before 7:00 PM.”
Make your plans accordingly!

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Miami Open Match Report: Kyle Edmund – Frances Tiafoe (2nd round)

This encounter appeared to be one of the most intriguing match-ups of the day when the order of play was initially announced. It pitted two rising stars of this year, Kyle Edmund, the highest-ranked British player at no.26 and a semifinalist at the Australian Open, against the American Frances Tiafoe (no.63) who had won his maiden ATP title just a little less than a month ago in Delray Beach.

The match lived up to its billing, not necessarily in terms of quality, but certainly in terms of the twists and turns that it took until the very end of the three-set duel.

From the start, it became clear that both players were going to have considerable edge on their service games, as long as their first-serve percentages remained high. Edmund began with a blank game, hitting three out of four first serves and never having to hit the second shot. Tiafoe returned the favor with a blank game of his own, not missing any first serves. Edmund replied with two aces in the third game for another easy hold and Tiafoe held firm with his second routine hold to get back to 2-2.

You get the picture, don’t you? The first serves were so dominant that by the time it was 5-5, each game averaged around 2,5 minutes. There had been no break points and only one deuce. The first set lasted a brief 45 minutes despite ending with a tiebreaker.

Photo: Matthew Stockman – Getty Images

The only break point – a set point for Edmund at the same time – was in the 6-5 game and it needed a lot of unusual things to occur for it to take place. At 30-15, Tiafoe made an unforced error on his forehand that had been working well until then. Then, a framed-forehand return by Edmund happened to land on the baseline (more on Edmund’s frame mishits later), completely catching Tiafoe unprepared. Frances barely got the ball back on an off-balance shot that landed short. Edmund attacked with his forehand, forcing Tiafoe into an error. Out of nowhere, the Brit found himself up a set point. It was too much variation in an otherwise metronomic set. Frances needed to reset the system. He served three big serves in a row – the third one, an ace – and carried the set into a tiebreaker.

So far, I have talked about how dominating first serves were in the first set, but I would not want you to think that the players served a ton of aces. At 6-6, Tiafoe had six aces and Edmund had two, so nothing groundbreaking there. On the other hand, they had one double fault combined (Edmund), and each played with an extremely high rate of first-serve percentage, Tiafoe at 95%, Edmund at 75%, but there was even more to it than that.

First serves were dominating in the sense that both players collected a ton of points in the form of 1-2 punches (winning on the second shot after a weak return caused by an effective first serve) or in the form of 1-2-3 punches (in which the third shot is a winning volley after a good approach shot on a short return, thanks to an effective first serve).

The returner never seemed to get out of the hole even when he was able to return and manage to get in a rally, because he would be stuck defending from the first shot forward. For an example of this, see the 5-5, 15-0 point. Edmund gets the first serve in, takes an offensive position in the court and runs Tiafoe ragged for the rest of the point behind the baseline, until the American eventually misses after multiple scramble shots.

It should come as no surprise then, that at 6-6, both players were hovering in the mid-80% range on points won on first serves. That set seemed to have “tiebreaker” written all over it from the beginning. Yet, the tiebreaker itself completely deviated from the norms.

It all started with Tiafoe leading 3-2 and serving. Until then, he was 100% on first-serve points won. He got the first serve in and Edmund hit an average return that gave Tiafoe a high forehand to attack. It was the 1-2-punch pattern that had worked to perfection for the American until then. Tiafoe nailed it deep behind the baseline. At 3-3, he got another solid first serve in and Edmund pulled perhaps his best return of the set, a rocket forehand that landed smack on the baseline, and went up 4-3. Tiafoe just lost the first (and only) two points of the set on a total of 37 points that started with his first serve.

So, you would think that with two serves coming, Edmund had a significant advantage, especially if he gets his first serves in. He did, on both points, and he lost both points on errors, the second one being an unforced one. Four points in a row lost by the server despite all starting with first serves in this match? Bizarre indeed, but as many on social media would say, with a hashtag attached to it, “that’s #Tennis.”

There was one more twist. At 4-5, Edmund had a forehand sitter on the service line that he would usually put away with one eye closed. He literally hit the ball with the frame of his racket, sending it to the sky and far behind the baseline. Tiafoe had two set points at 6-4. He needed only one. With an ace he pocketed the first set 7-6.

Edmund must have been disappointed at losing the set. He had a set point and led 4-3 in the tiebreaker with two serves to follow. Also, he probably knew that the match could easily turn around in his favor at any point if he could manage to break his opponent’s serve. After all, Tiafoe never came close to breaking his serve in the first set.

The American would not fare much better in the second set in that department, earning only one break point. To make matters worse for him, he would play his first below-average serving game on the fourth game of the set and get broken. He would double fault to start the game, then at 30-15, he would hit a wacky slice forehand approach shot on a last-second decision that would float out. Down a break point, he would hit the forehand approach shot in the net for good measure, giving Edmund a much-needed adrenaline shot in the arm.

Kyle rode the only break of the match all the way to the end of the set, winning it 6-4. Other than the break point that Edmund saved by an ace at 4-3, the rest of the set reflected more or less the pattern of the match, meaning routine service holds.

As the third set began, it was very hard to predict which player would come out on top. Edmund had the only break of the match, but there had only been a total of four break points in the 22 games played in the first two sets. First-serve percentages remained high, and it looked like unless one of the two had an unexpectedly dismal serving game (à-la fourth game of the second set by Tiafoe), another tiebreaker loomed large on the horizon.

In fact, the first game only served to reaffirmed that expectation. Tiafoe had to resort to second serves in the first three points and lost all three. Down 0-40, he got his next five first serves in, and other than the forehand smacked in the net by Edmund at 15-40, he had little trouble coming back to hold his serve. There were three more routine service holds and the scoreboard showed 2-2 in the final set.

There was one small variation though. While both players were winning almost 100% of their first serves, they were hardly winning any of their second-serve points. They were a combined 2 out of 10 on those, up to that point in the third set. That was different than in the first two sets. Tiafoe was the one to suffer from this problem in the fifth game. He got only one first serve in – an ace, naturally – and made three unforced errors on rallies started with his second serves. Edmund broke to go up 3-2 and it looked like a repeat of the second set was forthcoming.

Until 5-4…

On the first point, Edmund got the first serve in and Tiafoe returned short, like zillion other times before, except that this time, instead of completing the 1-2 punch, like he has zillion other times before, Edmund framed the backhand wide to go down 0-15. At 15-15, Edmund got his first serve in again, but Tiafoe returned well, and a rally ensued. After several shots, Edmund framed the backhand again and Tiafoe punished the ball that landed short with a clean forehand winner to go up 15-30. You could sense the crowd intensity go up a notch. Was an unlikely break finally on the way for the American?

At 30-30, Edmund’s backhand let him down again, this time missing deep on a routine cross-court shot. At 30-40, Edmund approached the net and missed a low backhand volley into the net. The improbable happened. Edmund played his first less-than-average serving game and lost 3 out of 4 points on those started with his first serve. Tiafoe got his first and only – and truly golden – break of the match to stay alive and level the match at one set each, five games each.

Photo: Clive Brunskill – Getty Images

At 5-5, Edmund had another chance to take charge when he led 15-40 on the American’s serve. He had a look at a second serve and hit his third framed shot in the last two games, a forehand return this time, that landed wide (I promise, no more mentions of “frame” shots). Tiafoe followed it up with three big serves to go up 6-5. Not much seemed to go right for Edmund in the last five minutes. He was looking to hold his serve for the 16th time in a row and shake his opponent’s hand as the victor about five minutes ago. Now, he was looking to hold to stay alive and get to a tiebreaker to decide the final set.

For a moment, it looked like he would not even get there. The best point of the match, a spectacular rally during which Kyle threw the kitchen sink and more at Frances, only to see the American get everything back and win the point with a brilliant counter-punch winner, gave the first point of the game to Tiafoe. He would eventually get to a match point at 30-40. Credit to Edmund who played a solid point of his own, approaching the net and challenging Tiafoe to pass him from a difficult position. Frances could not, and Edmund held serve two points later, forcing the tiebreaker.

So, yes, the match did indeed go to the tiebreaker in the final set, just not in the way you would have expected. The tiebreaker would not stick to the script either. Tiafoe would go up 6-1, only to see Edmund climb back to 6-5. On match point number five, Tiafoe would step up to the baseline, toss the ball up, and end the match with an ace.

It was a glorious victory for Tiafoe, and a heavy defeat for Edmund. It was so, not because both players performed at a very high level – in fact, the quality of tennis went slightly down in the final set.

It was a glorious victory for Tiafoe, rather because he had to play for an extended period of time with the burden of letting the match get away from him after having won a close first set, and yet find the determination within himself to finally overcome the barrier that sapped his mind for almost two hours – the inability to break Edmund’s serve – and do so precisely when it counted.

It was a heavy defeat for Edmund, rather because he felt like he had the victory within his reach for the better part of the match, only to have it snatched out of his hands at the last second. It may also bring up some larger questions for Edmund’s camp. The Brit, following a stellar month of January, has now been upset in his first matches, both in Indian Wells and in Miami. The hip injury that followed the Australian Open may have temporarily halted his progress more than expected. One can only hope that he does not have to go through a more complicated mental-recuperation process than he has had to go through on the physical side.

Next challenge for Tiafoe will be the 10th seed Tomas Berdych.

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