Showing posts with label Tennis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tennis. Show all posts

Wednesday, 10 February 2016

You Cannot Be Serious... Tennis Umpires


Two professional tennis umpires have been banned and four more are under investigation for fixing games to assist betting syndicates, it has emerged.

Kazakhstan's Kirill Parfenov was banned for life last February for contacting another official on Facebook in an attempt to manipulate the scoring of matches.

And Croatian Denis Pitner was suspended for 12 months after sending information about a player to a coach during a tournament and logging onto a betting account from which wagers were placed on games.

The revelations come as professional tennis faces increasing scrutiny over allegations of corruption within its highest levels.

It is already reeling from reports last month that 16 players who have been ranked in the top 50 had been repeatedly flagged to the Tennis Integrity Unit over concerns they had thrown matches.

Tennis authorities rejected accusations that evidence of match-fixing had been suppressed or had not been properly investigated over the past decade.

But the spectre of match umpires possibly colluding with betting syndicates by manipulating live scoring data at low-ranking events is a further blow to the sport's image.

In 2014 French tennis official Morgan Lamri was banned for multiple breaches of the Tennis Anti-Corruption Programme. 

Explaining why the latest suspensions had only just been disclosed, The International Tennis Federation (ITF) said its Code of Conduct for Officials did not require it to name those sanctioned until it tweaked the code at the start of the year.

The ITF would not comment on reports that said umpires from Kazakhstan, Turkey and Ukraine were among those being investigated.

However, it did address suggestions that a five-year deal worth a reported $70 million with data company Sportradar had inadvertently exposed tennis to corruption.

Sportradar passes on scoring data from umpires, even at bottom rung Futures circuit tournaments, to 'in-play' betting websites around the world.

By deliberately delaying inputting the outcome of a point, umpires can help court-side gamblers to place bets knowing what was going to happen next.

'The ITF's data contract with Sportradar for an official data feed provides regulation and control where previously there was none,' a statement said.

'Our agreement with Sportradar, like those in place with ATP and WTA, by creating official, accurate and immediate data, acts as a deterrent to efforts by anyone trying to conduct illegal sports betting and/or unauthorised use of data for non-legal purposes.

'Sportradar are excellent partners and share with the ITF the goal of ensuring the integrity of our sport.'

In the wake of revelations some 16 players in the top 50 were suspected of match fixing, Roger Federer (left) said they should be named, while Novak Djokovic (right) revealed he had once rejected an offer to throw a match for money

Tennis is one of the most gambled on sports in the world, with bookmakers actively taking bets mid-match.

Like cricket, match-fixing does not necessarily mean throwing a match, but could involve taking money just to double fault or lost a set.

Last month the sport was rocked by reports 16 players who have ranked in the top 50 are among those to be suspected of match fixing.

Incredibly, eight of those 16, including one Grand Slam winner, were alleged to have been playing at the Australian Open.

In the wake of the accusations, tennis legend John McEnroe admitted many had heard 'stories about this going on at the low levels', but added that 'no one knew it was happening at the Grand Slams'.

Many were also shocked to learn that some of the sport's top players had been approached and offered big money to throw matches.

Djokovic confirmed last month he was offered money to intentionally throw a match. The 10-time Grand Slam champion said that he was not directly approached but members of his support team were offered the money in Russia in 2007, an offer the player said was immediately rejected.

Wednesday, 27 January 2016

Kerber Makes First Semi in Victoria

Angelique Kerber upset the odds to beat Victoria Azarenka for the first time in her career and reach the Australian Open semi-finals.

Kerber had lost all of her last six meetings with Azarenka but the seventh seed turned the tide to win a pulsating match 6-3, 7-5 on Rod Laver Arena. The world No6 will now play Britain’s Johanna Konta in the last four.

Kerber had never before gone past the fourth round in Melbourne but a stirring display against Azarenka, who many had tipped to win the title, now puts her one victory away from the final.

“I can’t actually describe it in words,” Kerber said. “I was 0-6 [against Azarenka] before I came on court and I was just saying to myself, ‘just play like you play in practice, just go for it and believe you can beat her’. I’m so happy I beat her for the first time.”

The German raced into a 4-0 lead in the first set and while Azarenka brought it back to 4-3, she regained her composure to serve out when the Belarusian hit a backhand long.

The match was quickly flipped on its head in the second, however, when Azarenka stormed 5-2 clear but Kerber came back, saving five set points on her way to levelling at 5-5.

The contest had looked destined for a decider but Kerber now had the momentum and she won the next two games in a row to seal victory in one hour and 45 minutes.

“I was more aggressive than when it was 2-5,” Kerber said. “I was just saying to myself: ‘Forget the score, go for it and play the best you can play today’. I was not thinking about the score.

“At match point I had a little bit more in my mind but it’s just an amazing feeling to be in the semi-finals.”


Tuesday, 26 January 2016

Novak Eases Past Nishikori


Novak Djokovic rediscovered his groove to ease past Japan’s Kei Nishikori and set up an Australian Open semi-final with Roger Federer.

Djokovic made a career-high 100 unforced errors during a torrid performance against Gilles Simon in the previous round but it was back to business as usual for the world No1, who beat Nishikori 6-3, 6-2, 6-4 on Rod Laver Arena. The victory ensures Djokovic and Federer will meet for a 45th time, with the current head-to-head firmly in the balance at 22 wins each.

Djokovic came into the match with question marks about his form after a scrappy fourth-round performance against the Frenchman Simon, in which he came through in five sets.

The top seed reduced his error count down to 27 on Tuesday compared to Nishikori’s 54 and after the match the Serb revealed he cancelled practice on Monday in a bid to refresh.

“I haven’t practised yesterday, I didn’t hit a tennis ball,” Djokovic said. “Sometimes it’s good to reset your mind and rest your body. Less is more sometimes.”

Nishikori has not impressed in the latter stages of a grand slam since his US Open final appearance in 2014 and he came up short again, producing a disappointing display that lacked either control or consistency.

The world No7 beat Djokovic en route to that US Open final but he never looked like repeating the feat here, losing his serve six times overall in a brisk match lasting two hours and seven minutes.

“We’ve played more than a few times in the last couple of years and I lost to him at the US Open in 2014,” Djokovic said. “He’s not afraid to come out and play aggressive tennis which he did, I just needed to weather the storm, hang in there and wait for my opportunity. I did well in the important moments.”

Federer expended only slightly more energy earlier on Tuesday by beating Tomas Berdych in straight sets and Djokovic will know he needs to up his game again if he is to deny the Swiss a shot at an 18th major title.

“We keep playing each other in nearly every big tournament,” Djokovic said. “It’s always a big challenge. You don’t need to spend words on his achievements – he is a great champion and someone I have a lot of respect for. It will be a great match.”


Sunday, 25 January 2015

Murray Moves into Melbourne QF


Andy Murray extended his streak of consecutive grand slam quarter-final appearances to 16 with a roller coaster victory over Grigor Dimitrov at the Australian Open.

Murray looked set to be dragged into a decider when Dimitrov led 5-2 in the fourth set, but won the next five games to complete a 6-4 6-7 6-3 7-5 success in just over three and a half hours.

The match started on Sunday evening but fittingly stretched into the first hour of Australia Day and Murray will now look to improve on his perfect 10-0 record against Australian players at tour level when he takes on home favourite Nick Kyrgios for a place in the semi-finals.

Murray weathered an early storm from Dimitrov, who raced into a 3-0 lead before Murray won six of the next seven games to claim the opening set.

That set the pattern for an unpredictable contest with Murray twice going a break up in the second set and serving for it at 6-5, only to crack under the pressure and serve a double fault to allow Dimitrov to get back on level terms.

Trailing 3-2 in the tie-break, Murray then failed to put away an overhead at full stretch to allow Dimitrov a backhand winner down the line as the 23-year-old moved 6-3 in front.

Murray saved two points on his own serve but could do nothing about the third as a service winner gave Dimitrov the set in 70 minutes and levelled the match at one set all.
Anger

Murray’s mood didn’t improve in the third set when he was unable to take any of the four break points he created in the fourth game.

The object of his anger then switched to umpire Jake Garner, who failed to spot the ball had bounced twice before Dimitrov retrieved it.

Murray regained his composure to break Dimitrov in the eighth game and this time had no trouble serving out to take the set 6-3 and go two sets to one up.

Dimitrov, who put Murray out of Wimbledon last year, was not about to throw in the towel, saving yet another break point at the start of the fourth set.

Murray was frustrated at converting just five of his 16 break points and Dimitrov compounded the agony by taking his fourth break point out of seven to surge into a 3-0 lead.

Dimitrov had to work hard to hold onto his next two service games and it was beyond midnight when Murray saved a set point to force his opponent to serve for the set.

And that proved crucial as the 10th seed committed two errors on his previously reliable forehand to allow Murray back into the match, a chance the former Wimbledon champion gratefully accepted.

After holding serve to level at 5-5, Murray broke Dimitrov again with a backhand return winner that had the Bulgarian smashing his racket into the ground before standing on it to ensure he had broken it in half.

Murray still had to complete the job and in the end was grateful for the assistance of a massive net cord to seal a thrilling win.

"I got quite lucky at the end, a couple of net cords went my way and that was the difference really," said Murray.

"A lot of the games were close, back and forth, and the momentum was switching both ways all the time.

"Grigor is an unbelievable athlete, he's extremely quick around the court, so agile, and he gets shots that other players don't get to and he's got fantastic hands as well.

"I'm just glad that I managed to get through it at the end."


Wednesday, 19 January 2011

Australian Open 2011

Ana Ivanovic 
Australian Open 2011
Venue: Melbourne Park
Surface: Plexicushion
Official Ball: Wilson
Host Broadcasters: Seven Network & Fox Sports
Tournament Director: Craig Tiley
Tournament Referee: Wayne McKewen

Field sizes
Men's singles
128 (104 direct entries based on rankings, 16 qualifiers, up to eight wildcards).
Women's singles
128 (108 direct entries, 12 qualifiers, up to eight wildcards).
Men's doubles
64 pairs, including up to seven wildcards.
Women's doubles
64 pairs, including up to seven wildcards.
Mixed doubles
32 pairs, including up to seven wildcards.

Computer rankings are used as a basis for the seeding of 32 players in the singles championships. The first and second seeds are placed, respectively, at the top and bottom of the draw. All remaining seeds are then placed by ballot in designated positions in the draw, followed by the remainder of the field, which is randomly drawn from top to bottom of the draw by IBM computer technology.

Trophies
Men's Singles
The Norman Brookes Challenge Cup
Singles Championship of Australia
Presented by the State Lawn Tennis Associations and the friends of Mr Norman E. Brookes

Women's Singles
Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup
Australian Women's Singles Championship

Donated by the NSW Lawn Tennis Association



Rafael Nadal