1 Dabul, Brian ARG 96 2 Odesnik, Wayne USA 97 OUT (to MD) 3 Karanusic, Roko CRO 99 4 Gil, Frederico POR 103 OUT (to MD) 5 Levine, Jesse USA 108 OUT 6 Becker, Benjamin GER 109 7 Falla, Alejandro COL 116 8 Anderson, Kevin RSA 117 9 Kendrick, Robert USA 118 10 Beck, Andreas GER 119 11 Hernych, Jan CZE 120 12 Petzschner, Philipp GER 121 13 Nishikori, Kei JPN 122 OUT 14 Soeda, Go JPN 124 15 Muller, Gilles LUX 126 16 Stakhovsky, Sergiy UKR 128 17 Pless, Kristian DEN 129 18 Cipolla, Flavio ITA 132 19 Capdeville, Paul CHI 133 20 Bohli, Stephane SUI 134 21 Cuevas, Pablo URU 136 22 Ascione, Thierry FRA 137 23 Massu, Nicolas CHI 138 24 Delic, Amer USA 140 OUT 25 Warburg, Sam USA 141 OUT 26 De Voest, Rik RSA 142 27 Phau, Bjorn GER 145 28 Stadler, Simon GER 146 29 Sirianni, Joseph AUS 147 30 Smeets, Robert AUS 148 31 Van Gemerden, Melle NED @149 32 Huta Galung, Jesse NED 152 33 Malisse, Xavier BEL 154 34 Hartfield, Diego ARG 155 35 Mayer, Leonardo ARG 156 36 Kim, Kevin USA 157 37 Golubev, Andrey KAZ 159 38 Bjorkman, Jonas SWE 161 39 Giraldo, Santiago COL 162 40 Bozoljac, Ilia SRB 163 41 Vemic, Dusan SRB 164 42 Peya, Alexander AUT 165 43 Alves, Thiago BRA 166 44 Galvani, Stefano ITA 167 45 Rosol, Lukas CZE 170 46 Hippensteel, KJ USA @171 47 Ungur, Adrian ROU 172 48 Rehnquist, Bjorn SWE 173 49 Bachinger, Matthias GER 174 50 Lopez Jaen, Miguel Angel ESP 175 51 Munoz-De La Nava, Daniel ESP 176 52 Kudryavtsev, Alexandre RUS 177 53 Levy, Harel ISR 178 54 Ilhan, Marsel TUR 179 55 Mannarino, Adrian FRA 181 56 Bogdanovic, Alex GBR 183 57 Roger-Vasselin, Edouard FRA 184 58 Lacko, Lukas SVK 185 59 Kamke, Tobias GER 187 60 Olejniczak, Dawid POL 188 61 Miranda, Ivan PER 191OUT 62 Dlouhy, Lukas CZE 193 63 Ball, Carsten AUS 194 OUT 64 Jenkins, Scoville USA 195 OUT 65 Evans, Brendan USA 196 OUT 66 Ram, Rajeev USA 200 67 Waske, Alexander GER @200 OUT 68 Middelkoop, Matwe NED 203 69 Mello, Ricardo BRA 204 70 Slanar, Martin AUT 205 71 Beck, Karol SVK 206 72 Marrero, David ESP 207 73 Niemeyer, Frederic CAN 208 74 Fleishman, Zack USA @209 75 Dorsch, Benedikt GER 210 76 Ouanna, Josselin FRA 211 77 Machado, Rui POR 212 78 Hocevar, Ricardo BRA 213 79 Souza, Joao BRA 214 80 Sidorenko, Alexandre FRA 217 81 Brands, Daniel GER 218 82 Lorenzi, Paolo ITA 219 83 Amritraj, Prakash IND 221 84 Ebelthite, Colin AUS 223 85 Coutelot, Nicolas FRA 225 86 Lugassy, Gary FRA 226 87 Yani, Michael USA 229 88 Groth, Samuel AUS 230 89 Naso, Gianluca ITA 231 90 Stoppini, Andrea ITA 234 91 Pospisil, Jaroslav CZE 235 92 Piccari, Francesco ITA 236 93 Qureshi, Aisam-Ul-Haq PAK 238 94 Ledovskikh, Mikhail RUS 239 95 Witten, Jesse USA 241 96 Nunez, Eric USA @242 97 Estrella, Victor DOM 243 98 Menendez, Adrian ESP 244 99 Ouahab, Lamine ALG 245 100 Fischer, Martin AUT 246 101 Lindahl, Nick AUS 248 OUT 102 Goodall, Joshua GBR 250 103 Jun, Woong-Sun KOR 252 104 Sweeting, Ryan USA 255 105 Prpic, Filip SWE 256 106 Lapentti, Giovanni ECU 257 107 Brizzi, Alberto ITA 259 108 De Heart, Ryler USA 260 109 De Chaunac, Sebastien FRA 262 110 Miele, Andre BRA 263 111 Quintero, Michael COL 264 112 Zampieri, Caio BRA 265 113 Zib, Tomas CZE 266 114 Minar, Jan CZE 272 115 Van der Merwe, Izak RSA 273 116 Przysiezny, Michal POL @273 117 Armando, Hugo USA 274 118 Kuznetsov, Alex USA 275 119 Poch-Gradin, Carlos ESP 277 120 (WC) Aubone, Jean Yves USA 121 (WC) Berankis, Ricardis LTU 122 (WC) Buchanan, Chase USA 123 (WC) Clayton, Alex USA 124 (WC) Harrison, Ryan USA 125 (WC) Helgeson, Travis USA 126 (WC) Konieko, Bryan USA 127 (WC) McClune, Michael USA 128 (WC) Smyczek, Tim USA IN Gard, Catalin ROU
Alternates IN Feeney, Adam AUS 278 IN Monroe, Nicholas USA 280 IN Faurel, Jean-Christophe FRA 281 IN Polansky, Peter CAN 282 IN Klec, Ivo SVK 284 IN Chen, Ti TPE 285 IN Bloomfield, Richard GBR 286 IN Gonzalez, Santiago MEX 287 IN Widom, Todd USA 288 OUT Zemlja, Grega SLO 289 IN Slabinsky, Alexander GBR 291 IN Skugor, Franko CRO 292 1. Heuberger, Ivo SUI @292 2. Felder, Marcel URU 293 3. Klein, Brydan AUS 295
Main draw Alternates
1 Odesnik, Wayne USA 104 (TO MD) 2 Gil, Frederico POR 105 (TO MD) 3 Andujar, Pablo ESP 106 (TO MD) 4 Hernandez, Oscar ESP 107 (TO MD) 5 Karanusic, Roko CRO 108 (TO MD) 6 Nishikori, Kei JPN 109 (TO MD) 7 Becker, Benjamin GER 110 8 Dabul, Brian ARG 111 9 Anderson, Kevin RSA 112 10 Beck, Andreas GER 113 11 Gimeno-Traver, Daniel ESP 114 12 Rochus, Christophe BEL 115 13 Junqueira, Diego ARG 116 14 Falla, Alejandro COL 117 15 Petzschner, Philipp GER 118
Bloomers should make the cut, and I think Slabba will just sneak in as well, but I don't think it will go down far enough for Baker and Marray to make it.
With Bloomers being just 6 out, you'd think that even if 6 players don't withdraw or make the main draw, 6 WC's will come from players in the WC list, so he'll make it, and Slabba has a pretty good chance of getting in as well.
I'm guessing seeding will be around 160, so that's the target for Boggo to get to over the next couple of weeks to ensure he doesn't get any of the top players in the first round
6 players may not come from there as these days the USTA give them to younger players more often and that means people like McClune etc. And then there are Taylor Dent and maybe even Dev Varman as candidates.
Plus Klein and Eysseric could get the Australian and French wild cards.
I agree, it looks good for Bloomers and Slabba - the original cut is 6 places lower than it was last year and last year, 14 Alts got into the qualifying draw and the previous year, the original cut was as high as 252 and 16 Alts got in.
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GB on a shirt, Davis Cup still gleaming, 79 years of hurt, never stopped us dreaming ... 29/11/2015 that dream came true!
lets calm down people, just remember in the grand scheme of things it 4 poinst for a win 8 poitns for 2wins and 20 for qualifying, its likely for bloomers and slabba its just guna future style points feel free to shoot me tho if they get to the main draw and get to 2nd round.
It's not about the points. Even if you turn up and lose first round, you get $ 3,000 for it, which is a lot for players outside the top 150. A 15K Futures title will get you less than $ 2,000.
Plus playing Slams can only help your tennis in the long run.
lets calm down people, just remember in the grand scheme of things it 4 poinst for a win 8 poitns for 2wins and 20 for qualifying, its likely for bloomers and slabba its just guna future style points feel free to shoot me tho if they get to the main draw and get to 2nd round.
True, but 4 points is handy for them, and it's also the money which they get with is useful, as it's a lot more than winning futures/doing okay at challengers, which enables them to travel more etc.
Boggo is the only one who I really think could qualify, but with 4 in the draw, if gives us a better chance of a qualifer, and of course, a better chance of them drawing each other.
They do, Van. The LTA don't pay the expenses for all the players, contrary to popular opinion.
And even for the ones they do, they pay your expenses but don't give you allowances or anything. That means a yearly earning of something like $ 70,000 for players outside the top 150. Not a lot in a profession where you can earn for only 10-15 years at max....
its not that oneself beleives henmans comments, weather they are spoiled by the lta makes no difference, it could be possible with the class in the united kingdom at which tennis is accoisated that some of the players are well off anyway and thus sucess and hunger lacks?
in my native flemish kids from bery deprived areas pick up rackets and this maybe the reason they have 2players in top 100 plus former Xavier Malise?
its not that oneself beleives henmans comments, weather they are spoiled by the lta makes no difference, it could be possible with the class in the united kingdom at which tennis is accoisated that some of the players are well off anyway and thus sucess and hunger lacks?
in my native flemish kids from bery deprived areas pick up rackets and this maybe the reason they have 2players in top 100 plus former Xavier Malise?
your thoughts on this?
It could be the case, but the biggest problem in the UK is that unless you are well off to begin with, you haven't got a chance of making it as a tennis player, because you won't be afford to the coaching, the lessons, playing in tournaments, and then even if you do survive until you are 17/18, you then don't get funded to play professional tennis, so you have to take a part-time job to fund your tennis, restricting the amount of time you can spend working on your game, and meaning you can only play in the UK, as as the fields are strong, it's difficult to get the cheap points that get you onto the rankings and so to a position where you can use tennis as a career.
This response on the Timesonline website says 'everything' about British tennis :-
"Tennis here is inaccessible to the majority of people. I now Iive in Birmingham, the UK's 'second' city but it has fewer public tennis courts than my housing estate back home in Malaysia, a 'developing' country. The only option for regular indoor tennis is to pay nearly £1000 pa to join a club.