Alex Ward should be seeded here, with Richard Gabb and Joshua Jones also in the main draw.
QR1: Jathan Malik UNR v (q8) Yan Sabanin (RUS) WR 1199
Qualifying here also sees the ITF Pro Circuit debut of a qualifying wild card from Myanmar called Win Oo. It remains to be seen whether he lives up to his name - he's playing a seed so I fear there's more chance he might Lose 00 instead ...
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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!
QR1: Jathan Malik UNR beat (q8) Yan Sabanin (RUS) WR 1199 by 6-4 6-7(5) 7-6(2) FQR: Jathan Malik UNR lost to (q13) Chuang Ting Yu (TPE) WR 1756 by 3-6 6-5 ret.
L32: (4) Alex Ward WR 424 v (WC) Pannhara Mam (CAM) UNR L32: Joshua Jones WR 962 v (3) Axel Michon (FRA) WR 384 (CH 246 in Apr) L32: Richard Gabb WR 737 v Artem Sitak (NZL) WR 716 (CH 299 in 2008)
Born in the USA, Mam teamed up with Kenny Bun to win Cambodia promotion in Davis Cup this year, going 5/5 in singles, but has never won a set in a Futures singles main draw match.
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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!
Both Richard and Joshua lost in straight sets this morning. Somewhat disappointing again from Richard. 2 first round losses in Cambodia against a qualifier with a 1800ish ranking, and then to a peer in the 700s in straight sets. Thats an expensive trip with a relatively ordinary field. Richard isn't really talked about much in these forums, and hasn't really broken through in any futures draw - lots and lots of tournaments with a healthy number of L16 and a few QFs, plus one SF. Nothing more. Is he a slow builder type, or perhaps has reached his limit?
The only time I saw Richard play I thought he was technically spot on, a very schooled game, no real faults at all. He did seem to lack weapons however and I felt that though he'd be hard to beat, he may struggle to win matches if that makes sense????
This lofty judgement was made from watching one futures match. I tend to be proved wrong a very high percentage of the time and this could easily be one of those occassions
R1: (4) Marcus Daniell (NZL) & Richard Gabb WR 1814 beat Konstantin Gerlakh & Yan Sabanin (RUS/RUS) UNR 7-5 6-4 R1: Dekel Bar & Michael Laser (ISR/USA) UNR beat Mehdi Bouras (ALG) & Joshua Jones WR 2178 6-2 7-6(2) R1: Antoine Escoffier (FRA) & Alexander Ward WR 1962 beat (3) Mick Lescure & Luca Margaroli (FRA/ITA) WR 1391 6-4 6-3
QF: (4) Marcus Daniell (NZL) & Richard Gabb WR 1814 beat Dekel Bar & Michael Laser (ISR/USA) UNR 6-3 6-0 QF: Antoine Escoffier (FRA) & Alexander Ward WR 1962 beat Austin Karosi & Filip Veger (USA/CRO) UNR 6-3 6-3
SF: (4) Marcus Daniell (NZL) & Richard Gabb WR 1814 v (1) Maximilian Neuchrist & Artem Sitak (AUT/NZL) WR 793 SF: Antoine Escoffier (FRA) & Alexander Ward WR 1962 v (2) Wan Gao & Jeevan Nedunchezhiyan (CHN/IND) WR 1049
-- Edited by wolf on Wednesday 28th of November 2012 03:48:15 PM
L16: (4) Alex Ward WR 453 d. Wang Chuhan (CHN) WR 749 6-0 6-1
QF: (4) Alex Ward WR 453 vs [Q] Dekel Bar (ISR) WR 1139
Comment 1: Dekel Bar beat the seeded Escoffier (aka "The Chef") in the L16
Comment 2: How can Alex win the final Thailand futures tournament so easily (form great, acclimatised, etc), then immediately crash out first round of the Cambodia F1 6-4 6-0 to a much lower ranked player with little form (he lost in the next round, and lost 3 and 1 to Marcus in Thailand the previous week), then come back on the same courts the following week and be playing so strongly again. Maybe he was ill last week, or maybe it's the tennis Gods having some fun with us
As far as I can tell Alex played his Thailand final on the Saturday and Cambodia R1 on the Tuesday.
So, on the face of it not too bad at all, and Thailand and Cambodia border each other. But who knows, he might still have had travel problems, the courts may be very different paced to those he played so many martches in Thailand or as korriban says he may have been ill or or..
Works out overall not bad though. He wins his title with 18 ranking points, then OK goes out first round but he could have reached the QFs and you still get sod all for it in futures ranking points and not a lot of prizemoney either.
Have about a weeks rest in whatever joys Phnom Penh has to offer, get used to the courts and then go for it again, hopefully to reach the semi finals or beyond.
Welcome Crofte. Seems like a reasonable possible explanation to me.
Although it was a Saturday morning final win in Thailand and a Tuesday morning first round loss (big loss) in Cambodia. I presume he flew, but its only about 350 miles on the train (albeit not exactly at Eurostar speeds or comfort!), so shouldn't have been a problem either way!!! I still reckon there must have been an "issue"........anyway, seems to be back on form this week.
Yes, as long as he does the business this week, last week can be forgotten about.
Also worth noting his Doubles record this trip. Judging by bet365 this morning, him and "The Chef" were a set and 4-3 up before I left for work. Another SF on the cards?
This will be Alex's 10th Futures QF of the year (11th singles QF of the year overall, since he also reached the QFs of the Madrid Challenger as a qualifier), all of them in Futures in which he was seeded to reach the QF or beyond.
His record in the other 9 QFs is W 3 L 6, but the four times he reached QFs seeded 4 or better (he has also had at least a couple of tournaments where he was seeded 4 or better but lost before the QFs), he went on to match his seeding 3 out of 4 times, i.e. 2 SFs when seeded 4 and a title when seeded 1.
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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!