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Post Info TOPIC: Week 6 - Great Britain F2 ($15,000) - Tipton (indoor, hard)


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Week 6 - Great Britain F2 ($15,000) - Tipton (indoor, hard)


Sadly, Joe & Matt were unable to make their stroke of luck pay:

L16:  Florian Fallert & Tobias Simon (GER/GER) CR 1818 (788+1030) defeated (ALT) Joe Cooper & Matt Seeberger (USA) CR 2629 (1261+1368) by 1 & 4
L16:  Neil Pauffley & Marcus Willis CR 1773 (716+1057) defeated Nicholas Hu & John Lamble (USA/USA) CR 1504 (967+537) by 2 & 3  biggrin

L16:  (4) Jannis Kahlke & Oscar Otte (GER/GER) CR 952 (745+207) defeated (WC) Jonathan Binding & Matthew Hingley CR (2922 (1319+1603) by 1 & 1
L16:  Erik Crepaldi & Pirmin Hänle (ITA/GER) CR 1217 (455+762) defeated (WC) Lloyd Glasspool & Luke Oakley CR 1707 (357+1350) by 1 & 3

L16:  Pietro Licciardi & Gian Marco Moroni (ITA/ITA) CR 2371 (1021+1350) defeated Farris Gosea & Tim Kopinski (USA) CR 1279 (488+791) by 1 & 3  bleh
L16:  (3) Adrian Andrzejczuk & Adam Majchrowicz (POL/POL) CR 866 (552+314) defeated (WC) Will Davies & Joe Tyler UNR by 3 & 2

L16:  Jay Clarke & Jonny Gray CR 2082 (735) defeated Clement Geens & Omar Salman (BEL/BEL) CR 1360 (684+676) by 3 & 0  biggrin

******

QF:  Florian Fallert & Tobias Simon (GER/GER) CR 1818 (788+1030) vs Neil Pauffley & Marcus Willis CR 1773 (716+1057)

QF:  Jay Clarke & Jonny Gray CR 2082 (735) vs (2) Andrea Pellegrino & Andrea Vavassori (ITA/ITA) CR 726 (413+313)  bleh



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Very good day all round for Jay and Jonny

Indeed not bad for Marcus and Neil too, though real pity about Jonny's problems.



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Mark1968 wrote:

Jonny O'Mara is having a lot of pain in his hand and was struggling with his grip when serving, hence his retirement. This has been an ongoing problem for a long time and a scan is likely soon. He has withdrawn from next week's tournament at Shrewsbury.


Oh. No. Jonny has had a lot of forearm problems. That was the injury I was fearing the most  

 



-- Edited by Bob in Spain on Tuesday 7th of February 2017 10:35:02 PM

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Do hope he recovers well. Some excellent wins in singles and doubles - super work by Jay Clarke, and nice doubles wins. Will be very interested to see how Marcus Willis and Neil Pauffley do, recalling that they were quite a good team in their early days ...

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Think in recent years they've also played together fairly regularly for Gary's A1 Aegon Team



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I assume they play county cup together


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Yes, I assumed that, too. Had forgotten about the Aegon Team. Am going back (shows length of time on board ... sigh ...) to when they started out - think they were both at Bisham Abbey? Seem to remember newspaper article of ages ago, when people were despairing of the future, suggesting that they would be 'ones to watch'.

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don't know if it has been said yet but streaming available for this tournament on bet365 and also here offsidetv.com/videos/glasspool-lloyd-vs-pauffley-neil/

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Very nice win for Neil over Lloyd, in two sets, and without too much bother.

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Jay is 4-2* up over the 7th seed.

Marcus and Jonny Gray about to get started. Given Jonny's performances in the last couple of weeks, I wouldn't be too surprised if we saw an upset here. Marcus still favourite for me, but only just.

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I need to keep my big trap shut. 7th seed breaks Jay's serve and they are back to 4-3*

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Spectator wrote:

Yes, I assumed that, too. Had forgotten about the Aegon Team. Am going back (shows length of time on board ... sigh ...) to when they started out - think they were both at Bisham Abbey? Seem to remember newspaper article of ages ago, when people were despairing of the future, suggesting that they would be 'ones to watch'.


The old Times article I posted during Wimbledon last year supplies some background. wink  I've had to copy & paste it here, as what I thought would be a link to the page in question didn't work!

 

An old (4th July 2007!) little gem unearthed as I was sorting through papers in preparation for an office move last December:  an article from The Times by Owen Slot, then its chief Sports Reporter, which I'd originally intended to post at the time because of the Pauffley angle, only for Stacey to drop off the latter's radar!

 

 

From Russia with love for the work ethic

On the subject of hunger and desire in tennis, it may seem something of an oxymoron to mention Anna Kournikova, but the following is a tale told yesterday by Victor Roubanov, her coach at the Spartak club in Moscow.  To join the elite at Spartak, you had to go for trials and roughly one child in 200 would make it.  The point about Kournikova, aged 6½, is that when her turn came, Roubanov asked her what she could do and she immediately pumped 50 press-ups on her knuckles.  That helped to win her a place and thereafter Roubanov recalls the girl badgering the other kids to play with her through the lunch breaks.  "Sometimes," he said, "she would play for eight hours without stopping."  And yes [I think that may be a typo for "yet"], we tend to think that of all the Russian girls, she was the soft one.  All of this is significant now because the word is that British kids are soft, too, and because Roubanov is over here and trying to find one that it not.  The news is that he believes he has cracked it.  At the LTA's invitation, he went to work at Bisham Abbey in 1989 with his wife, Olga Morozova, the 1974 Wimbledon singles finalist and former Soviet national coach.  After a number of years, though, he asked if he could run his own programme in his own way, exactly the way he saw it working in Moscow.

So his story is one of Russian ways applied to the United Kingdom.  His first products are at Wimbledon in the boys' singles, two 17-year-olds, Neil Pauffley and Marcus Willis, both of whom, he says, will make the world top 50.  They themselves tell you their sights are set somewhat higher, adding that their unusual grooming gives them an edge over their British peers.  There are other British hopefuls, Willis said, who "aren't prepared to try everything to win".  He and Pauffley, who have been waiting since Friday to open their Wimbledon campaigns, talk about how others will "find excuses".

If all this is beginning to sound familiar, Roubanov reinforces the idea that Russians are simply bred to want it more, but believes these intangibles are not beyond our own children.  "Russian parents are tougher," he said.  "They push children.  Everyone wants to see their child here in Wimbledon.  If British parents see their children's tennis dip, they say, 'OK, we'll concentrate on school instead.'  They are not ambitious.  There is a reason.  Life is more comfortable here; British children have more opportunities.  In Russia, with such a big gap between the rich and the poor, many have one opportunity:  to play tennis.  Sport is an opportunity to earn money.  Parents here do not pay for tennis.  Russian parents will sell their houses, cars, everything for their children's tennis."

Through the Spartak club, Roubanov has watched the progress not only of Kournikova, but also of Marat Safin, Mikhail Youzhny, Elena Dementieva and Anastasia Myskina and he has a Safin tale to demonstrate what Russians do and Britons don't.  He once watched a "young" Safin, who was told to paly cross-court to hit a cone ten times.  "After half an hour," Roubanov said, "he was still out there trying to hit it.  It was:  'Come on, do it, do it.'  But if that was here?  The maximum would be ten minutes.  'You can't do it?  OK, let's do something else.'."  Roubanov is honest, saying:  "You cant change the mentality here."

What he believes he can do is this:  first, he does not believe in scanning the country for talent, it has to be local; and he will not consider a drive-in time of more than 30 minutes.  The reason is that he demands of his six-, seven- and eight-year-olds three two-hour sessions a week.  "This is very unusual for British parents," he said, "because they are used to two and they also have horse-riding, swimming, piano, ballet dancing."  The parents, he says, are introduced to a culture that is unfailingly professional.  They are given certain windows in which they are allowed to holiday.  "I never cancel," Roubanov said.  "I only cancel if I die.  There is high discipline.  If children come and see everyone working, then they work, too.  Not playing, but working.  This all tells the children this is something serious."

Bottom line:  does this make Pauffley  and Willis as hungry as the Russians?  "I think they are more safe than the Russians, but they have to feel that I want it badly."  He tells them to model themselves on Nikolay Davidenko because what he lacks in talent he makes up for in work ethic.  Willis and Pauffley seem to like the sound of that.

I have a clear recollection of reading the article when it was first published & as a result I've tended to keep an eye out for Neil's & Marcus' results ever since, so I was quite pleased when I stumbled across it again, complete with little colour photo of the three men at Wimbledon.  In spite of his rather sweeping generalisations vis-à-vis British tennis parents (Judy Murray or Simon Broady anyone?), his thoughts about British kids being too soft & "not wanting it" enough were not exactly a revelation at the time.  I then began to wonder whether, eight years later, Roubanov was still in the tennis coaching business in this country, so I did some research, admittedly, not very extensive.



-- Edited by Stircrazy on Wednesday 8th of February 2017 12:50:46 PM

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Jay gets over the line in the 1st set, winning the TB 7-3.

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Bob in Spain wrote:

Jay gets over the line in the 1st set, winning the TB 7-3.


And he's already a break up in the second:  *1-0.    Marcus vs Jonny *4-3.



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Jay in a right battle. Went to a final set breaker and to be fair he was superb in it, taking it 7-1

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