Sports

Zverev takes 4th title of the year

August 08, 2017
Alexander Zverev of Germany poses with the championship trophy after beating Kevin Anderson of South Africa in the final of the Citi Open at Fitzgerald Tennis Center in Washington Sunday. — Reuters
Alexander Zverev of Germany poses with the championship trophy after beating Kevin Anderson of South Africa in the final of the Citi Open at Fitzgerald Tennis Center in Washington Sunday. — Reuters

WASHINGTON — Alexander Zverev issued a warning to top ATP rivals Sunday after winning the Citi Open for his fourth title of the year — he’s not the next generation, he’s the now generation.

The 20-year-old German defeated South Africa’s Kevin Anderson 6-4, 6-4 to capture the $355,460 (302,000 euros) top prize at the US Open tune-up event on the Washington hardcourts.

World No. 8 Zverev dropped only nine points on his serve and never faced a break point in becoming the youngest player to win four ATP titles in a year, or take the Washington crown, since Argentina’s Juan Martin Del Potro did it at 19 in 2008.

“I improved a lot in the last few months to get where I can win tournaments,” Zverev said. “The longer the tournament goes for me the better I’m able to play. Hopefully this can continue to be like that.”

Zverev won his first title last September in St. Petersburg and added trophies this year at Montpellier, Munich and Rome, where he downed Novak Djokovic in the final.

He also ousted number four Stan Wawrinka at Miami and pushed Rafael Nadal to five sets in the third round of the Australian Open.

“I’m ‘Next Gen’ but the rankings say it for themselves,” Zverev said. “I think I showed I can play with the big guys this year.

“I think I showed I’m not an ‘in the future’ kind of guy. I’m right now.”

Only Wimbledon and Australian Open champion Roger Federer with five titles has won more ATP crowns this year than Zverev, and that’s only because the Swiss star handed the German his lone finals loss of 2017 at Halle in June.

“A lot of people are looking at him as the face of tennis and the next Grand Slam champion,” Anderson said of Zverev. “He seems to deal with it all pretty well. It will be interesting to see how the next little while progresses.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if he wins a few Grand Slams. He definitely seems to be on a path in that direction.”

Zverev, who will remain a career-best eighth in Monday’s rankings, made a Slam-best fourth-round Wimbledon run, losing in five sets to Milos Raonic.

“Winning those types of matches is the next level I need to reach,” Zverev said. “To get far in those events is my next goal.”

Zverev thanked new co-coach Juan Carlos Ferrero, the former world number one from Spain who worked with him at an event for the first time this week.

“What a way to start together and hopefully we have many more years to come and many more titles together,” Zverev said. “It’s amazing what we’ve already accomplished.”

Makarova wins women’s title

Russia’s 58th-ranked Ekaterina Makarova prevented a German title sweep by rallying past 40th-ranked Julia Goerges 3-6, 7-6 (7/2), 6-0 for her third career WTA crown.

“I was dreaming to win this tournament and I’m so happy,” Makarova said.

Makarova hadn’t won a title since 2014 in Pattaya City. Her first WTA trophy came at Eastbourne in 2010.

Keys wins at Stanford

Third-seeded Madison Keys outslugged No. 6 CoCo Vandeweghe 7-6 (4), 6-4 Sunday to win the Bank of the West Classic in a display of power and serving by the two young American stars in their first career matchup.

Keys won her third career title and first on hardcourt playing under cloudless skies at Stanford. She finally got her chance by rallying back to deuce in the ninth game of the second set, when Vandeweghe surrendered serve for the first time in the tournament.

Keys, who missed the first two months of the season following surgery on her left wrist, eliminated Wimbledon champion and top-seeded Garbine Muguruza 6-3, 6-2 in 57 minutes Saturday night to reach her first final this year.

A day later, Keys needed nearly that amount of time to win the first set in a tiebreaker: The opening set went 53 minutes then the second just 35.

The 22-year-old American had never won a championship on home soil. — Agencies


August 08, 2017
34 views
HIGHLIGHTS
Sports
3 days ago

Al Hilal president: No new signings for Club World Cup due to inflated demands

Sports
3 days ago

Saudi Arabia miss World Cup spot after Australia defeat, head to Asian playoff

Sports
5 days ago

Saudi Arabia face uphill task against Australia in World Cup qualifier