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Place: Miami, Florida Website:
The 2008 Sony Ericsson Open will be played March 26- April 6 at the
2007 Novak Djokovic
(1) FEDERER, Roger SUI/BYE
(1)Bob Bryan/Mike Bryan (USA) vs Rafael Nadal/Tommy Robredo (ESP) (3)Jonathan Erlich/Andy Ram (ISR) vs Marcelo Melo/Andre Sa (BRA) (8)Paul Hanley/Leander Paes (AUS/IND) vs Yves Allegro/Paul-Henri Mathieu (SUI/FRA) (6)Martin Damm/Pavel Vizner (CZE) vs Eric Butorac/Jordan Kerr (USA/AUS)
March 24, 2008 - The smart players reserved practice courts for early morning, before the noon rains hit.
Order of Play - Friday, March 28, 2008 Court 2 Match Start 11.00 am
excerpt of previous Sam Querrey interview: S. QUERREY/C. Berlocq 7‑6, 6‑3 - THE MODERATOR: Question for Sam. Q. Pleased with your performance overall? SAM QUERREY: Yeah. I mean, I could have played a little better. But, yeah, for the first round it's nice to get by that, and hopefully I'll play a little better than that in my next one against Berdych on Friday.
No. 10 Tomas Berdych reached the third round for the third straight year with a 6-1, 6-2 victory in one hour over American Sam Querrey. The top Czech Republic native only lost 10 points in eight service games.
Fourth seeds Mahesh Bhupathi and Mark Knowles of Bahamas will open their campaign against the Czech pair of Tomas Berdych and Lukas Dlouhy later on Saturday. expected result... M. Bhupathi M. Knowles def T. Berdych L. Dlouhy 3-6 6-3 10-5
Order of Play - Sunday, March 30, 2008 Grandstand Match Start 11.00 am
No. 10 Tomas Berdych needed only 65 minutes to defeat No. 22 Juan Carlos Ferrero 6-1, 6-3, and reach the fourth round in Miami for the first time. The top player from the Czech Republic broke Ferrero five times.
Order of Play - Tuesday, April 1, 2008 Grandstand Match Start 12.00 pm 1. Men's Singles: 4th Round
Result: Tomas Berdych def. Dmitry Tursunov 6/2 6/2 Tenth-seeded Czech Tomas Berdych blitzed Russian Dmitry Tursunov 6-2, 6-2 to setup a round-of-eight bout with 31st-seeded Russian Igor Andreev, who took out 15th-seeded Argentine Guillermo Canas 6-4, 7-6 (8-6). Canas was last year's Miami runner-up to Serbian star Novak Djokovic.
Jonathan Morgan Tomas Berdych has been simply on fire this tournament and continued it with another great performance, this time against Tursunov, 6-2, 6-2.
Tomas Berdych in action against Dmitry Tursunov SEE PHOTO
Tomas Berdych cruises into Florida quarters
Tomas Berdych took just 64 minutes to dismiss Russian Dmitry Tursunov 6-2, 6-2 on Tuesday. The 22-year-old is making his fourth straight appearance in Miami and had previously failed to advance past the third round. He returns to an ATP quarterfinal for the first time since his season opener in Sydney (l. to Guccione). The 25-year-old Andreev, who has also reached the last eight at Buenos Aires (l. to Acasuso) and Dubai (l. to Djokovic) in February, now awaits tenth-seeded Czech Tomas Berdych for the first time in ATP-level play. Andreev won all four of their meetings five years ago on the Futures and Challenger circuits.
Stadium Match Start 11.00 am Lindsay Davenport (USA) / Daniela Hantuchova (SVK) WC vs. Katarina Srebotnik (SLO) / Ai Sugiyama (JPN) [2]
The two have evenly split their previous six career meetings; Nadal won their last two clashes, in 2007 in the Monte Carlo semifinals and Wimbledon quarterfinals, but Berdych has won all three of their matches on hard court at ATP Masters Series events. The 22-year-old Berdych defeated Russian No. 31 seed Igor Andreev 6-4, 6-4 in Wednesday night's quarterfinal, converting on his two break point chances while saving the three he faced to advance to his first semifinal of the 2008 season. Berdych has yet to drop a set during the tournament, losing 11 games coming into his quarterfinal match with wins over Las Vegas titlist Sam Querrey, No. 22 Juan Carlos Ferrero and Dmitry Tursunov. Prior to this appearance, he had failed to advance past the third round in Miami. He is the first player from the Czech Republic to advance to the Miami semifinals since Petr Korda in 1993. That year, Korda lost to eventual champion Pete Sampras in three sets.
Berdych enters Miami Masters tennis semi-finals
Nadal, who lost to World No. 1 Roger Federer in five sets in the 2005 Miami final, will next confront No. 10 Tomas Berdych for a spot in Sunday's title match. The two have evenly split their previous six career meetings; Nadal won their last two clashes, in 2007 in the Monte Carlo semifinals and Wimbledon quarterfinals, but Berdych has won all three of their matches on hard court at ATP Masters Series events.
Eurosport - Thu, 03 Apr 2008 Tomas Berdych booked a semi-final date with Rafael Nadal in the Miami Masters after a 6-4 6-4 victory over Russia's Igor Andreev. The 10th seeded Czech converted with his only two break points in the match - while saving three himself - to book his first semi-final spot of 2008. Berdych has yet to drop a set in Miami and will fancy his chances against Nadal, as he has had the upper hand on the Spaniard in their previous meetings on hard courts. The pair have met three times on the surface with Berdych winning every time and with all three of those victorious coming in Masters events. However, Nadal won the two matches between the players last season - in Monte Carlo and Wimbledon. "There is no time for celebrating," said Berdych after the Andreev game. "I just need to recover for the next match and be ready for Rafa. "
Stadium Match Start 1.00 pm
World No. 2 Rafael Nadal earned a second shot at the Sony Ericsson Open title, posting his first hard court victory over No. 10 Tomas Berdych 7-6(6), 6-2 on Friday in Miami to secure his place in the championship match. Though the two Top 10 players had split their previous six meetings, Nadal had never defeated the Czech on hard courts - all three losses having come at ATP Masters Series events in 2006. The 22-year-old Berdych earned the first three break points of the match, but Nadal was the first to assume the lead. Berdych dropped serve in the eighth game of the opening set on Nadal's first break point opportunity. Berdych responded by breaking back in the next game, and then saved three set points to send the opening set to a tie-break. He saved another three to level the tie-break score at 6-all, but then double faulted on Nadal's seventh chance to drop his first set of the tournament. Nadal made it no contest in the second set, converting on both his break point opportunities while losing just one point on serve, to close out the match in one hour and 41 minutes. "The first set was the key of the match, and I [unluckily] lost a couple of points in the end of the set," said Berdych, who was looking to reach his second career ATP Masters Series final after clinching the 2005 Paris title. "He was playing really solid and he took the first set, and then I have to say that I got a little bit tired. If you are not 100% with him, then it's really tough to play."
Semi-Final Match Berdych-Nadal 2008 AMS Miami SEE PHOTO
THE MODERATOR: Questions, please.
Q. Do you think you played a little too defensive out there today? TOMAS BERDYCH: Well, I don't think so. I mean, the first set was the key of the match, and I unlikely lost a couple of points in the end of the set. That's happened. He was playing really solid and he took the first set, and then I have to say that, like ‑‑ well, I get a little bit tired, and then I ‑‑ I mean, if you are not 100% with him, then it's really tough to play. Q. The double fault was your first of the match but very crucial? TOMAS BERDYCH: Yeah. I mean, once ‑‑ it has to happen like for the first time. That's what I said. Like unluckily it was in the tiebreak. It was really close. I mean, I was down in the tiebreak. I came back, and maybe if I made the first set, everything can be different. Q. Was his deep topspin shots bothering you? TOMAS BERDYCH: Well, I mean, it's really tough shot, and ‑‑ to play, I mean, that's his style of the game. I mean, you have to take it like all together. It's not just about the spin or something like that. Yeah, I mean, he's a great player. He's using his weapons and it works. Q. What do you think you have to do to maybe get to the next level? Maybe beef up your backhand a little bit? TOMAS BERDYCH: Well, I'm trying to move for the next level. I don't know which kind of level you mean. I'm doing everything for that. I think that more important is consistency of good results. If I can bring like semifinals from every single tournament what I'm going to play, then it's going to be fine. Q. Could you feel him stepping it up? He won the last 12 points and he made no unforced errors in the second set. Did you feel him raise his game, or do you think it was more you? TOMAS BERDYCH: I think it was both things together. Like I said, it was like my battery's gone. It's really too long to stay here in the States. I mean, for these two tournaments, it's really long and ‑‑ well, it's maybe not the right way, but it's all right. So, yeah, I have to just get more ready for it and be more like better conditions and then maybe it's not going to happen in the second set. Q. He had never beat you on hard court before. How much of a better hard court player is he now than maybe even a year or two ago? TOMAS BERDYCH: Well, I think he starts to play more aggressively on the hard court, and I think that's why it's changing. Yeah, he can lose like maybe more matches on the hard, but I think his game is different because he's trying more attack the ball, playing more aggressively and then of course you going to start to make more unforced errors. But then if you are just standing like two meters behind the baseline and trying to just put the ball in, then if me or let's say James Blake a going to play with him, then the match is not going to be that tough for us and we can beat him I think every single game. But now when he starts to play more aggressive, he can make more winners and a little more unforced errors, but I think that's what tennis is about. Q. Can you look ahead to next week and the Davis Cup, Russia, what your feelings are and how that might play out? TOMAS BERDYCH: Yeah, well, it's going to be really tough. It's going to be really hard for us, especially for me, because, I mean, to get from here to Europe and then to Russia, it's not going to be easy. Then come after the long trip here in the States, come back and play indoor on the clay with really tough opponents from Russia, it's really not going to be easy. Well, the atmosphere is going to be different. It's going to be team match, so I'm looking forward for that. I like all the Davis Cup ties and everything. So we'll see. Q. How tough is their team? TOMAS BERDYCH: Well, I mean, they have a lot of options. For us, we have, I think, really good just two singles players, and then depends on the doubles. But they can put I think four or five players into the team and whatever or whoever is feeling better, has better form, he can play. Q. If I understand correctly, you weren't physically completely fit for the back‑to‑back tournaments in the States? TOMAS BERDYCH: I didn't say that. I mean, I just said that it's really too long to play two tournaments for one month and stay here. So that's what just happened in the second set today. I wasn't that fit and that's all what I said. Q. Speaking of long trips, are you planning to play the Olympics? TOMAS BERDYCH: Well, I mean, it's long time to thinking about Olympics, but, well, my memories are great for the Olympics, and I don't see any other like reason right now that I'm not going to go there. I mean, it's once in the four years. For me, it was great experience, and, well, so far I'm healthy and everything is going like we wish. So far I'm going there. Q. Were you surprised that Rafa challenged that ball in the tiebreak? It was a very big point, and he just stopped playing. Was that a surprise to you that he would take that risk? TOMAS BERDYCH: Well, I mean ‑‑ it was on his side. He was like one meter from the ball. So if you see the ball, or I think most of the players will do the same, because, I mean, you can feel the ball. You can see the ball. You are just one meter from the ball. When he was 100% sure that he saw it out, I mean, why not? If it's going to be other way and I'm going to be in his position, I would do the same. Q. Yourself and Nicole Vaidisova are the No. 1 Czech players. Talk about the level of expectation in the Czech Republic, considering where you might end up in the game. Perhaps in the past you've been written about as perhaps potential world No. 1s. Talk about the level of expectation. TOMAS BERDYCH: Well, I mean, expectations is one thing and like real tennis and real results are the other things. It's really nice if somebody is going to be talking about, or like especially the media and the people who used to think just with a pen and paper and writing some things, and then they going to be talking that, I don't know, you should serve better and play better, and these things. Well, I think it's not a good way. I think we are professionals in our sport and they're professionals in their work, so let's keep with this. I mean, I'm trying to do my 100% what I can, and I'm trying to step a little higher in the ranking. I'm still young and we will see; the career is really long. Q. You guys travel all year round; yet it seems that the players kind of pinpoint this month as a really tough travel month when you're going Australia and everything. What is it about maybe this run or the month that's different than the other travel all year that is harder? TOMAS BERDYCH: Well, especially for us, I mean, it's really long because you came from Europe and you have to get used for the other conditions, so you have to come a little bit earlier to the States. So you spend like one week before the tournament. Then if you are seeded, then you play like end of the first week. Then you have like one day off, one day match, one day off. Then if you lost in the first round or a little bit early in the draw, then you have like 14 days to next match. So you just move here. Every day practicing and on the same place. It's like all the things together, because if you have a tournament for one week and you lost, you can go home or to the next tournament which starts again in Monday. So this is quite a big difference than the normal single weeks of tournaments. FastScripts by ASAP Sports
BERDYCH The top Czech tennis player, Tomas Berdych, advanced to the semifinals of one of the world's biggest tournaments, the ATP Masters in Miami. Berdych then lost to Spain's Rafael Nadal in straight sets April 4, with Russia's Nikolay Davydenko eventually winning the tournament. Both Berdych and Davydenko are set to clash in the upcoming Davis Cup quarterfinal match between the Czech Republic and Russia to be played April 11-13 in Moscow.
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