Tennis - ATP World Tour — Alexander Zverev RSS





Zverev's Winning Formula: Quick-Strike Tennis, Unbreakable Serving

The metrics behind Alexander Zverev’s 6-4, 6-4 victory over Dominic Thiem in the Mutua Madrid Open final on Sunday make you take a deep, hard look at where winning and losing really occurs in a tennis match. It’s in the first two touches. And then daylight. When Zverev and Thiem either struck the ball once, which was a serve and a return, or they added just one more shot each to the rally but no more, that counted for 65 per cent (70/108) of all points. [ALSO LIKE] A maximum of two shots in the court for each player basically equalled two out of every three points in the match. This is where winning and losing really occurs – even...

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Zverev Targets Rome Title Defence After Madrid Triumph

What is the formula to dominate an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event? Just ask Alexander Zverev. Zverev didn't just dominate the 2018 Mutua Madrid Open. The World No. 3 thoroughly annihilated the field en route to his third Masters 1000 crown and first in the Spanish capital. No breaks surrended in 48 service games. Only one break point faced throughout the tournament. And a total of zero sets lost. Zverev put a bow on a perfect week with a 6-4, 6-4 win over Dominic Thiem on Sunday, blasting past his Austrian rival without pause. The 21-year-old admits that while it was a flawless performance in the Caja Mágica, it's one that he expects from himself. "I didn't get broken...

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Sascha's Madrid Moment: Zverev Streaks To Title

It was a magical performance in the Magic Box. No breaks surrendered, no sets relinquished. Alexander Zverev did not just win his third ATP World Tour Masters 1000 crown on Sunday. The German dominated the Mutua Madrid Open from start to finish, streaking to victory with a stunning display of aggression. Zverev overcame Dominic Thiem 6-4, 6-4 on Sunday to claim victory in Madrid for the first time. He secured the title with ruthless aplomb, notching his third different Masters 1000 trophy. The 21-year-old becomes the fifth active player with a trio of titles at the elite level, joining Rafael Nadal (31), Novak Djokovic (30), Roger Federer (27) and Andy Murray (14). "All in all, I'm just really happy with...

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