Qualifier Lloyd Harris makes history at Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships

Lloyd Harris became the first qualifier to ever reach the semi-finals of the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships. (AN photo by Ali Khaled)
Short Url
Updated 19 March 2021
Follow

Qualifier Lloyd Harris makes history at Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships

  • Andrey Rublev, Denis Shapovalov and wild card Aslan Karatsev complete the semi-final line-up

DUBAI: Qualifier Lloyd Harris made tournament history on Thursday as he advanced to the semi-finals of the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships. And Aslan Karatsev became one of the few wild cards to reach the final four in the 28-year history of the event.

“Since 1998, only one wild card had reached the semi-finals of the (event), when Malek Jaziri defeated fellow wild card Stefanos Tsitsipas in 2018, and now we applaud another similar and remarkable achievement by Aslan Karatsev,” said tournament director Salah Tahlak.

“Lloyd Harris is also the first qualifier, since the tournament began in 1993, to reach the semi-finals here, and we look forward to seeing how both he and Karatsev fare on Friday.”

Karatsev reached the semis with a 6-7 6-3 6-2 win over 16th seed Jannik Sinner. Harris overcame Kei Nishikori 6-1 3-6 6-3. They are joined by second seed Andrey Rublev, who defeated Marton Fucsovics 7-5 6-2, and third seed Denis Shapovalov, who beat Jeremy Chardy 7-5 6-4. Shapovalov will play Harris, while Rublev faces Karatsev.

Sinner made the early running against Karatsev, breaking to go 2-0 ahead before building a 4-1 lead. Karatsev broke back in the seventh game of the opening set but it was Sinner who took the tiebreak.

In the second set the tables were turned: Karatsev took a 2-0 lead after winning an 11-minute game on his fifth break point. That set him up to go on and level the match.

After an early exchange of breaks in the third set, Karatsev crucially fought off two break points to hold serve and make it 2-2. From then on he always held the upper hand against his discouraged opponent.

“I started to play better in the second set,” said Karatsev. “I started to feel more the game, to read how he’s playing and where is the weak place where I have to play. In the third set I felt he already dropped down a bit. I was feeling pretty much comfortable returning.”

Harris came through an extraordinary battle with Nishikori who, after suffering a frustrating series of injuries, was attempting to reach his first semi-final since Barcelona in April 2019. Harris dominated the opening set, taking it in just 23 minutes and winning 69 per cent of the points.

But in a remarkable turnaround, Nishikori swept to a 4-0 lead in the second set on the way to taking it 6-3. In the final set the games went with serve until Harris earned a vital break to lead 5-3 and then safely served out the match.

“It was a match of a lot of ups and downs,” Harris said. “In the first set I think Kei was missing quite a bit and I was serving really well, and then all of a sudden, out of nowhere he started reading my serve pretty good and started making a lot more balls, and I didn’t really have a good rhythm.

“Toward the end of the second set I started to find a little more range and we had a few tight games there, early in the third set, before I found a little more rhythm and I used that to get the break.”

Rublev had to work hard in the early stages of his match to gain an advantage over Fucsovics but benefited when his opponent double-faulted to gift him the opening set. Fucsovics, who was recently defeated by Rublev in the Rotterdam final of the ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament, grew increasingly frustrated in the second set as Rublev continued to apply pressure and claimed a decisive 3-1 lead on his fifth break point of the set.

The victory extends his ATP 500 winning streak to 23 matches; his last defeat at this level was in the quarter-finals in Dubai last year to Daniel Evans. Only Roger Federer, with 28 wins, has a longer winning streak.

“That first set, we were going point by point and everything was really close until 6-5 when, probably, he got a bit tight,” said Rublev. “And then he got frustrated and I thought this is my moment, that I really have a chance to win the set now. I made it and then I think he mentally went a bit down. Also he was tired because he played already many matches (to) three sets this week.”

Chardy was bidding to reach his third semi-final of the season, following runs in Antalya and at an Australian warm-up event in Melbourne. He was also a quarter-finalist this month in Rotterdam. In contrast, Shapovalov has been struggling. He lost both of his matches at the ATP Cup, got no further than the third round at the Australian Open and then won only one match last week in Doha.

Their records this season are not reflected in their performances this week, however — Shapovalov won his previous two matches in Dubai in straight sets, while Chardy struggled in all three of his, each time edging through 6-4 in the third set.

When they met on Thursday the first set went comfortably with serve until 5-5, when Chardy struggled with his serve and hit two double faults. This allowed Shapovalov to take advantage of his opponent’s second serve to earn a decisive break, and then serve out the set to love. The second set followed a similar path, with both players holding serve comfortably until 4-4, when Shapovalov broke serve and closed out the match with his 10th ace.

“I’ve definitely focused on my serve a lot in the last couple of weeks, trying for it to have more variation,” said Shapovalov. “I’m definitely very happy with the way I’m serving and hopefully I can continue that. We also worked a lot on my footwork and I’m moving well, and when I’m moving well I feel like everything kind of goes into place.”


‘He earned it’ – Monica Puig lends support to fellow Puerto Rican Bad Bunny ahead of Super Bowl halftime show

Updated 6 sec ago
Follow

‘He earned it’ – Monica Puig lends support to fellow Puerto Rican Bad Bunny ahead of Super Bowl halftime show

  • Retired tennis star speaks to Arab News in Abu Dhabi about the backlash surrounding Bad Bunny’s performance, the fandom around Alex Eala, and the 10-year anniversary of her Olympic triumph

Retired tennis player Monica Puig has voiced her support for fellow Puerto Rican Bad Bunny ahead of his upcoming Super Bowl halftime show, and admits it’s been difficult to witness the backlash against the NFL’s decision to select him to perform in Sunday’s showpiece.

Puig, who made history in Rio 2016 by becoming Puerto Rico’s first-ever Olympic gold medalist, had been working as the stadium presenter and MC at the Mubadala Abu Dhabi Open tennis tournament in the UAE capital this past week.

The 32-year-old cannot wait to watch her compatriot light up the Super Bowl 60 stage and is disheartened by the controversy that has been created around his upcoming performance.

“I'm getting off of a 15-hour flight tomorrow and I will be turning on the TV to watch Bad Bunny, Benito, or as they call it the ‘Benito Bowl’,” Puig told Arab News in Abu Dhabi on Saturday.

“It's been a really controversial moment, which has been hard to see because being from Puerto Rico, it is an American territory; it is part of the United States. And people have really said they wanted an American artist [to perform at the Super Bowl] when we are an American territory.

“We have a U.S. passport, U.S. currency, everything. We are part of the United States. The only thing that we cannot do is vote for the president. But we are essentially part of the U.S.”

Bad Bunny, Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, has been the most streamed artist on the planet in four of the past five years and the NFL is looking to bank on his mega popularity to expand their global reach.

But some in the United States aren’t happy that the Super Bowl halftime show will be performed in Spanish and others have criticized Bad Bunny’s public stance against the actions of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), which prompted him to skip the U.S on his latest tour in order to protect his audience.

Last week, Bad Bunny became the first artist in Grammy Awards history to win Album of the Year with a Spanish-language album, receiving the honor for Debi Tirar Mas Fotos.

He won three awards that night, taking his total Grammy tally to six, and when accepting one of them, he said, uncharacteristically in English: “ICE out! We’re not savage, we’re not animals, we’re not aliens. We are humans and we are Americans.”

Puig has personally met Bad Bunny before and is certain his performance is going to be “a treat”.

“He's earned it. Album of the Year; his album has resonated with all of Puerto Rico. It has even made a big international impact,” added Puig, whose first dance at her wedding was to the Bad Bunny song ‘Ojitos Lindos’.

“People who don't know Spanish love his album. And like he says, it doesn't matter if you don't even know Spanish, just learn to dance and you will enjoy. He is a great showman.

“He loves Puerto Rico with all of his heart and it's really great to see that the things that I feel for Puerto Rico and the things that I feel for my country, he feels as well. And I think we all do.

“All Puerto Ricans can pretty much resonate with that. So I'm going to be watching. I already told my husband we are going to order pizza. We are going to sit down. We are going to watch this performance because it's going to be just... I wasn't able to go to his concert because I was pregnant. I wanted to go back to Puerto Rico to watch. So for me, this is going to be a treat.”

Puig, who lives in Atlanta with her husband Nathan Rakitt and their six-month-old daughter Mila, understands everyone is entitled to their own opinion but wishes people can see the commonalities between us all as humans, rather than the things that divide us.

“It's been quite tough to see the divide because I don't think I've really seen so much pushback on many things. I mean, we have seen Latinos perform at the Super Bowl. We've seen Shakira. We've seen so many different faces and voices take the stage that are not American,” she said.

“To be able to see that kind of pushback, it's been a little puzzling. And for me, it is what it is. We're not going to change what's going on. We're not going to have any impact on what people say.

“And that's their own opinion. Everybody's entitled to their opinion. But I know that I am a 100 percent fan.

“We all have to love and embrace one another. Just because we are from somewhere else, just because we speak a different language doesn't make us any different. We are human. We put our shoes on one foot at a time and we all have dreams, ambitions, goals. And that's the most important thing.”

A ‘wild’ week in Abu Dhabi

Dreams, ambitions and goals were on full display in Abu Dhabi this week, where Puig had a front-row seat to the phenomenon that is Alex Eala.

The young Filipina has risen to rockstar status back home as she’s made her way into the top 50 in the world rankings and she drew capacity crowds in the UAE capital for every match she played across singles and doubles.

In doubles, she partnered another groundbreaking southeast Asian in the form of Indonesia’s Janice Tjen.

Both players are making history for their countries every time they step on a tennis court.

Puig knows a thing or two about making history and has some advice for the likes of Eala and Tjen.

“I think to enjoy it, embrace it,” she said.

“It also is a big responsibility because you are pretty much the face for your country. And I know the Philippines has had success in other sports, but Eala now being the face of tennis, Filipino tennis, and Janice Tjen for Indonesia.

“It's really great to see these players coming from their countries and making a big boom. And to see their fan base also follow them is something really cool because it doesn't matter if they know tennis, they don't know tennis, they show up for their countrywomen. And it's really been super exciting to see, especially here in Abu Dhabi, a lot of Filipinos here, a lot of Indonesian fans in here. So it's been a pretty remarkable week.”

Puig described the atmosphere during Eala’s matches as “absolutely wild” and said it reminded her of her own experience competing at the Rio Olympics en route to the top of the podium.

“They were just loud. They were so passionate and they were really trying to encourage Eala to win. And you saw that they were just suffering along with her,” she added.

This year marks the 10-year anniversary of Puig’s Olympic triumph.

Asked to reflect on the standout moment from her run in Rio, she said: “I think the biggest moment for me was seeing back home the reactions of everybody afterward, after the fact.

“Because I didn't really know or understand the impact that it had in Puerto Rico. And then my agent at the end of the match, he's like, ‘You have to see what's going on’. And I was just flabbergasted. I was stunned. And it was the biggest of the biggest celebrations.

“And just to see what it meant and knowing that sports in Puerto Rico really have the power to unite the island and really have the power to kind of dim all of the negativity that's going on and just kind of bring happiness in that moment. It was just wild.”