Broady falls at the second in Paris after Olivo win

Liam Broady’s ambition of following his Australian Open qualification by also making the main draw in the season’s second Grand slam in Paris, was ended after a close-fought 6-1 6-7 6-4 defeat to home hope Geoffrey Blancaneaux.

Broady had previously beaten the Frenchman in a one-sided contest but Blancaneaux made it clear that this would be a much tougher assignment by storming out of the blocks in a dominant first set which he won 6-1.

Blancaneaux was being backed by a noisy home crowd and was hitting winners off both sides as Broady struggled to get a foothold in the match and he was soon in trouble again when, after a comfortable hold for the Frenchman, more sparkling strokeplay saw him bring up two break points in Broady’ s opening service game of the second set.

Broady dug deep, however, taking the final four points of the game to get on the scoreboard at 1-1.

Broady was starting to let the Parisian know that he was in a fight and a beautiful down the line backhand winner brought up 30 All in the set’s fifth game, with Blancaneaux celebrating as he clinched that one with a forehand winner.

Broady also had to scrap hard to get through the sixth game which lasted over ten minutes and went to four deuces before restoring parity. And the tide seemed to be turning when Broady having brought up 15-30 in his next return game produced a deft lob to send Blancaneaux scurrying to the back of the court. The Frenchman’s desperate through the legs return was more in hope than expectation but he also managed to reach Broady’s drop shot volley to get back to 30 All, rather than facing two break points.

Broady saved game point and brought up his first break point with a delightful lob. Three times Blancaneaux staved off break points, with a service return winner attempt being millimetres away from clinching the crucial break before Blancaneaux finally held.

Broady took a tight game to level again at 4-4 and after two routine holds apiece the second set went into a tie-break. A double fault gave Broady an early advantage which a delightful return from the right handed Blancaneaux overturned.

Broady went 3-1 up with a drilled passing shot and then got lucky when his smash hit the net and looped onto the baseline before a volley winner sealed the point for 4-2. Broady was in no mood to surrender the advantage and the rattled Frenchman served up his second double fault of the breaker to seal it 7-2 in the Stockport-born left hander’s favour.

A commanding hold put Broady on the board and his groundstrokes were dominating as he brought up a 2-1 lead.

Blancaneaux had been holding on, but the increasingly noisy home crowd sensed an opportunity as a 20-shot rally was won by the former Roland Garros Junior champion to bring up two break points at 15-40. Broady fought off the first, ending a dominant rally with a volley winner, but at the second time of asking, the tables were turned as a drop volley winner sealed the break.

The noisy Court 6 crowd were chanting their support and Broady was in danger of being blown away as Blancaneaux sought a second break after a routine hold. Three times he held break points, but Broady was resolute, fighting them off and after a total of six deuces, a wide serve forced Blancaneaux to hit a forehand wide to keep Broady in touch at 4-3.

Both players held, to leave Blancaneaux serving for the match at 5-4, but Broady was determined not to go down without a fight and after a brilliant lob had brought up 15-30, a down the line winner gave Broady two break points.

However, Blancaneaux was not to be denied and saved the second with a deft backhand winner before sealing the match on his first match point to the wild acclaim of the appreciative home crowd. Broady was given a generous reception as he made his way off court in the early evening sunshine in recognition of a great battle, but to the victor, the spoils.

Blancaneaux showed that his form was no one off by sailing into the main draw with a 6-1 6-3 win the final qualifying round to reach the main draw for the first time.

Topsy-turvy Olivo match sees Broady thru in Paris

A game that swung one way and then the other ultimately saw Liam Broady edge to a deceptively tight 6-0 4-6 6-0 victory over Argentinian Renzo Olivo in the first qualifying round at Roland Garros.

Broady started brightly, serving with confidence and after a routine hold in the opening game he was straight on to the front foot, bringing up two break points in Olivo’s first service game. Olivo staved them off but was soon back in trouble and the power of Broady’s ground strokes proved a test too far, as at the third time of asking Broady brought up an early break.

Olivo proved that the Stockport left-hander wouldn’t have matters all his own way when bringing up two break points of his own, but Broady whose first serve percentage was over 85% in the first set, held firm to bring up an early 3-0 lead.

And the Brit’s dominance continued into the fourth game, when despite falling 40-15 down he refused to buckle and ultimately sealed a second break.

The pattern continued as Broady took the fifth game on serve and then again saved break points before bringing up ‘the bagel’ to seal the first set, 6-0.

It had felt as if the scoreboard had been misleading in that first set with Broady winning many close games and Olivo was relieved to get on the scoreboard at 1-1. And the closer nature of the second set was illustrated when a broken string at 30-all saw Broady hit wildly long to bring up an Olivo break point. Broady saved that break point but Olivo’s booming looping forehands were winning him a foothold in the rallies now and he held at 3-3 and then under more pressure for 4-4.

The second set’s ninth game proved crucial, with Olivo getting lucky when a hopeful lob landed on the baseline to bring up 0-15. He followed it with a sizzling backhand winner and a forehand service return that also clipped the baseline to bring up three break points. Broady kept battling, saving the first two with aggressive play before putting a backhand into the net after a good wide serve had opened up the court to go 5-4 down.

The Argentinian was in no mood to relinquish his advantage and held to love to even the match at one set all.

The early stages of the final set were always going to be crucial, and Broady, having replaced his white shirt with a blue one started aggressively, hitting the lines repeatedly to seal the opening game.

Broady followed the dominant service game with an equally dominant and assertive game to gain an early break. He was now the aggressor, moving Olivo from side to side and finishing with three delightful winners, to seal an early 2-0 lead.

He was taken to Deuce in the next game but moved into a 3-0 lead when Olivo could only net a serve that clipped the line.

Despite the commanding lead, Olivo wasn’t giving up and it took a marathon 4th game of the set to secure Broady’s ascendancy. Broady hit an array of brilliant forehands culminating in a down the line winner to start the game well and an equally dominant point that ended with a smash brought up 0-30.

But Olivo wasn’t finished and brought up a game point with a forehand winner of his own. Broady saved that game point and brought up a break point with a shot that landed on the baseline and forced the scurrying Olivo to hit long.

Another attempt at a forehand winner slipped agonisingly wide and after saving another two game points Broady saw two more break points slip by- the second after he reached a drop shot but just pushed his down the line shot inches wide.

The 11 minute and 45 second game finally went Broady’s way when a strong service return to the back of the court forced Olivo to hit a forehand wide to bring up a decisive 4-0 lead.

Still, the Argentinian wasn’t giving up on a place in Roland Garros easily and he saved a game point before forcing a break point of his own which Broady saved with a down the line forehand winner, and Broady let out a huge roar when at the third time of asking he sealed the game as Olivo netted weakly.

Olivo cut a dejected figure as Broady brought up his second bagel of the match but the crowd showed their appreciation to both men knowing what a hard-fought contest it had been.

Broady will face homegrown French prospect Geoffrey Blancaneaux in the second qualifying round on Wednesday.

REPORT- INDIAN WELLS v Ramanathan

Stockport Tennis star Liam Broady opened his campaign to qualify for Tennis’s ‘fifth’ slam, the BNP Paribas Masters in Indian Wells, California, with a 6-2 3-6 6-4 win over Indian Ramkumar Ramanathan.
Broady has already recorded a hat-trick of qualifying successes on the big stage this year, by following his qualification for the Australian Open by also winning through to ATP 250 main draws in Dallas and Delray Beach. 
This was Broady’s first match back after a toe injury hampered his progress in the Delray Beach event, and he started like a house on fire, putting pressure on his Indian opponent from the outset. Broady brought up a break point in Ramanathan’s second service game, but whilst the 27 year old extricated himself from that tight spot, he wasn’t able to do it again in the fifth game as Broady took advantage of a second serve to bring up the game’s opening break.
Broady was holding with huge authority and won a straight sixteen points on serve in the first set without dropping a single one, and he reinforced his advantage by breaking and holding again to seal a comfortable first set 6-2.
Ramanathan was clearly determined to start the second set better and was attempting to get to the net behind every first serve in an effort to re-assert some authority. 
A marathon first game saw him fight off two more breakpoints whilst being denied four times on his own game point before finally pumping his fist as he was able to chalk up the opening game.

Broady had shown remarkable consistency to win the first 22 points on his own serve, so it was a major shock when Ramanathan went from 30-0 down to breaking Broady’s serve to bring up a 3-1 lead. 
Broady returned to holding with confidence but Ramanathan was also winning some cheaper points now and brought up three set points at 5-3 when a strong forehand forced Broady to hit wide. Broady kept him guessing by saving the first two but the Chennai based Indian drew level when putting away a smash to seal the second set 6-3.
Broady started the third set strongly and having worked an opportunity for a break point, he got into the net and sealed an early break with a superb forehand volley. Any hopes that this might see him coast towards the finish line were abruptly shattered when Ramanathan worked himself an immediate break-back point with a blistering forehand return on a Broady second serve and when he forced Broady to hit a forehand long on the next point, the match was back on serve.
Both players held without alarms to bring the game to 4-4 when Broady came under pressure on his own serve as he was pegged back to Deuce, but a superb backhand down the line and an unreturned serve meant that Ramanathan would have to serve to stay in the match.
Broady got ahead in the ninth game when the Indian netted with a backhand approach shot and when he volleyed wide to bring up 0-30, Broady sniffed his chance. Broady came out on top after a long rally in the next point, as he worked the Indian around the court before a forehand down the line winner.
Having brought up three match points, Broady was in no mood to let them slip by and he launched himself into a blistering second service return on the first of them which Ramanathan was only able to divert into the net to seal Broady’s 6-2 3-6 6-4 victory.
He will play Australian Christopher O’Connell in the final qualifying round tonight as he seeks to join world number 1 Daniil Medvedev, the returning Novak Djokovic and Brits Andy Murray , Dan Evans and Cam Norrie in the main draw.   

The wizard of Oz

Liam Broady sensationally qualifies for Aussie Open after stunning comeback win.

Liam Broady pulled off an astounding comeback to book his place in the main draw of Tennis’s Australian Open and seal a dream first round tie with Aussie firebrand Nick Kyrgios.


Broady trailed by a set and 5-2 and was as much as 4000/1 to win with one bookmaker at one stage only, to storm back and seal a sensational and emotional victory.


The Stockport born left hander, who was seeded Number 10, was up against in-form Russian Roman Safiullin who had starred for his nation in their recent run to the ATP Cup semi final.


Safiullin who had ended Broady’s quest to qualify in Roland Garros eight months ago demonstrated his recent electric form by storming into an early 3-0 lead, only for Broady to peg him back as the Manchester-based Broady started to find his range in the Melbourne evening sun.


Having forced Safiullin into a forehand error to break back, Broady then looked set to take the lead when he brought up three break points in the seventh game, but Safiullin showed all his mettle to hold on and the 24 year old Russian drew first blood in the tenth game when out of nowhere he found two blistering returns which Hawkeye showed had clipped the baseline to bring up a set point.


The under-pressure Broady sadly chose the worst possible moment to deliver a double fault on set point to allow Safiullin to clinch the opener 6-4.


Broady brought up a break point in the third game of the second set but again he was unable to convert and when Safiullin broke and then held for a 5-2 lead it appeared that Broady’s brave attempt to qualify would fall short.


However, the changeover brought about a remarkable transformation as Broady refused to leave the tournament without a fight, holding to love, and then breaking to love as the under-pressure Russian’s game became increasingly ragged.


Broady completed his third consecutive game without losing a point to draw level at 5-5 and despite being denied three times when serving to force a tie break, Broady was finally able to take the set into a decider.
A sensational backhand winner started the tie-break going the way of the Heaton Chapel star and he took it 7-2 with a combination of winners and Safiullin errors.


The Russian was gesturing his disbelief and anger to his entourage during the changeover, but managed to compose himself to exchange holds early on in the decider.


Broady’s drive to complete the win was now irresistible with the Russian’s game disintegrating in response to Broady’s persistence and consistency and at 3-2 a sumptuous down-the-line winner set Broady up for a break point which he converted to break the Russian to love and bring up a 4-2 lead.


A routine hold heaped the pressure back on Safiullin and Broady’s dominance was such that despite trailing 40-0 in the eighth game, he won the last five points of the match to turn a 40-0 deficit into another break and bring up a 4-6 7-6 (2) 6-2 victory before collapsing to the ground and kissing the Melbourne tarmac in recognition of the emotion and significance of his victory.


This is only the second time that Broady has qualified for a grand slam, following his qualification for the Roland Garros tournament in 2020 and when the qualifiers were placed in the main draw, the mouthwatering prospect of facing Aussie wild-man Nick Kyrgios on his home turf became a reality to cap a memorable and thrilling day for Broady.  


Report on Broady- Kyrgios first round game

Stockport’s Liam Broady was caught up in a service whirlwind, in a raucous John Cain Arena in today’s first round Australian Open Tennis tie.


Broady, who had qualified for the Australian Open for the first time, having come back from first set deficits three times in qualifiers fell to a 6-4 6-4 6-3 defeat to a fired-up Nick Kyrgios in front of a wild Melbourne crowd despite impressing the crowd with a resilient performance.

 
Kyrgios has made no secret of the fact that the Arena, is his favourite court in tennis, and it was at fever pitch early on as Kyrgios stormed out of the blocks in his first match for four months. 


Having broken Broady early on, he brought the house down when sealing his first service game with a through-the-legs underarm serve.


It looked at that stage like Broady could be blown away but the Stockport left hander stood strong in the baying arena with a service hold to 30 to get onto the board.


That early break proved crucial though, as Kyrgios’ serve was imperious and meant that despite Broady holding serve comfortably the Australian was able to wrap up the first set with 10 aces and an 83% first serve percentage.


The second set followed a similar pattern to the first with Broady fighting desperately to get on the board, three times Broady faced a break point, only to save it, but at the fourth time of asking Kyrgios was able to seal the break and take the early advantage.


Broady saved a breakpoint before getting on the board in the third game, and despite winning a fair proportion of points when he was able to get a foothold in the point, the accuracy and power of Kyrgios’ serve made it very difficult for Broady to create any sustained pressure.


Kyrgios ramped up his first serve up to a blistering 141mph in holding the set, with that early break again proving crucial as he repeated the first set 6-4 scoreline.


It looked like deja vu all over again when Kyrgios took the first two points of the third set, but Broady was able to regroup and a delightful forehand crosscourt winner put the Manchester-based left hander on the board in the third set.


Broady was starting to return more of the Kyrgios serves, as the Australian just struggled slightly to find the very corners of the service box and three winners in a row – the first when returning another underhand serve, allowed Broady to bring up a breakpoint as Kyrgios showed the tension he was feeling despite his two set lead.


Kyrgios roared his delight as a Broady service return floated long and was equally animated as he drew back on level terms.  


The set’s third game ultimately decided the contest with fortune favouring the Canberra hotshot. Broady brought up a game point with patient approach play but couldn’t seal the deal and Kyrgios was able to earn a breakpoint.


Broady looked set to escape the danger when a strong approach shot saw him waiting at the net to put away Kyrgios’ desperate lunge, but the Australian’s shot clipped the net and rebounded wildly over Broady’s head as the Brit could only throw a despairing racquet at the ball and watch it bounce out.
Kyrgios knew that he’d got lucky and was duly apologetic to Broady but he never looked back, dropping only two more points on serve and when a Broady backhand volley hit the net the Australian crowd roared their excitement at the arrival of a match point.


Broady found a first serve on match-point but a brilliant backhand return from Kyrgios brought the Arena crowd to their feet again as he took the third set 6-3 and with it the match.


Liam Broady acquitted himself confidently in a bearpit atmosphere and won the respect of the Melbourne crowd who applauded him warmly as he left the arena leaving Kyrgios to take the further acclaim of his adoring fans who will hope to be back to see him take on Number two seed Daniil Medvedev in the next round