Tennis: Zverev misses final in Beijing

Tennis: Zverev misses final in Beijing

The tennis rivalry between Alexander Zverev and Daniil Medvedev is big. In the semi-finals in Beijing, the Hamburger had to admit defeat once again.

When he congratulated his long-time rival on his victory at the net, Olympic tennis champion Alexander Zverev was even able to smile. In the high-class semifinals in Beijing, the 26-year-old was eliminated 4:6, 3:6 against Daniil Medvedev.

The Russian world number three was too strong for Zverev in the crucial moments. Zverev missed his third final this season. His successful streak in China ended after seven wins in a row.

Zverev gives up the serve game and the set

After a very short break, Zverev, who has recently been a bit physically ailing, will continue directly at the Masters 1000 tournament in Shanghai. After a bye in the first round, the German number one will play against the Russian Roman Safiullin or the Brit Andy Murray. In the final against Safiullin in Chengdu last week, Zverev secured his 21st ATP title.

The Hamburger’s big goal for the final spurt of this tennis year is to qualify for the ATP Finals of the best eight professionals of the season from November 12th to 19th in Turin. The points collected in China are an important step towards this.

Zverev won the last duel with Medvedev, but only won two of the most recent ten comparisons with the Russian, who was one year older. In the fight for a place in the final in Beijing, the tenth in the world rankings seemed to be more out of breath in the longer rallies than his rival. Nevertheless, Zverev had the first two break points of the game at 3:3, but was unable to gain the advantage. Instead, the North German had to give up his serve game a little later. At 4:5 that meant losing the set.

Medvedev almost flawless

Zverev had not been completely fit during the days in Beijing and had reported feeling a bit ill. “I’m a bit under the weather, it’s very demanding on the body overall,” he said after the quarter-final victory over Chile’s Nicolas Jarry.

In the hard-fought duel with Medvedev, Zverev was unable to gain anything in the second set either. Medvedev played almost flawlessly and fended off both of Zverev’s break points. The Hamburger, however, lost his serve to make it 3:5 – after 85 minutes, Zverev went to the net to shake hands.

Source: Stern

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest Posts