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What to know about tennis in 2015 before the Australian Open

After a lengthy, days-long offseason, the 2015 tennis campaign begins where the last one left off: with an aging top tier fending off a host of up-and-comers.

Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images

After a lengthy offseason that spanned literally days, the 2015 tennis season is in full swing. The men’s tour is finishing up tournaments in Doha (semifinals: Roger Federer vs. Grigor Dimitrov, Kei Nishikori vs. Milos Raonic), Brisbane (Ivo Karlovic vs. David Ferrer and Tomas Berdych vs. Andreas Seppi), and Chennai (top seeds remaining: Stan Wawrinka, Roberto Bautista Agut); the women are in Brisbane (finals: Maria Sharaova vs. Ana Ivanovic), Auckland (Caroline Wozniacki vs. Venus Williams), and Shenzhen (Simona Halep vs. Timea Bacsinszky).

In just over a week, the tennis world will converge in Melbourne for the Australian Open, the first Slam of the year. Here are a game’s worth of early-year thoughts about the tennis universe.

15-love. The big four are still the (slightly smaller) big four.

On the men’s tour, 2014 saw a sea change ... and little change at all. Tennis’ big four -- Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal, Roger Federer, Andy Murray -- only accounted for five of eight Slam final appearances and two titles. That’s down from 2013, when those numbers were seven and four, respectively. These four have dominated so thoroughly, and for so long, that they have redefined what we think of as dominance.

Heading into 2015, these four are more of a run-of-the-mill dominant, a Becker-Edberg-Lendl level of dominant. When healthy, they’re the safest bets to win any tournament in which they appear, but they’re not in fifth gear quite as frequently as they used to be.

And they’re still the top four players in the most recent Advanced Baseline rankings.

Rk Player Overall Country Last Jan. Change Clay Rk Hard Rk Indoor Rk Grass Rk
1 Novak Djokovic 96.2 SRB 1 0 97.0 2 97.5 1 94.3 1 91.0 2
2 Roger Federer 94.4 SUI 3 1 92.9 4 96.1 2 93.8 2 92.2 1
3 Rafael Nadal 94.4 ESP 2 -1 99.2 1 95.4 3 87.0 4 86.4 4
4 Andy Murray 89.9 GBR 4 0 87.0 11 93.3 4 86.9 5 87.3 3
5 Kei Nishikori 88.9 JPN 16 11 88.1 8 92.2 5 85.7 7 81.3 7
6 Marin Cilic 87.9 CRO 15 9 85.6 17 90.4 6 88.2 3 83.4 5
7 Milos Raonic 86.4 CAN 13 6 83.3 18 90.4 6 86.4 6 77.8 10
8 Grigor Dimitrov 85.2 BUL 19 11 86.6 14 85.5 11 84.0 9 81.9 6
9 David Ferrer 84.9 ESP 6 -3 93.5 3 84.5 14 75.5 13 74.5 12
10 Tomas Berdych 84.8 CZE 7 -3 85.7 16 85.7 10 83.7 10 79.2 9
11 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 84.7 FRA 9 -2 81.9 22 88.4 8 81.6 11 81.3 7
12 Gael Monfils 84.1 FRA 18 6 87.7 9 85.4 12 81.1 12 72.4 14
13 Stanislas Wawrinka 82.8 SUI 11 -2 90.5 5 85.0 13 70.3 17 68.5 20
14 Ernests Gulbis 82.0 LAT 17 3 87.0 11 80.3 15 84.2 8 71.2 17
15 Roberto Bautista-Agut 77.6 ESP 54 39 78.8 28 79.9 16 72.2 15 71.3 16
16 Tommy Robredo 77.0 ESP 22 6 88.8 7 76.0 23 63.6 28 65.7 23
17 Richard Gasquet 75.9 FRA 10 -7 80.2 25 76.8 21 69.6 18 68.5 20
18 Philipp Kohlschreiber 75.6 GER 21 3 78.8 28 76.6 22 68.3 20 72.2 15
19 John Isner 75.5 USA 24 5 68.5 47 86.1 9 65.4 23 64.3 25
20 David Goffin 75.4 BEL 65 45 83.2 20 73.6 26 72.3 14 65.0 24
21 Alexandr Dolgopolov 74.7 UKR 41 20 80.2 25 78.8 18 59.9 33 61.9 29
22 Kevin Anderson 72.9 RSA 23 1 69.7 43 79.0 17 65.1 24 66.8 22
23 Fabio Fognini 72.8 ITA 31 8 90.0 6 68.2 33 59.4 35 61.5 30
24 Feliciano Lopez 71.0 ESP 37 13 69.1 46 75.3 24 58.8 37 75.2 11
25 Radek Stepanek 70.8 CZE 20 -5 73.4 38 68.6 32 72.2 15 70.9 18
26 Leonardo Mayer 70.6 ARG 81 55 87.6 10 65.0 38 59.9 33 60.5 32
27 Nicolas Almagro 69.9 ESP 14 -13 86.3 15 66.1 37 56.0 51 58.2 38
28 Gilles Simon 68.5 FRA 30 2 67.7 48 72.6 27 65.5 22 57.1 41
29 Dominic Thiem 68.0 AUT 141 112 80.7 23 64.4 39 60.8 30 57.0 42
30 Marinko Matosevic 67.1 AUS 77 47 56.5 77 78.3 19 56.8 44 64.0 26
31 Viktor Troicki 66.9 SRB 64 33 79.0 27 63.1 45 60.1 32 57.9 40
32 Jerzy Janowicz 66.7 POL 40 8 73.0 39 62.8 46 69.5 19 61.1 31
33 Jeremy Chardy 65.8 FRA 57 24 75.5 33 63.6 41 56.4 47 60.3 33
34 Ivo Karlovic 65.4 CRO 61 27 62.0 59 67.4 36 64.1 27 68.8 19
35 Bernard Tomic 65.3 AUS 48 13 54.4 83 77.1 20 53.1 62 63.2 27
36 Lleyton Hewitt 65.1 AUS 27 -9 58.2 72 69.4 30 60.9 29 73.0 13
37 Pablo Cuevas 65.1 ARG N/A N/A 86.9 13 56.0 58 56.1 49 54.3 50
38 Julien Benneteau 64.0 FRA 38 0 58.4 71 69.2 31 65.0 25 56.1 45
39 Mikhail Youzhny 63.8 RUS 12 -27 64.9 54 63.3 42 64.2 26 62.0 28
40 Fernando Verdasco 63.6 ESP 32 -8 76.6 31 59.4 52 53.8 60 58.4 37
41 Sam Querrey 63.3 USA 36 -5 54.4 83 71.7 28 60.3 31 56.7 43
42 Simone Bolelli 62.9 ITA N/A N/A 82.4 21 53.7 66 54.3 58 58.9 36
43 Marcos Baghdatis 62.5 CYP 44 1 49.4 100 73.7 25 58.0 39 58.2 38
44 Lukas Rosol 62.3 CZE 68 24 73.5 37 59.3 53 56.9 43 50.5 61
45 Nick Kyrgios 62.0 GRE 220 175 58.6 70 67.6 35 53.0 63 60.2 34
46 Jiri Vesely 61.9 CZE 74 28 71.8 42 58.5 55 56.2 48 55.6 47
47 Jack Sock 61.8 USA 100 53 62.0 59 63.2 43 58.7 38 59.5 35
48 Ivan Dodig 61.4 CRO 26 -22 60.9 61 61.6 50 65.9 21 54.9 49
49 Denis Istomin 60.7 UZB 50 1 56.6 76 68.1 34 50.1 71 55.7 46
50 Martin Klizan 60.6 SVK 85 35 83.3 18 49.5 76 54.3 58 51.6 57

(A full set of men’s top-300 AB rankings can be downloaded here.)

Nadal is fighting his way back from his most recent injury (first a wrist issue, then appendicitis) and got knocked out by a qualifier in the first round in Doha. So he’s not currently playing at the level of the No. 3 player in the world. But one assumes he’ll have the rust knocked off pretty soon, and when he does, the new/old top four will be in place.

15-all. Still, the gap has closed

It was a great year for tennis’ second tier, and not only because the top four actually shared some of the big spotlight. Stan Wawrinka completed a late-career peak, winning the Australian Open at 28 and holding the No. 3 ATP ranking for much of the spring and early summer. He’s still a solid fourth.

Kei Nishikori surged to fifth in both the ATP rankings and AB rankings. He ran into a 6’6 buzzsaw, getting thumped by Marin Cilic in the U.S. Open finals, but he still made it that far. And while Wawrinka is toiling at 11th in the AB rankings, Nishikori is a favorite of both ATP points and Colin Davy’s spreadsheets. He is best on hard courts, and with a good draw, he could have strong odds of making the Aussie semifinals this year.

A year ago, Cilic ranked 37th (ATP) and 15th (AB) while finishing up a suspension related to performance-enhancing drugs. These days, he’s ninth and sixth, respectively. He’s currently dealing with arm and shoulder issues, but his surge to the U.S. Open title was stunning.

Milos Raonic had himself a year; he reached the French Open quarterfinals and the Wimbledon semis and starts the year in the top 10 of both ATP and AB. Grigor Dimitrov is 11th and eighth, respectively. Ernests Gulbis made the French semis and is 13th and 14th.

Add to this some impressive movement from players like Roberto Bautista Agut, David Goffin, Alexandr Dolgopolov, Dominic Thiem, Marinko Matosevic, and Nick Kyrgios, and you’ve got a deep men’s field moving forward. That’s especially true considering the big four still look mostly strong, and one-time U.S. Open champion Juan Martin del Potro is almost back from injury. Get Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and Nico Almagro back from their injuries, and we’re really cooking.


Kei Nishikori, Photo credit: Robert Deutsch-USA TODAY Sports

30-15. Still Serena

Maria Sharapova had a nice rebound in 2014, as did Ana Ivanovic, Carolina Wozniacki, and Petra Kvitova. Their surges offset Li Na’s and Victoria Azarenka’s regression. And Simona Halep’s exciting breakout has pushed human backboards like Aga Radwanska and Angelique Kerber down in the women’s hierarchy and all but guaranteed some pretty exciting Slam quarterfinal matchups.

But No. 1 is still No. 1, even at age 33.

Rk Player Overall Country Last Jan. Change Clay Rk Hard Rk Indoor Rk Grass Rk
1 Serena Williams 94.2 USA 1 0 91.2 2 97.7 1 91.8 1 91.2 1
2 Maria Sharapova 92.8 RUS 3 1 93.5 1 94.8 2 87.9 4 89.2 2
3 Simona Halep 88.9 ROU 7 4 91.1 3 89.1 5 86.1 6 85.3 3
4 Ana Ivanovic 88.0 SRB 8 4 88.7 4 88.8 6 86.9 5 84.4 4
5 Caroline Wozniacki 85.9 DEN 10 5 79.9 8 89.6 4 88.0 3 83.8 5
6 Petra Kvitova 84.6 CZE 13 7 79.8 9 86.5 8 88.9 2 83.5 6
7 Na Li 84.3 CHN 4 -3 78.9 10 90.0 3 82.4 7 78.0 9
8 Agnieszka Radwanska 83.5 POL 5 -3 80.8 7 86.9 7 79.1 9 82.8 7
9 Angelique Kerber 79.0 GER 6 -3 75.0 17 81.3 11 79.5 8 80.3 8
10 Victoria Azarenka 77.8 BLR 2 -8 74.0 19 84.2 9 71.0 13 70.4 15
11 Lucie Safarova 76.5 CZE 28 17 76.6 13 77.6 13 76.6 10 71.2 14
12 Venus Williams 76.4 USA 12 0 69.0 23 83.4 10 72.4 11 73.3 13
13 Eugenie Bouchard 75.8 CAN 35 22 78.9 10 75.7 16 71.4 12 73.6 12
14 Carla Suarez Navarro 75.1 ESP 30 16 81.2 6 76.0 15 65.6 19 67.2 17
15 Garbine Muguruza 74.3 ESP 51 36 74.4 18 77.5 14 69.9 14 66.2 18
16 Andrea Petkovic 73.4 GER 20 4 81.9 5 71.9 22 66.7 18 64.7 19
17 Samantha Stosur 72.9 AUS 11 -6 78.5 12 74.2 17 65.2 21 62.0 23
18 Ekaterina Makarova 72.5 RUS 14 -4 68.8 24 77.8 12 62.4 25 74.5 11
19 Jelena Jankovic 72.1 SRB 15 -4 76.4 14 71.8 23 69.2 15 64.6 20
20 Sabine Lisicki 71.4 GER 16 -4 70.4 20 72.7 19 67.2 17 74.7 10
21 Svetlana Kuznetsova 70.5 RUS 18 -3 75.6 16 72.4 20 62.1 27 58.8 29
22 Dominika Cibulkova 70.0 SVK 23 1 70.4 20 72.9 18 65.3 20 62.9 22
23 Flavia Pennetta 66.8 ITA 27 4 64.4 30 72.0 21 62.4 25 57.5 31
24 Alize Cornet 66.1 FRA 43 19 66.3 27 69.3 24 58.1 32 63.2 21
25 Madison Keys 65.7 USA 29 4 62.9 33 68.0 28 62.9 24 68.1 16
26 Timea Bacsinszky 65.5 SUI 121 95 69.4 22 66.8 30 57.8 34 59.8 26
27 Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 63.9 RUS 32 5 60.7 37 65.9 31 68.7 16 57.0 34
28 Sara Errani 63.9 ITA 9 -19 75.8 15 60.0 37 58.1 32 54.1 38
29 Monica Niculescu 63.4 ROU 41 12 59.9 38 68.1 27 60.3 29 57.4 32
30 Sloane Stephens 62.7 USA 26 -4 65.7 29 63.0 33 58.5 31 58.4 30
31 Karolina Pliskova 62.6 CZE 98 67 58.7 42 69.0 25 56.1 38 55.5 36
32 Camila Giorgi 62.4 ITA 64 32 62.1 34 62.4 34 63.8 22 61.4 24
33 Shuai Peng 62.3 CHN 53 20 59.2 41 68.2 26 52.6 45 60.0 25
34 Elina Svitolina 62.0 UKR 95 61 59.5 40 67.9 29 57.2 35 49.9 46
35 Belinda Bencic 61.1 SUI 113 78 61.0 36 61.6 35 60.9 28 59.2 28
36 Roberta Vinci 60.2 ITA 17 -19 63.8 32 60.8 36 54.7 39 54.8 37
37 Varvara Lepchenko 59.2 USA 50 13 66.6 26 58.2 40 52.2 47 51.6 42
38 Kaia Kanepi 57.0 EST 19 -19 61.5 35 55.1 45 56.5 36 52.4 40
39 Mona Barthel 56.9 GER 34 -5 56.8 44 56.4 43 63.0 23 50.7 44
40 Zarina Diyas 55.3 KAZ 135 95 51.9 54 58.5 39 52.1 48 56.3 35
41 Casey Dellacqua 55.0 AUS 91 50 45.7 70 65.8 32 44.7 67 49.6 48
42 Petra Cetkovska 54.8 CZE 45 3 66.0 28 52.3 50 43.3 72 49.8 47
43 Barbora Zahlavova Strycova 54.7 CZE 74 31 50.0 58 57.3 42 53.3 43 59.6 27
44 Magdalena Rybarikova 53.6 SVK 39 -5 45.7 70 60.0 37 53.4 42 49.1 49
45 Alison Riske 53.2 USA 79 34 44.7 76 58.0 41 52.9 44 57.4 32
46 Irina-Camelia Begu 53.2 ROU 116 70 64.3 31 46.1 65 56.4 37 46.6 57
47 Heather Watson 53.1 GBR 85 38 54.0 51 50.6 52 58.8 30 52.9 39
48 Polona Hercog 52.9 SLO 37 -11 67.1 25 47.3 62 46.5 58 45.5 58
49 Kiki Bertens 51.9 NED 99 50 59.6 39 47.3 62 54.4 40 45.4 59
50 Caroline Garcia 51.4 FRA 133 83 52.9 52 53.2 48 45.6 61 47.8 55

(Again, download the entire women’s top 300 here.)

30-all. Eyes on Azarenka

The New York Times’ Christopher Clarey had an interesting feature this week on Victoria Azarenka, one of tennis’ most unique personalities and someone who, a year and a half ago, was the closest thing to an equal Serena Williams had on the WTA tour. After a series of injuries and the collapse of a relationship, Azarenka lost the plot a bit in 2014. She has fallen to 42nd in the WTA rankings and 10th in AB.

She fell to Karolina Pliskova in the first round in Brisbane, and she will be unseeded at the Australian Open, a tournament she has won twice. She is still AB No. 9 on hard courts, and she will be the ultimate draw land mine, even if she hasn’t yet rediscovered her top form.

40-30. Simona better win a Slam

It’s the only thing that can justify the hyperbole I find myself throwing her way.

In Jon Wertheim’s latest Sports Illustrated mailbag, he fields an e-mail comparing Simona Halep to Arantxa Sanchez Vicario. He points out that Sanchez Vicario won four Slam titles and not only reached the finals of eight others, but reached the finals of each Slam at least twice. Despite having the reputation of a clay-court specialist and backboard, she was an all-surface danger, and in the era of Steffi Graf and Monica Seles, no less.

So yeah, comparing Halep to an all-time great is a little dangerous. It’s even worse when you have my initial response to the mailbag question: “Well, I’d say she’s ASV with quite a bit of Federer’s artistry.” ASV + Federer! For a 23-year-old who has reached one Slam final! No pressure, Simona.

Halep’s combination of small stature, steady power, and creativity are confusing to the eye, and she might be my favorite player to watch at the moment. She currently stands at third in both the WTA and AB rankings, and she’s the top-ranked under-27 player in the game. There’s no way anybody could live up to “ASV, with a litttle bit of Federer” expectations, but I would settle for a single Slam title. She already came close. Her French Open final against Sharapova was quite possibly the best match of 2014.


Simona Halep, Photo credit: Anthony Gruppuso-USA TODAY Sports

Deuce. Sigh

Your top 10 American males according to AB:

19. John Isner
41. Sam Querrey
47. Jack Sock
55. Steve Johnson
76. Donald Young
110. Ryan Harrison
114. Denis Kudla
124. Tim Smyczek
130. Robby Ginepri
148. Wayne Odesnik

Granted, this list could be worse. Isner has rebounded a bit from a shaky 2014, and Sock, Johnson, and Young all moved up at least 30 AB spots from this time last year. Sock and Johnson moved up over 50 spots. That’s good!

Less good: Isner and Odesnik are 29, Querrey and Smyczek are 27, and Ginepri is 32. Ginepri’s 2005 U.S. Open semifinal appearance is the best Slam result of anybody in this list.

Only Sock, Harrison, and Kudla are under 25, and a) Sock is injured, and b) Harrison has made no progress over the last couple of years.

Sigh.

Ad. At least there are the American women!

Your top 10 American women according to AB:

1. Serena Williams
12. Venus Williams
25. Madison Keys
30. Sloane Stephens
37. Varvara Lepchenko
45. Alison Riske
52. Coco Vandeweghe
56. Lauren Davis
64. Bethanie Mattek-Sands
70. Taylor Townsend

While there are only five American males in the AB top 100, there are 15 American women. And while the top of the list didn’t really improve much in 2014 -- Keys only moved up a bit, and Stephens regressed -- it’s getting harder to remember all of the American up-and-comers.

Taylor Townsend reached the third round of the French Open just a month after her 18th birthday, Victoria Duval won matches at both Wimbledon and the U.S. Open before turning 19 in November, Nicole Gibbs reached the third round of the U.S. Open at 21, 23-year old Coco Vandeweghe is coming off of a career year, 24-year old Alison Riske went 5-4 in Slams in 2014 and reached the WTA top 40, Lauren Davis is into the top-60 at 21, Shelby Rogers is into the top 75 at 22, and 16-year-old Tornado Alicia Black is up to No. 146.

Plus, while their 2014s may have been a bit disappointing, Keys is still only 19, Stephens is 21, and Christina McHale is 22.

Perhaps only Keys and Stephens have Future Slam Champion talent (though, holy smokes, is it easy to be seduced by Townsend’s, Duval’s, and Black’s ground strokes), but Americans should be involved into the second week of each Slam this year, and not only because Serena Williams happens to be American.

Game. ESPN is all over the Australian Open

The Worldwide Leader will be showing more than 150 hours of Australian Open programming in January, and over 110 hours live. That’s phenomenal. Yes, most of it comes in the middle of the night, and no, not everybody else gets up as stupid-early as I do. But I’m excited.

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