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【新生代】德尔雷海滩赛黑马天福

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德尔雷海滩赛天福爆冷三盘击败大师兄挺进八强!
继续努力一黑到底!加油!


来自iPhone客户端1楼2018-02-23 13:39回复
    What a comeback!
    @FTiafoe rallies back from 1-4 and saves four set points to take the opening set over del Potro 7-6 in Delray Beach!
    7-6、4-6、7-5 !


    来自iPhone客户端4楼2018-02-23 13:42
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      奶粉天福目前排名第91位


      来自iPhone客户端6楼2018-02-23 13:46
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        难怪老牛夸他前途无量!
        你牛看人很准嘛……


        来自iPhone客户端12楼2018-02-23 13:52
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          天福这是要和沙波半决赛,与东哥决赛的想法了?
          Delray Beach QFs
          Donskoy-Johnson
          Opelka-Gojowczyk
          Fritz-Shapovalov
          Tiafoe-Chung
          That bottom half is pure #NextGen fun


          来自iPhone客户端13楼2018-02-23 13:56
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            美网上的一篇介绍天福的文章!与大家分享:
            Big things ahead for American tennis
            by Sally Milano
            The United States holds a unique place in the tennis record books, with a host of champions and all-time greats ranging from the 19th century to the present day. Still, it’s been 14 years since Andy Roddick won the US Open men’s title and claimed the No. 1 ranking in the world. And while Serena Williams has been at or near the top of the women’s rankings for almost two decades, many have questioned the current state of tennis in the U.S.: Who is going to be the next American champion? When will we have our next men’s No. 1? Will an American man ever win another major?
            Well, if the results of U.S. players in recent months mean anything, that time could be coming soon.
            Eighty-four American players are competing in qualifying or the main draw at the US Open in 2017 – almost three times that of second-place Russia, which has 30. The U.S. currently has nine men and 14 women ranked in the world's Top 100. And 10 men and 15 women ages 23 and younger are now in the world's Top 200 – again, the most of any nation.
            Taylor Fritz, who won the US Open boys’ title at the 2015 US Open and went on to finish that year ranked No. 1 in the ITF World Junior Rankings, was the first of a strong group of young American men to make a name for himself on the ATP World Tour. Last year, he reached the Memphis final in just his third ATP event, became the youngest player to finish 2016 in the Top 100 of the ATP rankings and was named the 2016 ATP Newcomer of the Year.
            Along with Fritz, Jared Donaldson, Ernesto Escobedo, Stefan Kozlov, Michael Mmoh, Reilly Opelka, Tommy Paul, Noah Rubin and Frances Tiafoe are also making a splash on the men’s tennis scene. They are all 21 years old or younger and are part of the ATP’s #NextGenATP campaign, which touts players as the "Next Generation" of stars on the ATP World Tour.
            “You're looking at the present and the future of it right here, for starters,” said U.S. Davis


            来自iPhone客户端17楼2018-02-23 14:07
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              “You're looking at the present and the future of it right here, for starters,” said U.S. Davis Cup Captain and former world No. 1 Jim Courier, a member of the acclaimed generation that produced Andre Agassi, Pete Sampras, Michael Chang and Todd Martin. “The even better news is that we have a cluster of 18-, 19- and 20-year-olds that are starting to make their way onto the tour, starting to get through the Challengers, move up to tour level.
              “I was lucky enough to come through a generation that pushed each other. We had a cluster back then. We were able to push each other to great heights. It can only benefit American tennis if we have this young group here.”
              Donaldson, Tiafoe and Escobedo are all currently ranked in the ATP's Top 100. Donaldson, 20, is now at a career-high ranking of No. 51, after reaching the quarterfinals in Cincinnati and the third round at Wimbledon this summer. He also reached the fourth round at Miami earlier this year and advanced to his first Grand Slam third round at the 2016 US Open, upsetting then-No. 14 David Goffin for his first Top 20 win.
              Nineteen-year-old Tiafoe, now at No. 71, recorded the biggest win of his career to date two weeks ago in Cincinnati, where he upset world No. 6 Alexander Zverev in the second round for the second Top 50 win of his career. He also won back-to-back Challenger singles titles in May and picked up his first Grand Slam win in January at the Australian Open.


              来自iPhone客户端18楼2018-02-23 14:10
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                No. 77-ranked Escobedo, 21, broke into the Top 100 in April after advancing to his first ATP semifinal in Houston, defeating John Isner in the quarterfinals. In early August, he qualified into Montreal and advanced to the second round.
                “The likes of Frances Tiafoe and Ernesto Escobedo remind me of the time when Andre Agassi, Pete Sampras and Michael Chang came along and rocked the tennis world,” said renowned sportscaster and former tennis pro Mary Carillo. “Sons of immigrants, playing with something to prove. It's exhilarating to watch Tiafoe and Escobedo. So much physical talent and court smarts – still raw in some ways but also so much ambition and desire. Such different paths from the massively talented son of privilege, Taylor Fritz, whose mother (Kathy May) was a Top 10 player herself. Those three, as well as the cool 7-footer, Reilly Opelka, are destined to do terrific things on the tour. And it seems that there's plenty more in the American pipeline.”
                That pipeline includes a talented, promising group of young women, who are rising in the rankings and achieving strong results of their own. Madison Keys has been a steady presence in the world’s Top 20 since 2015 and, at only 22 years old, still has the prime of her career ahead of her. Coached by Hall of Famer Lindsay Davenport, Keys reached a career-high singles ranking of No. 7 last October. Wrist surgery sidelined her for the early part of the season, but she is on her way to returning to top form. Now at No. 16 in the world, Keys won the singles title at Stanford in early August and reached the third round at Cincinnati, before falling to eventual champion Garbiñe Muguruza.
                CiCi Bellis, 18, who made her Top 100 debut last year and is now at No. 36, reached her first two WTA semifinals this summer – her first at the Mallorca Open in June and her second at Stanford in early August. And Amanda Anisimova, Jennifer Brady, Louisa Chirico, Danielle Collins, Lauren Davis, Kayla Day, Caroline Dolehide, Nicole Gib


                来自iPhone客户端19楼2018-02-23 14:11
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                  "It’s so exciting," says USTA Lead National Coach and U.S. Fed Cup Captain Kathy Rinaldi. "When you have a great group of players coming up, they push each other. That gives the younger players an extra belief, and then they start pushing each other.
                  “You see people like Kayla Day and CiCi Bellis and Jenny Brady and Shelby Rogers. There are so many. There’s 15-year-old Amanda Anisimova coming up and players like Taylor Townsend almost back inside the Top 100. It goes on and on. You see juniors, like Caroline Dolehide and Whitney Osuigwe, who is younger than she is, and Alexa Noel, who is even younger than her. There’s a whole chain of young American players."
                  At the junior level, U.S. players have thrived in recent years. American girls' have contested all-U.S. finals at the last two junior Grand Slam tournaments, with Claire Liu defeating Ann Li in the first All-American girls' final at Wimbledon since 1979 and Osuigwe beating Liu in the first all-U.S. girls’ final at Roland Garros since 1980.
                  Overall, five of the eight quarterfinalists in this year's Wimbledon girls' draw were from the U.S. – Liu, Li, Day, Sofia Sewing and Osuigwe – and four of the last eight players in the French Open girls' field – Liu, Osuigwe, Caty McNally and 2016 finalist Anisimova – also hailed from the U.S. Anisimova, 15, also made her Grand Slam main-draw debut in Paris in 2017 after earning a wild card into the tournament by winning the USTA Pro Circuit's French Open Wild Card Challenge.


                  来自iPhone客户端20楼2018-02-23 14:12
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                    The girls’ successes at Roland Garros and Wimbledon are just the latest for American juniors at majors. Last year, Day took home the US Open girls’ trophy and was one of 10 Americans to reach the round of 16 at the US Open Junior Championships. At Wimbledon 2016, Usue Arconada and Liu captured the girls’ doubles title. In 2015, three of the French Open boys’ singles semifinalists were American, with Paul beating Fritz in the first all-American French Open boys’ singles final, dating back to 1947. A month later, 6-foot-11 Opelka became the second consecutive American boy to win at Wimbledon, a year after Rubin defeated Kozlov in the 2014 all-American boys’ final.
                    “We’re really fortunate because I think it’s the most talented group that we’ve had in about 15 years,” said Martin Blackman, General Manager, USTA Player Development. “But where we’re really fortunate is that when [this group] came through, we actually had the right system in place to help them maximize their potential.”
                    The system Blackman refers to starts with recognizing the important role of a player’s private coach. He describes Player Development’s philosophy as a three-phase approach that began eight years ago with the development of Regional Training Centers throughout the country, giving players the opportunity to train close to home and have their training subsidized.


                    来自iPhone客户端21楼2018-02-23 14:13
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                      The second phase kicked in four years ago, when Player Development, then led by Patrick McEnroe, started the Team USA initiative, an even more inclusive and collaborative approach to working with private-sector coaches. During this time, Player Development began bringing coaches to camps and symposiums, making sure they were interacting with USTA national coaches and sharing the latest training techniques and information, which then would allow the private coaches to get the most from their students.
                      The third step, initiated under Blackman’s leadership, was the creation of a new department called Team USA – Pro, which provides players ranked between Nos. 100 and 500 with coaching assistance, training and financial resources. Whether it’s mental skills training, video performance analytics, travel coaching or strength and conditioning support, resources are made available for players who do not work directly with Player Development coaches.
                      Blackman also said the opening of the new USTA National Campus at Lake Nona in Orlando, Fla., in January has played and will continue to play a huge role in the development of American players. The new facility features hard, Har-Tru, red clay and indoor courts, as well as a gym and training room, café, study hall, beach volleyball court, basketball hoop and a player lounge.
                      The campus, Blackman said, has given Player Development the opportunity to be more inclusive than ever before of the top U.S. players at the junior, collegiate and pro levels, opening up the facility not just to players that Player Development works with directly but to all of the top U.S. players who train with their own teams there.


                      来自iPhone客户端22楼2018-02-23 14:14
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                        该楼层疑似违规已被系统折叠 查看此楼


                        来自iPhone客户端23楼2018-02-23 14:15
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                          "Maybe mine isn’t your normal tennis story. And maybe I’m not your normal tennis player. But I belong."
                          @FTiafoe


                          来自iPhone客户端24楼2018-02-23 14:17
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                            沙波与天福相约半决赛?


                            来自iPhone客户端26楼2018-02-23 14:28
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                              开心😃


                              来自iPhone客户端33楼2018-02-23 15:32
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