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Author: karambunai

Tennis

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Post time 22-9-2014 04:25 PM | Show all posts
Press in Wuhan





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Post time 22-9-2014 10:46 PM | Show all posts
21/9/14

jalan2 kat pavi... jumpa kei nishikori




white shorts, white/blue tshirt

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Post time 22-9-2014 11:27 PM | Show all posts
Mulan posted on 22-9-2014 10:46 PM
21/9/14

jalan2 kat pavi... jumpa kei nishikori

oh ninja!

kalau jmpa Kyrgios, kirim salam
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Post time 23-9-2014 08:34 AM | Show all posts
Yen_Aireena posted on 22-9-2014 11:27 PM
oh ninja!

kalau jmpa Kyrgios, kirim salam

ehh.. takmolah... masih berbekas di hati laa budak neh kalahkan Rafa last Wimbledon.

ninja sorang jer dtg promo masa i jalan2 pavi aritu... tgk pic tu mcm dia senyum kat i kan? *perasan abis*

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Kyrgios "emotionally spent," withdraws from indoor events               Saturday, September 20, 2014         /by         Kamakshi Tandon      

        Nick Kyrgios is finishing his regular season in a week's time, withdrawing from scheduled events at Tokyo, Stockholm and Vienna.


        The 19-year-old Australian wants to take some time away from the tour following his breakthrough season, when he defeated Rafael Nadal at Wimbledon and reached the Top 60.


        "I've pulled out of the other tournaments because I'm emotionally spent," the 51st-ranked Kyrgios said. "hysically I've probably only got enough left for one more tournament. I just want to sit back and take a break from everything."


        He will play in the International Tennis Premier League (ITPL) during the off season before getting ready for the Australian hard court season, where he will be one of the biggest attractions.

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emotionally spent, huh?

suka giler dpt kalahkan Rafa... pastu flop ker? joining the ranks of soderling, rosol, darcis?


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Post time 23-9-2014 09:55 AM | Show all posts


Great to have a win tonight! Great crowd, fun atmosphere. It's recovery time now with a big fat ice bath.

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Post time 23-9-2014 09:56 AM | Show all posts
WUHAN, China - She looked out of sorts in the first set but like she has done so many times in her career - and more times than any other player this year, too - Maria Sharapova toughed it out in three sets, beating countrywoman Svetlana Kuznetsova in her Dongfeng Motor Wuhan Open opener.

Watch highlights, interviews and more video from Wuhan right here on wtatennis.com!

It was a classic match-up for the feature night match in Wuhan. The two have a head-to-head series that dates all the way back to 2003, they're Russia's only two multiple Grand Slam champions on the women's side, and they're also two of the most competitive players on the tour to this day.

And when they took the court they threw the rankings out the window, World No.25 Kuznetsova playing much more like the World No.2 she once was, ripping huge groundstrokes to keep Sharapova moving, eventually drawing 20 unforced errors from her in the first set alone and clinching the set, 6-3.

But Sharapova always seems to lift her game when she knows it's going to three and she did the very same this time, pouncing right from the start of the second set, cutting down on all those errors and pretty much running away with it in the next two sets, eventually finishing it off, 3-6, 6-2, 6-2.

After having eight winners and those 20 unforced errors in the first set, Sharapova tightened the screws in a big way in the second and third sets - she had 25 winners and 13 unforced in those two sets.

It was Sharapova's WTA-leading 18th three set win of the year. No one else has more than 15.

"Svetlana is a very good player, a former Grand Slam champion, and we've had really tough matches in the past," Sharapova said. "She was a very difficult first opponent for me, so I was happy with the way I played in the second and third sets. I wasn't waiting for her to give me the match.

"I really stepped up after the first set, and that was really important."

And having already qualified for the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global two weeks ago, Sharapova might have another goal in mind for this week - her first WTA title in China. The closest she's come has been reaching the Beijing final in 2012 (falling to Victoria Azarenka).

Sharapova's win over Kuznetsova was one of two second round matches taking place on Monday, with Caroline Garcia's stunner over No.5 seed Agnieszka Radwanska as well

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Post time 23-9-2014 09:59 AM | Show all posts
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Post time 23-9-2014 10:02 AM | Show all posts
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Post time 23-9-2014 10:05 AM | Show all posts
Mulan posted on 22-9-2014 10:46 PM
21/9/14

jalan2 kat pavi... jumpa kei nishikori

jalan2 kat pavi xnk ajak orang


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Post time 23-9-2014 10:31 AM | Show all posts
Maria Sharapova vs Svetlana Kuznetsova Wuhan 2014 Highlights




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Post time 23-9-2014 10:38 AM | Show all posts
ashburn posted on 23-9-2014 10:05 AM
jalan2 kat pavi xnk ajak orang

isks.. takkan i nak ajak pakwe maria sharapova... abis pecah terus gegendang telinga ni di-ngaum nanti... huhuu
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Post time 24-9-2014 08:18 AM | Show all posts
Mulan posted on 23-9-2014 08:34 AM
ehh.. takmolah...  masih berbekas di hati laa budak neh kalahkan Rafa last Wimbledon.

nin ...

kalah sudah...
dia singgah gombak la tu nnt
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Post time 24-9-2014 08:47 AM | Show all posts

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Post time 24-9-2014 08:47 AM | Show all posts
Yen_Aireena posted on 24-9-2014 08:18 AM
kalah sudah...
dia singgah gombak la tu nnt



kena mintak ampun dgn i dulu baru leh menang next match
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Post time 24-9-2014 08:48 AM | Show all posts


Leander Paes with Michael Chang at KPJ Hospital.
#RESPECT

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Post time 24-9-2014 08:51 AM | Show all posts
Rindu plak dgn Del Potro...





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Post time 24-9-2014 09:47 AM | Show all posts
Lost in the Food Chain
Tuesday, September 23, 2014 /by Peter Bodo

Nick Kyrgios is one of the most exciting young players to break out of the ATP pack in a long time. Nick Kyrgios is also the first exciting new player to call a timeout and withdraw from tour play just when his momentum has him poised to break through to the elite level.

Kyrgios, the 19-year-old Australian who upset Rafael Nadal in the fourth round of Wimbledon, was the No. 8 seed this week in Kuala Lumpur. Word is that he went to play there merely to please his Malaysian mother, Nill. It wasn’t particularly good motivation, for Kyrgios was upset by his fellow countryman, Marinko Matosevic.

And that’s it for 2014 for Kyrgios, save a doubles match in Malaysia. He’s pulled out of the other three events he had on his schedule, Tokyo, Stockholm, and Vienna. Three-quarters of the way through his breakout year, Kyrgios is putting a stopper in it, claiming he’s “emotionally spent,” that he just wants “to sit back and take a break from everything.”

Unfortunately for Kyrgios, nobody else will be sitting back and taking a break, and few who found themselves in a comparably choice position at so young an age did either. It’s an unusual and somewhat puzzling decision by this appealing, gregarious young man.

Kyrgios is up to No. 51 in the rankings, and he backed up that upset of Nadal with a few more solid wins at the U.S. Open, where he reached the third round. But it’s not like he’s played himself into exhaustion. He’s played a grand total of nine matches since he beat Nadal, going 5-4, and that includes two Davis Cup rubbers against Uzbekistan. One of those matches was against the severely outclassed Sanjar Fayziev (No. 736), who lost to Kyrgios 6-1, 6-1.

If you include the Challenger and qualifying matches Kyrgios played earlier in the year, his 2014 record is 29-12 on just 41 matches. By contrast, 32-year-old David Ferrer has played 61 matches, and Roberto Bautista Agut has played 56.

Perhaps each and every match Kyrgios played after Wimbledon him through an emotional wringer. But tennis players tend not to be so delicate emotionally—they can’t afford it, because even the best ones lose so often.

Clearly, whatever happened to leave Kyrgios so drained did not take place on a tennis court. That leaves the experience of sudden stardom, and all that came along with his sensational upset of Nadal. Presumably, that has exacted a heavier price than meets the eye, even though it has also paid handsome material rewards. [errr... tak sanggup nak ckp padan muka... boleh join soderling, rosol & darcis la yek?]

But if it really is all about the glare of the spotlight and the pressure of expectation, Kyrgios may be in the wrong occupation. Most youngsters in his shoes tend to embrace their newfound status and work double-time to build on it. Kyrgios, though, is backing off. The obvious question: Is it fatigue and confusion, or an instinct for self-preservation of the kind that makes a suspicious wolf gingerly draw back from a trap?

This is something we will have to wait to find out.

Kyrgios’ decision to end his season also may have repercussions in the politics and administration of the game. He is already a drawing card among knowing tennis audiences, so his decision to skip the rest of the year is a severe disappointment to the tournaments he’s abandoning—and thus a blow to the ATP itself, as the organization is not merely a player’s union but a partnership between the players and the tournament promoters. When the tournaments suffer, the tour suffers.

Most everyone agrees that a pro player ought to enjoy a measure of freedom, to play when and where he wants. But the profession is also built on the tacit agreement that players will make good on the obligations they undertake. Up until now, the lure of wealth and fame appears to have been strong enough to add whatever additional motivation gifted youngsters needed to make a big push for stardom at the first opportunity. Let’s take a look at how some other youngsters handled their emergences:

—John McEnroe was just 18 when he made the Wimbledon semifinals (as a qualifier). He played on and went 20-11 after he beat Phil Dent in the quarterfinals.

—Boris Becker won Wimbledon when he was just 17, then played eight tournaments and three Davis Cup ties the rest of the year, culminating with the season-ending Masters (for which he had to qualify). He went 28-7 after winning Wimbledon.

—Roger Federer was 19 when he achieved instant stardom with his upset of Pete Sampras in the fourth round of Wimbledon in 2001. He went on from there to play seven tournaments, logging a 9-7 record.

I suppose Federer is the most relevant comparison; he’s the most recent of these overnight Wimbledon sensations, as well as the one closest in age to Kyrgios. Of course, times change. But they don’t change that much, at least not when it comes to the athletic aspect of the game.

One big difference beyond the physical issues is that, these days, the payout for a star player is enormous, both in prize money and endorsement earnings. As Sampras liked to point out, you can lead an awful nice life if you turn down the call of greatness, content to knock around in the Top 10 until you pop up and win a big tournament in order to keep your place in the food chain. It takes a different breed of cat to vie for domination, to be the guy with adopts a high degree of discipline and accepts the burden of living with “the target on his back.”

In other words, to be a McEnroe, Becker, or Federer.

It may not be fair to compare Kyrgios to those legendary stalwarts. Looking at the post-breakout records of those stars is really instructive that way. Maybe Kyrgios is just a big, happy-go-lucky kid who doesn’t really want that target on his back. Besides, everyone is different. Perhaps Kyrgios really has deeper or more complex needs than other talented youths do, or did. But history shows that the deepest need that great players have is the need to play and to win.

There’s one other possibility here: That Kyrgios wants to work on his game and fill some of the holes in it with the intent to have a big 2015. That’s a risky gambit though. Why let all the momentum go to waste? Like the old saltwater fisherman often says, you never leave fish to find fish.

Right now, Kyrgios isn’t feeling the desire or need to fight and win matches. Thus, he will have to jump start that need pretty quickly when he embarks on the New Year. At that point he’ll have gone three months without playing a competitive match. He will be under a lot of pressure to do well in his homeland come January, without a lot of prep time. And you can bet he will be under even more intense scrutiny than he is now. He’ll probably need all the emotional rest he’s getting over the next few months.

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Post time 24-9-2014 03:00 PM | Show all posts
Mulan posted on 24-9-2014 08:47 AM
kena mintak ampun dgn i dulu baru leh menang next match

amboiiii
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Post time 24-9-2014 03:01 PM | Show all posts
tgkk game Maria nie jiwa
kena kental
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Post time 24-9-2014 03:31 PM | Show all posts
ashburn posted on 24-9-2014 03:01 PM
tgkk game Maria nie jiwa
kena kental

ha ah.. asik drop the first set jer...

arini dia buat lagi...
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