}12 for '12: Tournaments of the YearPeter Bodo continues his year-end awards—12 in all, for 2012—with the Tournaments of the Year. You can see rest of his selections as well as the upcoming awards at the end of this article.
}12 for '12: Upsets of the YearPeter Bodo continues his year-end awards—12 in all, for 2012—with the Tournament of the Year. You can see rest of his selections as well as the upcoming awards at the end of this article.
}Celebrating 12 years of ATP Finals action in LondonThis year is a big one for the ATP Finals: it marks the 50th anniversary of the year-end tournament and the last time it will be played in London. After 12 years at the O2 Arena, the eight-player showdown is going to Turin, Italy in 2021. That's made a lot
}12 for '12: Biggest DisappointmentsPeter Bodo continues his year-end awards—12 in all, for 2012—with the year's Biggest Disappointments. You can see rest of his selections as well as the upcoming awards at the end of this article.
WIMBLEDON 2015: Tournament at a glanceA look at Wimbledon, the year's third Grand Slam tennis tournament: Surface: Grass courts. Site: The All England Lawn Tennis Club. Schedule: Play begins Monday; an extra week was added between the French Open and Wimbledon this year. The women's singles final is July 11; the men's singles final is
}Can anyone end the Big Four's title streak at Wimbledon?LONDON (AP) — Roger Federer, Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal and Andy Murray have ruled Wimbledon for the past 14 years, combining to win the tournament every time in that span. No real surprise, given the way that Big 4 dominates tennis. "Because they've been so good compared to every other
}12 for '12: Comebacks of the YearPeter Bodo continues his year-end awards—12 in all, for 2012—with the Comebacks of the Year. You can see rest of his selections as well as the upcoming awards at the end of this article.
}12 for '12: Newcomers of the YearPeter Bodo continues his year-end awards—12 in all, for 2012—with the Newcomers of the Year. You can see rest of his selections as well as the upcoming awards at the end of this article.
}12 for '12: Stories of the YearPeter Bodo concludes his year-end awards—12 in all, for 2012—with the Stories of the Year. You can see all of his prior selections at the end of this article.
}US Open Takeaways #2: Djovak Nokovic learns from losingSee No. 3 in the count down of the winners and losers, the best or worst or most memorable stories from the 2016 US Open. 2 Djokovic himself may have provided the introspective quote of the tournament: "Life is a big lesson; it's a big book. We keep writing the
}12 for '12: Quotes of the YearPeter Bodo continues his year-end awards—12 in all, for 2012—with the Quotes of the Year. You can see rest of his selections as well as the upcoming awards at the end of this article.
}The Big Cats, Part IIby Pete Bodo Yesterday, we looked at how the men's field is shaping up at the big summer hard-court tournaments, and today we'll check out the women. The big news, though, is that Cincinnati is a full-fledged combined event this year, bringing us one step closer to completion in the
}Madrid, SpainOn This Day: David Nalbandian completes the first and only Big 3 sweepOn October 21, 2007—13 years ago to this day—David Nalbandian pulled off the first and still only Big 3 sweep, beating Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic at the same tournament. It all went down at the ATP Masters 1000 event in Madrid (then called the Tennis Masters Series),
}12 for '12: Runner-Ups of the YearPeter Bodo continues his year-end awards—12 in all, for 2012—with the Runner-Ups of the Year. You can see rest of his selections as well as the upcoming awards at the end of this article.
}12 for '12: Most Improved PlayersPeter Bodo continues his year-end awards—12 in all, for 2012—with the year's Most Improved Players. You can see rest of his selections as well as the upcoming awards at the end of this article.
}Tsitsipas, Thiem, Medvedev, Zverev: Four big threats to the Big 3As the 2019 season concludes this week with the Davis Cup in Madrid, it is apparent that the Big 3 remain the pace setters in the men’s game and will not easily relinquish their authority. Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer have secured 12 consecutive major titles among them.
}Miami, USACaroline Garcia takes down Naomi Osaka again, sets Coco Gauff clash in MiamiCaroline Garcia booked a blockbuster fourth-round clash with No. 3 seed Coco Gauff at the Miami Open presented by Itau, after powering past Naomi Osaka 7-6 (4), 7-5 in a big-serving battle on Sunday afternoon. Facing off on Grandstand in their third meeting of the year, Garcia blasted 12 aces
}Local children celebrate Halep's return to AdelaideSimona Halep is one of the early big commitments for the inaugural tournament in Adelaide. The joint ATP and WTA event replaces Sydney, as the start of the calendar makes room for the ATP Cup. The Adelaide tournament will take place January 12-18, and local children were eager to show
}2012 U.S. Open Player Previews: Maria SharapovaWe profile 12 of the top title contenders at the 2012 U.S. Open.
}What's next for the Big 3? Upcoming schedules for Novak, Roger, RafaWith the 2019 Australian Open in the books, the “Big Three” are now also the top three on the men’s list for most Grand Slam titles in tennis history—Roger Federer at 20, Rafael Nadal at 17 and Novak Djokovic at 15 (winning his 15th in Melbourne to break a third-place