Friday, January 21, 2005

ORDER OF PLAY

Rod Laver Arena - Start Time - 11.00 AM

1. Men's Singles - 3rd Rnd.
Guillermo Coria (ARG)[6] vs. Juan Carlos Ferrero (ESP)[31]

VIDEO A short interview with JC after his second round match. Again the questions are dubbed in English but JC's answers are in Spanish.



>> video
>> html (if you have problems with the first link)

PHOTOS



pic: pumped
pic: backhand
pic: return
pic: in action
pic: fist pump
pic: another backhand
pic: close up
pic: waving

ARTICLE Forgotten Ferrero looms as a danger

Remember Juan Carlos Ferrero?

The former world No.1 and last year's Australian Open semi-finalist jogged a few memories as he barely broke sweat in whacking Argentine Mariano Zabaleta out of this year's Open.

Cliched as the term "forgotten man" is, it sums up Ferrero's Australian Open status perfectly after injury and illness in 2004 sent his world ranking plummeting to No.31.

But the message was clear in Ferrero's 6-1 6-2 6-0 second round shellacking of the world No.51 - the Spaniard can still play and could be the banana skin looming in Lleyton Hewitt's half of the draw.

"Why not?" said Ferrero when asked if he could repeat or even better his semi-final finish at Melbourne Park last year.

"If I play like today in the next few days I think I can go through.

"We'll see but I think I can."

Ferrero's 2004 semi-final defeat by eventual winner Roger Federer was the 2003 French Open champion and US Open runner-up's best performance of a year he looked poised to shake off the tag of being just a clay-court specialist.

Chicken pox, followed by a tumble in training in which he injured his wrist and ribs, allowed him no continuity whatsover in a cursed year.

Ferrero thought his injury nightmare was recurring when he hurt his ankle playing doubles on Wednesday.

But he showed no signs of discomfort on his heavily strapped ankle as he took control with an early first set service break, then broke Zabaleta's serve at will for the rest of an 83-minute clinic.

Just where Ferrero sits in the tennis world order since his absence will become clearer in his next clash - a third round showdown with world No.6 Guillermo Coria.

Coria had a much tougher assignment today to dispatch Brazil's Ricardo Mello 6-4 6-7 (3-7) 6-3 7-6 (7-3).

Thursday, January 20, 2005

MATCH STATS JC won!! He defeated Zabaleta 6-1, 6-2, 6-0 ^^ Next he plays Coria in the third round.


  Match Summary
   Zabaleta (ARG)Ferrero (ESP)
      
  1st Serve %29 of 58 = 50 %52 of 73 = 71%
  Aces 2 2
  Double Faults51
  Unforced Errors4419
  Winning % on 1st Serve17 of 29 = 59 %37 of 52 = 71 %
  Winning % on 2nd Serve10 of 29 = 34 %13 of 21 = 62 %
  Winners (Including Service)13 17
  Receiving Points Won23 of 73 = 32 %31 of 58 = 53 %
  Break Point Conversions0 of 3 = 0 %7 of 11 = 64 %
  Net Approaches6 of 13 = 46 %7 of 9 = 78 %
  Total Points Won5081
  Fastest Serve197 km/h191 km/h
  Average 1st Serve Speed185 km/h168 km/h
  Average 2nd Serve Speed152 km/h143 km/h

Wednesday, January 19, 2005

AO NEWS JC injured his right ankle and was forced to retire from the doubles match Wednesday. The Spaniards were leading 4-6, 6-2 and 3-5 when they decided it was best to stop play.

JC will undergo some tests to see if he can continue with his singles match scheduled for Thursday evening. =(

VIDEO A short on-court interview with JC after his first round match. Questions are dubbed in English but JC's answers are in Spanish. RealPlayer is needed to view clip.



>> video

Tuesday, January 18, 2005

ORDER OF PLAY Day 3: Wednesday, Jan 19

Court 14 Start Time 11.00 AM

Men's Doubles - 1st Rnd.
Chris Haggard (RSA)/Robbie Koenig (RSA) vs. Justin Gimelstob (USA)/ Graydon Oliver (USA)

followed by

Women's Doubles - 1st Rnd.
Jelena Jankovic (SCG)/ Aniko Kapros (HUN) vs. Natalie Grandin (RSA)/ Conchita Martinez Granados (ESP)

Women's Doubles - 1st Rnd.
Patricia Wartusch (AUT)/ Jasmin Woehr (GER) vs. Alyona Bondarenko (UKR)/ Emmanuelle Gagliardi (SUI)

Men's Doubles - 1st Rnd.
Juan Carlos Ferrero (ESP)/ Santiago Ventura (ESP) vs. Rick Leach (USA)/ Brian MacPhie (USA)

PHOTOS from JC's first round match.



pic: wave
pic: forehand
pic: hair flying =P
pic: toweling off
pic: backhand
pic: looking down

MATCH STATISTICS JC defeated Melle Van Gemerden 2-6, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4. Next he will play the winner of the Marc Kimmich vs. Mariano Zabaleta match.

  Match Summary
  Van Gemerden (NED) Ferrero (ESP)
  1st Serve %61 of 114 = 54 %85 of 118 = 72 %
  Aces41
  Double Faults21
  Unforced Errors4941
  Winning % on 1st Serve44 of 61 = 72 %58 of 85 = 68 %
  Winning % on 2nd Serve26 of 51 = 51 %14 of 32 = 44 %
  Winners (Including Service) 3531
  Receiving Points Won46 of 117 = 39 %44 of 112 = 39 %
  Break Point Conversions4 of 8 = 50 %5 of 12 = 42 %
  Net Approaches7 of 16 = 44 %15 of 15 = 100 %
  Total Points Won116116

Monday, January 17, 2005

ORDER OF PLAY Day 2: Tuesday, 18 January

Court 18 Start Time 11.00 AM

1. Sebastien Grosjean (FRA)[14] vs. Michael Llodra (FRA)

followed by

2. Marta Marrero (ESP) vs. Francesca Schiavone (ITA)[14]

3. Melle Van Gemerden (NED) vs. Juan Carlos Ferrero (ESP)[31]


OMG!! Court 18!!! *sigh* 0_0

Saturday, January 15, 2005

PHOTO JC off court.

>>pic: JC and sunglasses

Friday, January 14, 2005

NEW LAYOUT Yes, new season new layout. Hope you guys like it ^^

PHOTOS JC practicing in Melbourne Park.



pic: ball toss

DRAW The draw is out for the Australian Open. JC faces a qualifier in the first round. Some notable players in his quarter: Coria, Hewitt, Nalbandian.

Guillermo Coria ARG (6) vs. Tomas Berdych CZE

Ricardo Mello BRA vs. Alberto Martin ESP

Next Round

Marc Kimmich AUS vs. Mariano Zabaleta ARG

QUALIFIER vs. Juan Carlos Ferrero ESP (31)


>> full draw

Thursday, January 13, 2005

SEEDING Men's seedings for the Australian Open

1 Roger Federer (Switzerland)
2 Andy Roddick (US)
3 Lleyton Hewitt (Australia)
4 Marat Safin (Russia)
5 Carlos Moya (Spain)
6 Guillermo Coria (Argentina)
7 Tim Henman (Britain)
8 Andre Agassi (US)
9 David Nalbandian (Argentina)
10 Gaston Gaudio (Argentina)
11 Joachim Johansson (Sweden)
12 Guillermo Canas (Argentina)
13 Tommy Robredo (Spain)
14 Sebastien Grosjean (France)
15 Mikhail Youzhny (Russia)
16 Tommy Haas (Germany)
17 Andrei Pavel (Romania)
18 Nicolas Massu (Chile)
19 Vincent Spadea (US)
20 Dominik Hrbaty (Slovakia)
21 Nicolas Kiefer (Germany)
22 Ivan Ljubicic (Croatia)
23 Fernando Gonzalez (Chile)
24 Feliciano Lopez (Spain)
25 Juan Ignacio Chela (Argentina)
26 Nikolay Davydenko (Russia)
27 Paradorn Srichaphan (Thailand)
28 Mario Ancic (Croatia)
29 Taylor Dent (US)
30 Thomas Johansson (Sweden)
31 Juan Carlos Ferrero (Spain)
32 Jurgen Melzer (Austria)

Tuesday, January 11, 2005

PHOTOS *sad* JC lost to J. Hernych 7-6 (1), 3-6, 1-6. Also Nadal injured himself during his singles match so JC and Rafa are out of doubles.



pic: forehand
pic: reach
pic: chasing the ball

ARTICLE Ferrero crashes out to qualifier

In one of the biggest upsets ever in the Heineken Open first round, former world number one Juan Carlos Ferrero was bundled out of the tournament by Czech qualifier Jan Hernych.

The Spaniard looked a shadow of his former self as he went down 6-7 (1-7) 6-1 6-3 on a sunny Centre Court.

Hernych ended the year at 83 in the world, an increase of 150 places over 2004, but needed to qualify for the Auckland tournament.

The 25-year-old has already played three matches to reach the main draw but was expected to be flying home on Wednesday after drawing Ferrero in round one.

A break apiece in the first set led to the first set tiebreak, which the former French Open champion took with ease 7-1.

Hernych should have folded, after holding two set points at 6-5 in the first set, but he broke Ferrero in game one of the second set, a feat he repeated in the next service game.

With the Auckland audience still shocked at seeing a former Grand Slam champion being humbled by a qualifier, Hernych broke Ferrero again to take the set 6-1.

Both players traded breaks at the start of the final set but again it was the qualifier who ran down every shot, and helped by some poor shot selection by Ferrero, raced into a 5-1 lead.

The crowd were praying for a Spanish comeback, and they were rewarded when Ferrero broke back after Hernych threw away a match point and fired a weak backhand into the net.

Ferrero held his next serve, but after a nervous service game Hernych finally took the match and the applause of the crowd.

Monday, January 10, 2005

ORDER OF PLAY

Stadium Court

(starting at 11am)
A Calleri v R Ginepri
30 min break for UNICEF collection
G Coria v S Schalken
D Hrbaty v R Nadal
J Hernych v JC Ferrero

(not before 7pm)
R Sluiter v T Robredo
JC Ferrero/R Nadal v F Gonzalez/J Thomas

Sunday, January 09, 2005

INTERVIEW Ferrero: "Todo lo que me ha pasado me ha hecho sentar la cabeza"

Una entrevista de JOAN SOLSONA

Juan Carlos Ferrero acabó 2003 como el gran dominador de la tierra batida. Se estrenó en Roland Garros y alcanzó el sueño de ser el número uno. Sólo Andy Roddick pudo arrebatarle el trono ATP en los dos últimos torneos. Un año después, Ferrero inicia el lunes en Auckland (Nueva Zelanda) la temporada del regreso a la elite, después de un pasado ejercicio marcado por las lesiones y enfermedades, que le dejaron con el casillero de títulos en blanco.

¿Qué tal se encuentra físicamente para afrontar un año que promete ser muy duro?

La verdad es que muy bien. Las vacaciones me las tomé antes de la final de Copa Davis, por lo que llevo más de un mes entrenando para estar a tope en Australia.

Supongo que le benefició acabar en diciembre para no perder el ritmo de competición.

Bueno, en Sevilla no creo que cogiera ritmo de partidos porque apenas jugué.

Usted alcanzó las semifinales en el último Open de Australia. ¿Cuáles son sus opciones para repetir a partir del 17 de enero en el Melbourne Park?


Ahora mismo, no quiero marcarme metas en los torneos iniciales. Lo mejor será ir partido a partido. Quiero pensar que en 2004 perdí en primera ronda en Sidney y luego llegué a semifinales en el Abierto ‘aussie’.

¿Pero es consciente que casi todos sus puntos se ponen en juego el primer mes de competición con las semifinales de Australia (450) y la final de Rotterdam (210)?

Sería una tontería obsesionarse con lo que defiendo ahora en Australia. Una presión extra no me favorece. Aunque no obtenga resultados, me queda toda la temporada para recuperar posiciones.

Pasando balance de su último mal año. ¿Hay tiempo para sacar conclusiones positivas de tantos percances?

Te ayuda a madurar. Todo lo que ha pasado, me ha ayudado a sentar la cabeza. Todo profesional del deporte tiene un año mal y yo ya lo pasé.

¿Qué pide al 2005 para el Ferrero tenista?

Lo único que quiero es volver a sentirme competitivo en una pista.

Usted estaba acostumbrado a luchar por los ‘Grand Slam’ y Masters Series. Desde 2001 se plantó tres veces consecutivas en el torneo de maestros que cierra el calendario de la ATP. ¿Cuáles son hoy sus objetivos?

Volver a ganar un ‘Grand Slam’ y también estar ahí en los Masters Series. Pero todo ello pasa por regresar al nivel que estaba antes.

El lunes empieza la primera reválida para Ferrero en el torneo de Auckland.

Ya tengo ganas de empezar a jugar partidos después de una dura pretemporada en la que he cuidado mucho el aspecto físico, tanto en Villena como los últimos días en Brasil.

Usted voló el pasado jueves de Salvador de Bahia a Nueva Zelanda. ¿Pasar la última semana de entrenamientos en Brasil ayuda a adaptarse a las actuales condiciones climáticas de las antípodas?

Seguro. Allí es pleno verano y el calor y la humedad son factores que influyen en el resultado, especialmente en un ‘Grand Slam’ al mejor de cinco sets.

Después de la dulce resaca de Copa Davis, con su segunda Ensaladera con 24 primaveras, la primera semana de marzo visitan a la Eslovaquia de Dominik Hrbaty y Karol Beck.

Yo veo el sorteo bastante parecido al de 2004, cuando tuvimos que ganar a un rival complicado como la República Checa. La diferencia es que esta vez nos tocan las dos primeras eliminatorias fuera de casa. Lo positivo, al menos para los equipos finalistas, es que la competición de la Ensaladera se inicia en marzo y no en febrero, con más tiempo de margen para llegar en condiciones.

El tenis español vive inmerso en un proceso electoral que dará el 29 de enero un nuevo presidente para la Federación. ¿Sigue desde la distancia lo que está pasando entre los candidatos?

No es algo de lo que me mantenga muy informado desde la distancia. Espero que, gane quien gane las elecciones, haga lo mejor para el tenis nacional.

A excepción de Carlos Moyá (28 años), usted tiene 24, pero detrás suyo están Feliciano López con 23, Tommy Robredo con 22, Fernando Verdasco con 21 y Rafa Nadal con 18. ¿Estamos delante de la mejor generación de la historia?

Está claro que sí, sobre todo por el potencial que han demostrado todos estos jugadores. Ojalá muy pronto estemos todos muy arriba en el ránking.

Hablando de posiciones de privilegio en las listas del circuito masculino. ¿Qué le parece lo que está haciendo Roger Federer?


Creo que está siendo una sorpresa para el mundo del tenis. Pero esta campaña juega con la presión de repetir todos sus éxitos y ya veremos cómo lo afronta. No será fácil ganar once torneos, tres de ellos del ‘Grand Slam’...

Ferrero se hizo profesional en 1998, cuando aún funcionaban en lo más alto jugadores como Pete Sampras, Andre Agassi o Patrick Rafter. También se codeaban entre los grandes Carlos Moyá y Álex Corretja. ¿No tiene la sensación de que ahora hay más competencia entre los ‘top ten’?

Es cierto que se ha puesto muy caro un lugar entre los diez primeros del tenis masculino. En el último año han vuelto a luchar por estar ahí Safin, Hewitt o Henman.


>> original


Only in Spanish for now but non-Spanish speakers can use Babelfish for a rough translation ^^

PHOTO The first 2005 picture of JC on the courts ^^ He's pictured here practicing in Auckland.

Friday, January 07, 2005

ARTICLE Ferrero's lost season

By Scott Riley, Tennis Editor

Philadelphia, PA (Sports Network) - Following up on his dreamlike 2003 season, 2004 turned out to be a nightmare for the "Mosquito," one Juan Carlos Ferrero.

The free-swinging star enjoyed a breakout campaign last year, piling up 67 match wins, including a coveted French Open title among his four championships. He also achieved world No. 1 status in '03, becoming only the second Spaniard to do so since the world rankings commenced in 1973.

But the skinny righthander struggled mightily in a forgettable '04, a year in which he was riddled with injuries and even battled a bout with the chickenpox.

The 24-year-old was a disappointing 23-16 this past season and failed to add to his career titles tally, which still stands at 11. He reached a semifinal just three times all year, including a loss to the great Roger Federer at the Aussie Open, and lost in his only final, at the hands of fellow former world No. 1 Lleyton Hewitt in Rotterdam. Ferrero didn't reach another semi after succumbing to lefthanded countryman Fernando Verdasco in Valencia, Spain way back in mid-April.

[...]

>> full article

Sorry a little late but I thought it was a good summary of JC's 2004 season and it offers hope for 2005 ^^

Thursday, January 06, 2005

EBAY AUCTION From January 4-14 you can bid on signed goods from your favorite Spanish sports stars (including JC of course)!

The benefits of the auction will go to the construction of houses and the maintenance of a hospital in Anatapur (India), through the Vicente Ferrer Foundation.

The objective of this auction is to collect funds to construct houses in one of the poorest zones in southern India. This region will serve to house the influx of migrants as they move inland as a result of the tsunami that devastated 2,260 kilometers of the coast of India.

JC has donated a complete tennis kit and a training jacket.




>> link to auction