Breaking News: Marcos Giron’s plans a huge setup for Andrey Rublev due to…
HALLE, Germany—Last month in Rome, Marcos Giron served for an upset of Andrey Rublev in the second round, only to lose a heartbreaker to the incoming Madrid champion. On Tuesday, Giron made sure the same scenario didn’t come to fruition.
Facing the two-time Halle runner-up, the American upstaged Rublev, 6-4, 7-6 (5), for his first Top 10 win away from hard courts.
Finishing off the world No. 6 was no easy task. Giron saw a break advantage in the second set erased, and his tiebreak lead was trimmed from 6-2 to 6-5 before a Rublev forehand error ended the contest.
“He earned the right to be back in the match. And then I thought I elevated in the ‘breaker. So it was a little bit back and forth. The margins are so small and you can’t live in the past,” Giron told TENNIS.com in a sit-down interview afterwards. “I’m happy with the level I brought and I feel like I can be disruptive on the surface.”
Giron is the first to admit that he’s underdelivered on grass. But if his first three matches on the surface this month are any indication, that may all be changing for the better. Last week in Stuttgart, he eliminated Andy Murray in straight sets and pushed eventual champion Jack Draper to a deciding set.
“I honestly feel like my grass-court results in the last few years have been objectively a bit disappointing. I’ve had some good wins, quarters here. But I do feel like my game should really be able to do a lot of damage and it’s a matter of actually doing it,” he believes.
A native of Thousand Oaks, Calif., Giron’s first recollection of hitting on the surface was with a friend at a local club when he was 10. Twenty years later, Giron has solidified himself as an ATP Tour regular. What he lacks in the height department, the former NCAA champion offsets with his attention to the finer details.
“I’m definitely a little stockier, and so I think my footwork has always had to be pretty good to be a competitive player. I don’t feel small by any means, but when I watch tennis I’m like, ‘Whoa, I’m tiny compared to these other guys,’” he shares.
“That means I have to do everything else really well. I have to find ways on the forehand, the backhand. Movement is huge, and it’s always probably been one of my strengths.”
I honestly feel like my grass-court results in the last few years have been objectively a bit disappointing… but I do feel like my game should really be able to do a lot of damage and it’s a matter of actually doing it.Marcos Giron
A self-proclaimed “Quad Father” with compatriot J.J. Wolf, Giron’s physicality is a factor with his ability to efficiently get in and out of the corners and quickly changing direction from south to north. That’s particularly important on grass, where precarious baselines are an element that competitors are forced to accept as a playing condition.
“The hardest part is you can’t push off too hard and you can’t stop too fast. I’m able to decelerate pretty fast, stop pretty fast, I’ve got a low center of gravity,” shares Giron. “But, I feel like if you’re offensive, you can take your chances and run less than the opponent. Rublev slipped a few times in some big moments.”
Is Giron afraid of the same happening to him? Hardly, for he knows it’s imminent.
“At some point this grass swing, I’m going to eat sh*t. It’s going to happen and hopefully I don’t get hurt. But I’ve always moved pretty well and every year I’ve learned from it,” he says. “I’ve figured out what works well. I’ve talked to coaches. You talk to other players, what they’ve done well, what they find works. A little nugget here, a little nugget there. You have to learn, adapt and keep building or else you’re not going to be here.”
If Tuesday serves as a reminder, Giron is here to stay.
Andrey Rublev turns to Halle’s peaceful setting and hotel sauna for mental reset
The world No. 6 first appeared at the ATP 500 eight years ago and has reached two of the past three finals.
Published Jun 18, 2024
HALLE, Germany—If Wimbledon is the storm, Halle is the calm that comes before it. At least for Andrey Rublev.
Peace and quiet: it’s a state of being we all seek from time to time. After spending weeks in major cities like Madrid, Rome and Paris, Rublev finds refuge in the ambiance of the Terra Wortmann Open. Pastures with cows grazing and a mountain backdrop replace honking horns and packed streets filled by sounds of strangers.
“For me it’s a nice moment to a bit rest mentally before I go to London. A big city full of people, full of something happening always,” Rublev shares with TENNIS.com. “Here, it’s a nice place to stay calm for a week, focus only on tennis, to recover. It’s really quiet, really peaceful here.”
Beyond the tranquility, there’s another selling point of the ATP 500 for the 26-year-old.
“The sauna at the hotel is nice.”
Today, Rublev is a 16-time ATP champion with two Masters 1000 titles. He has remained inside the Top 10 since he first entered the elite group on October 12, 2020 and qualified at the last four editions of the Nitto ATP Finals. Even so, Rublev finds it difficult to accept how much time has elapsed since he first turned up to the long-running northwest Germany tour stop when he was an 18-year-old trying to find his way.
“It doesn’t feel like it at all. Looks like it’s been just last year,” he says. “But it’s tough to realize that it’s been eight years because in my head, eight years is a big number that means you have a lot of changes in life, or in general. For the moment, body wise, I feel like eight years ago.”
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In 2023, Rublev put a disappointing French Open exit behind him when he reached his second final in three years at OWL Arena. His time at Roland Garros this year once again ended earlier than hoped when the world No. 6 lost to Matteo Arnaldi in the third round. Rublev took two days off before putting in the hard yards for the surface switch.
“We start to practice full because we decided that it’ll be the only short 10 days that we can work before it will be grass season,” he explains. “Because on grass, I will not have much time to do good practices. These days I can really focus to build a little bit of game, so I was playing every day and then I came here.”
Rublev holds a career 19-8 mark on grass. On Tuesday, the No. 4 seed opens his campaign against Marcos Giron.
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