The Washington Post - 01.08.2019

(Axel Boer) #1

THURSDAY, AUGUST 1 , 2019. THE WASHINGTON POST EZ M2 D3


BY AVA WALLACE

Felix Auger-Aliassime has been
training so hard and for so many
years on a tennis court that the
18-year-old from Montreal has not
yet found the time to slow down
and get a driver’s license. Luckily
for him, should he need a ride
anywhere around Washington
these next few days, he has a few
volunteer drivers lined up.
“Maybe somebody could be my
co-pilot?” Auger-Aliassime joked
in a French-accented lilt Wednes-
day at a Citi Open fan event after
his 6-4, 3-6, 6-4 second-round win
over Reilly Opelka. Hands shot up
throughout the crowd.
Wednesday’s match, which sets
Auger-Aliassime up for a third-
round meeting with No. 6 seed
Marin Cilic, was the teenager’s
first at the Citi Open. It was theo-
retically an introduction to fans in
Washington who may not have
seen some of Auger-Aliassime’s
biggest moments of the year,
which came in such locales as Indi-
an Wells, Calif., Miami and Rio.
But this year, Auger-Aliassime,
now No. 22 in the world and turn-
ing 19 next week, has become a
known quantity even without log-
ging a major run at a Grand Slam.
That much was clear when he
played Opelka, an American, on
Wednesday and had at least half
the late-afternoon crowd behind
him.
“To receive that kind of support
away from home, even sometimes
in Europe or everywhere in the
world, it’s very special for a guy
like me,” Auger-Aliassime said.


Auger-Aliassime has won fans
the world over thanks to the mile-
stones he has logged at such a
young age. A much-heralded play-
er on the junior circuit, the 6-
foot-4 Canadian broke into the top
100 in February after becoming
the youngest finalist at an ATP 500
tournament in Rio de Janeiro. He
logged his first win over a top-10
player — Stefanos Tsitsipas, the
top-seeded man at the Citi Open —
in March at Indian Wells. He be-
came the youngest man to ever
reach the semifinals of the Miami
Open the tournament after that.
In a spring and summer season
full of young stars emerging on
tennis’s biggest stages, many close
observers of the sport believe Au-
ger-Aliassime is a cut above. When
he broke into the top 200 for the
first time in 2017 when he was 17
years 1 month old, he was the
youngest man to do so since Rafael
Nadal in 2002.
“It’s not normal, what he is do-
ing, at 18,” said Auger-Aliassime’s
coach, Guillaume Marx.
Tall and thin with room to add
muscle, Auger-Aliassime has a
smooth yet powerful all-court
game, with the ability to crack
serves — he hit 12 aces Wednesday
— and turn defense into offense
even against a powerful, 6-foot-11
server such as Opelka. He prefers
to be the aggressor, dictating
points, and is clearly comfortable
at the net. But what stands out
most about Auger-Aliassime is his
preternatural control on the court
and maturity off it.
He lists getting frustrated and
being impatient as his primary
flaws, but he never showed it
Wednesday, even in a tricky sec-
ond set, beyond the occasional
exasperated glance at his coach.
He holds eye contact when he
speaks and can be more reflective
of his short career than many tour
veterans.

“It’s not really on court that I’ll
have an outburst,” Auger-Alias-
sime said. “Just in my head, little
demons in my head tell me like,
‘You should do this better, you
should be doing that instead.’ ”
The ability to keep those de-
mons in check and go about busi-
ness is what his fellow pros have
noticed most.
“He’s 18, but he acts like he’s 35,”
longtime friend Frances Tiafoe
said.
Said Tsitsipas: “I’m not sur-
prised to see him doing well at 18.
He’s got a very bright future. He’s
very humble, very polite. He’s very
— ethical? He does everything the
right way.”
Said fellow Canadian Milos Ra-
onic: “He’s just very professional.
He’s meticulous.”
The son of French Canadian
schoolteacher Marie Auger and
Togolese tennis instructor Sam
Aliassime, he learned tennis from
his father, who began playing as a
young man after European tour-
ists visited Togo and played the
game.
“I don’t have memories of not
being on the court,” Auger-Alias-
sime said. When Auger-Aliassime
started getting serious about ten-
nis when he was around 7 or 8, his
father taught him a visualization
technique.
Every day in practice, he
wouldn’t just go through drills on
court. Auger-Aliassime would vi-
sualize moments in matches in
which the shot they were practic-
ing would come in handy. He
would take the time to think about
why practice was important — be-
cause he is trying to be No. 1 in the

world. Those techniques helped
him stay calm so he could close out
the match against Tsitsipas in
March and make his run in Miami.
They have helped him weather the
intense increase in attention from
journalists around the world, but
especially back home in Canada.
“Every time I’m training or do-
ing something tennis-wise, I al-
ways think, ‘Okay, I’m doing this
for the future to be the best player I
can.’ I’m visualizing myself being
at that level,” Auger-Aliassime
said. “I don’t feel at any time like
I’m not supposed to be here.”
Auger-Aliassime’s two coaches
— Marx and Frederic Fontang,
who split the yearly travel and
have become like second parents
to the young player — have contin-
ued this visualization trend in
practice. The three talk a lot on
court, about the purpose of every
drill and Auger-Aliassime’s goals.
“We had to work on patience,”
Marx said. “He’s very mature, but
at the beginning of the year he was
out of the top 100 and the main
word we had to say always was to
be patient, patient, patient. Don’t
rush the things. They won’t hap-
pen if you rush the things.”
There are reminders that Au-
ger-Aliassime is still new to the
spotlight. After his big win over
Tsitsipas at Indian Wells, he and
his older sister, who he counts as
his best friend, went shopping in
Los Angeles. He bought his sister
Gucci shoes and himself a Tom
Ford sports coat.
“I knew when I came back there
would be TV shows and things and
I wanted to be suited up well,”
Auger-Aliassime said with a
toothy grin. “I just look at it like,
you do something good, some-
times you’re able to treat yourself.
It was good. I was looking good on
TV. Right outfit for the right occa-
sion.”
[email protected]

BY AVA WALLACE
AND MATTHEW GUTIERREZ

Washington native Hailey Bap-
tiste’s short, sweet time at the Citi
Open ended Wednesday with a
6-4, 4-6, 6-3 loss to Kristina
Mladenovic in the second round.
Mladenovic, an experienced tour
pro with one career title, advanc-
es to face qualifier Anna Kalins-
kaya, who defeated 2016 Olympic
gold medalist Monica Puig, 2-6,
7-6 (7-5), 6-4 earlier Wednesday.
Baptiste’s run ended under the
bright lights of Stadium Court in
front of a sparse yet passionate
crowd that tried to spark her
throughout a tiring third set in
which her level dropped consid-
erably. The 17-year-old had won
the first WTA match of her career
the night before over 2017 U.S.
Open finalist Madison Keys and
showed the same controlled pow-
er the second time around.
Baptiste’s serve hovered
around 110 mph all night, and she
also deployed a fabulous kick
serve to much effect. The teen-
ager is quick, with good spin on a
powerful forehand, but Mladen-
ovic, who had 11 double faults
and was off her normally crafty


game, has more experience clos-
ing out matches. She honed in as
Baptiste wilted.
Still, getting to play at the
tournament’s largest venue was a
special moment in Baptiste’s
young career. The Washingto-
nian grew up near Rock Creek
Park Tennis Center and partici-
pated in the Washington Tennis
and Education Foundation’s pro-
gramming. As a part of the
WTEF, which owns the ATP sanc-
tion and is the beneficiary of the
Citi Open, Baptiste would sneak
into the tournament as a child
just to get a peek at the tennis.
“It felt really good playing on
that court. I’ve watched so many
matches there, and so many peo-
ple that I’ve looked up to played
on that court,” Baptiste said. “It
was really cool to be able to play
on the same court.”
Next up, Baptiste plans on
heading to USTA nationals in San
Diego to compete for a wild card
into the main draw of the U.S.
Open.

Davis outlasts Kenin
The grandstand crowd waited
nearly three hours for release,
and as Lauren Davis closed in on

a spot in the Citi Open quarterfi-
nals, the crowd was ready for the
moment. “Come on, Lauren!”
came a yell. “Here we go, LD!”
came another.
When Davis finally sealed the
match, completing a 5-7, 6-3, 6-4
win over fellow American Sofia
Kenin, the crowd stood and
roared.
Davis, a 25-year-old American
and former finalist in Washing-
ton, knocked out the highest
remaining seed in the women’s
draw. Kenin, a 20-year-old Rus-
sian native with American citi-
zenship, is enjoying her finest
year as a professional, including
a third-round win over Serena
Williams in June at the French
Open.
But she became the third top
seed to fall, only a day after No. 1
seed Sloane Stephens and sec-
ond-seeded Keys — and 15-year-
old sensation Coco Gauff — exit-
ed the WTA draw.
Despite winning the first set,
Kenin was not sharp Wednesday
against Davis, a player who
reached a career-high rank of
26th (May 2017) and currently
checks in at 75th in the world.
Throughout the match Davis re-

mained calm while Kenin kicked
a ball, hit one toward the side and
shook her head after unforced
errors.
“I played well. I’m happy to be
doing it and enjoying the tennis,”
Davis said. “I just had a game
plan and I executed it. At times it
wasn’t the prettiest, but I com-
peted really well. Just happy with
the way I fought.”
Davis said she and Kenin have
trained together in Delray Beach,
Fla., and she knew precisely how
Kenin wants to play. Davis dis-
mantled the speedster by staying
aggressive with her backhand
and showing quickness in the
midafternoon humidity.
Neither player is imposing.
Davis stands 5-foot-2, Kenin 5-7.
But each struck the ball well and
played with power.
Davis knows Kenin likes to
dictate the point and countered
her opponent’s approach with a
simple mind-set: “I just tried to
not hit it right at her,” Davis said.
Davis advances to Thursday’s
quarterfinal against American
Jessica Pegula, to whom Davis
lost earlier this season.
[email protected]
[email protected]

CITI OPEN NOTES


D.C. native Baptiste’s run ends in the second round


Rising star Auger-Aliassime moves on


Heralded 18-year-old
gains devoted following
during Citi Open debut

ROB CARR/GETTY IMAGES
Felix Auger-Aliassime, the son of a French Canadian schoolteacher and a Togolese tennis instructor, beat Reilly Opelka on Wednesday.


BY DAVE SHEININ

An MLB trade deadline day
marked by inaction and minor
moves — with mostly third and
fourth starters and middle reliev-
ers changing hands, instead of
aces and closers — began gaining
steam in the hours before the 4
p.m. deadline and finally erupted
in the minutes just after, as news
of some late-arriving deals trick-
led out. And one team, the Hous-
ton Astros, emerged as the day’s
clear winners, if not this fall’s
clear World Series favorites.
While other top contenders
picked around the margins of the
marketplace, or stood pat com-
pletely, the Astros, nearly alone
among the elite teams, made the
kind of bold move that often
means the difference between
winning and losing in October.
Already in possession of one of
the best rotations in the game, as
well as an American League-best
69-39 record entering Wednes-
day, the Astros sent four top
prospects to the Arizona Dia-
mondbacks for veteran right-
hander Zack Greinke — a 35-year-
old ace with a Cy Young Award
and six all-star appearances on
his résumé, not to mention the
ninth-lowest ERA (2.90) in the
majors this season.
Pity the team that runs up
against the Astros in the Division
Series, where their Games 1, 2 and
3 starters, in some order, will be
Justin Verlander, Gerrit Cole and
Greinke — who are a combined
36-13 this season and rank first,
fifth and second, respectively, in
the majors in walks plus hits per
innings pitched (WHIP).
With apologies to the Los An-
geles Dodgers (Hyun-Jin Ryu,
Clayton Kershaw and Walker
Buehler) and Washington Na-
tionals (Max Scherzer, Stephen
Strasburg and Patrick Corbin), no
potential playoff team in either
league could put forward such a
trio in October.
“You just don’t know when
you’re going to assemble a group
this talented again,” Astros Gen-
eral Manager Jeff Luhnow told
reporters. “So you have to take
advantage of it.... We are defi-
nitely going for it this year.”
The Astros’ late-arriving move
— which didn’t even leak until
roughly 15 minutes beyond the 4
p.m. deadline, as paperwork was
approved at Major League Base-
ball’s Manhattan offices — was
reminiscent of their trade two
years ago for Verlander, a move
that ultimately helped them win
the 2017 World Series.
But there was one major differ-
ence: that deal occurred on Aug.
31, at the so-called “waiver” trade
deadline (because involved play-
ers had to first clear waivers) —
which baseball eliminated this
year, consolidating its trade pro-
tocols into a single July 31 dead-
line.
The Astros’ cost to land Grein-
ke was understandably steep. The
four prospects they sent to Ari-
zona — first baseman/outfielder
Seth Beer, right-hander J.B. Bu-
kauskas, right-hander Corbin
Martin and infielder Joshua Ro-
jas — were rated the third-,
fourth-, fifth- and 22nd-best mi-
nor leaguers in their system by
MLB Pipeline.
The Diamondbacks also re-
portedly sent $24 million to the
Astros to partially offset Grein-
ke’s remaining salary in 2019,
plus 2020 and 2021, when his
$35 million salaries will again
rank among the game’s highest.
Greinke also represents a solid
hedge in the event Cole, as most
industry observers expect, de-
parts via free agency after this
season.
Less sexy, but potentially cru-
cial in their own right, were the
Astros’ late-breaking trade with
the Toronto Blue Jays for reliever
Joe Biagini and swingman Aaron
Sanchez. Neither pitcher has
been at his best this year, but
given the Astros’ reputation and
track record for turning around
struggling pitchers, it would sur-
prise few if Biagini and Sanchez,
the latter a former all-star, wound
up contributing for them down
the stretch and in October.
While the Astros moved swiftly
and decisively to add pitching,
their chief competitors in the AL,
the New York Yankees and Min-
nesota Twins, were far less bold.
The Yankees, with their rotation
suddenly compromised by injury
and underperformance, made no
big league deals whatsoever,
while the Twins added a solid
reliever — Sam Dyson from the
San Francisco Giants. The AL
East-leading Yankees, at 67-39,
trailed the Astros by a game in the

overall league standings entering
Wednesday, while the Central-
leading Twins (65-41) were four
back.
Notably, Greinke had the Yan-
kees as one of the 15 teams on the
no-trade list in his contract, but
did not have the Astros on it.
Meanwhile, the National
League lacked the same sort of
signature move that the Astros
pulled in the AL, but the Chicago
Cubs made a late-breaking trade
with the Detroit Tigers for out-
fielder/third baseman Nicholas
Castellanos — who should help
them against left-handed pitch-
ing down the stretch while serv-
ing as insurance as Kris Bryant
deals with a knee injury. Castella-
nos cost the Cubs two pitching
prospects.
The Los Angeles Dodgers,
whose 70-39 record entering
Wednesday led the majors and
stood 6^1 / 2 games clear of their
closest NL pursuer, were also
curiously quiet. Despite an obvi-
ous need for bullpen help, which
had them linked to most if not all
of the top available relief arms on
the market, the Dodgers added
just one modest piece — lefty
Adam Kolarek, who had a 4.19
ERA in parts of three seasons
with the Tampa Bay Rays but has
limited left-handed batters to a
.209 batting average.
The Dodgers would have pre-
ferred all-star lefty Felipe
Vázquez of the Pittsburgh Pirates
— as would any team — but
reportedly balked at the Pirates’
high demands for him.
There seemed to be a lot of that
dynamic going around, in what
was decidedly a seller’s market —
aided by the wide open wild-card
races in both leagues that result-
ed in few teams being clear sell-
ers. Despite rampant rumors and
speculation in the weeks leading
up to Wednesday, top starting
pitchers such as San Francisco’s
Madison Bumgarner, the New
York Mets’ Noah Syndergaard
and Texas’s Mike Minor, as well as
relievers such as Toronto’s Ken
Giles, San Francisco’s Will Smith
and the Mets’ Edwin Diaz stayed
put.
“We tried,” Boston Red Sox
president of baseball operations
Dave Dombrowski told reporters
after his team, out of range of the
Yankees in the East but in the
hunt for a wild card, failed to
address its bullpen shortcom-
ings. “We just didn’t like the
asking prices. We went right to
the very end.”
But as always, moving decisive-
ly at the trade deadline was a
choice some teams made, no mat-
ter the costs, and some didn’t.
While the Astros clearly ruled the
day in the AL, their counterparts
in the NL were the Atlanta
Braves.
Even as the Braves’ battered
bullpen was blowing another
save Wednesday at Nationals
Park — in a game against Wash-
ington that Atlanta ultimately
won in 10 innings — their front
office was pulling off major deals,
completed within minutes of
each other, to acquire a pair of
accomplished relievers: Detroit
Tigers closer Shane Greene, an
all-star this season, and Giants
veteran Mark Melancon, a three-
time all-star.
Those moves, paired with their
trade for Rangers right-hander
Chris Martin the day before,
should overhaul the Braves’ bull-
pen as the team embarks on a
two-pronged mission to hold off
the Nationals in the NL East and
construct a roster capable of tak-
ing on the Dodgers in the NL side
of the playoff bracket.
The dealmaking may have
been slower than in years past,
and the biggest names on the
market — those of both players
and teams — may have stayed put
at the close of Wednesday’s busi-
ness. But as the Astros and Braves
and a handful of other teams
showed, there were major, game-
changing deals there to be made.
All you had to do was say yes.
[email protected]

With Greinke trade,


Houston eyes October


Astros emerge as
deadline day winners
after late blockbuster

Citi Open
Through Sunday at
Rock Creek Park Tennis Center
TV: 1 p.m., Tennis Channel
Results, today’s schedule. D8

ROSS D. FRANKLIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Astros landed veteran
right-hander Zack Greinke, a
Cy Young Award winner who
has made six all-star teams.
Free download pdf