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Sunday, July 6, 2014

Noah Rubin Downs Kozlov to Claim Wimbledon Boys Title; Ostapenko Defeats Schmiedlova to Earn Girls Championship

Noah Rubin, 2014 Wimbledon boys champion

©Colette Lewis 2014--
Wimbledon--

Any unseeded qualifier capturing a Wimbledon title is bound to be cast in the role of underdog, but 18-year-old Noah Rubin's 6-4, 4-6, 6-3 win Sunday afternoon over fellow American Stefan Kozlov could hardly be called an upset.

Once No. 6 in the ITF junior world rankings, Rubin devoted most of 2014 to ITF Men's Circuit events, but with his ATP ranking currently 539, the New Yorker was able to get into qualifying of the French and Wimbledon junior championships in his final year of eligibility.  Although he was careful to say he knew there was a chance he'd lose in qualifying, he was not buying the Cinderella story.

"Nothing said I couldn't be here," said Rubin, who had lost in the first round in his previous two Wimbledon junior championships. "I believe in my competitiveness, my mental capability, and speed. I don't see why not."

Kozlov was the one with the experience in a junior slam final, having played on Rod Laver Arena in the boys championship match at the Australian Open in January, but even he was awed by the atmosphere on Court 1, which was approximately two-thirds full with thousands of ticket-buying fans applauding every winner.

"When I played on Rod Laver it was really quiet," Kozlov said of his experience in Melbourne. "I don't know why, I don't think anyone was into the match, I mean it was 3 and love. It was not even half way filled. Today was an unbelievable atmosphere, one of the best I've ever played."

Rubin agreed.

"I didn't expect it to be that packed," admitted Rubin, who said he wasn't distracted by the cheering crowds watching the men's final on the big screen on the famous hill just outside. "I actually thought nobody was going to come out to the match, but that was not the case. They were all very enthusiastic to be out there. I kind of got the crowd into it a little bit. Just the atmosphere was unbelievable."

Fans didn't side with either player, but after Rubin won the first set, breaking Kozlov for the second time in the set in the fifth game and holding the rest of the way, they were actively supporting Kozlov's push to take the second set.  Rubin went up a break 3-2 in the second set on a dazzling backhand cross court pass, but Kozlov broke right back, taking advantage of two unforced errors by Rubin.

With Rubin serving at 4-5 in the second set, he played one of his worst games of the match, with Kozlov just required to stay in the point long enough for Rubin to make an error.  After maintaining laser-like focus in his quarterfinal and semifinal matches against the big serving Tim van Rijthoven of the Netherlands and Taylor Fritz of the US, Rubin wasn't as sharp against Kozlov, who averaged 102 mph on his first serve.

But Rubin's maturity showed in the final set, especially when he failed to convert two break points with Kozlov serving at 3-3, 15-40. Rubin made two errors on those break points, but when he got a third, he yelled "let's go, right here, come on," urging the crowd to get behind him.  When Kozlov sent a forehand long on the next point, Rubin got his wish, and Kozlov sensed his opportunity was gone.

"I kind of choked at 3-all in the third," said Kozlov. "I gave away a service game which I should have won, and that was it. After that, the match was over. Down 15-40, I played two good points, and got a little bit relieved, and then I shanked a forehand, when I should have hit a winner. Then, on the next point, I played carelessly."

Two hours into the match, Rubin held for 5-3 and was bouncing up and down on the baseline as Kozlov served to stay in the match.  He missed a drop shot to start the game, won the second point with a good first serve, but Rubin snuck in for a rare forehand volley winner to make it 15-30.  A long rally on the next point ended with a forehand winner by Rubin, giving him two match points.  He missed a forehand long on the first one, but Kozlov gave him the second one, netting a routine backhand.  Rubin didn't celebrate wildly, but he did go over to hug his father Eric in the stands before the trophy presentation.

The champion's lap with the trophy is a Wimbledon tradition, but Rubin wasn't quite sure what to do.

"We were both a little confused about that," Rubin said. "I didn't know if that was a tradition or not. I didn't want to break any traditions here, so I just followed their rules."

But Rubin invited Kozlov, a friend and occasional roommate, to join him.

"They told me to go. I was like, Stefan let's go, let's do it together," Rubin said.  "I thought it was interesting, but it was good."



Kozlov then gave Rubin the American flag Kozlov's father had put in his bag before the match, and they joined in displaying it and posing for photographs with it.

"Stefan brought the flag. He said, 'I have a flag, I have a flag.'", Rubin said. "I was like, dig it out. It's been a long time since an all-American final, so might as well support."

Rubin is the first American to win the Wimbledon boys singles title since Donald Young in 2007. He believes the young US boys, seven of whom reached the round of 16 and three the semifinals, could give the country hope for a new set of stars.

"At the end when we were holding the American flag, I was like, this is pretty special," said Rubin. "Hopefully we'll keep rising together and none of us will fall off, and we'll, as a group, get to the top and show the results American wants."

Rubin said his title at Wimbledon does not change his plan to attend college for a one year, at either Wake Forest or Virginia, with that decision to be made in the next few weeks. He will play the Godfrey Illinois Futures, then Kalamazoo, with a week off before to rest and recover from his eight wins in the past ten days.



Unseeded 17-year-old Jelena Ostapenko continued her mastery of grass, defeating No. 8 seed Kristina Schmiedlova of Slovakia 2-6, 6-3, 6-0 to become Latvia's first junior slam champion.

Ostapenko had defeated Schmiedlova in the final of the ITF Grade 1 in Roehampton last Friday 6-2, 6-3, but it took her a bit longer to find her form Sunday afternoon.

"I think my opponent, she maybe knew how to play against me, or she did some research," said Ostapenko, whose previous best result in a junior slam was two quarterfinal appearances at the Australian Open. "She played just much better today than last week, and I'm really happy that I could win."

Schmiedlova said Ostapenko's errors in the opening set gave her hope for a different outcome, but her fatigue, and Ostapenko's winners--40 in total for the match--sealed her fate.

"In the first set I think I played very good and my serve was good, and she did a lot of unforced errors," said Schmiedlova, who turns 17 in August. "In the second set, I was really tired today, my second final in two weeks, and my arm hurts, but it was a great tournament for me, so I'm happy."

Schmiedlova said she tried to change strategy, but once Ostapenko found the range on her groundstrokes nothing worked.

"She's a very aggressive player and it's hard to play against her," said Schmiedlova, younger sister of WTA pro Anna Schmiedlova, who is 19.

Ostapenko admitted to some nervousness at the start, but she also credited the play of Schmiedlova.

"My opponent started the match really well and she was playing really good," said Ostapenko, who has won three $10,000 ITF women's circuit events this year. "I was doing some unforced errors. Then I just tried to come back in the second set and focus on every point, to get my game back. It helped me, and I won."

In the third set, Ostapenko broke Schmiedlova to start the set, then saved two break points in the second game to take a 2-0 lead. After that, Ostapenko went for the lines, and usually hit them, with her backhand especially effective.  As winner after winner came off Ostapenko's racquet, Schmiedlova stayed composed, but had no energy to counteract Ostapenko's power.

Both finalists plan to play the European Championships later this month in Switzerland, and to play both the Youth Olympic Games in China and the US Open Junior Championships.

"I will play some WTA events, like ITF Pro Circuits," said Ostapenko. I think the US Open will be my last junior event."

Reminded that women's finalist Eugenie Bouchard was sitting where she was just two years ago, Ostapenko has a role model only three years older.

"I think she improved really a lot and she's one of the best players on the tour now," said Ostapenko. "I think I have to maybe follow her and try to do the same as she did."

Brazilians Marcelo Zormann and Orlando Luz win boys doubles title
The junior tournament closed with the boys doubles final.  No. 3 seeds Orlando Luz and Marcelo Zormann of Brazil defeated top seeds Kozlov and Andrey Rublev of Russia 6-4, 3-6, 8-6 to claim their first junior slam titles.  Kozlov saved three match points serving at 5-6 in the third set, but when Rublev served at 6-7, he too went down 0-40 and this time the hole was too deep.

Qiu Yu Ye and Tami Grende with ITF President Francesco Ricci Bitti
Earlier in the day, the girls doubles title went to Tami Grende of Indonesia and Qiu Yu Ye of China.  They defeated Maria Bouzkova of the Czech Republic and Dalma Galfi of Hungary 6-2, 7-6(5). Both teams in the finals were unseeded.

For complete draws, see the Wimbledon website.

6 comments:

get real said...

Anyone know height of both of the boys - Rubin and Kozlov. Hope Rubin reconsiders college and focuses on tennis. Just don't buy into the argument that college tennis is the best way to develop- two dual matches a week, if that, vs. rest of the tennis hopefuls playing a much more intense sked and workout. Seems going to college after winning the Zoo and his great showing at the Open held Novikov back. Just my opinion.

Lovethegame said...

For a player of Rubin's pedigree, it is hard to justify going to college if he is absolutely sure he wants to play pro tennis when 80-90% of the top 100 players didn't go to college. It is still a personal decision and many would say college was the best time and experience of one's life. And one or two years will not kill his career. We often hear from college coaches and former players how great college tennis is for development. But, there are far more players who had great junior careers and flamed out in college than players that eventually go on to pro tennis. College gives you many choices and you are surrounded by other people daily who are just figuring out what they want to do with their lives. On the pro tour, you would be surrounded by players who want to be pro tennis players. There were people telling Ginepri, Fish, Raonic, etc that they were crazy to not go to school. If he wants to be a pro, he should become a professional now. If he's not sure, college tennis is a great route to figure things out.

Dave said...

Great to see so many American boys doing well. The quality of Kalamazoo this year should be the best in years. When you consider that the two Wimbledon boys finalists are arguably not even the favorites, considering the success in both ATP and ITF of a lot of the top players.

I am curious to how others who follow junior tennis would power-rank the field going into the Zoo. I would go, 1) Donaldson 2) Rubin 3) Altamirano (4) Paul (5) Fritz (6) Baughmann (7) Mmoh (8) Wiersholm (9) Ponwith (10) Rybakov

Also considered Opelka, Smith, Hiltzik, Nava, Kumar, Kerzerman.

I don't see Kozlov, Tiafoe, or Escobedo on the competitors list, which is too bad. Probably would rank them 4-6 between Altamirano and Paul if they played.

Colette Lewis said...

I don't know about Escobedo, but Tiafoe and Kozlov are planning to play Kalamazoo-- will need wild cards

Brent said...

Unless you have already had a lot of success at the pro level, I think a year or two of college to hedge your bets makes a lot of sense. I think the 'all in' approach can sometimes actually be counter-productive to development, very much dependent on results and the psyche of the kid. Rubin has a bright future but there is a very small chance that he will look back 20 years from now and say 'if only I had gone straight to the pros'.

get real said...

TO brent...You can always go to college. You can always go to a good school unless you need the tennis to get admitted. I doubt Jack Sock is second guessing his decision to go pro vs. playing for UT. haha