
The ATP Tennis Radio Podcast
548 episodes — Page 2 of 11

PODCAST - Southern Hemisphere Special
In the second of our two-back-to-back specials focussing on various aspects of the game, this week Chris Bowers and Jill Craybas are joined by Australian doubles player Matt Ebden and Argentine, Francisco Cerundolo to talk about the logistics of being a player from the Southern Hemisphere having to ply their trade all over the world. Headlines are…MATT EBDEN ON LEAVING AUSTRALIA TO PLAY TENNIS - ‘When I was breaking through I was very quickly into the four month trips to the US and the six month trips to Europe, or at least two, three, four months minimum and that just became the norm. You couldn’t just leave Australia and just do two or three months, the costs made it not worth it, so there were many trips that left me homesick and pretty wrecked’.FRANCISCO CERUNDOLO ON HOW SUCCESS ON COURT LEADS TO A MORE RELAXED LIFE OFF IT - ‘Once you get into the top one hundred, top fifty, it’s easier because you have a calendar that’s almost the same and you know in advance what you are going to play, so that’s easier for us as you can arrange your life. Once you get better and improve your ranking it gets easier off the court and then on the court you feel better because you’re playing bigger events, you win matches, so it’s better overall’.FRANCISCO CERUNDOLO ON HIS DESIRE TO PLAY MORE TOURNAMENTS IN SOUTH AMERICA - ‘We only have two tournaments in Argentina at ATP Tour level in then in Rio and Chile, so there’s almost a month you can play there and I really like it. Some players feel pressure when you play at home, but I don’t feel like that. I hope we can have the Davis Cup in Argentina one day and I know now in Challengers and Futures we have more tournaments in South America, so that’s super nice, so hopefully South America can keep growing up’.- Show presented by Chris Bowers and Jill Craybas- Podcast guests Matt Ebden and Francisco Cerundolo

EXCLUSIVE - Sven Swinnen, Coach Dominic Stricker
Jill Craybas speaks to Dominic Stricker's coach Sven Swinnen about his player's development and about training with Roger Federer as a youngster.

PODCAST - Doubles Special
This week in a slightly different change to the format, Candy Reid and Chris Bowers sat down with World Number One doubles pair, Wesley Koolhof and Neal Skupski to discuss the health of the doubles game and how it might grow and develop in the future. The team also speak to legendary coach and doubles master tactician, Louis Cayer and this year’s Roland Garros doubles champion, Austin Krajicek.WESLEY KOOLHOF ON HOW TO PROMOTE THE DOUBLES GAME - ’The biggest thing is marketing. Obviously the singles guys are the big stars and we also need the big stars to play doubles as well to get more viewers, but I think mainly the marketing side of doubles could be looked at’.NEAL SKUPSKI ON DOUBLES GLOBAL NATURE - ’The points are going to be a lot shorter, quicker around the net, a lot of fun points, it’s a completely different game. It depends on where we go in the world, for example when we go to America we tend to see a lot more fans come just to watch the doubles and places around the world as well, certain countries. Doubles just needs to be shown more on tv to get us out there’.LOUIS CAYER ON HOW THE DOUBLES GAME HAS CHANGED OVER THE YEARS - ’The game has changed a lot. When I started there was less than ten percent of the serves staying back in doubles, now it’s over sixty percent. It’s very normal now for top singles players and even some doubles players to stay back because of the quality of the return’.AUSTIN KRAJICEK ON REACHING NUMBER ONE EARLIER IN THE YEAR - ‘It’s been a goal of mine to win a Grand Slam and being number one ever since I was a kid. Sometimes it didn't feel it’s attainable and it was a surreal thing, just for a week as Wesley Koolhof and Neal Skupski passed me by, but I can always say I was number one and hopefully I can get back there’.- Show presented by Candy Reid- Interviews by Candy Reid, Chris Bowers and Jill Craybas

EXCLUSIVE - Coaching Masterclass From Joe Salisbury's Coach, Justin Sherring
Candy Reid is joined by coach Justin Sherring who works with Joe Salisbury on the ATP Tour, having previously worked with Jack Draper at a young age. Justin talks Candy through what he's learnt from working at the top level.

PODCAST - Alcaraz Dethrones Djokovic At Wimbledon
Former WTA players Jill Craybas and Lucie Ahl, as well as commentator Peter Marcato join presenter Chris Bowers to talk about Carlos Alcaraz dethroning Novak Djokovic in an epic Wimbledon final, as well as to look back over all the other various talking points from a dramatic two weeks of action

EXCLUSIVE - Neal Skupski On Murray, Wimbledon And Being Coached By His Brother
Doubles Number 1 Neal Skupski speaks to Chris Bowers about growing up watching Roger Federer and Andy Murray, his dreams of one day playing at Wimbledon and his views on being coached by his older brother Ken.

EXCLUSIVE - Kyle Edmund On Injury, Wimbledon, Commentary And The Future
Kyle Edmund speaks to Jill Craybas about recovering from wrist Injury, getting into TV commentary and the future.

PODCAST - Halfway Through Wimbledon 2023
TIM HENMAN ON FALLING IN LOVE WITH WIMBLEDON - ‘When I reflect on the whole journey of my mum taking me to Wimbledon when I was six for the first time, I saw Bjorn Borg play in 1981 and that was when I made my one-and-only career decision, so then fifteen years later to play on Centre Court for the first time and to be a British player and have that support, It was always going to be special’.TIM HENMAN ON PLAYING WITHOUT PRESSURE - ‘I always joked that when I was getting blamed for the weather at Wimbledon, expectation was too high! You control the controllables. I’ve always been interested in the psychology of sport and the mind and pressure is all self-inflicted. In 1995 I got disqualified from Wimbledon and I accidentally hit a ball girl when we were playing a doubles first round. The next day I was sharing a flat with another player and he went out and bought all the newspapers and I sat there in the morning reading them all and it was horrific and I said to myself there and then, I will never read a newspaper ever again because it’s their opinion and why would I be influenced by a journalist who’s never played the game, so from that moment on I never listened to outside voices’.TIM HENMAN ON HENMAN HILL - ‘So in 1996 it was when the old court number one was knocked down and when the new court was constructed and there was a lot of moving of earth and they sort of piled the earth and that was when this hill was formed and they put the big screen up and I was playing my matches then and getting into the second week and that was when it became known as Henman Hill and it’s another amazing connection for me with the Championships’.- Show presented by Chris Bowers- Podcast guests Peter Marcato and Jill Craybas- Tim Henman interview by Jill Craybas

EXCLUSIVE - British Doubles Pair Henry Patten And Julian Cash
British Doubles pair Henry Patten and Julian Cash speak to reporter Candy Reid about making the transition from Challenger to main tour.

PODCAST - 2023 Wimbledon Preview
CARLOS ALCARAZ ON PLAYING ON GRASS - 'You know for me it’s great because I just have to focus on the movement and not on my style. If I move well I think it’s going to be great. I used to watch Federer on grass, I watched videos because you want to be like Federer, but it’s impossible, but he is my role model on grass. The elegance that he hits the shots that he plays, he moved really well and made the tennis on grass easy’.HOLGER RUNE ON DREAMING ABOUT PLAYING AT WIMBLEDON - ‘I have always dreamt about winning this tournament and I think one day it will suit me well. I like to play aggressive and come forward to the net, which in theory should work well on the grass, but I want to be happy and not too stressed when I play and it’s very important to stay positive’.MATE PAVIC ON FOLLOWING IN GORAN IVANISEVIC’S FOOTSTEPS - ‘We all grew up in Croatia on Goran’s Wimbledon in 2001 and that kind of sticks to you that Wimbledon is there, that’s Wimbledon and everything else is down, you want to win it since you were a kid, you’re dreaming of it since a kid and it’s a special feeling’.TIM HENMAN ON THE CHANGE HE WOULD MAKE TO THE GRASS SEASON - ‘If I could change one thing in the sport it would be the variation of surfaces. I think we’ve got too uniform, so I would make grass a little quicker. It was becoming a bit or a serving competition when I was playing and was that appealing, but the level of tennis these days is phenomenal, but it’s too one dimensional’.STEFANOS TSITSIPAS ON THE THREAT NICK KYRGIOS POSES - ‘You know Nick Kyrgios is a threat because on a good day he can play great tennis, he doesn’t play all year and then just shows up on one tournament on grass, serves big and plays like he has nothing to lose, so he is a very tricky opponent to play against’.STEFAN EDBERG ON HIS EARLY MEMORIES OF WIMBLEDON - ‘I can still remember the time when I first got to Wimbledon in 1983, when you walk on top of that hill, you actually see Wimbledon, just the site, seeing Wimbledon in front of you was the thing that you dreamt about going to one day’.- Show presented by Chris Bowers- Podcast guest Jill Craybas- Interviews by Richard Connelly, Seb Lauzier, Chris Bowers and Jill Craybas- Edberg & Wilander feature by ATP Uncovered

EXCLUSIVE - Matt Ebden On His Wimbledon 2022 Title
Matt Ebden speaks to Richard Connelly about his run to the Wimbledon doubles title last year alongside fellow Australian, Max Purcell.

PODCAST - Alcaraz, Bublik, Federer, Korda, Krajicek And Many More
CARLOS ALCARAZ ON RETURNING TO WORLD NUMBER ONE BY WINNING QUEENS - ‘Right now I’m feeling better then at the beginning of the week and of course recovering the number one spot give you extra motivation going into Wimbledon. It gives you extra confidence, but it doesn’t change too much if I play Wimbledon as number two or number one’.ALEXANDER BULIK ON WINNING THE TITLE IN HALLE - ‘Well it means the world to me. I’ve been struggling for health and now having this for a reward, I don’t take it for granted. I thought it would be nice to win this tournament one day and I’m really, really happy’.ROGER FEDERER ON TENNIS TODAY - ‘I’m very surprised by how often and frequently I check scores, three times a day maybe, I’m really into it. I think there’s some great matches going on and I think the level of play is going up more and more, again and again and it’s nice to see the new generation challenging the likes of Novak and Rafa’.SEB KORDA ON RECOVERING FROM HIS WRIST INJURY - ‘Hoping that my wrist gets used to playing again and hopefully I don’t have so many aches and pains. I was a little worried coming into the grass season because the ball slides a little more on the grass and you can catch it later, but everything is going well so far’.ALFIE HEWETT ON HIS POSITIVE MINDSET - ‘Obviously I’ve got this condition and was told I have to be in a wheelchair, so obviously as a seven-year-old that was very difficult to process but it’s made me learn a lot about myself, strength can come in many different ways and It’s all about perception in many ways. You can perceive a situation to be a lot worse than it is and I’ve learnt with the tennis to be more optimistic about what’s around the corner’.COACH MIKE RUSSELL ON HOW GRASS-COURT TENNIS HAS CHANGED FROM WHEN HE WAS PLAYING - ‘Grass is exponentially slower. My first Wimbledon you couldn’t even have a rally from the baseline, it was literally who could get to the net faster, all serving and returning, so now there’s a lot more movement, you really have to have good leg strength and good mobility, flexibility, because you’re put in awkward positions because of some of the bounces and that’s really been the biggest change I’ve seen on the grass’.PHYSIO WOLFGANG OSWALD ON GRASS-COURT FITNESS - ‘We can’t get as much volume gym-wise because you’re coming straight from clay. It’s tough to do the grass court stuff at the end of the clay, so you have to micro-dose some stuff it, some pre-hab in the warm-up, some strengthening stuff, you can just go, like in other sports, a few week’s of lead-up, we don’t have that luxury’.RICHARD KRAJICEK ON PETE SAMPRAS - ‘We played ten times and I beat him six times. I liked playing against him and because of my serve I wasn’t afraid of anybody and his coach said to my coach that he didn’t like playing me because he didn’t get the locker room win’.PLUS…GRASS-COURT TENNIS FEATURE BY ATP MEDIA AND ANDREY RUBLEV FEATURE BY ATP UNCOVERED

EXCLUSIVE - Paul Haarhuis On Dutch Tennis
Holland David Cup Captain Paul Haarhuis speaks to our reporter Richard Connelly about how the game is progressing in the country.

PODCAST - Sliding From Clay To Grass
RICHARD KRAJICEK ON THE CHANGE TO HIS GAME THAT IGNITED HIS CAREER - ‘I changed to a one-handed backhand and it wasn’t that great a shot, It didn’t make a big improvement in my game, but what it did do is that it was so vulnerable that people were attacking my backhand, so the only way to avoid someone coming into the net on my backhand is if I beat them to it and that’s when I became a serve and volley player’. DUTCH JOURNALIST DAVID AVAKIAN ON TENNIS IN HOLLAND - ’Tennis is the second sport, Football is the number one and then you have things like Field Hockey and Cycling, but it grew during covid again and it’s been paired with Padel a lot, but I prefer the balls on the strings, it’s just better then that flat thing’.COACH MARIUSZ FYRSTENBERG ON TENNIS IN POLAND - ‘A lot of things changed with Agnieska Radwanska started to play well, then we had Jerzy Janowich who was an iconic player and right now Iga Swiatek and Hubie Hurkacz are here, so I think we’re safe for years to come’.PLUSHolger Rune builds his perfect player, assorted players make their grass-court predictions, Hubert Hurkacz speaks about his relationship with food and commentators Chris Bowers, Mark Woodforde and Lucie Ahl try to name what the world’s top five will look like in five years time #top5infive- Podcast presented by Seb Lauzier- Interviews by Kate Flory, Seb Lauzier, Richard Connelly- Features by ATP Uncovered and Kate Flory

EXCLUSIVE - Austin Krajicek On His Love For Paris And Ultra Running
2023 Roland Garros champion Austin Krajicek speak to Chris Bowers about his love for playing in Paris and how his ultra-running compliments his tennis fitness.

PODCAST - Djokovic Wins Historic 23rd Major Title
MARK WOODFORDE ON NOVAK DJOKOVIC'S PLACE IN HISTORY - ‘For me that’s the tie-break between the trio, Federer, Nadal and Djokovic, the amount of Grand Slams and they all deserve to have that title, the greatest of all-time, but he has elevated himself alone finally. He was the third person in this group, so it has been a tremendous journey until now where he’s in the clear’.MARK WOODFORDE ON CASPER RUUD - ‘He’s the one that’s won the most clay court matches recently, the most clay court tournaments and he’s learnt from losing to Nadal last year and if Novak wasn’t here this year, along with Nadal’s absence, the Norwegian could have been lifting the trophy’.LUCIE AHL ON THE DJOKOVIC v ALCARAZ MATCH - ‘It was an unbelievable two sets and I think Djokovic would have admitted that physically he was struggling after two sets and I didn’t expect that to happen to Alcaraz, so I think we’re going to remember that Alcaraz cramped and forget what happened in the first two sets and also perhaps forget that we should never write off Djokovic’.ALEX CORRETJA ON CARLOS ALCARAZ’S PARENTS - ’They educated him in a way that he feels like he’s not more important than anyone else and they also let the coaches do their job and I think this is very important and of course, I think this is very important, they tell him everyday how important it is to be grateful to people and to be well educated’.ROLAND GARROS DOUBLES CHAMPION AUSTIN KRAJICEK ON PARIS - ‘Paris is now officially my favourite city and continues to deliver, so I would absolutely say it’s my favourite place to play at the moment and it’s just an amazing venue. I really have a good feeling here in Paris and we like to play on clay and it suits our game well and I think we’ve been playing some good stuff’.- Podcast presented by Chris Bowers- Podcast guests Mark Woodforde and Lucie Ahl- Interviews by Chris Bowers

EXCLUSIVE - Jan Zielinski On His Doubles Career
Polish player Jan Zielinski speaks to Candy Reid about teaming up with French player Hugo Nys and doing well at the 2022 US Open and 2023 Australian Open.

PODCAST - Halfway Through Roland Garros 2023
CHRISTOPHER CLAREY ON RAFAEL NADAL’S EXPLORATORY SURGERY - ‘I’m assuming one of Nadal’s specialists could only do it on that day because no one in their right mind would chose to do exploratory surgery the night before their birthday. It sounded like it was more an investigative thing, but it’s very rare to do it, so I think Rafa’s grasping for answers a little bit right now’.LUCIE AHL ON THE POTENTIAL OF ALCARAZ PLAYING DJOKOVIC IN THE SEMI-FINALS - ‘We’ve only had one match where they’ve played each other because of various reasons, so I think everyone is hoping that it happens, I’m looking forward to it. Alcaraz is playing unbelievably well. Djokovic hasn’t dropped a set, but every match he’s had to go to at least one tie-break and there’s a potential issue with his leg, but as we’ve seen so far, I think he’ll find his way through and I don’t think that one will disappoint if they do make it through to the semis’.CHRISTOPHER CLAREY ON GAEL MONFILS - ‘Like all of us I’ve followed Monfils throughout his career and he is a big moment, big setting character and obviously all the things he’s been through with his wife and Ukraine and having his first child, and Gael’s an empath, so I’m sure he’s felt all of that and so all of the emotions when he came back from 4-0 down in the fifth the other night, that was extraordinary as he shook Baez’s hand and then he just lost it in a beautiful way’.LUCIE AHL ON SOME LESSER-KNOWN NAMES PROGRESSING IN THE DRAW - ’The depth in the men’s game has got a lot stronger and the Challenger level is tough and we’re starting to see players make the transition through. It’s easy sometimes to see players like Alcaraz and think that’s everyone’s path. Once the lower ranked players start to come through and you see a few more shocks, they will start to get some belief as well’.CHRISTOPHER CLAREY ON TAYLOR FRITZ SHUSHING THE FRENCH CROWD - ’That was bottled up that reaction he had at the end of that match. He had has his full dose of the french language there after three-plus hours, he’d had more than enough and In some ways I don’t blame him. With someone like Taylor that fire had to come out, but we’ll see what price he has to pay with the french public going forward, because they’ll remember that, him shushing them after beating their player’.Podcast presented by Chris BowersPodcast guests - former New York Times Tennis Correspondent, Christopher Clarey and former British number one, Lucie Ahl

EXCLUSIVE - Mansour Bahrami On His Love Of Tennis
One of the game's great entertainers speaks to reporter Jill Craybas about how he forst got into tennis and his continuing love affair with the game.

PODCAST - 2023 Roland Garros Preview
STEFANOS TSITSIPAS ON COMPARING CARLOS ALCARAZ TO RAFAEL NADAL - ‘He gets to every ball on the court, he covers pretty much half of the planet when he plays, so they have a lot of similarities and I think he can be the next Rafael Nadal of our tennis’.HOLGER RUNE ON WHETHER HE’S A PERFECTIONIST - ‘I am, especially on the practice court, match court not as much, which is good, because I feel like on the match it’s not about how it looks and how you hit the ball, it’s more about finding solutions to win. I don’t think about tennis 24/7, but I think about what’s necessary for my tennis 24/7’.STAN WAWRINKA ON THE ADVICE HE’D GIVE TO HIS YOUNGER SELF - ‘Keep dreaming, keep passionate about the game that you love. Don’t forget it’s a game that you started to enjoy with your friends. From a young age I always put a lot of pressure on myself and I think it was the pressure that I put on myself that I was struggling to deal with completely’.HUGO NYS ON HIS DOUBLES PARTNERSHIP WITH JAN ZIELINSKI - ‘It’s not easy to find a good doubles partner. It’s like in life you know because you have to get along on the court, off the court and when you lose tough matches you have to stay together. I’ve spent five years on the tour in doubles and this is the first time I’ve built something big with someone’.- Show presented by Chris Bowers and WTA player Tamira Paszek- Interviews by Ursin Caderas and Candy Reid- Features by ATP Uncovered and Kate Flory

EXCLUSIVE - Marc-Andrea Huesler On Life In The Top 100
Chris Bowers speaks to Swiss number 1 Marc-Andrea Huesler about life as the top-ranked Swiss male tennis player and how he copes with the different levels of the tour.

PODCAST - Daniil Medvedev's First Clay Court Title
DANIIL MEDVEDEV ON HIS GROWING APPRECIATION OF CLAY COURTS - ‘Friendship, I don’t think I love it, I love hard courts, my only love, in tennis of course, but I definitely like clay courts much more now’.HOLGER RUNE ON HIS DESIRE TO BE THE BEST - ‘If you try to see always the big picture, rather than the small picture, you will understand why I have to do this. Without tennis I’m sure I wouldn’t have the same mentality as I have today, so it’s kind of built who I am and I fell in love with it from the beginning’.STEFANOS TSITSIPAS ON SACRIFICES - ‘I have been very professional in my everyday life and somehow I wish I could be more relaxed in that sense and let go, but at the same time it’s a blessing that I get to be so professional and get to experience pressure in my everyday life, because I feel it makes me better, but there are times when you get fed up with the routines’.FABIAN MAROZSAN ON HIS VICTORY OVER ALCARAZ - ‘Everything was perfect, the crowds, the weather, it was amazing and I don’t know what happened during the points. I just hit back every ball and just tried to do my best and it just happened, so I don’t know what to say. He’s the best in the sport so I’m really happy about this’.MAGDA LINETTE’S COACH MARK GELLARD ON HOW TENNIS SHOULD USE DATA MORE - ’Tennis is quite far behind in a lot of these things and I think as coaches we don’t use half the resources we should be using and a lot of it is how we interpret the information. What I’ve done with Magda the last few years if focus less on the opponent and instead focus on what we do well. Statistics are good for two reasons, they tell you what almost always happens and what hardly ever happens’.FELICIANO LOPEZ ON NADAL - ‘I feel sad that at this stage of his career he can’t do what he really loves to do, which is playing tennis. I saw Roger Federer last year when he had to retire and the way he did it was very sad and I just hope this isn’t going to be the same for Rafa and whenever he recovers from his injury it’s going to be great news and I just want him to play tennis and finish his career on his own terms and I don’t think it’s going to be nice to see another case similar to Roger’.JANNIK SINNER ON HOW PLAYERS VIEW THE ABSENCE OF RAFAEL NADAL - ‘You can see it from the draw, when you see Rafa or Novak in the draw it makes a little bit of difference for sure because you know what they are capable of, but in another way, slowly the new generation is coming to mix up the draw, so it is good’.NOVAK DJOKOVIC ON THE NEW GENERATION - ’New generation is here already. Alcaraz is number one from Monday and I think it’s good for our sport that we have new faces and new guys coming up, it’s normal. I’m personally still trying to hang in there with all of them and I still have the hunger to keep going, so let’ see how far I’m going to play’.- Show presented by Seb Lauzier- Interviews by Ursin Caderas and Candy Reid- Features by ATP Uncovered and Kate Flory

EXCLUSIVE - Mariusz Fyrstenburg On Tennis In Poland
Poland's Davis Cup Captain Mariusz Fyrstenberg speaks to Candy Reid about his own career and tennis in the country.

PODCAST - Djokovic, Alcaraz, Fognini, Sinner, Musetti, Nardi, Edberg & More
NICOLA PIETRANGELI ON THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN HIS PLAYING DAYS AND TODAY - ‘It’s a different game. Before you had to know how to play tennis, this is a physical game. Before you had talent and then you became an athlete, today you’re an athlete and if you have talent it’s better’.NOVAK DJOKOVIC ON HIS BIGGEST RIVAL - ‘I can’t take anybody else but Nadal as my biggest rival, as long as Nadal is playing, as long as I’m playing, Nadal is always my biggest rival regardless of the ranking or what’s going on on tour. I have tons of respect for Alcaraz and there’s some other players, but Nadal and myself go back a long time, so definitely he comes in front’.CARLOS ALCARAZ ON WINNING THE LAUREUS WORLD BREAKTHROUGH OF THE YEAR AWARD - ‘It was amazing but it was crazy for me to receive that big award and being surrounded by great athletes, great people, it was unbelievable for me. As Federer, Rafa, Djokovic did, they won multiple Laureus Awards, but the big ones, but starting from the bottom, it’s great to represent tennis’.FABIO FOGNINI ON RETAINING THE FIGHTING SPIRIT - ‘The last few years after my injury and after the pandemic of course, I didn’t win so many matches, but I want to make a present to myself and I don’t want to close my career with injuries. I have something special here in my head, so I would like to fight until I reach this goal’.JANNIK SINNER ON HIS SELF-BELIEF - ‘I have a different mindset and I’m not scared to say that I can win big, big matches. I’m here, I can do it, but you have to have the right respect for every single player and emotional-wise it’s not easy, but I want to push myself to the limits and I know I can show some very good tennis’.LORENZO MUSETTI ON HIS MEMORIES OF WATCHING FEDERER IN ROME - ‘I have one picture in my head that reminds me of me watching Federer playing doubles on the courts that are now practice courts and I was looking at him like my inspiration and now when I play on that court, I always remember him playing there and moving and having the steps on court where I’m going now’.LUCA NARDI ON LEARNING TO ADAPT HIS GAME AT THE START OF HIS CARRER - ‘For sure my gaming is changing a little bit. I learned to be more of a defender sometimes because I work a lot physically and I won a lot of matches when I didn’t play that well but I had the physical power’.ITALIAN TENNIS FEDERATION’S LUCA SBRASCINI ON GETTING KIDS INVOLVED IN TENNIS - ‘We’ve had 60,000 kids during these two weeks and for us that’s a big success. The secret is to create an event, within the big event and our main objective is to involve a lot of kids, we reach out to clubs and schools and we have a lot of projects that we involve within these events’.STEFAN EDBERG ON ROME - ‘It’s a good place to place to play, you know you feel like tennis belongs here, it’s like playing at Wimbledon, that’s where tennis belongs as well and there are certain places in the world where you feel that this is special and this is one of the places’.STEFAN EDBERG’S RECIPE FOR SUCCESS - ‘Well first of all you need to have good people around you and you need to have a vision and you need to have a team that looks after you on and off the court and you need to keep your passion going, but you also need a little bit of luck’.- Podcast presented by Seb Lauzier- Interviews by Ursin Caderas, Richard Connelly and Jill Craybas

EXCLUSIVE - Mark Gellard On Coaching Magda Linette
Reporter Candy Reid speaks to coach Mark Gellard about working with world number 19, Magda Linette, Life on tour and how he got into tennis coaching in the first place.

PODCAST - Alcaraz Defends Madrid Title
CARLOS ALCARAZ ON RETAINING HIS MUTUA MADRID OPEN TITLE - ‘For me it’s so special to lift the title here in Madrid, in front of my home crowd, in front of my family, my friends, it’s a thing I will never forget’.JOURNALIST DAVID AVAKIAN ON JAN-LENNARD STRUFF’S REMARKABLE RUN TO THE FINAL IN MADRID - ‘He told me that he wasn’t an early riser like Carlos is, he wasn’t that good when he was younger and he’s been putting his game together over the years, 2019 is a year that he keeps pointing to as a great year for him, so it’s just a very careful way of building a career’.JANNIK SINNER ON LORENZO MUSETTI - ‘It’s always tough to play against a friend and it’s tough for both of us when we have to play against each other. I feel like he is improving a lot and it’s always nice to see where the level is and I have the feeling that every time I play against him I can see where I have to improve and I can give him the same feeling’.MATTEO BERRETTINI ON HAVING NEVER PLAYED JANNIK SINNER AT TOUR LEVEL - ‘In general our relationship is great, we text each other, we practice together, when we have the chance we play doubles together, so it’s really like a healthy relationship and we help each other to raise our level and that’s why it would be even better to play against each other’.LLOYD GLASSPOOL AND HARRI HELIOVAARA ON THEIR SLIDING DOORS MOMENT IN ROME LAST YEAR - ‘Without it of course it would have been a different kind of spring because we would have had less points and probably wouldn’t get into one or two tournaments because our ranking wouldn’t have been that high, but most importantly we wouldn’t have had the confidence of beating the number one team in the world’.- Podcast presented by Seb Lauzier- Podcast guest - Tennis commentator and journalist, David Avakian- Interviews by Seb Lauzier, Ursin Caderas and Richard Connelly

EXCLUSIVE - David Witt, Coach Of Jessica Pegula
Candy Reid speaks to David Witt about what he's learnt coaching current WTA star, Jessica Pegula as well as the things he took from coaching Venus Williams for ten years. In this wide-ranging interview, Candy starts by asking David about his views on Frances Tiafoe performoing the role of hitting partner to Jessica at the United Cup at the beginning of the year.

PODCAST - Rublev, Rune, Zverev, Shelton, Medvedev, Murray, Shelbayh and Witt
ANDREY RUBLEV ON WINNING HIS FIRST MASTERS 1000 TITLE IN MONTE-CARLO - ‘I feel a bit looser because I’ve done something that I was looking for a long time and I feel a bit less weight on the shoulder, but there is so much work that I need to do and now we’re already in Madrid’.ANEKE RUNE ON HOLGER’S DEVELOPMENT - ‘I think for us it’s been step-by-step and now it’s just bigger titles. Two years ago it was Challengers and Future titles, which for us in the team was still big, but looking at his level now, the results match the level he has today’.HOLGER RUNE ON HIS PASSION - I’ve gotten the chance to show my passion on the court and show who I am when I play and I like it you know. It’s part of my game style to have this energy on the court and I feel good when I’m pumped and I feel good to play this way’.ALEXANDER ZVEREV ON WINNING TOURNAMENTS MORE THAN ONCE - ‘I think there are places that suit some players better then others and it’s also like a comfortable place where you’re going back and know you’re going to play well. There’s definitely places where you step on the court and you know you’re going to feel better than the previous week.BEN SHELTON ON GETTING USED TO LIFE ON TOUR - ‘Every place that I get to is a new experience, you know going to the Lisbon airport, that was the first airport in Europe that I’ve been in, but I’m lucky that my coach and physio have done this many times, so to have them with me to help guide me is very, very important’.DANIIL MEDVEDEV ON WHY HIS GAME ISN’T SUITED TO CLAY - ‘I could talk for hours but first of all you have to adjust to every shot because every bounce could be a bad bounce and you never know when it’s coming and some players are easy to adapt to this, but that’s not my case. I like when it’s a clean stroke and that’s what I need in my game. The movement is definitely different, because you have to slide and be ready for the next shot and that’s what I do not good enough’.ABDULLAH SHELBAYH ON HIS DESIRE TO REPRESENT ARABIC PLAYERS - ‘I try to not put too much pressure on myself but having Ons Jabeur and Malek Jaziri and Ons as one of the best in the world is very inspiring for me. Honestly to see more Arabic players coming to the tour is very special and I hope I can reach the heights that Ons has reached and even more hopefully’.DAVID WITT ON ON THE BENEFITS ON JESSICA PEGULA TRAINING WITH FRANCES TIAFOE - ‘We hit with Frances Tiafoe one time and I think it’s good for both of them because Frances is so happy-go-lucky, so it let’s Jess know that you don’t always have to be so serious, but at the same time Jess makes him be more serious, so they bounce off each other’.PLUS, ANDY MURRAY ANSWERS FANS QUESTIONS IN AN ATP UNCOVERED FEATURE - Presenter: Seb Lauzier- Interviews by Seb Lauzier, Ursin Caderas, Paul King and Candy Reid- Andy Murray Feature by ATP Uncovered

EXCLUSIVE - Christian Zahalka On Coaching Yoshihito Nishioka
Christian Zahalka speaks to Jill Craybas about coaching Yoshihito Nishioka and what he's learnt from decades in the game.

PODCAST - Masterful Alcaraz Makes It Title Number Two In Barcelona
CARLOS ALCARAZ ON WINNING THE BARCELONA OPEN BANC SABADELL TITLE - ’This is something that I was talking about with my team before the match, to stay relaxed, to want to play the tough moments, to forget the mistakes and to be myself on the court’.STEFANOS TSITSIPAS ON LEARNING FROM PREVIOUS DEFEATS TO RAFAEL NADAL IN BARCELONA - ’The first time I played him I just wasn’t ready, I didn’t pick it up yet, but the second time was the most memorable one in terms of the intensity that I brought onto the court and the experience that I had from previous encounters. He brought the best out of me that day and I was so close and it was so disappointing to finish that match with a loss’.TOMMY ROBREDO ON RAFAEL NADAL AND BARCELONA - ‘Well it’s his club also, so maybe the people don’t know but Rafa, the license of his tennis is from the membership of this club, obviously he had been winning here for twelve years, but he has been winning everywhere on clay, but it’s special that we felt that Rafa is part of the club, part of the city and that makes it special as well’.FELICIANO LOPEZ ON MAKING BARCELONA PART OF HIS FAREWELL YEAR - ‘I came to Barcelona when I was very young and I used to come here to train with the pros because they were calling the federation and asking for some young players that they needed to play with and I used to come here and I was dreaming that one day I could play this tournament and it’s very nice that I can come here twenty yers after my first time here to be able to play one more time’.DR RUTH ANDERSON ON PLAYERS MENTAL HEALTH - ‘Mental Health affects one in four people in the general population, experiencing mental health symptoms is an everyday experience for all of us, so it’s a common experience and athletes aren’t immune to that and certainly need to manage that and on top of that there is the increasing recognition around your psychological ability being just as important as your physical, technical and tactical ability to work on’. FRANCES TIAFOE ON BEING SUPPORTED BY LEBRON JAMES - ‘LeBron has said some cool stuff to me like keep going, keep believing, you know, cliched stuff but it means so much more coming from him and you know, it’s just cool for those upper echelon guys to see me as one of the best. He’s like that guy for me, you know everyone has that guy and no matter how many times I see him it’ll never be normality for me and little things like that is probably why I won the tournament in Houston’. TAYLOR FRITZ ON GETTING USED TO PLAYING ON CLAY - ‘I feel like I’ve never really hated being on red clay, green clay, can’t stand it, but red clay, I’ve always like it, maybe not my best surface but you know I feel like I’ve had some good results on it, but no matter how good I feel on clay, for a lot people it’s what they grew up on and I’ll never feel as good on it as they do, but I just have to make up for it by playing even better’.- Podcast presented by Seb Lauzier- Interviews by Ursin Caderas, Jill Craybas and Richard Connelly- Barcelona 70th Anniversary Feature by ATP Media- Commentary by Nick Lester

EXCLUSIVE - Ruth Anderson, The ATP'S New Director Of Well Being And Mental Health
Jill Craybas sits down with Ruth Anderson, the ATP'S new Director of Well Being and Mental Health to dicsuss every aspect of a player's mindset.Taken from the MindHQ.com website:Ruth has developed her expertise working as a psychologist and manager within welfare services, the mental health sector, and elite sport. With unique experience in both mental health and high performance sport, Ruth understands what is required to make change, and achieve maximum potential in all areas of life.Ruth’s career began leading teams in the welfare sector, providing services to disadvantaged young people and families, and delivering a range of psychological services and programs on mental health units for children, adolescents, and young adults. Transitioning her skills into the high performance sport environment, Ruth has worked within the elite sport industries in both Australia and the United Kingdom, and at all levels of international competition. For 8 years Ruth worked at the Australian Institute of Sport as a Senior Sport Psychologist, and established and managed the national athlete counselling service. Working across a variety of sports, and teams, including the Great Britain and Australian Cycling Teams, Tennis Australia, Paddle Australia and Diving Australia Ruth gained extensive expertise in elite sport performance. Holding roles at the last four Olympic Games, Ruth was the Head of Psychology Services for the Australian Olympic Team at the Olympic Games in Beijing, 2008 and London, 2012; the Lead Psychologist for the British Cycling Team for the Olympic Games in Rio, 2016; and Director of Psychology for the Australian Olympic Team for the Tokyo Olympic Games, 2021. Now based in London, Ruth is the Director Player Wellbeing for the ATP Tour.Ruth’s PhD investigated automaticity as the optimal psychological state for peak performance, and her research with elite athletes has been published internationally. Ruth’s research portfolio includes projects and publications across a range of areas related to sport performance and well-being including peak performance, automaticity, psychological recovery, athlete homesickness, and pain assessment and coping. Applied publications have been the areas of critical incident management and grief and loss. Ruth’s book, The Cycling Mind, has been published by Bloomsbury Publications, London.

PODCAST - Rublev Rallies To Maiden Masters 1000 Title
ANDREY RUBLEV ON WINNING HIS FIRST MASTERS 1000 TITLE - ‘I have tears man, I don’t know what to say to be honest, I’m just happy finally, struggling so much to win these Masters 1000 tournaments. Losing 4-1 and love 30, sitting with break points and thinking there is no chance to win and then…I don’t know man’. Today it was, if you’re going to lose, at least believe until the end and in the end I was able to do it’.HOLGER RUNE ON DEALING WITH EXPECTATIONS - ‘People are starting to expect more and more, but most of all I have high ambitions within myself and that’s the most important thing, but for sure, you’ve just got to improve as much as you can every day and if you think about winning and losing too much, that can just distract your mindset’.JANNIK SINNER ON HIS PHYSICALITY - ‘We have worked so much in the off season, in the gym and in the physical part which give me a lot of confidence now. Also tennis-wise I think it gives me something new, so let’s see how it goes on the clay season’. LORENZO MUSETTI ON BEATING NOVAK DJOKOVIC - ‘I’m struggling not to cry because it’s really an emotional win because it was a really long match, not easy conditions, so I’m really, really proud of myself and I’m struggling not to cry because it’s still a dream for me’.NOVAK DJOKOVIC ON THE MASTERS 1000 CATEGORY - ’Those are the biggest events we have on the ATP Tour and you want to play your best at the Masters 1000 events. Of course I pride myself with the amount of tournaments at the 1000 category that I’ve won and I always try to go further’.MATT EBDEN ON THE EXCITEMENT OF PLAYING ON TOUR - ‘It’s so exciting to see all of our Masters tournaments grow and grow and grow. Obviously a number of them going to two weeks now and becoming like huge features on the calendar that all the fans can follow, so I suppose the ATP are trying to grow them in line with the Slams so that we have the Slams, the Masters and all our big tournaments all year round and not just the Slams’.CASPER RUUD ON HIS INCONSISTENT FORM - ‘It’s frustrating but at the same time, I’m not going to say I predicted it was going to happen, but your whole career is not going to be a joyful ride, there will be some down and hopefully more ups then downs, but the last month hasn’t been what I wanted, but hopefully we’re on a new surface and I can shake things off’.PLUS IN AN EXCLUSIVE FEATURE, ATP MEDIA TAKE A LOOK AT HOW THE TOP 10 HAS A VERY DIFFERENT FEEL TO IT IN 2023AND…SPORTS STARS USAIN BOLT AND GEORGE RUSSELL SAMPLE THE ATMOSPHERE AT THE MONTE-CARLO COUNTRY CLUB- Podcast presented by Seb Lauzier- Interviews by Paul King and Richard Connelly- Features by ATP Media

EXCLUSIVE - Sebastiaan Van Bentum On Tallon Griekspoor's Improved Fitness
Fitness coach Sebastiaan Van Bentum speaks to Richard Connelly about working with top 40 player, Tallon Griekspoor.

PODCAST - 2023 Clay Court Swing Preview
ALEJANDRO DAVIDOVICH FOKINA ON WHAT HE’S BEEN WORKING ON OFF COURT - ‘It’s more things in my serve, the fear that I had when I was a kid, the tense moments when I have the match and it turns around and goes to the opponent, it’s not easy. Some player's focus for 24 hours on tennis, but I don’t like’. SEBASTIAAN VAN BENTUM ON WORKING ON TALLON GRIEKSPOOR’S DURABILITY - ‘He is a really explosive guy, really strong, pure muscle, but he was not always available for tournaments and you can be the best in the world, but if you are not available for tournaments, you cannot win points, so the challenge was to get him to be able to play twenty five tournaments in a year and at least three tournaments in a row’.ALEXANDER ZVEREV ON HIS RETURN FROM INJURY - ‘It’s kind of been a break, I’ve been injured, not dead so I’ve not been reborn again or something like that. It’s still the same old me and I still want to win these tournaments and I’m going to do everything I can to do so’.PLUS ATP UNCOVERED GET PREDICTIONS FROM A NUMBER OF TOP PLAYERS AHEAD OF THE CLAY SEASON- Podcast presented by Chris Bowers- Interviews by Jill Craybas, Richard Connelly and Seb Lauzier- Clay Court feature by ATP Uncovered

EXCLUSIVE - Tennis Writer Joel Drucker
Over the course of his 35-year writing career, Oakland-based Joel Drucker’s work has appeared in a variety of media outlets. These include broadcast venues such as HBO, CBS, Tennis Channel, as well as dozens of print publications, ranging from the New York Times to Tin House, Huffington Post, Salon, the San Diego Reader, Los Angeles Magazine, Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle, East Bay Express, Cigar Aficionado, Forbes FYI and People. His primary topics have been sports, popular culture and business. In this engaging conversation with ATP Podcast reporter and former WTA player Jill Craybas, Drucker speaks about his favourite tennis memories and where he thinks the game is heading.

PODCAST - Medvedev, Sinner, Mmoh, Eubanks, Baez & Drucker
DANIIL MEDVEDEV RETURNING TO HIS DOMINANT BEST - ‘Confidence, I managed to work hard and last year I didn’t manage to be consistent throughout the whole tournament many times and here In Miami I managed to play a lot of great matches throughout the tournament’.JANNIK SINNER ON CARLOS ALCARAZ - ‘Every time we play we have good matches, every time until now is a close match and so I learn many things from him and I learn many things from him, he makes ma a better player and I think at the moment he is on a higher level’. JOURNALIST JOEL DRUCKER ON WHERE THE GAME IS GOING - ‘We see people like Carlos Alcaraz and so I think the game is going to be more all-court hopefully. I hear a phrase often, the game of today and I don’t want to be the game of today, I want to be the game of tomorrow. The game of tomorrow is going to continue to involve some of these incredibly lethal ground strokes, however there will also be slices and players coming into the net’.CHRISTOPHER EUBANKS ON LEARNING FROM SERENA WILLIAMS - ‘I’ve never seen a laser-like focus like practicing with her and it also made me a lot more focussed. The way that she could dial in on every single ball is even something i’d be missing on my own practices. Just having that awareness that I need to lock in, I need to focus I think was the biggest thing and there’s not that many people that I’ve practised with who have had that level of focus’.SEBASTIAN BAEZ ON LEARNING FROM HIS COACH, SEBASTIAN GUTIERREZ - ‘I have found on him, like a teacher and he’s not like a normal teacher, he’s my coach on life. You have a career of a tennis player of maybe fifteen years, or ten and after that you are a person. He always tries to teach me that it’s impossible to be a good player if you’re not a good person’.PLUS, MICHAEL MMOH TALKS ATP UNCOVERED THROUGH WHAT HE TAKES WITH HIM ON HIS TRAVELS - Show presented by Seb Lauzier- Interviews by Ursin Caderas, Jill Craybas and Candy Reid- Mmoh feature by ATP Uncovered

EXCLUSIVE - Wayne Ferriera On His Career And Coaching France Tiafoe
South African Wayne Ferreira won more than 500 matches during a pro career that spanned from 1989 to 2005 and saw him rise as high as world No. 6. Ferreira posted six victories over 14-time Slam champ Pete Sampras in his prime, including four straight between 1995 and 1998, when the American was in the midst of his record stretch as the year-end No. 1.Ferreira had a little iron man in him too, having set the all-time mark for the most consecutive Grand Slam appearances in men’s tennis. He played in 56 straight majors, surpassing the previous record of 54 held by Swede Stefan Edberg. But Ferreria, now 50, may have found his true calling in his role as a coach, as a mentor to American Frances Tiafoe and in this wide-ranging discussion with ATP Podcast reporter Jill Craybas, Ferriera speaks about his career and what he's learnt along the way that now helps his young player.

PODCAST - Borg, Stine, Rublev, Ruud, Cerundolo, Shelton & Shang
FRANCISCO CERUNDOLO ON HIS AMBITIONS - ‘The first thing I put on myself is to try to do as well as last year, to maintain top 40 top 30, but if I can say something I would like to reach the top 20 and reach the second week of a Grand Slam’.BRAD STINE ON TOMMY PAUL’S RUN TO THE 2023 AUSTRALIAN OPEN SEMI-FINALS - ‘He did have a bit of a good draw. I want to see Tommy continue to beat the top guys, to get through and to make it to a semi with a draw that’s a tough draw. It was extremely satisfying, I don’t want to take anything away from it, but I do think we have to keep progressing and getting better so hopefully we can keep making firsts and they become the norm, not the firsts’. BEN SHELTON ON HIS GAME STYLE - ‘It’s really important that I play an aggressive game style and find my way to net, incorporate the serve and volley, so that’s been something I’ve been focussing on and combine that with footwork and my return of serve and I would say they are the three areas I’m focussing on’.ANDREY RUBLEV ON HIS BURNING DESIRE TO WIN - ‘It comes naturally since I was a kid, I always hated to lose no matter what I was doing, but now it is only with tennis, with the rest I don’t care, sometimes I lose on purpose to make others happy, but with tennis I still hate to lose’.JUNCHENG SHANG ON WORKING WITH KEI NISHIKORI’S FORMER COACH DANTE BOTTINI - ‘He’s brought a lot of positive thinking. I’m a positive guy outside of the court but sometimes a little negative thinking about the bad side of my tennis, so he’s taught me how to think positive after each point, even when I’m down and not playing good’.BJORN BORG ON NOVAK DJOKOVIC - ’Novak I think he might win one or two more Grand Slam tournaments, who knows, but what he is doing for tennis in general is unbelievable. He’s still pushing the limits, he wants to be the greatest, win more tournaments and break all the records in tennis history, he’s a fantastic player’.BJORN BORG ON HIS SON LEO - ‘I was hoping he’d pick another sport and he started to play soccer, but then he wanted to play tennis so whatever he wants to do. He’s playing tennis, he loves tennis, he has a big heart for tennis, he’s motivated, he’s nineteen so he has many more years. Sometimes I go to my son and I say to him that he can ask me if he has any questions about tennis and my son says I don’t know anything about tennis, so thank you very much!' PLUS CASPER RUUD ANSWERS FANS QUESTIONS, COURTESY OF ATP UNCOVERED- Podcast presented by Seb Lauzier- Interviews by Ursin Caderas, Mike Cation, Nick McCarvel and Seb Lauzier- Ruud feature by ATP Uncovered

EXCLUSIVE - Mike Bryan With Jill Craybas
In this exclusive conversation, former WTA player Jill Craybas catches up with one half of the legendary Bryan Brothers team, Mike Bryan.

PODCAST - Alcaraz Wins Indian Wells, Returns To World No.1
CARLOS ALCARAZ ON HIS INDIAN WELLS VICTORY AND RETURNING TO WORLD NUMBER ONE - ‘It means a lot to me to recover the world number one is crazy for me, but especially to lift the trophy here means a lot. I said before, I love this tournament and I really enjoy my time here, so for me it’s amazing to complete these ten days like this’.JANNIK SINNER ON HIS PHYSICAL AND MENTAL STRENGTH - ‘We’ve put a lot of work in, much more physically than tennis-wise, so many hours in the gym and I’ve also worked on the mentality as well, trying not to have so many problems in my head, so this is a lot of work to do, especially in the next couple of years, this is going to be very important for my future’.WAYNE FERREIRA ON FRANCES TIAFOE’S NUTRITION - ‘Frances has had to cut back and he’s actually been doing a good job, but he’s still, in my opinion, not doing as well as he should be on the breakfasts, but he’s not on a specific diet, he’s just trying to eat as well as he can’.TOMMY PAUL ON THE AMOUNT OF AMERICANS COMING THROUGH - ‘We’re all playing really good tennis and as the year goes on hopefully we’ll keep going up in our rankings and I think there will be more American’s in the top 20 soon too and I think it’s a really exciting time. Breaking into the top 20 was a big goal of mine and I’m pumped to have it and now I’m looking to the next one’.FELIX AUGER-ALIASSIME ON HOW WINNING HIS FIRST TITLE HAS LED TO MORE - ’This year the goal is even higher and I think it comes from just preparing yourself in the right way, scheduling your tournaments and practices and the way that you come into the tournaments not just being happy to win a few matches’.MIKE BRYAN ON THE MODERN GAME - ‘It just seems like they are moving like cats into the corner. I remember watching Agassi in 88 here in Indian Wells and it sounded like a shotgun the way he hit it and now everybody is hitting it like that. It’s like super-tennis and to win a Grand Slam is like running seven marathons’.PLUS - LISTEN OUT FOR AN EXTENDED VERSION OF THE MIKE BRYAN INTERVIEW, THIS COMING WEDNESDAY ON THE PODCAST CHANNEL- Podcast presented by Seb Lauzier- Podcast guest Jill Craybas- Interviews by Seb Lauzier and Jill Craybas

EXCLUSIVE - Yibing Wu, The First Chinese Man To Win An ATP Title
Chinese Yibing Wu sits down with the ATP Tour to discuss his recent title in Dallas as well as his hopes and ambitions for the future.

PODCAST - Alcaraz, Ruud & Medvedev Join Us From Indian Wells
TOMMY HAAS ON A NEW ERA IN MEN’S TENNIS - ’The new era is here right. As a Tournament Director you always want the top players to be part of it, but for different reasons we don’t have some of the all-time greats here on the men’s side with one being retired, one injured and one wasn’t granted entry into the country, so you’re looking at the next generation and the new era’.CARLOS ALCARAZ ON DEALING WITH BEING UNDER THE MEDIA SPOTLIGHT - ‘I think this is the first time I’ve been top seed in a Masters 1000, so it’s great, but honestly I don’t think too much about it and just enjoy and of course with social media, with the fans and everything outside the court, I’m trying to enjoy as well, so you can see me always smiling and not taking the pressure on board’.CASPER RUUD ON HIS SLOW START TO 2023 - ’There’s no hiding the fact it hasn’t been what I had hoped for, but it’s a long year, so I don’t feel stressed and I hope from this week on, things can go well for me and belief in myself and motivation is very high’.FACUNDO LAGONES ON CAMERON NORRIE’S DEVELOPMENT - ‘It’s really fun to watch and he’s still growing and he’s more mature than last year. I feel there were two big changes, one when he turned pro and you could see him developing more as a grown-up and it’s not just his tennis, with his career everything became like a business to him and then the second big jump came during lockdown when he became even more mature and he focussed everything on his tennis’. YIBING WU ON MISSING HOME - ‘It’s a really long time that I haven’t been at home, nearly a year and a half and I can’t see my parents, my grand parents of my friends back in China, so whenever I have the chance to go back I always take a bike, ride around the neighbourhood or even around some famous buildings and just feel the city and feel that I am part of the city’.PLUS A FEATURE LOOKING AT DANIIL MEDVEDEV'S THREE TITLES IN THE PAST THREE WEEKS, COURTESY OF THE ATP MEDIA NEWS TEAM- Show presented by Seb Lauzier - Podcast guest Jill Craybas- Interviews by Seb Lauzier, Jill Craybas and Zhensu Xiao- Medvedev feature by ATP Media

EXCLUSIVE - Michael Russell On Taylor Fritz's Amazing 2022
Taylor Fritz's coach Michael Russell speaks to Jill Craybas about his amazing tournament victories in Indian Wells and Tokyo 2022 and they also speak about Taylor reaching the world's top 10 for the first time.

PODCAST - Djokovic, Rune, Musetti, Molcan And Former Player Tomas Berdych
NOVAK DJOKOVIC ON HIS RECORD 378 WEEKS AT NUMBE ONE - ‘Any achievement that is linked to the history of the sport that I love is very flattering, very fulfilling and I’m very happy because I’ve dedicated my life to achieving great things in tennis and so it’s flattering to be among the legendary names like Steffi Graf, but I keep going, moving on and trying to take on the next challenge’.ALBERTO MARTIN ON JOINING ANDREY RUBLEV’S TEAM - ‘Andrey has changed a big part of the team, not only me, but the physical trainer is new, so it’s a lot of changes and I think we need to assimilate a little bit. He did well in Australia but the other tournaments he could do a little bit better’.TOMAS BERDYCH ON FELLOW CZECH JIRI LEHECKA - ‘I think after a bit of a low period after myself and Radek Stepanek, I think he’s definitely one who can carry the flag. He is very young but what I’ve seen it’s really the way he’s composed with his game. I like his fitness preparation, his body being strong and he has a similar style to my game, so I think he has a bright future ahead of him’.HOLGER RUNE ON WHAT HE HOPES TO ACHIEVE BY THE AGE OF 30 - ‘I’m hoping for a lot of Grand Slam titles and a lot of success for sure’.ALEX MOLCAN ON WORKING WITH NOVAK DJOKOVIC’S FORMER COACH MARIAN VAJDA - ‘He brings a lot of professionalism into the team, his thoughts and his experience with Novak is incredible to listen to. I’m always asking questions about what he was doing in certain situations, I’m not trying to be like him, but of course I’m still asking Marian a few things about him’.LORENZO MUSETTI ON BEING A TOP 20 PLAYER - ‘It’s a dream because you know scoring a best ranking is always a positive. I’m playing good but I have to keep working hard to try and get more and the next step is the top 10 and I just need to keep working and keep dreaming and let’s see if I can make it’.MICHAEL RUSSELL ON TAYLOR FRITZ’S ANKLE INJURY AHEAD OF WINNING THE 2022 INDIAN WELLS MASTERS - ‘When we went to practice, getting ready to play Rafael Nadal, Taylor feels the ankle and he can be a little dramatic at times and he basically goes down on the ground and says that he can’t move. The fact that we were on Centre Court and a lot of the media were there early for the women’s final, they started to pick up on that and I started to get loads of messages from my friends in media’.PLUS THE ATP NEWS TEAM DOCUMENT THE ABIERTO MEXICANO TELCEL PRESENTED BY HSBC TOURNAMENT TURNING 30.

EXCLUSIVE - Thiago Monteiro On Life On Tour
Brazilian Thiago Monteiro speaks to Jill Craybas about playing on the Challenger Tour and trying to break through to the main tour.

PODCAST - Alcaraz, Thiem, Wawrinka, Medvedev & Many More
CARLOS ALCARAZ ON HIS DESIRE TO RETURN TO WORLD NUMBER ONE - ‘It’s a great goal for me, but it’s going to be really tough as Djokovic deserves so much to be there, but I’m really hungry to go to the tournaments, to win them and to return to number one, that’s a big goal for me this year’.TOMAS BELLUCI ON HIS DECISION TO RETIRE - ‘I’m happy with what I’ve achieved in my career. I made the decision in the middle of last year as I played a tournament and wasn’t feeling well physically. I was having so many injuries, so I think that was the moment when I felt I need to choose different for my life and that was the moment’.DOMINIC THIEM ON GETTING MAINTAINING A WORK AND LIFE BALANCE - ‘I’m constantly thinking of a life beyond tennis. I think that tennis was, for a long time, the only part of my life, which is good in one way but if you’re getting older it’s not good anymore, you need a life beyond tennis, you need other thoughts in your head, other things to do and the injury time out and tough time to come back helped me in those terms and I’m very happy about it’.STAN WAWRINKA ON HIS DESIRE TO RETURN TO THE TOP - ‘My game is high, when I enter the court I believe I can beat any player in front of me. Now I have to do it and I have to do it in repetition in the same week, but the year is long and I’m always looking for the full year, to the big picture, controlling what I can control and the matches and results will come’.ARTHUR RINDERKNECH ON THE NEXT WAVE OF FRENCH PLAYERS COMING THROUGH - ‘It’s a new generation for sure with Monfils not playing for the last year, Tsonga of course retired, Gilles Simon retired, Lucas Pouille who was really good, Richard Gasquet still shows he can win, but behind that there is a new generation coming, so hopefully we can do, maybe not as good as them, but get as close as possible’.FABRICE MARTIN ON LEARNING FROM DIFFERENT COACHING SYSTEMS - ‘When I went back to France I felt it was more about technique, more tactical, whereas in the States it was more focussed on you and your game and on your strengths and so sometimes it fits you and sometimes it doesn’t , but I used a bit of everything’.PLUS DANIIL MEDVEDEV ANSWERS QUIZ QUESTIONS ON HIS OWN CAREER- Podcast presented by Seb Lauzier- Interviews by Seb Lauzier, Richard Connelly, Chris Bowers and Candy Reid- Medvedev feature by ATP Uncovered

EXCLUSIVE - Sebastian Baez On His Career, Juan Martin Del Potro And Argentina's Football World Cup Victory
Argentine Sebastian Baez speaks to Candy Reid about his career, Juan Martin Del Potro and Argentina's Football World Cup Victory.

PODCAST - Alcaraz, Zverev, Krajicek, Tiafoe, Rune, Medvedev & Schwartzman
CARLOS ALCARAZ ON 2022 - ‘It was a dream season for me, so many big titles. You have to believe in yourself, you have to believe you can win every match, every tournament, you know. I want more in every tournament and that’s the key to everything, to believe in yourself, to be calm and to be your hundred percent your whole year and to be strong in the tough moments’. ALEXANDER ZVEREV ON PLAYING WITH DIABETES - ‘When you get this illness at a young age, you get a lot of doubt in you and people give you a lot of doubt because I’ve always had doctors telling me, with an illness like that you will never be a professional athlete, especially not in a physical sport like tennis and I want to make sure that the message is out there that you really can and that you should never put limits on yourself just because you have an illness like that’. RICHARD KRAJICEK ON THE ROLE OF TOURNAMENT DIRECTOR - ‘I retired young and through injury and then I got the offer to be Tournament Director in Rotterdam, the biggest tournament we have in Holland and I though it was a great way to stay close to tennis, but to not have to travel too much as I have a young family. It was a great way to stay with tennis, travel to the big tournaments and re-educate myself and I’m very lucky to be surrounded by such a good team and I’m just a part of it’.FRANCES TIAFOE ON HIS FIRST TITLE IN DELRAY BEACH - ‘I grew up playing a lot in south Florida so to win my first title there was pretty cool and to beat one of my idols, Del Potro. I was very nervous for that match because I just wanted to beat him. It was tough, I barely got over the line that day, so I was just happy that I beat him. To be across the court from Delpo was just an honour and to be able to shake his hand with a win was something I’ll never forget and I’m happy that was our last time playing’.HOLGER RUNE ON HIS AMBITIONS FOR 2023 - ’This year my goal is definitely to qualify for Turin and not only be alternative, but it was a nice experience. I feel I’m doing a few things better than in 2022 which is nice, I’ve improved a lot of things, so it’s a positive sign, but I’m only nineteen and have a lot of things to learn’.DANIIL MEDVEDEV ON WHAT IT’S LIKE DEFENDING A NUMBER ONE POSITION - ‘I heard from ex tennis players who say when they look back it was tough to defend a number one position and if I look at my rankings, my results, I have to say it tough but I didn’t feel much, I felt really happy to be there, I had a lot of points and I liked being in the position where everyone wanted to beat you, so I don’t think it was a problem for me, but many people say it could be you know, so it’s about guessing and I don’t know what’s the truth’.PLUS….DIEGO SCHWARTZMAN IS TASKED BY ATP UNCOVERED TO ANSWER QUIZ QUESTIONS ON HIS OWN CAREER- Show presented by Seb Lauzier- Interviews by Richard Connelly- Features by ATP Uncovered

EXCLUSIVE - Diego Moyano Speaks About His Coaching Career
Coco Gauff's coach Diego Moyano speaks to Candy Reid about what he's learnt from working with the young American as well as from the likes of Kevin Anderson, Tommy Paul and Reilly Opelka.

PODCAST - Central And South American Special
THIAGO MONTEIRO ON LIFE ON THE ROAD - ‘It’s totally mental, for example on the clay we have to go from Monte Carlo to Barcelona and then Roland Garros and more because it’s not that cheap or easy to go home and then back again, this logic doesn’t work for us so it’s different from the European players. Sometimes when I tell someone that this is my seventh week straight or ninth week straight, they think I’m crazy’.EDUARDO INFANTINO ON THE SOUTH AMERICAN MENTALITY - ’The key was big coaches and they were looking to the past, not just to the future and this kind of mentality was the key in South America and was the key for the next generation. This is why so many projects have stopped in one moment, when coaches don’t open their eyes and look for another way to practice regarding physical condition, recovery, everything’.DIEGO MOYANO ON WHAT HE LOOKS FOR IN A YOUNG PLAYER - ’To be the best player you can be you need to be a well rounded person and you need to have knowledge of what surrounds you. Even on the tennis side if we live in a bubble, beside that you have to get as close as you can to a normal life, so having friends, boyfriends, girlfriends, whatever makes you happy. If you have the chance to do it go to the galleries, see the fashion and use the tennis to see the other things outside of tennis’.MARCELO AREVALO ON HIS GRAND SLAM VICTORY INSPIRING THE NEXT GENERATION IN EL SALVADOR - ‘It had a big impact on the kids back at home to believe because tennis is not a popular sport, not only in El Salvador but in the region, in Central America and the Caribbean and I think winning a Slam created hope for all those kids. Tennis is a great sport and if you can impact some people in life and somehow help them, that’s what really gives me joy’.RAFAEL MATOS ON WINNING THE 2023 AUSTRALIAN OPEN MIXED DOUBLES - ‘When I woke up on the morning of the final I was so nervous, but I think it’s really important, when you are nervous you cannot control things, so you have to be nervous and then control what you can do with that and that was one of the keys for us. Now it’s a motivation as since you were a kid you have these goals, so now that it’s happened, you feel more confident to win matches and make money’.DANIEL VALLEJO ON PARAGUAY - ‘The best thing about Paraguay has to be the food probably. Paraguay is pretty nice, especially the people. When you are from another country they treat you nice and that is not something that you see in every country, so that is something that you have to know from Paraguay, that’s for sure'PLUS...SEBASTIAN BAEZ TALKS ABOUT HOW HE LIKES TO TRAVEL WITH ATP UNCOVERED- Podcast presented by Seb Lauzier- Interviews by Jill Craybas and Candy Reid- Baez feature by ATP Uncovered and Kate Flory