The tennis player Aoi Ito, qualified for the semifinals of the Makinohara tournament

The International Tennis Federation (ITF) is the governing body of world tennis. (Infobae)

the japanese Aoi Ito won by 4-6, 6-4 y 6-4 in two hours and twenty-seven minutes Savanna Ly-NguyenVietnamese tennis player in the quarterfinals of the tournament of Makinohara. After this result, the player manages to qualify for the semifinals of the tournament Makinohara.

The match data shows that the Japanese managed to break her opponent’s serve 8 times, achieved 81% effectiveness in the first service, committed 2 double faults and won 50% of the points on serve. As for Ly-Nguyen, she managed to break her opponent 7 times, had 69% first serve, committed 3 double faults and managed to win 50% of the points on serve.

In the semifinals, the Japanese tennis player will play against the Japanese Hayu Kinoshitatoday Saturday from 7:00 Spanish time.

the tournament of Makinohara (ITF Japan 02A) is held from October 3 to 9 on grass in the open air. A total of 56 players participate in this competition.

A centenary sport

Tennis is undoubtedly a classic sport. Every year, four tournaments (the so-called ‘Grand Slams’) concentrate all the world’s attention: the season begins with the Open the Australiato continue with the clay track of Roland Garrostravels to London with the celebration of Wimbledon and finally closes in the United States with the US Open.

In the rest of the year, players also compete around the world completing seasons on the different surfaces: hard or fast track, clay o herb.

Tennis was born in Europa at the end of the 18th century and since 1926 it is a professional sport after the creation of the first tour. It was especially popular with the wealthy classes in English-speaking countries, but today it is a global sport. It’s divided in of the categories: the men’s (ATP) and the women’s (WTA) competition.

ATP

The ATP (Association of Tennis Professionals) is the association of professional tennis players that brings together players from all over the world in the men’s category.

The ATP tour organizes several tournaments throughout the year: ATP Masters 1000 (where the winner of the tournament will take 1,000 points to add to the ATP ranking), ATP 500 and ATP 250. Below these tournaments, on a lower step, is the ATP Challenger Tour, where the future stars of world tennis fight. In addition, he also handles the Grand Slams.

The fight to be the best in history continues in the men’s category. The Spanish Rafael Nadalthe Serbia Novak Djokovic and the swiss Roger Federer compete to break all records and add the largest number of Grand Slams. The three players are often referred to as ‘Big Three‘ versus the new generations or ‘Next Gen’.

These possible future tennis stars have entered the world tennis circuit with a bang, as in the case of the Greek Stefanos Tsitsipasof the Italian Matteo Berrettinithe German Alexander Zverev or the russians Medvedev y Rublev.

Novak Djokovic currently holds the record for weeks at number 1 of the ATP rankings, closely followed by Roger Federer, the legendary American player Pete Sampras, Iván Lendl and Jimmy Connors.

WTA

The WTA (Women’s Tennis Association) was created in 1973 by the famous former tennis player Billie Jean King. The Californian won 39 Grand Slam titles during her active career and is a benchmark and icon for the world of tennis.

Currently, there are many tennis players in the women’s category who are also struggling to stay at the top of the world tennis elite and surpass Stefanie Graff or Serena Williams. Players like the Polish Iga Świątek (champion of Roland Garros in 2021), the Greek Maria Sakkari o Paula Badosa (the first Spanish winner of Indian Wells) are fighting to stay in the top 10 of the WTA ranking.

In the year 2022, the Australian tennis player Asleigh Barty announced his final retirement from tennis and put an end to an impressive career with several Grand Slams behind him. Now is the opportunity for the other players to take over from him and become number 1.

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Note Source: Narrative

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