Rohan Bopanna

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Oldest slam finalist of the Open era/ 2023

Prajwal Hegde, Sep 8, 2023: The Times of India

New York : Rohan Bopanna is 43 and owning it. Playing in unforgiving conditions, the 6-foot-4-inch Bangalorean, in tandem with the rock-solid Aussie Matthew Ebden, made the US Open men’s doubles final. The sixth seeds rallied to beat the French pair of Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut 7-6 (3), 6-2.


Bopanna, in the final here in New York 13 years after his maiden charge in the men’s doubles in 2010, became the oldest Grand Slam finalist of the Open Era. At 43 years and 6 months, he beat Daniel Nestor’s record. “Great energy from the crowd, thank you guys for coming,” Bopanna said. “Back in the final 13 years later, I love New York.”


Ebden made no secret of the team’s intention, saying they are going for the title. “We are playing for the big titles,” he said.

The conditions were extreme, the roof was partially drawn over the Louis Armstrong stadium. The 41-year-old Mahut came down on the court when he was serving in the 12th game. He complained of dizziness. Play was stalled for four minutes when the physio and doctor came on court to attend to the Frenchman.

Bopanna and Ebden came back from a break down in the opening set, levelling at 4-4 when Mahut double faulted at 15-40. The IndoAussie combine, who were made to play by the Frenchmen, came on top in the tie-break. The sixth-seeded pairing broke in the third game of the second set, and then got an insurance break in the fifth game.

2015

World Tour Final

The Times of India

Jean-Julien Rojer and Horia Tecau picked a shade without sizzle for their final encounter of the Barclays ATP World Tour Final. A blue that saw them merge into the soft setting of the O2 Arena.Just as well that their play provided the shine and sparkle, riding to a 6-4, 6-3 win over Rohan Bopanna and Florin Mergea to clinch the year-end trophy and claim the title of the no.1 team in the world. Bopanna, in his second final here, having made the title round with Bhupathi in 2012, had two doublefaults and two aces in his opening service game. He fought off a breakpoint (30-40) before a Rojer backhand volley earned the world no.1 pairing the early break of serve.

2017

See graphic.

Rohan Bopanna, achievements, as on June 9, 2017; The Times of India, June 9, 2017

2023

Bids farewell to Davis Cup on a winning note

Sep 18, 2023: The Times of India

India resumed normal service to seal a comprehensive 4-1 win over Morocco, and with it a place in the 2024 World Group I playoff of the Davis Cup, in Lucknow.

After the drama of the opening day which saw debutant Mukund Sasikumar retire with cramps in the opening singles, Sunday’s action proved to be uneventful and went by form at the Vijayant Khand Mini stadium. Rohan Bopanna, playing his last tie, ensured his Davis Cup career ended on a winning note as he combined with Yuki Bhambri to beat Elliot Benchetrit and Younes Lalami Laaroussi 6-2, 6-1 to put the hosts ahead 2-1. Sumit Nagal then clinched the tie for India with a 6-3, 6-3 win over Yassine Dlimi. 
In the inconsequential fifth rubber, Digvij ay Pratap Singh, also playing his first tie, edged Walid Ahouda 6-1, 5-7 (10-6).
Rohit Rajpal’s team will now play against one of the 12 losing teams from World Group I in February.


It was an emotional moment for Bopanna who played his first tie in 2002 against an Australian side spearheaded by Lleyton Hewitt in a World Group first round tie in Adelaide.


After 36 nominations an d 33 ties played, the 43-year-old and current doubles World No. 7 bows out with a 22-27 win-loss record -10-17 in singles and 12-10 in doubles.
 The man of the moment, however, was Nagal. The Wor ld No. 156 proved his maturity over the two days.


On Saturday, playing after Mukund had conceded the opening singles, Nagal poured water on any hopes Morocco might have nurtured of pulling off an upset by dispatching the 28-year-old Adam Moundir, a typical journeyman on the pro circuit, in an hour and 15 minutes. He needed a little more than that, an hour and 45 minutes, on Sunday to put it past Dlimi.


“Very different players. One (Moundir) goes for his shots and the other (Dlimi) is a baseliner. I knew what I had to do, and I had watched Dlimi play yesterday, which was a big help,” Nagal said.
The 26-year-old from Haryana shares a rapport with Mukund. Watching a teammate’s maiden Cup appearance end on a disappointing note, especially just before one had to go out on court, might have been a distraction for anyone but Nagal handled it professionally. “I had mixed feelings. I struggled to finish my first match for India. But I had to do my own stuff,” he said.

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