Sloane Stephens and Christina McHale Advance at Mutua Madrid Open

The first round of the Mutua Madrid Open got underway Saturday with two Americans advancing on the first day. #16 Sloane Stephens dropped her first set to Teliana Pereira of Brazil 3-6 but rallied in the next two sets to win 6-3 and 6-2. Christina McHale had a bit easier time with a 6-0, 6-4 win over Anna-Lena Friedsam of Germany. In doubles action Coco Vandeweghe/Anna-Lena Groenefeld (Germany) were swept in two close sets 6-4, 7-5 by #5 Caroline Garcia and Kristina Mladenovic of France.

The US men will join the action on Sunday as Steve Johnson takes on Alexandr Dolgopolov of Ukraine . In women’s singles there is an all-American matchup as Madison Keys and Alison Riske face off. Vandeweghe will also be back in action as she starts her women’s singles competition against #11 Lucie Safarova of the Czech Republic. The final US woman to get started in the singles event is Louisa Chirico who will be taking on Monica Niculsecu of Romania.

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US Sonar Team Takes Bronze at Sailing World Cup in Hyeres

Going into the final day the US sonar team of Alphonsus Doerr/Bradley Kendell/Hugh Freund looked a good bet to medal and even had a chance to win gold. Unfortunately it wasn’t their strongest day and seventh and eighth place finishes gave them a big hit in the standings. The 15 points from those two finishes were more than their last five races combined and they ended up third, a point behind second place. Thankfully their strong finishes earlier in the week were enough to keep them in third with a four point margin and they took home a third place finish.

In the 2.4m races Dee Smith continued to be the best among the four Americans competing and ended the competition on a high note by winning the final race after being fifth in the first race of the day. Smith finished sixth overall, same as in Miami. Daniel Evans was the second best American finishing 13th in his first competition of the year.

In the men’s RS:X Pedro Pascual finished 28th, 35th, and 34th and settled for 38th for the event. He surpassed his 24th place overall finish from Miami only once in the ten races in Hyeres.

Caleb Paine rebounded in the Finn class with an 11th place finish good enough to secure him a place in Sunday’s final. In the men’s 470 Stuart Mcnay/David Hughes were 19th in the opener, really damaging any medal hopes, but rebounded with two second place finishes to ensure they were in the final. They may not be able to win as they did in Miami but hopefully they can finish strong in the final.

In the Nacra 17 races the team of Bora Gulari/Louisa Chafee would have needed an extremely strong day to contend for a spot in the final race and did have two good results finishing seventh and sixth after a 21st place finish to start the day. They wound up 15th overall. It wasn’t a good start to the day for the women’s 470 team of Anne Haeger/Briana Provancha who took a penalty and finished 26th in race one. That result ended up taking them out of final race contention despite finishing 10th and 14th in their final two races. They finished 13th overall.

Christopher Barnard finished 36th and 30th in his two Laser races on Saturday, his seventh place finish in race four the only time he got into the top 23 in Hyeres. Overall his 36th place finish was a move up from 51st in Miami. Things did not end well for Thomas Barrows II/Joseph Morris (US Virgin Islands) in the 49er as their two worst results of the event (outside of a DNF in race three) came on Saturday when they were 36th and 35th.

Finally in the women’s RS:X Marion Lepert finished 24th-25th-16th and had to settle for 19th place overall, the same place she finished in Miami.

The final races on Sunday will see the US athletes compete in the final of the Finn and men’s 470 events.

Previous ISAF Sailing World Cup Coverage:
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Day 3 Update

Compound Men Upset in Gold Medal Final by Iran

It’s been an up and down few days for the US compound men in Beijing. After qualifying all four of their archers in the top 11 on Wednesday they all failed to reach the quarterfinals in the individual knockout competition on Thursday. Friday brought a chance to rebound in the team competition and Alex WiflerSteve Anderson, and Reo Wilde were clearly the best team in advancing to the final against the #10 seed Iranians. Unfortunately things continue to flip flop for the US and there was a drop off on Saturday as they shot just 228 in the gold medal final and Iran was able to upset them by scoring a 229.

The US will look to claim gold in two other events on Sunday when Zach Garrett competes in the men’s recurve gold medal final and when Brady Ellison and Khatuna Lorig compete in the mixed team recurve gold medal final.

Previous Archery World Cup Shanghai Coverage:
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Tejay Van Garderen With Strong Ninth Place Finish in Mountain Stage at Tour de Romandie

Tejay Van Garderen continued his strong Tour de Romandie showing on Saturday in the final mountain stage. Van Garderen finish ninth and only was nine seconds back of the winner, Christopher Froome of Great Britain. In the overall standings Van Garderen slipped ever so slightly to tenth and should have a good chance to finish in the top ten for the second time this year with a good finish on Sunday.

Three other Americans finished in the top 50, Nathan Brown rebounded from being 79th in the time trial on Friday to finishing 38th on Saturday, 12:11 back. Brent Bookwalter was 46th and Peter Stetina was 47th, both about 13 minutes back. Both Bookwalter (34th) and Brown (38th) are still in the top 50 for the full event.

The Tour de Romandie wraps up on Sunday with a 110.2 mile flat stage.

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Day 1 Update
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Day 4 Update

Three US Women to Begin Play Saturday at Mutua Madrid Open

Qualifying on both the men’s and women’s sides has yet to wrap up but first round action will start on Saturday in the women’s singles and double draws and three American women will be involved.

Sloane Stephens is the #16 seed in the women’s singles and opens up with Teliana Pereira of Brazil in round one. Christina McHale will also be starting in the women’s singles with Anna-Lena Friedsam of Germany her opponent. The other American getting underway on Saturday is Coco Vandeweghe who will be partnering with Anna-Lena Groenefeld of Germany in women’s doubles. Two Anna-Lena’s? Maybe it’s like Chris over there… Vandeweghe/Groenefeld will be taking on Caroline Garcia and Kristina Mladenovic of France, the #5 seed.

US Sonar Team Wins Race on Friday at Sailing World Cup in Hyeres

The US sonar team of Alphonsus Doerr/Bradley Kendell/Hugh Freund followed up two second place finishes on Thursday with two fourths and their first win of the regatta in Hyeres. They have now finished in the top four in five straight races after a ninth place opener and are poised for a top three finish with two races left.

Caleb Paine’s run of success in the Finn class races came to and end as 30th and 24th place finishes ended a run of four top seven finishes. In the 2.4m category Dee Smith had a solid 4th-9th-8th day to remain the top American while in the Nacra 17 race the team of Bora Gulari/Louisa Chafee were not great in their first three races of the day with three finishes outside of the top 12 (22nd-13th-16th) before really improving for their best finish so far in fifth in race nine.

In the men’s 470 Stuart Mcnay/David Hughes ended a run of three straight eighth place finishes when they were 15th and over on the women’s side the team of Anne Haeger/Briana Provancha were 16th. Christopher Barnard was 24th and 31st in his two Laser races on Friday following a nice seventh place finish on Thursday.

Over in the 49er Thomas Barrows II/Joseph Morris (US Virgin Islands) had one of their best days with 13th and 21st place finishes while in the men’s RS:X Pedro Pascual was on the course side to start so he finished 41st. Finally in the women’s RS:X Marion Lepert was unable to follow up a fourth place finish to wrap up Thursday with much success as she was 28th.

The 2.4m, Sonar, and RS:X men’s categories all wrap up on Saturday. There will be two races in the 2.4m and the sonar categories while RS:X will go three times. 

All the other categories will have their final races before the field is cut for Sunday’s final race. In the 49er, men’s and women’s 470, Nacra 17, and RS:X women’s categories that means three races while the Finn category has one race and Laser has two.

Previous ISAF Sailing World Cup Coverage:
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Redemption for Compound Men as They Reach Gold Medal Final

The most disappointing group of archers on Thursday had clearly been the men’s compound group from the US. Despite all finishing in the top 11 of qualifying not a single one advanced even as far as the quarterfinals. With a chance to move on from that and have some success as a team on Friday the trio of Alex WiflerSteve Anderson, and Reo Wilde shot the highest scores of each round and advanced to Saturday’s gold medal final. The first round wasn’t close as the US easily outpointed #16 seed Hong Kong 236-220 but the quarterfinals and semifinals were much closer battles with the US advancing by two points over #8 Turkey 235-233 and by a single point over #12 Australia 232-231. The US opponent in the final will be #10 Iran who upset #2 Netherlands in a tiebreaker after tying them at 232 in the semifinals.

The other teams for the US didn’t have much success on Friday. The men’s recurve team of Zach GarrettBrady Ellison, and Jacob Wukie were the #1 seed and beat #16 Canada 5-3 to open but were upset by #9 Great Britain 5-1 in the quarterfinals. The women’s recurve team of Khatuna Lorig, La Nola Pritchard, and Mackenzie Brown were the #13 seed and didn’t fare well getting shutout 6-0 by #4 India. The women’s compound team of Crystal Gauvin,  Danielle Reynolds, and Dahlia Crook were also in a #4-#13 match but as the favorite against Turkey. Things didn’t turn out well for the US though as Turkey pulled a 231-225 upset.

Saturday is the compound finals and the only US participants will be the men’s team in the gold medal final.

Previous Archery World Cup Shanghai Coverage:
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Tejay Van Garderen Jumps Back into Top Ten at Tour de Romandie

In the third stage of the Tour de Romandie, a quick 9.4 mile time trial, Tejay Van Garderen posted the 11th best time, 25 seconds back, and was able to move into the top ten for the overall standings where he now is ninth, 1:22 behind leader Nairo Quintana of Colombia. Three other Americans finished in the top 50 on Friday, Brent Bookwalter in 26th, 46 seconds back, Chad Haga just inside a minute back at 59 seconds in 35th, and Andrew Talansky in 40th 1:01 back. Bookwalter moved up to 24th in the overall standings while Nathan Brown stayed in the top 50 at 36th despite finishing 79th on Friday.

The Tour de Romandie has its final mountain stage on Saturday, a 107.3 mile stretch that will probably determine the winner.

Previous UCI World Tour Coverage:
Tour de Romandie Preview
Day 1 Update
Day 2 Update
Day 3 Update

US Sonar Team in Second at Sailing World Cup in Hyeres

The US sonar team of Alphonsus Doerr/Bradley Kendell/Hugh Freund had a fantastic Thursday as they finished second in both of their races and jumped up to second overall. Their ninth place finish from Wednesday had been holding them back but with some strong finishes from here in the final five races they could be real contenders to medal. Caleb Paine also continued to have success in the Finn class races in Hyeres on Thursday where he finished seventh and fifth and stayed in the top five overall in fourth place. With five races remaining and no awful results so far Paine has some potential margin for error and is right in the thick of the battle for second and third.

In the 2.4m category Dee Smith remained the top American after two races on Thursday where he finished seventh and ninth and is now in seventh place overall. Daniel Evans had a 17th and 11th place finish but stayed in the top ten at ninth. In the Nacra 17 race the team of Bora Gulari/Louisa Chafee had four races to complete and went 12th-19th-20th-16th and moved up to 18th.

In the men’s 470 Stuart Mcnay/David Hughes finished eighth in both of their races making in three straight eighth place finishes and placing them, you guessed it, eight overall. The women’s team of Anne Haeger/Briana Provancha bounced back from a DNF in their second race on Wednesday with a 14th place finish and a second place finish on Thursday. They are now 11th overall with five races left. Christopher Barnard had struggled to two 38th place finishes on Wednesday and Thursday didn’t start off any better with a DSQ in his first race before he finally broke through with a seventh place finish in the final race of the day.

Over in the 49er there were three more races where Thomas Barrows II/Joseph Morris (US Virgin Islands) went 24th-33rd-26th but fell from 30th to 34th while in the men’s RS:X Pedro Pascual is up one spot to 38th after finishing 21st-35th-35th. Finally in the women’s RS:X Marion Lepert fell from fifth place to 12th after starting the second day roughly with 28th and 27th place finishes before a fourth place finish to wrap things up.

The 2.4m, Sonar, 49er, and RS:X men’s and women’s categories will have three races on Thursday while the men’s and women’s 470, Finn, and Laser categories have two races. Finally the Nacra 17 has four races again on Thursday.

Previous ISAF Sailing World Cup Coverage:
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Zach Garrett Reaches Men’s Recurve Gold Medal Final at Archery World Cup

While he wasn’t the top qualifier from the US on Wednesday in the men’s recurve Zach Garrett was still in the top ten. When it came time for the knockout portion of the competition on Thursday though Garrett shown as brightly as anyone. The #9 seed cruised through the competition with 6-0, 6-2, and 6-0 wins to reach the round of 16. He faced good competition there in #8 seed Plihon Pierre of France but was dominant again with a 6-0 win. After a 6-0 win over Xuesong Gu he finally got a really tough match against Chun-Heng Wei of Chinese Taipei which he just barely advanced from 6-5 to reach Sunday’s final. His opponent will be #2 seed Sjef Van Den Berg of the Netherlands. The other Americans didn’t last long in the competition as two of the three lost in their first match. Brady Ellison was the #1 seed but got upset in his first match 7-3 by #33 seed Arsalan Baldanov of Russia. #39 Sean McLaughlin met a similar fate getting upset by #74 Fatih Bozlar of Turkey while #37 Jacob Wukie did open with a 6-4 win before losing 6-0 to #28 Larry Godfrey of Great Britain.

In women’s recurve Khatuna Lorig was also upset in her first match after a bye to open, 6-4 by #53 Ariuna Zhargalova of Russia. La Nola Pritchard did a bit better with 6-2 and 6-0 wins before a 6-2 loss to #3 Lisa Unruhof Germany. 35th with a 645. Mackenzie Brown and Ariel Gibilaro both lost in the opening round with #64 Brown losing to #49 Randi Degn of Denmark 6-2 while #72 Gibilaro lost 6-0 against #41 Hui Cao of China.

Crystal Gauvin went on a nice little run advancing 149-144 and 146-141 before meeting Mexican #7 Linda Ochoa-Anderson in an all-North American quarterfinal. After a very close match Ochoa-Anderson emerged 147-146 and eliminated Gauvin. #16 Danielle Reynolds had two close matches on the day defeating #64 Suvaporn Anutaraporn of Thailand 140-139 before losing to #17 Toja Cerne of Slovenia 146-144. Dahlia Crook and Lexi Keller both had first round byes but lost in their first matches. #37 Crook was defeated by #28 Stephanie Sarai Salinas of Mexico 141-137 while #44 Keller lost 144-133 to #21 Kim Yun-Hee of Korea.

Finally things were a bit disappointing in the men’s compound as the US had all four of their archers in the top 11 but didn’t advance one to the quarterfinals. #3 Alex Wifler lost in his opening match against #30 Demir Elmaagacli of Turkey when they tied 148-148 and Wifler lost the tiebreaker. Advancing a bit farther was #4 Steve Anderson who won his opener 145-143 but lost to #13 Patrick Laursen of Denmark 148-143. #5 Reo Wilde met the same fate as Wifler as he lost his first match to #28 Mohd Juwaidi Mazuki of Malaysia 149-145. Losing in his first match as well was #11 Braden Gellenthien to #59 Buden Domagoj of Great Britain on a tiebreaker after they tied at 145.

Friday will be the knockout rounds of the men’s and women’s team competitions and a chance for redemption for the men’s compound archers.

Previous Archery World Cup Shanghai Coverage:
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Day 1 Update