Medvedev Says Balance Key as He Adapts Game for Clay

02 April 2023, US, Miami Gardens: Russian tennis player Daniil Medvedev celebrates after defeating Italy's Jannik SInner during their men's final match of the Miami Open at Hard Rock Stadium. (dpa)
02 April 2023, US, Miami Gardens: Russian tennis player Daniil Medvedev celebrates after defeating Italy's Jannik SInner during their men's final match of the Miami Open at Hard Rock Stadium. (dpa)
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Medvedev Says Balance Key as He Adapts Game for Clay

02 April 2023, US, Miami Gardens: Russian tennis player Daniil Medvedev celebrates after defeating Italy's Jannik SInner during their men's final match of the Miami Open at Hard Rock Stadium. (dpa)
02 April 2023, US, Miami Gardens: Russian tennis player Daniil Medvedev celebrates after defeating Italy's Jannik SInner during their men's final match of the Miami Open at Hard Rock Stadium. (dpa)

Daniil Medvedev will head into the Monte Carlo Masters hoping to strike the right balance as the world number four looks to tweak his game for the claycourt swing without compromising on the style that has delivered four titles in 2023.

Medvedev has won 18 of his 19 titles, including the 2021 US Open, on hardcourts, the only exception coming at the Mallorca Open when he triumphed on grass the same year.

He has been in red-hot form this season having triumphed in Rotterdam, Doha, Dubai and Miami but the 27-year-old knows clay presents a different challenge for his game.

"I definitely have to change my game because my strokes are too flat and clay doesn't let the ball go through the court as much," Medvedev, who plays Lorenzo Sonego or Ugo Humbert first in the ATP 1000 tournament, said.

"My opponents can use those (shots against me).

"At the same time, you can't change what you do in nine months or a year drastically, so I have to find a good balance where I still play my game, with a little change, with some shots in the right moment."

Despite not being the biggest fan of clay, Medvedev reached the Monte Carlo semi-finals and Barcelona final in 2019 and the Russian knows winning a title on the surface would boost his confidence before the French Open.

He would much rather be playing on hardcourts though.

"I wish we could continue on hard, but I understand that there are different surfaces on Tour and that is good because some people are better on clay, some on hard, some on grass," Medvedev said.

"It's good to have different surfaces, I think that's good for the sport."



Arteta Calls Arsenal's Defending 'Naive' after Villarreal Loss

Soccer Football - Friendly - Arsenal v Villarreal - Emirates Stadium, London, Britain - August 6, 2025 Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta Action Images via Reuters/Peter Cziborra
Soccer Football - Friendly - Arsenal v Villarreal - Emirates Stadium, London, Britain - August 6, 2025 Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta Action Images via Reuters/Peter Cziborra
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Arteta Calls Arsenal's Defending 'Naive' after Villarreal Loss

Soccer Football - Friendly - Arsenal v Villarreal - Emirates Stadium, London, Britain - August 6, 2025 Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta Action Images via Reuters/Peter Cziborra
Soccer Football - Friendly - Arsenal v Villarreal - Emirates Stadium, London, Britain - August 6, 2025 Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta Action Images via Reuters/Peter Cziborra

Arsenal were naive in their defending and paid a painful price, manager Mikel Arteta said after his side's 3-2 friendly defeat against Villarreal left them with back-to-back pre-season losses.

Arsenal, who started their preparations for the new season with victories over AC Milan and Newcastle United before losing to London rivals Tottenham Hotspur, found themselves trailing 2-0 inside 33 minutes against Spanish side Villarreal at the Emirates on Wednesday.

"Today I think the result is painful. I think they were super efficient but we've been naive, especially the way we have defended in open spaces and that's something that, especially the way we play, we have to absolutely nail," Arteta told reporters.

"Today we haven't been good at all in that department and that has cost us the game for sure."

Arteta, however, was pleased with what he saw from striker Viktor Gyokeres, who completed his 63.5 million euros ($74.14 million) switch from Sporting last month, after handing the 27-year-old Swede his first start in an Arsenal shirt.

"I think it was very important for him to start a match and start to have the feeling and the connection with the team," Reuters quoted Arteta as saying.

"He's been with us only a week or so, but I really saw a lot of things and a lot of purpose, especially the way he was attacking certain spaces."

Arteta also heaped praise on highly rated 15-year-old attacking midfielder Max Dowman, who won a penalty for Arsenal.

"He continues to impress, without a doubt. The impact he had in the game again today, the efficiency that he shows in every attack and action, it's incredible," the Spaniard added.