Friday, January 30, 2015

Promotions and Demotions Following the 2015 Australian Open

The finals of the Australian Open are not yet played - and what finals promise these to be, with a Yokozuna/Ozeki (Djokovic/Murray) matchup in the mens' tournament, and two Yokozunas (Serena Williams, Sharapova) competing for the ladies' title.

But promotions and demotions have already been determined. With the top players dominating the tournament, there are many more demotions than promotions.

Ekaterina Makarova, Sekiwake
  • There are no promotions into the higher sanyaku (=championship) ranks. Quarterfinalists Kei Nishikori and Ekaterina Makarova (picture) both fell one win short of clearing the "great hurdle" to Ozeki (=Champion) and stay at Sekiwake (=Junior Champion I). Fellow quarterfinalist Venus Williams fell one win short of re-activiating her long dormant Yokozuna (=Grand Champion) status - another quarterfinal at one of the next three slams would be enough. 

  • All active Yokozuna stay active - the Dai-Yokozuna (=great Grand Champions) Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, and Serena Williams as well as the "normal" Yokozuna Novak Djokovic and Maria Sharapova. Nadal needs to get to the quarterfinals at the French Open, however, to avoid that his Yokozuna status switches to dormant.

  • Andy Murray, Stan Wawrinka, Eugenie Bouchard, and Simona Halep all hold rank at Ozeki, as all made the quarterfinals or better. Freshly baken Ozeki Marin Cilic missed the Australian Open and goes kadoban (has to reach the quarterfinals at the French Open to avoid demotion).

  • Petra Kvitova gets demoted to Sekiwake, after failing to back up her success at Wimbledon 2014 in the next two grand slams.

    Nick Kyrgios, Komusubi
  • Semifinalist and Ex-Ozeki Tomas Berdych raises back up to Sekiwake (from Komusubi).

  • Two-time quarterfinalist Nick Kyrgios and semifinalist Madison Keys get first-time promotions into the sanyakyu ranks at Komusubi (=Junior Champion II). Quarterfinalist and ex-Sekiwake Milos Raonic holds rank at Komusubi.

  • Ex-Ozeki David Ferrer and Viktoria Azarenka both get demoted from Sekiwake to Komusubi after losing in round 4, as does Caroline Wozniacki. Gael Monfils, Shuai Peng, Sara Errani (ex-Sekiwake) and Na Li (retired ex-ozeki) drop out of the sanyaku ranks.


    Sanyaku Rank Changes
    Player (career rank if different) To From
    Promotions
    Tomas Berdych (ex-Ozeki) Sekiwake Komusubi
    Nick Kyrgios Komusubi* Maegashira
    Madison KeysKomusubi* Maegashira
    Demotions
    Petra KvitovaSekiwake Ozeki
    David Ferrer (ex-Ozeki)Komusubi Sekiwake
    Viktoria Azarenka (ex-Ozeki)Komusubi Sekiwake
    Caroline WozniackiKomusubi Sekiwake
    Gael MonfilsMaegashira Komusubi
    Li Na (ex-Ozeki, retired)Maegashira Komusubi
    Sara Errani (ex-Sekiwake)Maegashira Komusubi
    Shuai PengMaegashira Komusubi

    * New career high
  • Wednesday, September 24, 2014

    Fare Well, Champion

    A great Ozeki (=Champion) has retired from the sport of tennis: two-time grand slam winner Na Li.
    
    Na Li, the 29th female Ozeki of the open era

    Fare well, champion. You will be missed.
     

    Tuesday, September 9, 2014

    Promotions and Demotions Following the 2014 US Open



    Sanyaku Rank Changes
    Player (career rank if different) To From
    Promotions
    Marin Cilic Ozeki* Maegashira
    Kei Nishikori Sekiwake* Maegashira
    Caroline Wozniacki Sekiwake Maegashira
    Elena Makarova Sekiwake* Maegashira
    Gael Monfils Komusubi Maegashira
    Shuai Peng Komusubi* Maegashira
    Sara Errani (ex-Sekiwake)Komusubi Maegashira
    Demotions
    David FerrerSekiwake Ozeki
    Milos Raonic Komusubi Sekiwake
    Na Li (ex-Ozeki)Komusubi Sekiwake
    Grigor DimitrovMaegashira Komusubi
    Lucie SafarovaMaegashira Komusubi

    * New career high

    Monday, September 8, 2014

    Winds of Change

    For the first time in almost 10 years, there was no Roger Federer, no Rafael Nadal, and also no Novak Djokovic. The three reigning Yokozuna (=Grand Champions), who had sent at least one of them to the last 38 grand slam finals - winning 34 of them - were all absent. Also missing was long-standing Ozeki (=Champion) Andy Murray.

    Instead two relative nobodies played the mens' 2014 US Open final: Marin Cilic, whose best slam performance thus far had been a single semifinal participation at the 2010 Australian Open. And Kei Nishikori, who had never made a grand slam quarterfinal. In the event, the hard-hitting Croatian, measuring almost 2 meters, outgunned the nimble Japanese counterpuncher 6-3, 6-3, 6-3.

    The win was surely well deserved. Cilic had crushed Roger Federer in straight sets in the semifinals, after doing the same in the quarterfinals to ex-Ozeki Tomas Berdych. Together with his quarterfinal participation at Wimbledon - where Cilic lost a tight fivesetter to Djokovic - this grants Cilic a promotion to Ozeki; he is the 32nd male Ozeki of the open era (a rank that Cilic's coach and compatriot Goran Ivanisevic never attained, by the way).

    Nishikori had an arguably even tougher route to the final, having to overcome Sekiwake Milos Raonic, Ozeki Stanislas Wawrinka, and Yokozuna Novak Djokovic in long, grueling matches. With this final, Nishikori earns a promotion to Sekiwake, which makes him the first Asian born, sanyaku (champion) ranked player of the open era. Given that the Yokozuna-tennis ranking system takes its inspiration from Ozumo - Japan's national sport - a circle comes to completion.

    Many observers have declared this year's US Open would mark the end of the "big 4". After all, Federer has lost consistency - at the biblical tennis age of 33 - Nadal and Murray are increasingly prone to injury, and Djokovic has not quite returned to his dominance of 2011. And yet - for much of the second week of the US Open, conditions were plain irregular, with temperatures of 95F (35C) and humidity levels around 70 pecent. Success had as much to do with being able to cope with tropical conditions as with the tennis playing capacity. The next few slams will show what these Open's outcome is worth.
     
    As regards the remainder of the banzuke (=-ranking list), Ozeki Andy Murray and Stanislas Wawrinka both reached the quarterfinals and therefore hold rank - in the case of Murray for the 15th straight time. David Ferrer, by contrast, missed the quarterfinals for the second consecutive slam and thus gets demoted to Sekiwake, after six tournaments at Ozeki. Ferrer will share that rank with Nikishori. Raonic drops one rank to Komusubi (=Junior Champion 2), where he will be joined by Berdych and colorful Gael Monfils, who returns to Komusubi for the third time in his career, after giving Federer a stiff five-set challenge in the quarterfinals. Grigor Dimitrov, who lost to Monfils in round 4, drops out of the sanykau ranks.
     
    5 players in lower sanyaku is something the male banzuke has not seen in some time: the dominant "big 4" had not given many other players a chance to earn ranking points. This - at least for now - has changed.   
      
    The mens' sanyaku ranks at the end of the 2014 grand slam season are therefore as follows:
     

    Men
    Career rank 1/ East Current Rank West Career rank 1/
    High Sanyaku (Senior Champion Ranks)
    Y Novak Djokovic Y1 Roger FedererDai-Y
    Dai-Y Rafael Nadal Y2 --
    O Andy Murray O1 Stanislas WawrinkaO
    O Marin Cilic O2 --
    Lower Sanyaku (Junior Champion Ranks)
    O David Ferrer S Kei NishikoriS
    S Milos Raonic K1 Tomas BerdychO
    K Gael Monfils K2 --
    1/ Highest sanyaku rank achieved in a player's career

    Sunday, September 7, 2014

    Serena Joins the Legends amid an Ozeki Massacre

    Dai-Yokozuna (great Grand Champion) Serena Williams added an 18th grand slam title to her career by dispatching Caroline Wozniacki without much ado in the final of the 2014 US Open. Serena - who had failed to reach the grand slam quarterfinal at the last three occasions, and thus had to make at least the seminfinal at Flushing Meadow to remain an active Yokozuna - cruised through the field, with no opponent winning more than 3 games in any set Serena played.

    With 18 major titles, Serena has pulled even with Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert. We keep her behind these legends in the open era ranking for now, as Navratilova and, especially, Evert did not always play the Australian Open, in line with the standard at their time. But a couple more titles and Serena will be #3. Next in sight is Steffi Graf with 22 titles.

    The other high sanyaku ranked players (senior champions) experienced a debacle. Serena's co-Yokozuna (Grand Champion) Maria Sharapova lost in round 4 to Wozniacki. Sharapova hasn't played Yokozuna type tennis since her promotion at this year's French Open, and will need to reach the semis at the 2015 Australian or French Open to remain an active Yokozuna. And the three players who had been promoted to Ozeki (Champion) at Wimbledon - up-and-coming Eugenie Bouchard and Simona Halep, as well as double-Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova - also lost in rounds 3 or 4, and therefore go immediately kadoban, i.e. they need a quarterfinal at the 2015 Australian Open to avoid demotion. Ex-Ozeki Viktoria Azarenka, coming back from injury, made a courageous effort to win back her erstwhile rank - a semifinal would have been nough - but fell one win short.

    Finalist Wozniacki - who played a fine tournament until falling to Serena - returns to Sekiwake (Junior Champion I); a rank she has already held 5 times - last after the 2012 Australian Open. A semifinal in January in Melbourne and she would finally make it to Ozeki; a rank that her career record starts suggesting. Wozniacki shares Sekiwake rank with Azarenka and semi-finalist Ekaterina Makarova, who made her sanyaku breakthrough after having been close several times before. Makarova is the 42nd female Sekiwake of the open era.

    Another first-time sanyaku promotion, in this case to Komusubi (=Junior Champion 2), earned Shuai Peng. Peng is the third Chinese sanyaku-ranked player of the open era, after Na Li (career high Ozeki) and Jie Zheng (another Komusubi), and the 59th female Komusubi of the open era. The dramatic scenes of the semi-final - when Peng collapsed on a brutally hot and humid court, and was consolated by her opponent Wozniacki - will not be forgotten that quickly. Peng shares Komusubi rank with her compatriot Li, who had to sit the US Open out with an injury, and ex-Sekiwake and quarterfinalist Sara Errani.

    The ladies' sanyaku ranks at the end of the 2014 grand slam season are therefore as follows:

    Women
    Career rank 1/ East Current Rank West Career rank 1/
    High Sanyaku (Senior Champion Ranks)
    Dai-Y Serena Williams Y Maria SharapovaY
    O Eugenie Bouchard* O1 Simona Halep*O
    O Petra Kvitova* O2 --
    Lower Sanyaku (Junior Champion Ranks)
    O Viktoria Azarenka S1 Caroline WozniackiS
    S Ekaterina Makarova S2 --
    O Na Li K1 Shuai PengK
    S Sara Errani K2 --

    1/ Highest sanyaku rank achieved in a player's career
    * kadoban
    Venus Williams is an 'inactive' Yokozuna

     

    Monday, July 7, 2014

    Promotions and demotions following Wimbledon 2014


    Sanyaku Rank Changes
    Player (career rank if different) To From
    Promotions
    Eugenie Bouchard Ozeki* Sekiwake
    Simona Halep Ozeki* Sekiwake
    Petra Kvitova Ozeki Maegashira
    Milos Raonic Sekiwake* Maegashira
    Grigor Dimitrov Komusubi* Maegashira
    Lucie Safarova Komusubi* Maegashira
    Demotions
    Viktoria Azarenka Sekiwake Ozeki
    Li Na Sekiwake Ozeki
    Tomas Berdych (ex-Ozeki) Komusubi Sekiwake
    Ernests Gulbis Maegashira Komusubi
    Agnieszka Radwanska (ex-Sekiwake) Maegashira Komusubi
    Flavia Pennetta (ex-Sekiwake) Maegashira Komusubi
    Dominika Cibulkova (ex-Sekiwake) Maegashira Komusubi
    Andrea Petkovic Maegashira Komusubi
    Carla Suarez Navarro Maegashira Komusubi

    * New career high