STOCKTON, Calif. -- If Michael Mmoh is right, Cameron
Norrie has a very bright future.
When it was suggested to Mmoh that the left-hander's game resembles his British
countryman Andy Murray's, Mmoh replied: "Lefty Andy Murray is a pretty good
comparison. He has a really good backhand and a pretty good forehand. He's very
talented at moving you around the court and really dictating that baseline, so
he'll just push you from corner to corner. He can do that all day. He has very
good precision."
That doesn't necessarily mean Norrie, who will face Mmoh today in the semifinals
of the $100,000 Stockton Challenger, will ascend to No. 1 and win three Grand
Slam singles titles like Murray.
Norrie, 22, is far behind Murray at the same age. Murray won the first of his 45
ATP titles, 14th in the Open era (since 1968) and fourth among active
players, in the now-defunct SAP Open in San Jose at 18 years old in 2006 and
repeated in 2007. Norrie is ranked No. 136 and could crack the top 100 by the
end of the year. That would be an impressive feat, considering he turned
pro only four months ago after his junior year at Texas Christian University in
Fort Worth.
Norrie, seeded eighth, beat Tennys Sandgren, seeded second, 6-3, 7-6 (5)
on Friday at the University of the Pacific's Eve Zimmerman Tennis Center.
The third-seeded Mmoh, 19, of Bradenton, Fla., led 34-year-old Russian
qualifier Dmitry Tursunov, a former top-20 player who has been plagued by
injuries, 6-3 when Tursunov retired with a hamstring injury.
It's the third consecutive tournament in which Tursunov, who trained in Northern
California from age 12 into his 30s, has retired and the second straight because
of a hamstring problem.
In the other semifinal, sixth-seeded Darian King of Barbados will meet unseeded
veteran Tim Smyczek of Tampa, Fla., for the first time.
King, 25, defeated fourth-seeded Stefan Kozlov, 19, of Pembroke Pines, Fla.,
6-4, 6-4. Smyczek, 29, eliminated Elias Ymer, a 21-year-old Swede, by the same
score.
Both King and Smyczek qualified for the U.S. Open in August and lost in the
first round.
Sandgren, 26, of Gallatin, Tenn., in the Nashville area was the only top-100
player in the Stockton Challenger at No. 97. Top-seeded Ruben Bemelmans, a
Belgian who lost to Ymer in the first round, dropped from No. 92 when the draw
came out last Saturday to No. 101 in the latest rankings on Monday.
Norrie's victory wasn't really an upset. He improved to 3-0 against Sandgren,
including a 6-2, 6-3 victory in the final of the $100,000 Tiburon (Calif.)
Challenger on Sunday.
"I think I've had a little bit of luck (against Sandgren)," the 6-foot-2
(1.88-meter) Norrie said modestly. "I've been winning the long rallies against
him, and that's what he usually does well. That's paid dividends, and I've been
coming forward when I've needed to and knocking off some volleys when he's on
the run and slices. I've been staying positive and staying tough."
Sandgren led 4-1 (one service break) in the second set, but Norrie broke back
for 3-4 when Sandgren sailed a high backhand volley long. Both players then held
serve to force the tiebreaker, in which Norrie bolted to a 5-1 lead and held on
for the match.
"He played a good game to break me (early in the second set)," said Norrie, who
reached the second round of the U.S. Open as a qualifier before losing to
eventual semifinalist Pablo Carreno Busta. "I felt like I was playing well. I
just tried to focus on the present. Then I fought back and played a very good
tiebreaker and served really well. It's the best I've served the last two weeks.
I'm feeling really good about the match."
Mmoh, the son of former journeyman pro Tony Mmoh from Nigeria, skipped college
and turned pro last year. He was happy that his match against Tursunov lasted
only 39 minutes.
Mmoh was coming off a 1-6, 6-2, 7-6 (4) victory over Mackenzie McDonald, who
grew up in Piedmont in the San Francisco Bay Area, on Thursday. Mmoh saved two
match points in the 2-hour, 34-minute battle.
"I had a super-long match yesterday and was pretty sore this morning," conceded
Mmoh, who was named after Michael Jordan and has much of his namesake's
athleticism. "Having a 30-minute match or whatever it was is going to help me
the rest of the tournament and if I decide to play Fairfield (next week) as
well."
Norrie is 2-0 against Mmoh, including a 7-5, 6-2 win last week in the Tiburon
quarterfinals.
"I need to be a little more aggressive and take my chances," said the 6-foot-1
(1.85-meter) Mmoh, ranked No. 156. "I don't think I'm going to have a lot of
success just putting the ball in play and hoping he's going to miss because he
can make a ton of balls. I'm going to look to use my firepower and take it upon
him."
Here are the Stockton singles and doubles draws
and today's
schedule. The tournament is being streamed live.
Also, here are the singles qualifying draw and today's schedule for the $100,000
Northbay Healthcare Men's Pro Championships at Solano Community College in
Fairfield, Calif.
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