Kei Nishikori bests Aljaz Bedene 7-6(6) 5-7 6-4 in the 2nd round in Miami on Saturday. Nishikori will have to play Stefanos Tsitsipas in the 3rd round. The battle lasted 2 hours and 50 minutes. His best achievement in this tournament was reaching the final in 2016. Here you can see his history at this event.

Miami
Nishikori's Record

The Japanese added to his prize money $ 10,000 after winning this match. He has won already $ 26,000 after this win. If he wins the next match, the Japanese will add $ 14,000 to his earnings to get in total $ 40,000 in total.

Highlights Kei Nishikori vs. Aljaz Bedene Miami Open – Miami

Stats: aces, double faults, breaks, winners

Nishikori
Bedene
7-66 5-7 6-4
2h:50
113
113
Total points
104
104
49
49
Winners
56
56
43%
43%
Ratio Winners
54%
54%
-- Serve --
3
3
Aces
11
11
2
2
Double Faults
6
6
66%
66%
1st in
63%
63%
73%
73%
1st won
77%
77%
49/67
49/67
1st won
56/73
56/73
53%
53%
2nd won
33%
33%
18/34
18/34
2nd won
14/43
14/43
-- Break Points --
4/6
4/6
Total
4/6
4/6
67%
67%
Won
67%
67%
See Full Stats

At the end of the match, the Japanese scored 113 points vs. Bedene’s 104.

Nishikori

Kei was pretty effective at converting 67% of the break points that he conquered (4/6).

Bedene

On the other side, the Slovenian was sharp when converting 67% of the break points that he conquered points (4/6). Yet, that was not enough to win the match.

After this contest, the head to head between Nishikori and Bedene is 2-0 for Kei.

Draw and next match H2H: Kei Nishikori vs. Stefanos Tsitsipas – stats

Nishikori will take on Tsitsipas in the 3rd round.

This will be the 2nd time that Kei Nishikori and Stefanos Tsitsipas square off. The head to head is 1-0 for Nishikori (see full H2H stats), but they have never competed against each other on hard.

Live score progression and stats

Tsitsipas conquered a good lead at the beginning of the set after breaking Nishikori in the 1st game (1-0). Nonetheless, Kei managed to stage a great comeback to break Aljaz in the 2nd (1-1) and in the 12th (6-6) game before winning the set at the breaker at 6.

Tiebreak

Nishikori won 3 minibreaks in the 1st (1-0), 7th (4-3) and 14th (8-6) point. On the other side, Bedene won a minibreak in the 12th (6-6) point.

This was the tiebreak sequence: 1-0, 1-1, 1-2, 2-2, 3-2, 3-3, 4-3, 5-3, 6-3, 6-4, 6-5, 6-6, 7-6, 8-6

Nishikori was exemplary in converting all his break points in the 2nd (0-1 0-40) and the 12th game (5-6 30-40). On the other side, Aljaz converted 66% of his break points (2/3). He had his opportunities in the 1st (0-0 30-40), the 3rd (1-1 30-40) and the 11th game (5-5 30-40).

They played 81 points. Kei was the winner of the set after clinching 5 points more than the Slovenian (43-38). Nishikori surrendered 16 points on serve (27-16). on the other side of the net, Aljaz conceded 16 points on serve (22-16).

The Slovenian won the set after he broke the Japanese in the 6th (4-2) and in the 12th (7-5) game. Nishikori tried to stage a comeback breaking in the 7th (4-3) game. Nevertheless, Bedene stayed solid to win the set 7-5.

Bedene converted 33% of his break points (1/3). He had 3 break points opportunities in the 6th (3-2 30-40) and the 12th game (6-5 15-40 and 30-40). In addition on the other side, Nishikori converted 50% of his break points (1/2). He had his opportunities in the 7th (2-4 40-A) and the 9th game (4-4 30-40).

They contested 77 points. The set was a huge battle since finally Aljaz won just 3 points more than the Japanese (40-37). Bedene lost 17 points on serve (26-17). On the other side, Kei conceded 14 points on serve (20-14).

The set was even with both players refusing to concede anything to the opposition. Eventually, the only discrepancy was one break that the Japanese conquered in the 7th game (4-3) just before ultimately winning the set (6-4).

The Japanese converted 50% of his break points (1/2). He had 2 break points opportunities in the 3rd (1-1 30-40) and the 7th game (3-3

40-A). On the other side, the Japanese didn’t concede a single break point during this set.

They contested 58 points. Kei was the winner of the set after clinching 8 points more than Bedene (33-25). The Japanese lost 5 points on serve (20-5). On the other side, the Slovenian conceded 13 points on serve (20-13).

Tennis Scores in Miami

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