Alejandro Tabilo ousts Sebastian Ofner 6-3 6-4 in the final in Mallorca on Saturday. The match lasted 1 hour and 14 minutes. This is the first time that Tabilo conquered this tournament. His most significant achievement in this tournament so far was reaching the 1st round. Here you can see when his history at this event.
The Chilean added € 59,080 to his prize money after conquering this final. He has earned € 141,795 in total after winning this tournament.
Highlights Alejandro Tabilo vs. Sebastian Ofner Mallorca Championships – Mallorca
Stats: aces, double faults, breaks, winners
At the end of the match, Tabilo scored 63 points vs. Sebastian’s 52.
Tabilo
The Chilean served exceptionally well to win 86% of the points (31/36) behind his first serve. Notwithstanding he won only 48% points (13/27) on his second serve. The Chilean won this match even if he was struggling to find the solution in converting his break points as he converted only 40% (2/5) of the procured opportunities.
Ofner
On the other side, Ofner wasn’t able to conquer any break point (0/3). That was one of the key issues for his loss.
After this match, the head to head between Tabilo and Ofner is 1-1.
This was the 2nd career title for Tabilo. (see list of titles and finals). The Austrian lost the opportunity to win his title at the first attempt. (see list of titles and finals)
Live score progression and stats
The set was even with both players refusing to concede anything to the opposition. Eventually, the only discrepancy was one break that the Chilean grabbed in the 6th game (4-2) prior to ultimately winning the set (6-3).
Tabilo converted 33% of his break points (1/3). He had 3 break points opportunities in the 2nd (1-0 30-40) and the 6th game (3-2 0-40 and 15-40). On the other side, Alejandro didn’t concede a single break point during this set.
They played 52 points. Alejandro conquered the set after winning 4 points more than the Austrian (28-24). Tabilo surrendered 6 points on serve (20-6). on the other side of the net, Ofner conceded 8 points on serve (18-8).
Similarly to the 1st set, the set was pretty even as both sides managed to hold the serve. The only difference was 1 break that the Chilean clinched in the 9th game (5-4) before eventually winning the set (6-4).
The Chilean converted 50% of his break points (1/2). He had 2 break points opportunities in the 9th game (4-4 30-40 and 40-A). On the other side, the Austrian was unable to convert any of his 3 break points. He had 3 break points opportunities in the 6th (3-2 15-40 and 30-40) and the 10th game (4-5 40-A).
They played 63 points. Alejandro was the one to win the set after conquering 7 more points than Sebastian (35-28). The Chilean lost 13 points on serve (24-13). on the other side of the court, the Austrian conceded 11 points on serve (15-11).