ATP Houston: Argentina strike again, Tiafoe hangs on and keeps the drama alive

ATP Houston: Argentina strike again, Tiafoe hangs on and keeps the drama alive

A day that swings from control to pure scrap

At Houston, they thought they were about to get an American statement. Instead, they got a dogfight.

The Argentines came in fearless. The Americans dug in. These quarter-finals told two very different stories. One of control. One of survival.

And in the end, we’ve got a last four that should be worth the wait.

Argentina keep setting the pace

They’re everywhere this week. And in Houston, they bit again.

Roman Andres Burruchaga led the way. Down 3-0 from the off against Learner Tien, he didn’t blink. He hauled himself level. Then he took charge.

A 7-5, 6-4 win. Steady. No panic when it mattered.

Then Thiago Agustin Tirante piled on the pressure. Against Ben Shelton, the task was a lot tougher.

Dropping the first set to a top-10 player can kill a match. Not this one.

He stuck around. He adjusted. He found his rhythm.

6-7, 6-3, 6-4. Another clear warning shot.
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Shelton falls short, the breakthrough will have to wait

For Shelton, it’s a setback.

After a solid opening, he had a real chance to kick off his clay-court run with some authority.

But against a player who kept the ball in play and kept his nerve, he eventually cracked.

A reminder, if anyone needed one: on clay, power only gets you so far.

Tien stalled after a dream start

Same story for Tien.

A controlled start. An early break. A feel of command.

Then, little by little, the match slipped away.

Because Burruchaga never gives you a free pass. And on this surface, every lapse gets charged.

Tommy Paul gives the expected answer

Thankfully for the home crowd, it wasn’t all falling apart.

Tommy Paul took matters into his own hands.

Against Tomas Martin Etcheverry, he didn’t let doubt creep in. Clean hitting, sharp tempo, job done.

6-4, 6-2. Crisp. No mess.

A big win, for him and for American tennis in this event.

Tiafoe, the match that changes everything

And then there’s Frances Tiafoe.

A match that could easily have slipped away. And nearly did.

Against Alexei Popyrin, he was under the pump. Outplayed in spells. The Australian hammered out 55 winners.

Then came the third-set tie-break, and there it was: match point.

Just one.

And Tiafoe saved it.

Survive and move on

That’s the kind of moment that flips a week on its head.

3-6, 6-4, 7-6. Nearly three hours of war.

Not pretty. Not tidy. But a win all the same.

And sometimes that’s all that matters.

An all-American semi-final showdown

So it’s Tommy Paul against Frances Tiafoe for a place in the final.

A clash of styles. A clash of moods.

Paul, cleaner. More consistent.

Tiafoe, wilder. More emotional.

And a spot in the final on the line.

Houston, a battleground between two schools

This tournament is telling you something.

On one side, the Argentine school. Patient. Solid. Built to last.

On the other, the American school. More direct. More explosive.

And when those two ideas collide on clay, every match turns into a scrap.

The last four, between order and pressure

On one side, Burruchaga against Tirante. All-Argentine.

On the other, Paul against Tiafoe. All-American.

Two ties. Two early finals.

And one simple question: who grabs control?

A finish to the tournament under serious pressure

At this stage, there’s no obvious favourite.

Just players who are riding high. And others who’ve had to battle through.

And more often than not, that’s where it comes down to something else.

The head. The details.

A match point saved… or blown.

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