Beijing: Keys Interview
An interview with Madison Keys before her first round match at the China Open.
An interview with Madison Keys before her first round match at the China Open.
An interview with Garbiñe Muguruza before her first round match at the China Open.
Former World No.1 and 2008 French Open champion Ana Ivanovic took the tennis world by surprise when she announced on Facebook Live that she would be retiring from the sport, effective immediately.
“It hasn’t been an overnight decision,” she explained in an exclusive with WTA Insider. “It’s been on my mind for a little bit but I tried to also follow my heart because for me, it’s proven to be the best way.
“I really felt now it’s time to just give back. Coming from Serbia, everything that I’ve been through in my life and my career, so far my parents and my brother with me, they made it all possible. I feel very fortunate and so I want to give back and maybe help others be as fortunate as I was.”
What followed was an outpouring of well wishes from her friends and colleagues who’ve been with her throughout her 13-year career. From WTA founder Billie Jean King, to 2016’s World No.1s Angelique Kerber and Serena Williams, to rising stars like Belinda Bencic and Daria Gavrilova, it was clear Ivanovic was as much beloved by her fellow players as the fans saying #ThankYouAna.
Check out what her fellow WTA stars had to say about the Serb on Twitter:
I will miss one of my best friends on tour @AnaIvanovic ❤️ You've had an incredible tennis career. Best wishes for the exciting new chapter! pic.twitter.com/IUlbkHHGVE
— Angelique Kerber (@AngeliqueKerber) December 29, 2016
@AnaIvanovic Best wishes with your future endeavors. Will miss seeing that spectacular smile! ? Once a champion, always a champion. ? ?
— Billie Jean King (@BillieJeanKing) December 28, 2016
@AnaIvanovic my goodness I will miss your smile. All my love ❤️❤️
— Serena Williams (@serenawilliams) December 28, 2016
You were one of my first Idols when I was a small girl ?All the best at your life after tennis @AnaIvanovic ! We will miss you on the Tour! pic.twitter.com/YCMv5G43ic
— Belinda Bencic (@BelindaBencic) December 29, 2016
Will miss you on tour, but excited for you and what your new chapter has to bring? see you soon!!?? https://t.co/twK95j9Dnl
— Caroline Wozniacki (@CaroWozniacki) December 28, 2016
@WTA @AnaIvanovic #ThankYouAna pic.twitter.com/5magt6K1wy
— Daria Gavrilova (@Daria_gav) December 29, 2016
Ha sido un placer haber compartido contigo tantos años en el circuito @WTA. I will miss you @AnaIvanovic! See you soon! ?? #ThankYouAna pic.twitter.com/LQdj5MEMll
— Anabel Medina (@anabelmedina) December 28, 2016
Awww, sorry to see @AnaIvanovic retire! Will miss that forehand, the smile &the little fist pump. Delightful to all! #happyretirement ????
— Tracy Austin (@thetracyaustin) December 28, 2016
We will miss seeing your smile on the court! Fighter, professional, great person. Enjoy your post-tennis life, Ana ? pic.twitter.com/1FXcBl4C2Z
— Petra Kvitova (@Petra_Kvitova) December 28, 2016
That smile, that grace, that forehand, that class….@AnaIvanovic … Tennis will miss you… BUT, what a rich life you have ahead of you!!!
— Chris Evert (@ChrissieEvert) December 28, 2016
@AnaIvanovic Will miss you on tour! Good luck and enjoy the next chapter. ??
— Laura Robson (@laurarobson5) December 28, 2016
Good luck with the next chapter! https://t.co/wnlGE91Mzg
— Anne Keothavong (@annekeothavong) December 28, 2016
What a amazing athlete, competitor,fighter but most importantly what a great person off court @AnaIvanovic congratulations on everything you
— TamiraPaszek (@tamira1990) December 28, 2016
achieved in your career! You can be proud @AnaIvanovic ??wishing you all the best for this new phase of your life ??? will miss you on tour
— TamiraPaszek (@tamira1990) December 28, 2016
Congrats on your career @AnaIvanovic good luck and have fun on what's coming next! We had some fun matches together ?? pic.twitter.com/95flZJ5whh
— victoria azarenka (@vika7) December 28, 2016
Will miss you and our laughs and chats.. good luck.. best always .. love ❤️ https://t.co/sEWhYkB0dQ
— Sania Mirza (@MirzaSania) December 29, 2016
Congrats @anaivanovic on a wonderful career. Hope you have a great time off court and I hope we'll still see you around!??? pic.twitter.com/yAbd64Xubt
— Roberta Vinci (@roberta_vinci) December 29, 2016
wish you nothing but the best. #ajde! https://t.co/T2sHsL8rDI
— Jamie Hampton (@Jamie_Hampton) December 28, 2016
Amazing tennisplayer and even better person?. Happy retirement @AnaIvanovic ??
— Sofia Arvidsson (@Sofia_Arvidsson) December 28, 2016
They don't come much nicer, prettier or classier than this girl ❤ Thank you @AnaIvanovic for being a Champion on and off the court ⭐ @WTA pic.twitter.com/RrnKYdCjSq
— Michaëlla Emmrich (@MisaKrajicek) December 28, 2016
@AnaIvanovic Ana,congrats on your amazing career!Oh,we will miss you ? ? Good luck in your new chapter,I am sure it will be all fine?❤
— Elena Vesnina (@EVesnina001) December 29, 2016
@AnaIvanovic we will miss you Ana! ?All the best to your family and you ❤
— Alla Kudryavtseva (@AllaK11) December 28, 2016
@AnaIvanovic wishing u the very best in your future Ana! You were truly one of THE NICEST PEOPLE EVER ON TOUR! Beautiful inside & out!!
— rennae stubbs (@rennaestubbs) December 29, 2016
@AnaIvanovic good luck in the future
— Melanie South (@melaniesouth) December 28, 2016
We had couple of battle together, @AnaIvanovic
I will miss seeing you on the tour …
Good luck in your post tennis life and Enjoy it ! ? pic.twitter.com/bnOaxpFsFL— Caroline Garcia (@CaroGarcia) December 28, 2016
Congrats on your career @AnaIvanovic and good luck with what's coming now:) pic.twitter.com/NsJiifeAXE
— Kiki Bertens (@kikibertens) December 28, 2016
イワノビッチ引退かぁぁ、
可愛くて大好きな選手。
寂しいなぁ。#ThankYouAna pic.twitter.com/SfvBS8tZGX— Misa Eguchi / 江口実沙 (@misa_eguchi) December 29, 2016
All the best Ana ??????we will miss u https://t.co/Z6foNyYPAu
— Svetlana Kuznetsova (@SvetlanaK27) December 29, 2016
You can be proud of you @AnaIvanovic ! You are a great champion and a very nice person, now enjoy the real life ? #ThankYouAna
— Alize Cornet (@alizecornet) December 29, 2016
Didn't have a chance to play with you! But still happy I got a chance to share a few years on @WTA tour at the same time with @AnaIvanovic ? https://t.co/iHaPvC8PEF
— Kovinić Danka (@KovinicDanka118) December 29, 2016
had always fun playing with you,playing against you like when we were kids at Eddie Herr and many more!Wish you all the best @AnaIvanovic
— Jarmila Wolfe (@tennis_jarkag) December 29, 2016
What a babe. Gorgeous inside and (obv) out ? tennis will definitely miss you #AnaIvanovic pic.twitter.com/L86hX1InjG
— Heather Watson (@HeatherWatson92) December 29, 2016
Lucky to have shared the court with such a nice person.. good luck in this next chapter of your life @AnaIvanovic .. enjoy!! pic.twitter.com/fU4bf5Vlzx
— Sara Errani (@SaraErrani) December 29, 2016
BEIJING, China – World No.3 Agnieszka Radwanska defeated the tricky Ekaterina Makarova in straight sets to advance to the third round of the China Open and put herself in pole position to qualify for the WTA Finals.
Watch live action from Beijing on WTA Live powered by TennisTV!
Makarova did well to avoid the first set shutout – she was down 5-0 when she finally got on the scoreboard and began to mount a comeback – but Radwanska powered through 6-3, 6-4 after just over an hour an thirty minutes on court.
Everything seemed to be going Radwanska’s way at the China National Tennis Center on Monday night. Despite facing fierce resistance from the Russian in the second set, Radwanska struck 20 winners and just eight unforced errors against Makarova’s 25 winners and 31 unforced errors. She also served at 52 percent and fired five aces.
.@ARadwanska with the drop shot to lob combo! ? https://t.co/mjfnrJ9FJ7
— WTA (@WTA) October 3, 2016
With the victory Radwanska edges even closer to qualifying for the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global. In fact, she’s one win away from a spot in the season-ending event, but she could still qualify without lifting a racquet if both Johanna Konta and Svetlana Kuznetsova lose in the second round.
“I just hope I can [qualify] here, that’s for sure,” Radwanska said after her win last round. “But, well, I had the situation last year when I had to win the Tianjin Open to qualify for Singapore, and I did it. Of course, it was last-minute qualifying.
“I will try everything to qualify a bit before that this year. Everything is open. This is a big event. Everybody can do a lot of points here.”
That doesn’t mean Radwanska’s in the clear just yet – standing between her and a ticket to Singapore is the winner between giant-killer Roberta Vinci and familiar rival Caroline Wozniacki. It would be the third meeting in as many weeks for Wozniacki and Radwanska, with the pair splitting their previous encounters and Tokyo and Wuhan.
KEY INFORMATION:
Tournament Level: Premier
Prize Money: $1,000,000
Draw Size: 30 main draw/32 qualifying
Main Draw Ceremony: Friday, December 30- 12 pm AEST
Qualifying Dates: Friday, December 30 – Sunday, January 1
First Day of Main Draw: Sunday, January 1
Singles Final: Saturday, January 7- 7 pm AEST
Doubles Final: Saturday, January 7- following singles
MUST-FOLLOW SOCIAL MEDIA ACCOUNTS:
@WTA
@WTA_Insider – WTA Insider, Senior Writer Courtney Nguyen
@BrisbaneTennis – official tournament handle
WHERE TO WATCH:
Click here to select your country and find broadcast details for the Brisbane International.
TOURNAMENT NOTES:
– There have been six different champions crowned at Brisbane since its first staging in 2009: Victoria Azarenka (2009, 2016), Kim Clijsters (2010), Petra Kvitova (2011), Kaia Kanepi (2012), Serena Williams (2013, 2014) and Maria Sharapova (2015).
– With defending champion Victoria Azarenka away from the completion after giving birth to a baby boy and with no former champions in the draw, a new champion will lift the Brisbane trophy this year.
– One to watch: Entering the tournament as a wildcard, Australian Ashleigh Barty returned to tennis in 2016 after a stint in cricket as an all-rounder for the Brisbane Heat. Her return has been highlighted by a quarterfinal run at Nottingham, and she’s also been granted a wildcard into the upcoming Australian Open.
PLAYER FIELD:
Click here for complete singles and doubles draws.
The Brisbane International serves as the only Premier event of the first week of the season and the field is packed with five of the Elite Eight from the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global. A finalist last year, Angelique Kerber leads the field along with Singapore champion Dominika Cibulkova, Karolina Pliskova, Garbiñe Muguruza, Svetlana Kuznetsova, Elina Svitolina, and Elena Vesnina.
Also in Brisbane is Roberta Vinci, who recently announced her intention to play through another season, as well as the Gold Coast’s own Samantha Stosur, Olympic Gold Medalist Monica Puig, China’s top-ranked player Zhang Shuai and Eugenie Bouchard.
WILDCARDS:
Ashleigh Barty (AUS), Donna Vekic (CRO)
Wuhan champion Petra Kvitova opens her China Open account on Day 4, along with Simona Halep. Chris Oddo previews Tuesday’s key matchups in Beijing right here at wtatennis.com.
Tuesday
Second Round
[14] Petra Kvitova (CZE #11) vs. [Q] Wang Yafan (CHN # 143)
Head-to-head: First meeting
Key Stat: Kvitova has lost five times to players ranked outside of the Top 100 since July of 2013.
A few days after triumphantly bagging her second Wuhan title, No.14-seeded Petra Kvitova will look to keep the momentum rolling in Beijing in her second-round tilt with Chinese wild card Wang Yafan. Kvitova has won 20 of her last 25 matches, and she’s finally sustaining the type of consistency that can move her back into the Top 10. But the 26-year-old warns that it isn’t going to be easy for her to maintain the jaw-dropping level she hit in Wuhan. “I need this kind of consistency all year, which to be honest, I don’t think I can really do that,” Kvitova said after pummeling Dominika Cibulkova for her 18th career title on Saturday in Wuhan. “I’m probably the player who has up and downs. Of course, I am going to try to be better in the downs. But I don’t really think that I can be consistent all season. I’m just how I am probably, and I can’t really change it.” Kvitova may have to accept a certain amount of deviation in form due to her reliance on power and precision rather than margin, but she’s just happy to have turned her season around with some sparkling tennis over the last two months. “I’m happy that my ups, they are really high, which I love of course,” she said. “The downs are very low, but that’s how it is.” Will Kvitova stay high in Beijing and keep her hopes for a late run at a Singapore slot alive? Or will she fall prey to inconsistency against an unknown Chinese commodity? Wang, 22, has claimed seven ITF titles but has never broken into the Top 100 on tour. That said, she defeated Ana Konjuh to qualify for the main draw and knocked off World No.72 Madison Brengle in straight sets to reach the second round.
Pick: Kvitova in two
[4] Simona Halep (ROU #5) vs. Yanina Wickmayer (BEL #56)
Head-to-head: Wickmayer leads, 3-1
Key Stat: Wickmayer has lost her last 16 sets against the Top 10.
Yanina Wickmayer takes a 3-1 lifetime record into her second-round battle with Simona Halep, but the Belgian earned each of those three wins more than three years ago, and Halep has become a vastly improved, elite player since then. Halep demonstrated her superiority over Wickmayer when they last met in 2015 at the Australian Open’s round of 16, defeating her in straight sets. It’s been a mixed back for Wickmayer since she claimed the Citi Open title in late July. Since then she’s lost six of eight and only recently regained her form. On Saturday Wickmayer blasted past Monica Puig, 6-2, 6-0, and she should be confident on the heels of that strong result. But Halep is fresh off a semifinal appearance at Wuhan and she has won 24 of her last 28 matches dating back to the first week of Wimbledon. Halep was handed a lopsided defeat by Petra Kvitova in the Wuhan semis, but the Romanian’s confidence hasn’t suffered because of it. “I played semis, the best result here in China,” she said last week. “I played good matches, good tennis. Even today I’m not negative. I cannot be. I played tough matches in the last months, and all were very, very good. So I’m okay.”
Pick: Halep in two
[13] Roberta Vinci (ITA #16) vs. Caroline Wozniacki (DEN #22)
Head-to-head: Wozniacki leads, 3-2
Key Stat: Wozniacki has won the last three hardcourt meetings against Vinci.
2010 Beijing champion Caroline Wozniacki has turned her season around in the span of a red-hot month. On Tuesday she’ll look to keep the good vibes rolling when she faces No.13-seeded Italian Roberta Vinci for a spot in the sweet 16. Vinci owns 23 hardcourt wins this season and she’s always a tough out on the surface, but Wozniacki has defeated the 33-year-old in all three of their meetings on hardcourts. Can Vinci use her eclectic style to throw Wozniacki’s game off saddle, or is Wozniacki, winner of 13 of her last 15 matches and six of her last seven deciders, simply too strong at this phase of the season to be denied?
Pick: Wozniacki in two
[11] Johanna Konta (GBR #14) vs. Timea Babos (HUN #26)
Head-to-head: Konta leads, 1-0
Key Stat: Babos is bidding for her 5th Top 20 win of 2016 on Tuesday.
Two players in the midst of breakout seasons will vie for a spot in the round of 16 on Tuesday, as Johanna Konta and Timea Babos meet for the second time and the first time in more than four years. Konta, ranked No.14 this week, was outside of the Top 200 when she first met Babos, who was then No.59. Four years later both players are firmly inside the Top 30 with Konta now knocking on the door of the Top 10 and entertaining hopes of making a last-ditch run at WTA Finals qualification. But Konta will have to hurry if she wants to make it to Singapore. She’s nearly 400 points behind No.8 Madison Keys on the RTS leaderboard and Beijing could be her only chance to make up the difference. Konta started her Asian swing with a quarterfinal performance at Wuhan last week, and she actually played Petra Kvitova pretty tough despite falling to the scorching-hot Czech in straight sets. Konta has won 18 of 23 matches since Wimbledon and continues to impress with her consistent level and supreme focus. The British No.1 doesn’t ever lack intensity or purpose on the court, and that should serve her well when she meets Babos, who is still learning to compete at the elite level and can go off the rails at times.
Pick: Konta in two
By the Numbers:
23 – All but three of Wozniacki’s 26 wins have come on hardcourts this season.
133 – Zhang Shuai’s ranking at this year’s Australian Open. The 27-year-old is currently the Chinese No.1, ranked at 36. She faces Alison Riske in second-round action on Tuesday.
4 – Previous champions remaining in the draw (Wozniacki, Kuznetsova, Radwanska and defending champion Muguruza).
0 – Number of successful China Open title defenses that have occurred. Garbiñe Muguruza is bidding to become the first.

An interview with Simona Halep after her win in the third round of the Miami Open.
BEIJING, China – Petra Kvitova overcame some early resistance from local favorite Wang Yafan to safely take her place in the third round of the China Open.
Watch live action from Beijing on WTA Live powered by TennisTV!
Continuing the dominant form that took her to the title last week in Wuhan, Kvitova required little more than an hour to wrap up a 6-4, 6-1 victory and set up a showdown with defending champion Garbiñe Muguruza.
Beijing resident Wang came through qualifying to take her place in the main draw and even with the roof closed due to rain she looked at ease on court. In fact, it was the World No.143 that broke first, edging 3-2 ahead when Kvitova netted a backhand.
Any suggestion that Kvitova’s recent exertions were in danger of catching up with her were given short shrift. A break to love began a run that would bring her 10 of the next 12 games and place in the third round.
Happy to be through in Beijing! Thanks to my friend Mr Roof 😉 @ChinaOpen pic.twitter.com/ZzNePB6CtB
— Petra Kvitova (@Petra_Kvitova) October 4, 2016
“I was pretty tired. I had two days off, which I think helped me. For sure, was a good win today. We’ll see how everything is going, like, in the next days,” Kvitova said.
“But I think I still do have motivation. I think it was a great week in Wuhan. I think that gave me more motivation and confidence, which I really needed before. I’m not really struggling with motivation here.”
While Kvitova’s head was ready for Wang, the same could not be said for her hands – a botched grooming session meant she took to the court with her fingers generously taped.
Kvitova with 3 fingernails taped so I ask what happens thinking it's blisters.Nope: manicure gone wrong. “Never do gel”, she said in a laugh
— Carole Bouchard (@carole_bouchard) October 4, 2016
If the Czech keeps winning, she still has an outside chance of reaching the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global. Muguruza is also in the hunt for a place in Singapore, where last year she defeated Kvitova in an epic round robin encounter.
Kvitova, who avenged this with a three-set victory in Stuttgart, is expecting another tight affair: “For sure will be great match. I think it will be great battle again. I know how we fight in Stuttgart. It was a great match over there.
“I know how dangerous she is. I mean, she’s really playing aggressive from both sides and she’s serving real well and returning as well. That’s why I think I really need to be ready from the first shot which I’m playing.”
Agnieszka Radwanska takes on Madison Brengle in the third round of the Miami Open.
ZHUHAI, China – After an action-filled week at the Dongfeng Motor Wuhan Open, the WTA Elite Trophy Zhuhai welcomes a new face into the leaderboard: Petra Kvitova.
Kvitova’s big win in Wuhan puts her at the No.12 spot on the WTA Elite Trophy Zhuhai leaderboard, but she’s not the only big name to join the fray. Madison Keys and Carla Suárez Navarro switched spots, making the Spaniard the top seed for the season-ending event.
Meanwhile, only a handful of points separate the next two players in contention, Svetlana Kuznetsova and Johanna Konta, so a good result at this week’s China Open could create more major shifts.
The year’s final tournament will take place in Zhuhai and will run from November 1 to 6. Like last year, the singles draw will feature 11 of the top ranked players and one wildcard, with the winner collecting 700 rankings points.
Here’s the latest leaderboard update for the WTA Elite Trophy Zhuhai as of October 3, 2016:
