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News | WTA Tennis English

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

While some stars are still working hard on the tennis court, others are enjoying a well-deserved break…and some amazing gifts.

Defending champion Heather Watson is using her time off at the Abierto GNP Seguros wisely – by sitting in the stands and recording the performance of her friend and Great Britain Fed Cup teammate Naomi Broady.

Ace ace baby ? Thanks to bae @heatherwatson92 for the video

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Alizé Cornet is having fun in Mexico.

Elsewhere, thrillseeker CoCo Vandeweghe is in deep water.

?????

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And new World No.7 Johanna Konta is ready for a very special delivery…of her favorite food.

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Champions Corner: Caroline Wozniacki Reflects On Tokyo Triumph

Champions Corner: Caroline Wozniacki Reflects On Tokyo Triumph

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

TOKYO, Japan – Caroline Wozniacki came to the Toray Pan Pacific Open having re-asserted her presence among the game’s elite at the US Open. Ranked No.74 in late August, the Dane roared into her first Grand Slam semifinal in exactly two years, and reminded fans and pundits that she was still one to watch.

Backing up that run in New York might have been tough for some, but Wozniacki’s week in Tokyo was arguably more impressive, earning two more Top 10 victories – including a thrilling win over No.2 seed Agnieszka Radwanska – to take her first title of 2016. Can she keep up her exciting start to the WTA’s Asian Swing?

WTA Insider caught up with Wozniacki after withstanding the charge from Japanese teenager, Naomi Osaka:

WTA Insider: Take me through the week and how you were able to maintain your form from the US Open with some great wins. What was the key for you this week in Tokyo?
Wozniacki: It’s been a great week, and I think the court really suits me. It’s kind of fast; the ball is a little heavy, but I’ve played well here in the past, and I think grinding and fighting for every point was key. I had some tough three-set matches here this week, and I managed to pull those off. I’m just really happy to be here at the end of the tournament.

WTA Insider: Going back to maybe a few days after the US Open, and you’re thinking about the rest of the season. What’s going through your mind as you know you’re playing well and have a great opportunity in Asia. What’s your motivation or your thought process before heading to Tokyo?
Wozniacki: Honestly, I took some days off and relaxed after enjoying a good US Open run. I had some sponsor commitments, and had a few hits, or actually one hit before I left for Tokyo. I practiced with a few of the girls here before my first match. I felt good, like I was hitting the ball well. I knew I’d face a few tough opponents, but I was feeling confident and hitting the ball well. That combination is good for me.

Caroline Wozniacki

WTA Insider: Did you think you had a level of confidence heading to Tokyo that you hadn’t had the rest of the year?
Wozniacki: I just felt like I played well at the US Open, and if I could keep that up, I would be tough to beat. But you never know; it’s a new week, new tournament, and I was just coming in here trying to take one match at a time – I know that’s a cliché – and go from there. I know that, when I’m healthy, I can play well, so hopefully I can carry this on into the rest of the year.

WTA Insider: Flashback to Zhuhai, and maybe again when we spoke in Eastbourne. Your injuries were creeping up and had obviously derailed your season for several months. You kept saying that if you kept working, surely luck has to break your way somehow. Do you feel like that’s what has happened over the past four weeks?
Wozniacki: It’s been a great few weeks. I’m just happy that I’ve managed to get some great wins under my belt. It hasn’t been about getting easy draws, but I’ve gotten some breaks to win the tight matches. I’ve been healthy for a little bit now, which is huge for me. Hopefully I can build on that moving forward.

WTA Insider: Talking about the final a little bit: you fell behind the early break, and was able to turn things around. Was there a leg issue as well?
Wozniacki: I don’t know; hopefully it’ll feel better tomorrow. I got some treatment on it, got it taped up. Right now, I’m going to try and enjoy this win for as long as I can. It was a tough match; Naomi’s a great player, and really young, so she has lots of potential. I think we’ll see lots of her in the future.

WTA Insider: You were talking about the ability to turn things around and play better tennis in New York, and you’re playing much more offensively, getting to the net. That seems like a change; is that something you’ve put into your mind about shortening points?
Wozniacki: I think I’m maybe moving a little bit faster. I’ve been able to work on my fitness, so that means that I can get to the ball faster and take it earlier. That gets my opponent out of position, and that makes it easier to get to net, when the opportunity is there.

Caroline Wozniacki

WTA Insider: You’re going to board a plane fairly quickly to head over to China. There’s lots of points in Wuhan and Beijing. How much does getting back into the Top 20 or other possible ranking goals play on your mind?
Wozniacki: Not really. I’m playing well; obviously, being in the Top 10 is a goal. But everything else, I’m just happy to have won here and I’m going to do my best to deal with this really quick turnaround. We’ll have to see how I can do that, go out there and fight.

WTA Insider: The semifinal you played against Aga was one of the most riveting matches of the year. You had your back against the all and were able to pull that out. How much do those wins over top players mean to you right now?
Wozniacki: It was such a great fight. Aga and I know each other so well, and we know each other’s games so well. We always know we’re going to have long rallies, and it’s going to be a fun match for both of us. I had my back against the wall and she was playing really well, but I somehow managed to fight and stay aggressive. I went for my shots and they went in at the right moments. It was a grueling match, but a fun one and I really enjoyed it. It definitely means a lot beating a top player, and feeling like I’m back where I want to be.

WTA Insider: Do you fee like you are? Are you there, or are you getting there? Where is Caroline right now?
Wozniacki: I think I’m feeling good. Obviously, you can always improve and always play better. But I feel like I’m hitting the ball well; I’ve beaten four Top 10 players in the last couple of weeks, and it’s been good. I’m just enjoying it and hopefully I can carry this momentum forward to the rest of the year.

All photos courtesy of Getty Images.

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Notes & Netcords: September 26, 2016

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

THE WINNERS

2010 Toray Pan Pacific Open champion Caroline Wozniacki overcame injury and withstood a late charge from rising star Naomi Osaka, 7-5, 6-3 to win her first title of 2016.

“It’s the last match of the tournament, and I just wanted to go out and enjoy it,” Wozniacki said in her on-court interview. “It’s the final and both of us had great weeks. We both wanted to go out there and play well.”

Read match recap & watch highlights. | WTA Insider: Wozniacki on her Tokyo title.

 Lara Arruabarrena won a topsy-turvy Korea Open Tennis final against Monica Niculescu on Sunday to capture her second WTA title.

Four years on from her only other WTA silverware, on the clay of Bogotá, Arruabarrena mastered the cement – and Niculescu’s unorthodoxy – to triumph, 6-0, 2-6, 6-0, in just under two hours.

Read match recap.

Lesia Tsurenko edged past defending champion and No.2 seed Jelena Jankovic 6-4, 3-6, 6-4 to claim the title at the Guangzhou International Women’s Open.

Playing Guangzhou for the second time in her career, Tsurenko capped off her trip to the sprawling Chinese port city by taking home her second career title after a nearly two-hour-and-thirty-minute clash against Jankovic.

“I think today I played really good tennis, except maybe in the second set when I felt a little bit tired,” Tsurenko said in her post-match press conference. “But I said to myself that I have to give it all in the final set, and I was fighting for each point. I had to give 100 percent to win this title.”

Read match recap.


RANKING MOVERS:
Notable singles ranking movers for the week of September 26, 2016.

Lara Arruabarrena (ESP), +29 (No.90 to 61): Arruabarrena owns the week’s biggest ranking jump and rises to a career high of No.61 after claiming her second WTA title in Seoul.

Lesia Tsurenko (UKR), +27 (No.80 to 53): Tsurenko continued her career-best week at the US Open with another big move, taking home the title at Guangzhou and sitting just outside the Top 50.

Naomi Osaka (JPN), +19 (No.66 to 47): 18-year-old Osaka delighted her home crowd with a run to her first career final in Tokyo. She rises to No.47 – a career high – and becomes the youngest player ranked inside the Top 50.

Caroline Wozniacki (DEN), +6 (No. 28 to 22): Just a few weeks ago, Wozniacki entered the US Open ranked No.74. A lot can change in those few weeks, with Wozniacki now back within striking distance of the Top 20 after capturing her first title of the year in Tokyo.


UPCOMING TOURNAMENTS

2016 Dongfeng Motor Wuhan Open
Wuhan, China
Premier | $2,288,250 | Hard
Sunday, September 25 – Saturday, October 1
Defending champion: Venus Williams

Tashkent Open
Tashkent, Uzbekistan
International | $226,750 | Hard
Monday, September 26 – Saturday, October 1
Defending champion: Nao Hibino

China Open
Beijing, China
Premier Mandatory | $5,424394 | Hard
Saturday, October 1 – Sunday, October 9
Defending champion: Garbiñe Muguruza

TOP 20 PLAYER SCHEDULES
1. Angelique Kerber – Wuhan, Beijing
2. Serena Williams
3. Garbiñe Muguruza – Wuhan, Beijing
4. Agnieszka Radwanska – Wuhan, Beijing
5. Simona Halep- Wuhan, Beijing
6. Karolina Pliskova – Wuhan, Beijing
7. Venus Williams – Wuhan, Beijing
8. Carla Suárez Navarro – Wuhan, Beijing
9. Madison Keys – Wuhan, Beijing
10. Svetlana Kuznetsova – Wuhan, Beijing
11. Victoria Azarenka
12. Dominika Cibulkova – Wuhan, Beijing
13. Johanna Konta – Wuhan, Beijing
14. Timea Bacsinszky – Wuhan, Beijing
15. Roberta Vinci – Wuhan, Beijing
16. Petra Kvitova – Wuhan, Beijing
17. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova – Wuhan, Beijing
18. Elina Svitolina – Wuhan, Beijing
19. Samantha Stosur – Wuhan, Beijing
20. Elena Vesnina – Beijing


HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO YOU!
Best wishes to those celebrating birthdays this week:

Serena Williams (USA) – September 26, 1981
Simona Halep (ROU) – September 27, 1991
Monica Puig (PUR) – September 27, 1993
Cagla Buyukakcay (TUR) – September 28, 1989
Kimiko Date-Krumm (JPN) – September 28, 1970
Paula Ormaechea (ARG) – September 28, 1992
Martina Hingis (SUI) – September 30, 1980

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News | WTA Tennis English

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

CHARLESTON, SC, USA — Caroline Wozniacki won all four sets she played as day turned to night on Thursday in Charleston, as the 2011 champion ousted Anastasia Rodionova, 6-3, 6-3 to reach the quarterfinals for the fifth time at the Volvo Car Open.

“It was tough conditions to play in this wind, a little chilly tonight as well and then playing someone who doesn’t give you any rhythm,” Wozniacki assessed at the close of her second match of the day. “Obviously she plays a lot of doubles, so she was coming in, doing drop shots and hitting the ball hard and then slow. She was definitely trying to break my rhythm up, and it was difficult. But I managed to pull through.”

The No.5 seed defeated Annika Beck in straight sets earlier on Thursday, and showed no ill effects of having to play two matches in the span of a few hours. The Dane has never lost before the quarterfinals in five career appearances in Charleston, and advances to face Jelena Ostapenko in Friday’s quarterfinals.

The former World No.1 won 15 straight points over the first four games of the match to take command before the qualifier got on the board and a foothold in the match. The Australian broke and held serve in a lengthy game, saving five break points in total, to close the deficit to 4-2, but Wozniacki held on from there to take four of the next five games to lead by a set and a break.

Rodionova saved a trio of break points in the fifth game of the second set, and broke the Wozniacki delivery at love to level the match. Nonetheless, the qualifier who scored upsets against Duan Ying-Ying and Sara Errani to reach the third round was unable to conjure another stunner as the Dane secured the final three games to move safely through to the last eight.

Looking ahead to Friday night, Wozniacki lost the only match she’s played against the Latvian teenager at the Connecticut Open last year, as she attempts to reach the semifinals in Charleston for the first time since raising the trophy in 2011.

“I think I’m well-prepared for tomorrow. I got some clay tennis in today and feel like I’m just going to go out there and have fun and do my best and see how it goes,” Wozniacki said. “I’m just playing right now. I had one practice session before the tournament started for me, and that was it. I just kind of run on experience and try and figure it out.”

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Puig Adjusting To Highs And Lows Of Post-Olympic Life

Puig Adjusting To Highs And Lows Of Post-Olympic Life

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

WUHAN, China – Monica Puig is getting a crash-course in the propulsive nature of the tennis season. After a solid quarterfinal showing at the Toray Pan Pacific Open last week, Puig lost in the first round of the Dongfeng Motor Wuhan Open on Sunday to Roberta Vinci, 6-3, 6-3.

On paper it was a standard result. Few would bat an eye at the sight of the No.15 player in the world knocking out the No.33 player in straight sets.

But nothing is standard for Puig these days. Not since her jaw-dropping run at the Olympic tennis event in Rio, where she defeated now World No.1 Angelique Kerber to win gold, capping off a week that saw her notch career-best win after career-best win. It’s been a whirlwind six weeks since then and the 22-year-old now finds herself between two worlds: one that continues to revel in the glory of gold and one that has relentlessly moved on.

“There’s been a lot of media attention, a lot of focus on just the Olympics,” Puig told reporters after the match. “It’s kind of hard when you have to focus on other things, other tournaments, and everybody keeps bringing you back to Rio.”

After becoming the first man or woman representing Puerto Rico to win Olympic gold, Puig was back on court two weeks later. With the spotlight on her in New York, she bowed out in straight sets in the first round of the US Open to Zheng Saisai.

Monica Puig

“It’s a bit tough when you come off the biggest win of your career, the biggest tournament you’ve ever won, and all of a sudden you have to get back to training.

“I feel like Rio definitely drained me mentally and physically because it was a lot to take in. I wish I obviously would have had that time to full-on celebrate, and that would have been it. The tennis calendar isn’t that forgiving.”

Asked directly whether she wished she could have taken a time-out after Rio, Puig did not equivocate: Yes.

“A lot of gymnasts are doing Dancing with the Stars, all this and that,” Puig said with a laugh. “I’m in Wuhan, which is not bad. It’s not bad.

“It’s not something that I’m used to, winning something this big, then having to continue and keep going. I would have loved to celebrate. I would have loved to have some downtime, give my body a little bit of a breather to catch up with everything that’s happened.”

Monica Puig

When asked whether she might take some consolation in other players’ ability to battle through a post-Slam winning slump, Puig singled out Angelique Kerber’s ability to get back on track as a good reason not to panic. She also emphasized one simple fact: she wouldn’t trade her gold medal experience for anything.

“It’s like a shock to the body and to everything else,” Puig said. “All of a sudden you’re just like, ‘No way did this just happen.’ I just had that one match in New York, then I came to Tokyo and I had a really good tournament. I think it’s just coming back to thinking about what you have to do, not getting overshadowed by what happened or anything.

“I bet [other players] must have been the same: going to sleep and thinking about everything just happened, that they won a Grand Slam. I think probably for Kerber it’s a little bit different now since she’s had two and so much success, so maybe she’s getting used to it.

Monica Puig

“In terms of me, I never had this type of moment. It took me a while to go to sleep and actually calm my thoughts and not replay that moment over and over again. It’s still very new, still very fresh in my mind. I will officially always be labeled the ‘Olympic gold medalist’. I’m getting used to the title.”

Next up for Puig is next week’s China Open and then she will stay in China to play the Tianjin Open. Her goal is to finish the season on a good note and set herself up to be seeded at the Australian Open in January.

“I know when vacation time comes around, I’m not going to be thinking about tennis,” Puig said. “I’m going to turn off Twitter, Instagram. I am going to be like hiatus, out. Nobody is going to know about me for two weeks. I think it’s also healthy to just focus on myself, on the rest, what my body needs to recover, and to start a good pre-season.”

All photos courtesy of Getty Images.

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