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Wuhan Tuesday: Top Seeds Kerber, Muguruza, Kick Off Wuhan Campaigns

Wuhan Tuesday: Top Seeds Kerber, Muguruza, Kick Off Wuhan Campaigns

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

How will Angelique Kerber handle her first match as a reigning World No.1 on Tuesday? We preview a busy slate of action in Wuhan, courtesy of WTATennis.com contributor Chris Oddo.

Tuesday

Second Round

[1] Angelique Kerber (GER #1) vs. Kristina Mladenovic (FRA #54)
Head-to-head: Kerber leads, 2-0
Key Stat: Kerber became the WTA’s 22nd No.1-ranked player on the Monday after the US Open.

How will it feel, taking the court as the WTA’s top-ranked player for the first time? Angelique Kerber isn’t quite sure. “I don’t know if it feels different,” she told reporters on Sunday in Wuhan. “I mean, I’m still the same person.” More than anything, having two weeks to relax after winning the US Open has left her feeling recharged and ready to push on through until the end of the 2016 season. “The two weeks at home, that gives me a lot of relaxing and a lot of power again, a lot more motivation,” she said. “I had a few days’ rest. That was really important for me after the US trip. Now, of course, the last trip of the year here in Asia, I’m really looking forward. I will try to enjoy everything, try to play my best and let’s see. I’m looking forward to now play the next tournament after New York.” The German will take on Kristina Mladenovic, a player that she has defeated in straight sets in their two previous meetings. Mladenovic, who defeated CoCo Vandeweghe in first-round action on Sunday in Wuhan, has not won back-to-back matches since July.

Pick: Kerber in two

[3] Agnieszka Radwanska (POL #4) vs. Ekaterina Makarova (RUS #39)
Head-to-head: Radwanska leads, 4-2
Key Stat: All six of Radwanska and Makarova’s matches have been decided in straight sets.

No.3 seed Agnieszka Radwanska has lost two of her last three matches to Ekaterina Makarova, but she does own a 4-1 lifetime record against the Russian on hardcourts. Makarova, who blasted past Sabine Lisicki on Monday, has gone 0-3 against the Top 5 this season but she does own eight Top 5 wins in her career. Can Makarova, in the midst of a mildly disappointing season, summon the magic and make a run at Radwanska? It won’t be an easy task. The Pole is always an extra-tough out on hard courts. She’s gone 31-9 this season on the surface (Makarova has gone 14-12), and has won 99 matches on hardcourts since the beginning of 2014. Though she has gone winless in her first two appearances at Wuhan, Radwanska has been in good form of late, winning 9 of her last 11 and reaching the Tokyo semifinals last week.

Pick: Radwanska in three

[2] Garbiñe Muguruza (ESP #3) vs. Jelena Jankovic (SRB #39)
Head-to-head: Muguruza leads, 3-1
Key Stat: Jankovic has lost eight of her last nine against Top 5 players.

Wuhan was a major springboard for Garbiñe Muguruza in 2015. The Spaniard came to the Dongfeng Motor Wuhan Open having lost four of six after her breakthrough final at Wimbledon. But Muguruza erased all doubts about her big-match legitimacy by reaching the final here and then winning the title in Beijing to assure Singapore qualification. This year, Muguruza is the hunted rather than the hunter: She’s looking to cling to her Singapore status rather than swoop in and steal it. Currently at No.6 in the Road to Singapore standings, the Spaniard needs a few more key wins to clinch her spot. It’s not time for holiday yet, but Muguruza wants to make sure that when it is time for vacation, she can look back on her season knowing that she’s done everything she can to succeed. “This year I want to do everything I can so I can go on holiday happy,” she said on Sunday in her pre-tournament press conference. “I don’t want to have [losing] on the back of my mind.” On Tuesday Muguruza will face veteran Jelena Jankovic for the fifth time. The Serb was a runner-up last week in Guangzhou, and powered past Daria Gavrilova in straight sets on Sunday.

Pick: Muguruza in three

Caroline Wozniacki (DEN #22) vs. Katerina Siniakova (CZE #56)
Head-to-head: First meeting
Key Stat: Wozniacki has won 11 of her last 12 matches.

The turnaround continues. Now knocking on the door of the Top 20 just a month after bottoming out at No.74 in the world rankings, Caroline Wozniacki continued her torrid play with a straight-sets thumping of Samantha Stosur on Monday in Wuhan. The indefatigable Dane may be running on fumes after a long week in Tokyo, but it is not affecting her tennis. “I felt surprisingly good on court today,” she said in her post-match press conference after defeating Stosur for the seventh time in 12 career matches. “I was expecting to be tired, maybe not have the right timing, since it’s completely different conditions. I think a day off would have been nice, but I played really well today… I’m on a roll, so hopefully I can keep pushing myself and play well.” On Tuesday Wozniacki will be at it again, facing 20-year-old Czech Katerina Siniakova for the first time. Will Wozniacki have the energy to fend off the rising youngster? Siniakova has reached the final in two of her last four events (Bastad, Tokyo International), but to progress further in Wuhan she’ll need to stop the momentum of the Wozniacki freight train.

Pick: Wozniacki in two

Around the Grounds: Defending champion Venus Williams will contest her first match since the US Open against Yulia Putintseva of Kazakhstan. Williams holds a 3-1 lifetime edge over the fiery 21-year-old, but Putintseva won the pair’s last meeting, defeating Williams in three tough sets at Charleston this year. Williams was magnificent in Wuhan last season. She notched three Top 10 wins in claiming what ended up as the biggest title of her season. Williams says that being the defending a champion isn’t playing on her mind at all. The 36-year-old is just eager to play some good tennis. “I’m just happy to be here, do the best I can, hope to play just as well as last year, have just as much luck.” She told media on Sunday. “So no big expectations.”

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Kvitova Claims Fifth Krantzcke Award

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

It all came together for Petra Kvitova at the end of a long and grueling season.

Struggling with consistency and splitting with longtime coach David Kotyza, Kvitova caught fire after winning an emotional Bronze medal at the Olympic tennis event, roaring to her first title of 2016 at the Dongfeng Motor Wuhan Open and finishing the season on a high with the Huajin Securities WTA Elite Trophy Zhuhai crown. She was later part of the Fed Cup team that took home its fifth victory in the last six years, in a nail-biter against France.

Kvitova took home one last honor before 2017 in the form of the the Karen Krantzcke Sportsmanship Award, her fourth in a row.

The Karen Krantzcke Sportsmanship Award is awarded to the player who conducts herself in a manner fitting of a professional sports figure and observes the rules of fair play, shows respect for others and is gracious on and off the court. This award has been voted on by players since 1978 and has recognized athletes including Kim Clijsters, Elena Dementieva, Ana Ivanovic, Lindsay Davenport, Chris Evert and Evonne Goolagong-Cawley.

As she has done in Fed Cup, Kvitova has also earned this honor five of the last six years.

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Bacsinszky Ready To Regroup For An Even Bigger 2017

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

2016 Quick Hits
Week 1 Ranking: No.12
Year-End Ranking: No.15 (Career-High No.9, 5/16/2016)
Season Highlights: Title at Rabat, SF at Miami
Best Major Result: QF (French Open)

2017 Outlook

Is it still called second season syndrome when you’ve been on tour for 12 years?

After a meteoric rise in 2015 – which saw her start the year ranked around the Top 50 and end with two titles, two finals, a Grand Slam semifinal, and a Top 10 ranking – Timea Bacsinszky’s season this year looked to have hit a plateau.

After a lingering knee injury led to a frustratingly slow two months, the Swiss player still put together a run to the Miami Open semifinals – knocking out big names like Agnieszka Radwanska and Simona Halep along the way – then backed it up with a title in Rabat, quarterfinal in Rome and a return to the French Open quarterfinals.

And while she did reach her career-highest ranking of No.9 back in May, Bacsinszky admits that 2016 didn’t end up being all it could be.

“This year was kind of particular because started it with a bit of delay,” she told WTA Insider at the Huajin Securities WTA Elite Trophy Zhuhai. “And I was trying so hard to come back, because it’s tough to be Top 10 and ending up losing quite easily in the first few tournaments of the year.

“The will to do well was there, but really I didn’t have enough in my hands and enough in my legs. Mentally, I was prepared, so I just looked forward and told myself, ‘It’s going to come. Sooner or later, it’s going to come.'”

Looking ahead to 2017, Bacsinszky will be looking to translate all of that desire into results and bring her trademark creative style onto the big stage. With a second consecutive Top 20 finish under her belt, the Swiss will be eager to keep rising and prove she belongs among the big names.

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Kuznetsova Reflects On Comeback Season With Signature Wit As Singapore Looms

Kuznetsova Reflects On Comeback Season With Signature Wit As Singapore Looms

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

WUHAN, China – Svetlana Kuznetsova’s self-awareness never ceases to disarm a press room. The Russian was the last teenager to win her maiden Slam, which she did at the 2004 US Open at 19 years old. Over a decade on, the 31-year-old is set to return to her highest ranking since 2010, moving as high as No.7 after making the semifinals of this week’s Dongfeng Motor Wuhan Open.

Kuznetsova is in good position to finish her year inside the Top 10 for the first time since 2009 and qualify for the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global for the first time since that same year. All that is to say, the veteran is in the midst of an impressive career-turnaround, having been ranked as low as No.85 just three years ago:

Svetlana Kuznetsova

Over the last two years, Kuznetsova stopped caring about her ranking or even her results. She just wanted to enjoy her tennis again and go back to playing her creative and, for better or worse, unpredictable, creative game style. She fancies herself “an artist” on the court. When she plays her best, there’s little argument.

The result? A more relaxed, go with the flow Sveta. She finished last season by winning the Kremlin Cup and qualifying for the Huajin Securities WTA Elite Trophy Zhuhai, then picked up right where she left off, winning the Apia International Sydnery in January. Then came a run to the final of the Miami Open, where she beat then-No.1 Serena Williams en route and has been a consistent feature in the quarterfinals or better.

“All the life for me is mental,” Kuznetsova told reporters after saving match point to beat Agnieszka Radwanska in Wuhan. The press corp laughed. Kuznetsova shot a knowing grin.

“Right before the match, [my coach]. Carlos told me, Do you remember the time you play in Madrid?

“I said, ‘No, I don’t.’

“He said, ‘You were up 6-3 in the tiebreak, and then you lost it’.

“I’m like, ‘Oh.’

“Then here I go. I’m like 6-3 up, then 6-All. I’m like, ‘Damn, why did he tell me that?’

“Then I still have sometimes negative things appear in your head and you have to turn them around. After the match I said to Carlos, ‘Why did you tell me that before the match?’

“He said, ‘I know, I know. I was stupid.'”

Over the years Kuznetsova has learned how to play tricks on her herself, to lie to her mind to get her body to do what she wants it to do. It’s part of the experience you gain as a veteran on tour and it’s particularly important at the end of the season, when fatigue can get the better of so many players.

“Like probably when I was 25, 26, I was like, Damn, I’m so tired,” Kuznetsova said. “Damn, when the season going to be over? Now I don’t feel tired because I believe it’s mental. If you say, ‘Oh, season is in the end, I’m tired,’ you will be tired.

“Now I know it’s not something, like, ‘I going to play for ages.’ It makes it easier for me. Now I know it’s a few years left. It’s like, ‘Do the best out of it and that’s it.’ When I was 25, I knew [my tennis career] was still long way to go. I was like, ‘Shit, I’m so tired.’

“Now I just enjoy it.”

Knowing that she is closer to the end of her career also helps take the pressure off. The prospect of competing is far less daunting, especially if you, as Kuznetsova does, trick yourself.

“I think about [retirement] in the positive way, to make me go for more,” Kuznetsova said, when asked how much she thinks about the end of her career. “I say, ‘Look, it’s one, two years, you’re done.’ Maybe it’s not [but] it’s something convincing. You have to work with yourself and find the keys to convince yourself to do good in the positive way. Whatever you say, it’s working. If it’s positive, it makes you go better, that’s good.

“Sometimes I have to lie to myself a little bit in a funny way. I say, ‘Yeah, it’s one tournament, that’s it.’ It’s not, it’s going to be more. But it helps mentally. If you think it very long-term, that comes very big in front of you, big wall. If you do short-term, is better.”

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Cibulkova To Keep Defying The Odds In 2017

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Dominika Cibulkova

2016 Quick Hits
Week 1 Ranking: No.38
Year-End Ranking: No.5 (Career high, Oct 31)
Season Highlights: Titles at Katowice, Eastbourne, Linz and WTA Finals, Final at Acapulco, Madrid and Wuhan
Best Major Result: Quarterfinals (Wimbledon)

There are few players who’ve had a busier season than Dominika Cibulkova had in 2016.

Whereas some players peak at the right times – an Asian Swing renaissance, a red-hot US hardcourt summer – Cibulkova did it all season long and on every surface.

She reached the final in Acapulco (outdoor hardcourts), won at Katowice (indoor hardcourts), final in Madrid (clay), title in Eastbourne (grass), final in Wuhan (outdoor hardcourts), and titles at Linz and the WTA Finals (indoor hard).

But despite her continuously stellar results, which earned her a spot in Singapore’s Greatest Eight, Cibulkova admitted that she’s always struggled with self-belief.

“I was never that kind of player that came on tour and was winning tournaments,” Cibulkova told WTA Insider in Singapore. “I always needed, you know, proof. I needed to beat a Top 20 player, a Top 10 player – I was taking small steps to get where I am now.”

It all came together at the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global, where her qualification came down to the wire, where beat the odds to advance in the group stage, and where she defeated the World No.1 Angelique Kerber to claim the biggest title of her career.

“I always thought that winning a Grand Slam was something unreal, it’s impossible,” Cibulkova said afterwards. “But by winning [the WTA Finals], I want to achieve another dream, and that’s winning a Grand Slam.”

With her self-belief through the roof, surely Cibulkova now has all the proof she needs to know that she belongs at the top among the game’s biggest names.

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Mattek-Sands & Safarova Storm To Wuhan Title, Confirm Singapore Return

Mattek-Sands & Safarova Storm To Wuhan Title, Confirm Singapore Return

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

WUHAN, China – Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Lucie Safarova completed a dominant week together with their seventh WTA title, outclassing Sania Mirza and Barbora Strycova to win the Dongfeng Motor Wuhan Open.

A sparkling performance saw Mattek-Sands and Safarova break six times to wrap up a 6-1, 6-4 victory after a fraction over an hour on court.

The result continues a memorable end to the season for the American-Czech duo, whose success in China follows on from victory at the US Open. This points haul has not only sent both players shooting up the rankings, but more importantly secures them a return to the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global.

The only wobble came with the finishing line in sight, Safarova surrendering her hitherto faultless serve to offer Strycova the chance to level the second set at 5-5. However, the No.5 seeds nipped the comeback in the bud, swatting away a couple of opportunistic volleys to close out the match.

“I think we had an amazing match today,” Safarova said. “We came out strong from the beginning. We returned great, served great, took their time away. That was the right strategy.”

The tone was set on the very first point of the match, Safarova firing a backhand past Strycova. Sensing an early opportunity, on the following point Mattek-Sands swept an inviting ball past the stranded Czech. They soon had the break and went from strength to strength, finding an answer for every question posed by the No.3 seeds.

“We went over our game plan and we just upped our game. So whether our opponents played well or didn’t play well, we were going to stick to our game,” Mattek-Sands added. “But I think, like Lucie said, we just took away their time and that’s what we did.”

Mattek-Sands and Safarova will hope to replicate this form in Singapore, where they have unfinished business. Last year, their challenge came to a premature conclusion, injury dashing their hopes in the round robin stage.

“It’s just awesome [to qualify]. we’ve been there last year but were a little bit injured and so it wasn’t the greatest performance,” Safarova said.

“But it’s amazing to make it again,” Mattek-Sands added. “Singapore is obviously is the best of the best. We literally just found out right after the match that we qualified so it’s still sinking in.”

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Radwanska Steps Closer To Singapore With Beijing Win Over Wang

Radwanska Steps Closer To Singapore With Beijing Win Over Wang

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

BEIJING, China – 2015 BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global champion Agnieszka Radwanska is just two matches from booking a return to Singapore with a first round win at the China Open, defeating wildcard Wang Qiang, 6-2, 6-2.

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“First match is always tricky,” said the No.3 seed in her post-match press conference. “I just realized that the court and balls are much slower than the last week. Well, I was just trying to be more aggressive. If I had a chance, I was stepping in and moving to the net.”

Radwanska could have booked her ticket to Singapore last week had she won the Dongfeng Motor Wuhan Open, but fell to former World No.2 Svetlana Kuznetsova in the quarterfinals – despite holding a match point in the second set.

“You are always trying to not think about pressure, especially here, close to Singapore.

“I just hope I can do it here, that’s for sure. 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. It’s a little bit more pressure, but I think every year it’s kind of similar situation for everyone, especially a lot of girls this year is really close and the rankings are very tight.”

Easing ahead to a 6-2, 5-1 lead, Radwanska wobbled at the finish line against Wang, a talented player who started the year by taking out Sloane Stephens at the Australian Open, but the Pole rebounded to end the match in one hour and 24 minutes.

“I had a couple of matchpoints. It was still not a tragedy when I was 5-1 up. I was just very happy that I put a couple of good shots in next game and closed that set also very quickly.”

Up next for the World No.3 is Ekaterina Makarova, who dispatched fellow Singapore doubles partner Elena Vesnina, 6-2, 6-1, in their first round encounter on Sunday.

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