St. Petersburg: Cibulkova vs. Wozniacki
Dominika Cibulkova takes on Caroline Wozniacki in the second round of the St. Petersburg Ladies Trophy.
Dominika Cibulkova takes on Caroline Wozniacki in the second round of the St. Petersburg Ladies Trophy.
CINCINNATI, OH, USA – World Co-No.1s Sania Mirza and Martina Hingis reached the Western & Southern Open final, but found themselves on opposite sides of the net as Mirza and new partner Barbora Strycova recovered from 5-1 in the opening set to beat Hingis and CoCo Vandeweghe, 7-5, 6-4.
“I’m not going to lie,” Mirza said after the match. “It’s a very difficult situation. It’s not easy because, A, because we are still good friends, so it’s never easy. The first we tournament we split and we come and we have to play each other. Of course there is no better match to play than the final, so was difficult, I think. for both of us.
“But having said that we are professional tennis players. We have to come out and we have to give our best and we have to try and win. That’s all we can do, and we both tried to do that.
“It was going to happen eventually. We had to play against each other at some point. I think it’s better that it happened earlier, as soon as we came out, because next time it’s obviously less difficult to play.”
Hingis and Mirza were indeed playing their first tournament apart since officially confirming their split last week, and with both women advancing into the championship match, only one could remain No.1 as the points earned this week would be counted among their best results that make up their WTA ranking total.
Not that the notion bothered Mirza.
“As cliche as it sounds, a ranking is really just a number. At the end of the day you have to come out and you have to play your best tennis. That’s what we did, and we feel like that’s why we won the tournament.
“For us it’s important to win every time we play. We both fight; we both like to play and we both like tennis obviously.”
In Strycova, Mirza found another great partner, one who’d arrived in Cincinnati having just earned an Olympic bronze medal in women’s doubles.
“She was obviously one of my first choices because I felt like we could play well together given our games.
“We know each other. To be honest, we have not been like friends so to say, but we know each other since we were 15 years old. We’ve always had mutual respect for each other and our games. At least I have had.”
“Me too,” Strycova added.
Enjoying a career-best season with solid results in both disciplines, the Czech veteran admits she enjoys doubles on both a tactical and emotional level.
“I’m very emotional player. I need the communication. I need to put the emotions away.
“But you have to see the balance when it hurts me or when it or helps me. I’m 30 years old and didn’t still find it, but I’m working on it!”
In front of a packed house (and playing together for 1st time), Mirza/Strycova win the doubles title.#CincyTennis pic.twitter.com/9oPKL3aqlU
— W&S Open (@CincyTennis) August 21, 2016
STUTTGART, Germany – The European clay season begins in earnest this week as hometown favorite Angelique Kerber leads the WTA into the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart. The two-time champion tops a draw that houses a host of elite players and threats on the dirt, as players look to get off on the right foot on the road to Roland Garros.
Check out 10 things to know ahead of Germany’s Premier red-clay event.
1) Star-studded sightings in Stuttgart.
Eight of the WTA’s top 10 are competing this week. Defending champion Angelique Kerber is the event’s top seed, as one of three former champions in the main draw.
2) Top seed, but not No.1 (for now).
Though Kerber will drop to World No.2 in the rankings on Monday, the German has a chance to reclaim the top spot in the WTA rankings should she reach the semifinals this week.
3) Good things come in threes.
Kerber could be the fourth player to three-peat in the history of the tournament, dating back to when Tracy Austin and Martina Navratilova did it at the event’s beginnings in Filderstadt. Maria Sharapova also won three straight tiles from 2012-14.
4) Siegemund sneaks in.
Last year’s runner-up Laura Siegemund earned the final wildcard to this year’s tournament at the 11th hour – the World No.37 was tabbed as the final entrant prior to Saturday morning’s draw.
5) Sharapova says hello.
The aforementioned three-time Stuttgart champion Maria Sharapova returns to the WTA this week.
6) An epic rematch first up.
Though both are unseeded, the first round match between Kristina Mladenovic and Mirjana Lucic-Baroni promises to have fireworks. The two have met already on clay this season, as the Croat took a marathon 4-6, 6-4, 7-6(13) victory in Charleston earlier this spring.
7) Game, set, match – for the first time.
Two of the event’s top 8 seeds will be looking to break a losing spell in Stuttgart this week. The No.6 seed and a wildcard in the event, Johanna Konta is 0-2 in her career at the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix, while No.3 seed Dominika Cibulkova has fallen in the first round in each of her four appearances.
8) Welcome back, welcome back, welcome back.
Several WTA stars will be returning to Stuttgart for the first time in a while this week, as Cibulkova makes her first appearance in the tournament since 2012, while Mirjana Lucic-Baroni plays the event for the first time in three years. Latvia’s Anastasija Sevastova plays just her second Porsche Tennis Grand Prix, having fallen in the first round in 2011, and her first-round foe, 2010 runner-up Samantha Stosur appears for the first time since 2013.
9) Compatriots to do battle to commence play.
Two first-round matches will see countrywomen face off, as Elena Vesnina will play Daria Kasatkina — and the winner of the all-Russian showdown will face either Garbiñe Muguruza or Carla Suárez Navarro, who face each other in an all-Spanish clash.
10) Show your colors, then head to Stuttgart.
Nine players who will feature in the main draw are also donning their country’s colors this weekend – Kerber, Vesnina, Kasatkina, Siegemund, Johanna Konta, Simona Halep and CoCo Vandeweghe.
ST PETERSBURG, Russia – No.2 seed Roberta Vinci is through to her first WTA Premier final at the St. Petersburg Ladies Trophy after pushing past Ana Ivanovic in straight sets, 7-5, 6-4.
Watch live action from St. Petersburg & Kaohsiung this week on WTA Live powered by TennisTV!
The No.4 seeded Serbian started the match strong off the blocks – she grabbed the first break of the match and raced to a strong 3-0 lead. But Vinci mounted her comeback by relying on her deadly slice backhand and timely trips up to the net, taking the first set 7-5.
Vinci and Ivanovic stayed deadlocked in the second set until Vinci broke again for a 4-3 lead. In the last game of the match, Ivanovic buried a drop shot into the net to give the Italian match point before Vinci sealed the match, winning the set 6-4.
Overall Vinci just played a cleaner game – she hit 18 winners just 12 unforced errors to Ivanovic’s 27 and 29 – and was lethal at the net, winning 19 of her 22 net points played.
“It was an incredible match, tough in the beginning with the 3-0 down in the first set,” Vinci said after the match. “But I think I play good games, aggressive.
“It’s always difficult to play against Ana. She plays so flat, so quick. But I’m happy.”
With the win, Vinci is into her first final since the 2015 US Open and is looking to add a tenth singles title to her career haul.
The 33-year-old Italian is set to face off against No.1 seed Belinda Bencic, who overcame the rising Russian Daria Kasatkina in the second semifinal. This will be the pair’s first meeting.
“Probably I’m gonna watch some games, but of course will be a tough match,” Vinci said of her potential opponents in the final. “They both play such a good game. They are so young but good ranking for both. So, will be tough but I’m in the final.”
Two of the youngest players in the Top 70, 18-year-olds Bencic and Kasatkina were facing off for the first time at the WTA level.
“Dasha is a very good friend,” Bencic said after the match. “I’m happy that we still can be friends off the court even though on the court we fight against each other. I think that’s the way it should be.”
Both players coming off of late night session quarterfinal matches yesterday, with Bencic’s battle with Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova ending after midnight and Kasatkina’s match against Dominika Cibulkova finishing after 1 am.
A bit of lingering sluggishness was evident at the start of the match as both players traded early breaks and holds, keeping the match level at 4-4 before Bencic broke to take the set at 6-4.
Kasatkina created many break opportunities in the match but was only about to capitalize on one out of the 10, and Bencic was able to close out comfortably in straight sets 6-4, 6-3.
The win not only books Bencic’s ticket in to the St. Petersburg Ladies Trophy final, it also guarantees her spot into the Top 10 for the first time in her career.
“This is a huge moment for me!” Bencic enthused after the win. “To be in the Top 10, it was always like a dream, from very small kid – now I reached it! This is a big day for me.”
That's right @BelindaBencic…
Top 10! #WTA pic.twitter.com/w5VAZfhvmc
— WTA (@WTA) February 13, 2016
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