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Around The Grounds At The Australian Open

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970
Caroline Wozniacki and Victoria Azarenka were joined by four colorful characters at the Australian Open Kids Tennis Day – as well as the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

Caroline Wozniacki and Victoria Azarenka were joined by four colorful characters at the Australian Open Kids Tennis Day – as well as the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

Eugenie Bouchard’s loyal fans, the “Genie Army,” were out in full force in sunny Melbourne.

Eugenie Bouchard’s loyal fans, the “Genie Army,” were out in full force in sunny Melbourne.

Australian player Daria Gavrilova thrilled Aussie fans with her spirited performance at her home slam. The 21-year-old made the Round of 16, her best result ever at a slam.

Australian player Daria Gavrilova thrilled Aussie fans with her spirited performance at her home slam. The 21-year-old made the Round of 16, her best result ever at a slam.

Down the road from Melbourne Park, Johanna Konta stands under the distinctive clocks of Flinders Street Station. Konta made British tennis history by becoming the first woman in 33 years to reach the quarterfinals of the Australian Open.

Down the road from Melbourne Park, Johanna Konta stands under the distinctive clocks of Flinders Street Station. Konta made British tennis history by becoming the first woman in 33 years to reach the quarterfinals of the Australian Open.

Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley presents Maria Sharapova with a cake commemorating a major milestone: she reached 600 career singles wins after her victory in the third round.

Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley presents Maria Sharapova with a cake commemorating a major milestone: she reached 600 career singles wins after her victory in the third round.

Australian Open quarterfinalist Angelique Kerber makes a young fan happy at Autograph Island.

Australian Open quarterfinalist Angelique Kerber makes a young fan happy at Autograph Island.

Naomi Osaka wants to be the very best, like no one ever was. The 18-year-old Japanese – pictured here meeting the penguins at Melbourne Aquarium – made the third round at the Australian Open.

Naomi Osaka wants to be the very best, like no one ever was. The 18-year-old Japanese – pictured here meeting the penguins at Melbourne Aquarium – made the third round at the Australian Open.

Serena Williams signs autographs after her Round of 16 win. The World No.1 has yet to drop a set in her Australian Open title defense.

Serena Williams signs autographs after her Round of 16 win. The World No.1 has yet to drop a set in her Australian Open title defense.

Annika Beck dealt the No.11 seed Timea Bacsinszky a second-round upset, and doled out many autographs at the Australian Open Autograph Island.

Annika Beck dealt the No.11 seed Timea Bacsinszky a second-round upset, and doled out many autographs at the Australian Open Autograph Island.

World No.113 Zheng Shuai was contemplating retiring after the Australian Open – until she upset the No.2 seed Simona Halep in the first round. Zheng – pictured here with coach Liu Shuo at the Chinese Museum – is now in her first ever Grand Slam quarterfinal.

World No.113 Zheng Shuai was contemplating retiring after the Australian Open – until she upset the No.2 seed Simona Halep in the first round. Zheng – pictured here with coach Liu Shuo at the Chinese Museum – is now in her first ever Grand Slam quarterfinal.

Two-time champion Victoria Azarenka signs a camera lens after her victory – can the undefeated No.14 seed make it three Grand Slams in Melbourne?

Two-time champion Victoria Azarenka signs a camera lens after her victory – can the undefeated No.14 seed make it three Grand Slams in Melbourne?

Daria Kasatkina, who made the third round in Melbourne, tries on a bit of Aussie spirit – and a cork hat – at the Australia Pop Up Shop.

Daria Kasatkina, who made the third round in Melbourne, tries on a bit of Aussie spirit – and a cork hat – at the Australia Pop Up Shop.

Carla Suárez Navarro is always calm – whether she’s on court or holding a freshwater crocodile. A quarterfinalist here in Melbourne, she’s looking to move into the final four for the first time in her career.

Carla Suárez Navarro is always calm – whether she’s on court or holding a freshwater crocodile. A quarterfinalist here in Melbourne, she’s looking to move into the final four for the first time in her career.

Garbiñe Muguruza during her post-match interview. The World No.3 made the third round of the Australian Open.

Garbiñe Muguruza during her post-match interview. The World No.3 made the third round of the Australian Open.

The spotlight is on World No.4 Agnieszka Radwanska, behind the scenes at her ESPN Player Montage. The reigning WTA Finals champion is seeking to make the Australian Open her first Grand Slam title.

The spotlight is on World No.4 Agnieszka Radwanska, behind the scenes at her ESPN Player Montage. The reigning WTA Finals champion is seeking to make the Australian Open her first Grand Slam title.

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Venus Vying For Gold In Mixed Doubles

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil – Four-time gold Olympic medalist Venus Williams is going for a record breaking fifth medal at the Olympic tennis event in Rio after booking a spot into the final of mixed doubles with partner Rajeev Ram. The pair will take on Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Jack sock in the all-American final.

“I’m used to doing this with Serena so it’s such a crazy feeling doing it with someone else,” Williams admitted after the match. “It’s like a wild emotion, to feel what I feel with Serena. I never thought that would happen.”

Williams and Ram had to fight back from a set down against Indian superstars Sania Mirza and Rohan Bopanna to make it into the final. They came back to dominate in the match tiebreak, rattling off eight points in a row to take the match 2-6, 6-2, 10-3.

Williams is going for a fifth gold medal, which would set a new record for most medals in Olympic tennis. By virtue of reaching the final, she’s already guaranteed a medal, making her the first tennis player to medal in all three tennis events (along with her singles and doubles medals in Sydney 2000).

“It is what you are hoping for and I gotta be honest I was secretly hoping to be in this position when we both got in,” Venus said. “I think we both were, if we admitted it.

“We kept saying we don’t know what’s going to happen, we’ve never played together, but then the thought of ‘Oh my God this just happened’. I don’t know, it’s so surreal.”

They’ll take on fellow Americans Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Jack Sock in the final after the pair edged past the Czech duo of Lucie Hradecka and Radek Stepanek, 6-4, 7-6(3).

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WTA Finals Signature Playlist

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

What pumps up the Elite Eight before they take the court in Singapore? Find out some of their favorite songs in the latest episode of the WTA Live Fan Acccess presented by Xerox.

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News | WTA Tennis English

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

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.

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Cool Konta Beats The Buzz

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

MELBOURNE, Australia – She originally immigrated to the UK at the age of 14 because of the distance between Australia and her new tennis training base in Europe. But throughout the Australian Open fortnight, that same distance has served well to keep the pressure off of the shoulders of British semifinalist Johanna Konta.

“The UK is a number of thousands of miles away and a completely different time zone, which in this case it might be quite nice,” Konta said, speaking of the growing buzz around her wins Down Under. “I think whatever pressure or whatever buzz there is outside, it only affects me as much as I let it.”

The always-cool Konta might remain unaffected, but there’s good reason for all the buzz.

She was the first British player since Jo Durie in 1984 to reach the quarterfinals of a Grand Slam, and with her win over Zheng Shuai she’s matched another of Durie’s milestones: making a Grand Slam final four, which Durie achieved at the 1983 US Open.

Now, she’s one win away from becoming the first British finalist in a Slam since Virginia Wade won Wimbledon in 1977.

“I don’t know Jo Durie or Sue Barker or any of the others who’ve been this far,” Konta admitted to the press after her win against Zhang. “But I’ll definitely make a concerted effort to find out more about them. It’s on the to-do list to become more informed.”

Konta displayed her potential with her impressive 2015 performance, improving her ranking by 103 spots to end the year at No.47 and produced several upsets along the way, notching wins over Garbiñe Muguruza and Andrea Petkovic at the US Open and over Victoria Azarenka and Simona Halep in Wuhan.

But for Konta, who was nominated for WTA Most Improved Player, the focus isn’t on making history or headlines- just continuing her steady upward climb to the top.

“I’m not really thinking about accumulating ‘wow’ moments, just solid experiences,” Konta said. “I just look at the way I live every single day and the way I want to compete in every single match. It’s about doing my job.”

The last Brit to make the Australian Open semifinals was Sue Barker in 1977, back when the tournament was held in December and the 32-player draw was dominated by Australians.

How does Barker feel about Konta batting away so many long-held records?

“I feel sorry for her having so many records thrown at her and it’s upsetting that it has taken so long to break the ones that were set in my era,” Sue Barker said to The Times. “Most other countries would be upset if they didn’t have a woman in a quarterfinal for a couple of years.”

“There has been a void in British women’s tennis for so long but now Johanna Konta has filled it.”

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Vekic Knocks Out Ivanovic In Cincy

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

CINCINNATI, OH, USA – Croatian qualifier Donna Vekic snapped a six-month long losing streak to knock out 2014 finalist Ana Ivanovic out of the Western & Southern Open in straight sets, 6-4, 6-2.

Watch live action from Cincinnati this week on WTA Live powered by TennisTV!

“I’m very happy – I’ve played a great three matches and I’m happy to be through to the second round,” Vekic said after the match.

The only previous time Vekic played Ivanovic, the match ended in a lopsided straight sets victory for the Serbian. But now with more experience, and with three matches in Cincinnati already under her belt in the qualifying rounds, Vekic came out looking more match fit and playing aggressively.

Vekic’s big forehand gave Ivanovic plenty of trouble throughout the match. The Croat earned a double break lead early on to build a 5-1 lead. Though the former No.1 eventually looked to be finding her rhythm and even got a break back to cut into Vekic’s lead, she wasn’t able to keep the unforced errors out of her game and Vekic took the first set 6-4.

She opened the following set with another break, punching back an Ivanovic volley with a deep cross court forehand. A lackadaisical backhand from Ivanovic drifted just wide and gave Vekic her first match point, on Ivanovic’s serve at 5-1, but the Serb held on after a pair of big serves and aggressive baseline play. Vekic took the match at the second time of asking, sealing it with a big inside-out forehand.

“I’ve played [Ivanovic] before and I know her,” Vekic said. “I just played my best tennis tonight and it was enough – I’m happy.”

Once ranked as high as No.62, Vekic has struggled with finding her form in recent months. With her win over Ivanovic, she’s well on her way to finding it again. She’s snapped a losing streak dating back to February – the 20-year-old hadn’t won a WTA-level main draw match since her first round win in Doha.

She faces another big task ahead in the form of British No.1 Johanna Konta in the second round. The No.10 seeded Konta sits at a career-high ranking of World No.13 after a spate of great results that has seen her reach the quarterfinals or better in seven events so far this year.

“I’m just gonna get back out there on the practice court and try to keep up my level,” Vekic said of the matchup. “Hopefully that’ll be enough again.”

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Around The Grounds At The Australian Open

Around The Grounds At The Australian Open

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970
Caroline Wozniacki and Victoria Azarenka were joined by four colorful characters at the Australian Open Kids Tennis Day – as well as the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

Caroline Wozniacki and Victoria Azarenka were joined by four colorful characters at the Australian Open Kids Tennis Day – as well as the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

Eugenie Bouchard’s loyal fans, the “Genie Army,” were out in full force in sunny Melbourne.

Eugenie Bouchard’s loyal fans, the “Genie Army,” were out in full force in sunny Melbourne.

Australian player Daria Gavrilova thrilled Aussie fans with her spirited performance at her home slam. The 21-year-old made the Round of 16, her best result ever at a slam.

Australian player Daria Gavrilova thrilled Aussie fans with her spirited performance at her home slam. The 21-year-old made the Round of 16, her best result ever at a slam.

Down the road from Melbourne Park, Johanna Konta stands under the distinctive clocks of Flinders Street Station. Konta made British tennis history by becoming the first woman in 33 years to reach the quarterfinals of the Australian Open.

Down the road from Melbourne Park, Johanna Konta stands under the distinctive clocks of Flinders Street Station. Konta made British tennis history by becoming the first woman in 33 years to reach the quarterfinals of the Australian Open.

Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley presents Maria Sharapova with a cake commemorating a major milestone: she reached 600 career singles wins after her victory in the third round.

Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley presents Maria Sharapova with a cake commemorating a major milestone: she reached 600 career singles wins after her victory in the third round.

Australian Open finalist Angelique Kerber makes a young fan happy at Autograph Island.

Australian Open finalist Angelique Kerber makes a young fan happy at Autograph Island.

Naomi Osaka wants to be the very best, like no one ever was. The 18-year-old Japanese – pictured here meeting the penguins at Melbourne Aquarium – made the third round at the Australian Open.

Naomi Osaka wants to be the very best, like no one ever was. The 18-year-old Japanese – pictured here meeting the penguins at Melbourne Aquarium – made the third round at the Australian Open.

Serena Williams signs autographs after her Round of 16 win. The World No.1 has yet to drop a set in her Australian Open title defense.

Serena Williams signs autographs after her Round of 16 win. The World No.1 has yet to drop a set in her Australian Open title defense.

Annika Beck dealt the No.11 seed Timea Bacsinszky a second-round upset, and doled out many autographs at the Australian Open Autograph Island.

Annika Beck dealt the No.11 seed Timea Bacsinszky a second-round upset, and doled out many autographs at the Australian Open Autograph Island.

World No.113 Zheng Shuai was contemplating retiring after the Australian Open – until she upset the No.2 seed Simona Halep in the first round. Zheng – pictured here with coach Liu Shuo at the Chinese Museum – is now in her first ever Grand Slam quarterfinal.

World No.113 Zheng Shuai was contemplating retiring after the Australian Open – until she upset the No.2 seed Simona Halep in the first round. Zheng – pictured here with coach Liu Shuo at the Chinese Museum – is now in her first ever Grand Slam quarterfinal.

Two-time champion Victoria Azarenka signs a camera lens after her victory – can the undefeated No.14 seed make it three Grand Slams in Melbourne?

Two-time champion Victoria Azarenka signs a camera lens after her victory – can the undefeated No.14 seed make it three Grand Slams in Melbourne?

Daria Kasatkina, who made the third round in Melbourne, tries on a bit of Aussie spirit – and a cork hat – at the Australia Pop Up Shop.

Daria Kasatkina, who made the third round in Melbourne, tries on a bit of Aussie spirit – and a cork hat – at the Australia Pop Up Shop.

Carla Suárez Navarro is always calm – whether she’s on court or holding a freshwater crocodile. A quarterfinalist here in Melbourne, she’s looking to move into the final four for the first time in her career.

Carla Suárez Navarro is always calm – whether she’s on court or holding a freshwater crocodile. A quarterfinalist here in Melbourne, she’s looking to move into the final four for the first time in her career.

Garbiñe Muguruza during her post-match interview. The World No.3 made the third round of the Australian Open.

Garbiñe Muguruza during her post-match interview. The World No.3 made the third round of the Australian Open.

Most legendary selfie of all time? Arantxa Sanchez-Vicario, Barbara Schett, Rennae Stubbs, Nicole Bradtke, Marion Bartoli, Martina Navratilova, Lindsay Davenport, Kim Clijsters, Iva Majoli and a host of other champions squeeze in with for a quick photo.

Most legendary selfie of all time? Arantxa Sanchez-Vicario, Barbara Schett, Rennae Stubbs, Nicole Bradtke, Marion Bartoli, Martina Navratilova, Lindsay Davenport, Kim Clijsters, Iva Majoli and a host of other champions squeeze in with for a quick photo.

Kim Clijsters – a four-time Grand Slam champion – gives a talk at the Australian Open’s Celebration of Inspirational Women Brunch.

Kim Clijsters – a four-time Grand Slam champion – gives a talk at the Australian Open’s Celebration of Inspirational Women Brunch.

First-time Grand Slam finalist Angelique Kerber answers questions in her interview with Australia’s Seven Network ahead of the Australian Open final.

First-time Grand Slam finalist Angelique Kerber answers questions in her interview with Australia’s Seven Network ahead of the Australian Open final.

Staying focused: Serena Williams seeks her 22nd Grand Slam title – a feat which would tie Steffi Graf’s Open Era record.

Staying focused: Serena Williams seeks her 22nd Grand Slam title – a feat which would tie Steffi Graf’s Open Era record.

The spotlight is on World No.4 Agnieszka Radwanska, behind the scenes at her ESPN Player Montage. The reigning WTA Finals champion is seeking to make the Australian Open her first Grand Slam title.

The spotlight is on World No.4 Agnieszka Radwanska, behind the scenes at her ESPN Player Montage. The reigning WTA Finals champion is seeking to make the Australian Open her first Grand Slam title.

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Insider Podcast: Catching Up With CoCo

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

CINCINNATI, OHIO, USA – CoCo Vandeweghe has been around the world, and can now add the Olympics to her global passport.

Straight from a thrilling three-set win over Sara Errani, Vandeweghe sat down with WTA Insider to discuss victory over the Italian veteran and her wild week in Rio for the Olympic tennis event on the first of our Daily Dispatches from the last major tournament of the Emirates Airlines US Open Series:

Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn or on any podcast app of your choice to ensure you never miss an episode when they go live. Reviews are always helpful, so if you like what you’ve heard so far, leave us one. You can also get new episode alerts by following us on Twitter @WTA_Insider.

Follow @WTA_Insider

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Champions Corner: Monica Puig

Champions Corner: Monica Puig

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Monica Puig was already in the midst of a career-best season even before she hopped on a play to Rio de Janiero for the 2016 Olympic tennis event. A little over a year ago she fell outside the Top 100 and was struggling to win matches. This year she’s already back to to No.35, notching more match wins in 2016 than she had in her two previous seasons combined.

Despite her quiet rise through the rankings and improved strength and power, few would have tapped the 22-year-old for Olympic glory. But there she was on Saturday at the top of the podium in tears, flanked by two major champions whom she vanquished en route – she also beat a third in Garbiñe Muguruza – with Olympic gold dangling from her neck.

Puig made history for Puerto Rico in Rio. Not only did she become the first woman to ever win a medal for Puerto Rico, but she also won Puerto Rico’s first gold medal in its Olympic history.

WTA Insider caught with Puig on Monday after her life-changing win:

Monica Puig

WTA Insider: Olympic Gold Medalist Monica Puig. How are you?
Puig: I don’t think that “Olympic Gold Medalist” I actually believe it because I keep repeating it to myself over and over again and I still can’t really believe what happened this past week.

WTA Insider: What went through your mind on match point?
Puig: Well I think it was pretty much everybody could see that I was just saying ‘Oh my God’ over and over, especially after such a tough match like it was. I extended my lead in the third set and she just started swinging away. I was like, I have to be really careful here because she has nothing to lose. I really had to be careful. She saved a couple of my match points and on that final one I just couldn’t really believe it was actually over.

WTA Insider: Did you actually allow yourself to think about the gold medal at all?
Puig: I told myself going into the match to just enjoy the moment. But I think after the first set I think I started to really come to grips about what was going to happen and maybe got a little bit carried away in the second set. In the third I just tried to keep myself as focused as possible. But when you go up 5-0 in the third set there’s no way in avoiding all the emotion that starts to come to the surface. Just trying to keep it down a little bit longer and then finally when you win it, it was everything that I hoped for and more.

WTA Insider: You were very contained with your emotions all week in Rio. The only time you really let some emotions out was when you went up 5-0 in the third in the final. Was this a conscious thing all week?
Puig: Yeah, I’ve been trying to work on it a little bit. Trying to stay really focused in my routines. Trying to be more mentally even throughout the matches.

I did a really good job of it in Florianopolis leading up to the Olympics and carrying it on through and just letting out the emotions when I really, really needed it and it’s been working. But there, when I went up 5-0 I just fired myself up because it just helped numb the nerves a little bit more so it was good.

Monica Puig

WTA Insider: How do you put your 2016 into context? It’s been a fantastic season for you, even before Rio. This has been a career season. But when people ask you, ‘Monica, how did you do this,’ what do you say?
Puig: I told everybody that I was going to be really patient with myself this year. Obviously coming off a very disappointing 2015 season, trying to take it one tournament at a time even though it hasn’t been easy. I’ve had my let downs, I’ve had my weeks where I felt absolutely terrible.

But just trying to be as patient as possible because I knew that I was putting in the hard work and that something good was going to come out of it. I think coming slowly up the rankings very quietly, nobody has really talked about me until now. It just shows that I was ready for this moment and I think it was my time to shine and finally let the world know who I was.

WTA Insider: Is Olympic Monica different from Tour Monica? Do you think you can match that intensity outside of the Olympic setting?
Puig: Yeah, I think I can because in reality at the Olympics, whenever I stepped on court I was still competing, doing my job. The only difference was it was for an Olympic medal and I was staying at the Athlete’s Village. That was the only difference but my job didn’t change at any time. I know the tennis that I’m capable of playing. It was just a matter of time for me to believe it myself.

I know there will be weeks where I’ll lose in the first round and there’ll be weeks when I win couple of more rounds or get to the final or win, but there’s one thing that nobody can take away from me and that’s the Olympic title.

Monica Puig

WTA Insider: Puerto Rico is going nuts. How does it feel to make history for Puerto Rico, to become the first woman to win an Olympic medal, the first athlete to bring home the gold?
Puig: I don’t think I’ve been able to process it very well just yet. I’m just really overwhelmed by the attention that I’m getting and all the well wishes and everything. It’s just incredible. I will be going back to Puerto Rico to celebrate it with them.

WTA Insider: That’s going to be an epic parade.
Puig: It’s going to be unbelievable! I want to take the time to enjoy this moment and embrace it all because you only compete in your first Olympics and win your first gold medal once. So I have to wait another four years to play the Olympics.

This, to me, is even more special than a Grand Slam because it’s so rare to have an Olympic gold medal. It comes once every four years. I know I will have several opportunities to win a Grand Slam, but this is one that doesn’t come four times a year. It just comes once. For me to grab it so early, it was a dream come true.

Monica Puig

WTA Insider: You’ve always been very vocal bout your Puerto Rican pride. How does that shape you as a person?
Puig: I’m just so proud of where I come from. Every time I land in Puerto Rico I get tears in my eyes every single time because it’s so beautiful and I can’t believe that I was born in such an amazing island. Even though I wasn’t raised full time there I still went back to visit and spend some time with my family members there and get really surrounded by the culture that Puerto Rico has to offer. I’m just so proud of where I come from.

I’m never going to lose that spirit of being Puerto Rican. I’m going to represent them until the day I finish tennis and so on and so forth.

WTA Insider: Taking your week in Rio outside of the Olympic context, it was an incredible week. You beat the reigning Australian Open champion, the reigning French Open champion, and a two-time Wimbledon champion. Setting the Olympics aside, what does this mean for your individual tennis career?
Puig: I think I can say that I’m amongst the best out there. It’s not so much a matter of ‘if’ it was going to happen but ‘when.’

I’m just going to try and not put any pressure on myself to back this up in any way because I know what I did and I know that I’m extremely young. I still have a really long career ahead of me and there’s no rush to get anywhere.

I’m just going to enjoy the ride right now and work as hard as I can to come out to the US Open and continue to represent Puerto Rico and myself in the same graceful manner that I did at the Olympics. I know that more good things are going to come for me during my career, but there’s no rush for anything.

Monica Puig

Hear more from Puig in the latest Dropshot Episode of the WTA Insider Podcast:

All photos courtesy of Getty Images.

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WTA Shot Of The Month: Wozniacki

WTA Shot Of The Month: Wozniacki

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

January was packed with plenty of amazing shots – we narrowed it down to the five best.

In the end it was Caroline Wozniacki, who played a stupendous rally against Danka Kovinic at the ASB Classic. Restarting the point with an out-of-nowhere pick-up lob, the Dane showed off all her spee and anticipation when Kovinic tried a drop shot – taking home this month’s top votes.

Click here to watch all of January’s finalists.

Final Results for January’s WTA Shot Of The Month

1. Caroline Wozniacki (42%)
2. Simona Halep (28%)
3. Eugenie Bouchard (16%)
4. Svetlana Kuznetsova (8%)
5. Victoria Azarenka (6%)

Caroline Wozniacki

2015 WTA Shot of the Month Winners

Shot of the Year: Agnieszka Radwanska
October: Agnieszka Radwanska
September: Agnieszka Radwanska
August: Simona Halep
June: Ana Ivanovic
May: Agnieszka Radwanska
April: Angelique Kerber
March: Agnieszka Radwanska
February: Simona Halep
January: Maria Sharapova


How it works:

Five shots are selected by wtatennis.com
Winner is then determined by a fan vote on wtatennis.com
 

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