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Mirza & Niculescu Claim New Haven Crown

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

NEW HAVEN, CT, USA – Sania Mirza and Monica Niculescu capped off their newly rekindled doubles partnership with their first title together at the Connecticut Open, edging past Kateryna Bondarenko and Chuang Chia-Jung 7-5, 6-4.

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

The last time Mirza and Niculescu partnered up was way back in 2010, where they joined forces to reach the quarterfinals at the Western & Southern Open. They played that one tournament together before calling time on the partnership, but the pair have remained friends ever since.

So when Niculescu called Mirza last week asking them to team up again, it was inevitable that World No.1 Mirza would say yes.

“I asked Sania in Cincinnati,” Niculescu explained. “I had an idea maybe she wants to play here. I ask her. When she said yes, I was so excited. It seems we won the tournament, so I’m happy I asked her.”

“We know each other for a long time,” Mirza added. “Also our games kind of suit each other, so you have that confidence. I think it helped we got a couple first easy matches in terms of the way we played. We kind of found our rhythm almost immediately.”

The newly minted pairing opened their Connecticut Open campaign with a commanding straight sets win over American wildcards Alison Riske and Louisa Chirico, then overpowered regular duo Darija Jurak and Anastasia Rodionova in straight sets. They faced a close fight against the No.3 seeded Andreja Klepac and Katarina Srebotnik, squeezing out a comeback, 2-6, 6-3, 10-8, to make it to the final.

“It’s always nice to have the week before a Grand Slam where you’re able to ease up,” Mirza explained in post-match press. “We go to New York and there’s so much happening there. Here you have nice restaurants and even though we’re in the city, you feel quite quiet around here.

“I was actually not planning on completely playing this week. But when Monica asked me, I thought we could obviously win together.”

Despite winning a title on their first tournament back together, they both made it clear that this partnership is just for the short term and both will return to their regular partners in time for the US Open.

“I play with Barbora Strycova,” Mirza assured.

“I play with Vania King,” Niculescu added. “That’s why I said I hope it’s not the last time we going to play together.”

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US Open Tuesday: Serena Starts

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

NEW YORK, NY, USA – Six-time US Open champion Serena Williams leads the top half of the draw into action on Day Two at Flushing Meadows. Chris Oddo previews the action right here at wtatennis.com.

Tuesday, First Round

[1] Serena Williams (USA #1) vs. Ekaterina Makarova (RUS #29)
Head-to-head: Williams leads, 4-1
Key Stat: Williams has to reach the semifinals in New York in order to have a chance at retaining the No.1 ranking.

Serena Williams holds a remarkable 63-1 record in the first round of majors but on Tuesday she’ll be facing a player that she’d surely rather see later in the draw – if at all. In fact, the last time Williams and Ekaterina Makarova squared off it was in the semifinals of the 2014 US Open in a match that Williams won easily en route to her sixth career US Open title. Williams was dominant in that tilt, as she has been so often in a Grand Slam career that has netted her 304 wins, but her current injury status has many wondering if she can be her old dominant self in New York this year. That’s the burning question ahead of this highly anticipated tussle, and we won’t have our answer until Williams and Makarova duke it out to open Tuesday’s night session on Arthur Ashe Stadium. What we do know is that Makarova owns a win against Williams on the Grand Slam stage. The Russian defeated Williams at the 2012 Australian Open and though she’s lost the last three matches and last six sets to Williams, that victory could come in handy when it comes to Makarova’s belief. As for Williams, belief won’t be the issue. For the legendary American it will be more about getting off to a quick start and proving that she’s fit enough to go on another magical run in New York.

Pick: Williams in three

[16] Samantha Stosur (AUS #17) vs. Camila Giorgi (ITA #67)
Head-to-head: First meeting
Key Stat: 2011 US Open champion Stosur has made the second week in New York four times, including last season.

A former champion will meet up with a dangerous floater on Tuesday when Aussie Sam Stosur and Italy’s Camila Giorgi lock horns for the first time on Day 2. Giorgi can be wildly inconsistent and tends to play a somewhat one-dimensional game, but the 24-year-old can be lethal on a hardcourt if she is in the zone. She reached the round of 16 at the US Open in 2013 when she won a memorable night match against Caroline Wozniacki, and the victory proved that Giorgi has what it takes to succeed beneath the bright lights of New York. Stosur will look to serve big and hope to force a lot of Giorgi errors by using her world-class topspin to move the ball above the Italian’s strike zone. It’s the veteran Aussie’s match to lose and if she remains focused, keeps Giorgi on the run and off balance, Stosur should be able to lock down the win.

Pick: Stosur in two

[5] Simona Halep (ROU #5) vs. Kirsten Flipkens (BEL #56)
Head-to-head: Halep leads, 4-0
Key Stat: Halep has won all eight sets contested against Flipkens.

Something about this match-up works decidedly in Simona Halep’s favor. The Romanian has waltzed past Kirsten Flipkens in all four of the pair’s meetings, and she has only once dropped more than four games to Flipkens in a set. But they have not met since 2014, and Flipkens comes in with pretty good form, having just knocked off Belinda Bencic and Caroline Garcia at New Haven. Speaking of good form, Halep has won 17 of her last 19 dating back to the start of Wimbledon. The World No.5 has repeatedly stated that she is feeling fit as a fiddle and is ready to make her mark in New York. I feel that I play good tennis,” Halep said when asked to assess her performance at Montréal and Cincinnati this year. “I’m strong on my legs. Mentally I’m very good. I think it is the best period that I had this year so far.” Concerning New York, Halep says she doesn’t need to change a thing to have success. “I’m going there just to play my best, to do my best, to win matches, and to treat the tournament like I treated [Montréal and Cincinnati].”

Pick: Halep in two

Eugenie Bouchard (CAN #39) vs. Katerina Siniakova (CZE #72)
Head-to-head: First meeting
Key Stat: Siniakova is bidding for her first US Open main draw win.

Eugenie Bouchard is back at the sight of her best and darkest days of 2015. Things were going swimmingly for Bouchard in Queens last year when she reached the round of 16 with an emotional victory over Dominika Cibulkova. It was the high point of an otherwise disappointing season for the Canadian but before she had a chance to build on her success she was out of the tournament, forced to withdraw after she suffered a concussion in a freak locker room fall. Bouchard has put together a much stronger season in 2016, but she hasn’t made the second week at any of the season’s first three majors. Can the Canadian purge her New York demons and begin another run on Tuesday? To do so she’ll have to get by 20-year-old Katerina Siniakova, a talented Czech who reached the third round of a major for the first time this summer at Wimbledon. Siniakova owns a 3-8 record at majors and she’s yet to win in Queens, which is all the more reason for her to leave it all on the court against Bouchard.

Pick: Bouchard in three

Around the Grounds…
Cincinnati champion Karolina Pliskova will square off with American wild card Sofia Kenin on Day 2. The No.10-seeded Czech has yet to reach the second round of a major in 17 previous appearances. Great Britain’s Laura Robson will look to snap a six-match losing streak at majors when she faces compatriot Naomi Broady.

By the Numbers…
72
– Number of Grand Slam main draws that
Venus Williams has played in. The 36-year-old will break the all-time record, passing Amy Frazier, when she takes the court against Kateryna Kozlova of the Ukraine on Day 2.
7 – Number of finals that
Serena Williams has reached in her last eight Grand Slams. The American has gone 5-2 in those finals.
4 – The number of players that entered the tournament with a shot of emerging with No.1 ranking at the end of the
US Open fortnight (Serena Williams, Angelique Kerber, Garbiñe Muguruza and Agnieszka Radwanska).
304
Serena Williams current total of Grand Slam victories are just two shy of the all-time record of 306 which is held by Martina Navratilova.

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Catching Up With Vera Zvonareva

Catching Up With Vera Zvonareva

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

The 2016 US Open draw features seven former finalists, including Svetlana Kuznetsova, the first Russian to take home the trophy in Flushing. Kuznetsova’s countrywoman and fellow former World No.2 Vera Zvonareva reached the final back in 2010; absent from the Open since 2012, Zvonareva will be part of the action for the first time in four years, if only from a distance.

“I’ll be commentating for Eurosport Russia for a few matches,” she told WTA Insider by phone on Wednesday. “It’ll be a huge opportunity for me. I like to watch tennis and different matches, so it will be exciting.

“I don’t know if I’ll be good at it or not, but it’ll be something good to try. I’ve only ever been in the radio booth, but not on TV. It’ll be a new experience for me, but I’m ready for the challenge.”

The gig comes as just the latest in a series of fun and exciting challenges for the Beijing Bronze medalist, who announced her marriage and newborn daughter Evelyn (Evelina in Russian) in a lengthy post on Instagram.

“I’ve had so many injuries over the last few years. I tried to come back a couple of times, first after my shoulder surgery, and then I had an Achilles injury. I needed to take a break and my physio told me I’d need six months to get back on court again.

“During that period of time, I thought maybe it’d be great to have a family, because I couldn’t do what I love to do; I couldn’t do any sports. It happened really fast, and then I became a mom this summer.

“It’s all different, being away from tennis and being a mom, but it’s great as well.”

Vera Zvonareva

Zvonareva’s injury struggles began not long after she and Kuznetsova won the women’s doubles title at the 2012 Australian Open. Two truncated comeback attempts – the most recent ending last spring – sent her back towards more pursuable passions like academics and athletics, the latter of which she shares with husband Alexander.

“I met my husband about four or five years ago; we met during a run. I love running, and I had been taking part in different competitions in Moscow, but for fun, not professionally, just different five or 10K runs. I was doing those and he loves running as well, so that’s how we met.

“He came with me to a couple of tournaments, but then I couldn’t continue. He would love to see me play more because he loves tennis and to watch me play, but I got injured.”

She discovered she was expecting while studying for her Master’s degree in Political Science, applying her typically studious approach to the news as her due date drew nearer.

“During the pregnancy, I tried to juggle studying and being pregnant. I took birthing courses for four months, because I’d never had sisters or brothers; my family was quite small. For me, it’s something new, so my husband and I took the courses together.

“My close friends knew, of course, but I never made it public because I prefer to keep my personal life to myself.”

Vera Zvonareva, Kim Clijsters

Following fellow WTA stars Ana Ivanovic, Dominika Cibulkova, and Tsvetana Pironkova down the aisle, Zvonareva is able to rely on a network of compatriots who’ve began families before her.

“I heard Victoria’s news, and of course it’s great to hear she’s expecting. I’ve been in touch with some friends from the tour, especially the Russian girls and former players like Elena Dementieva, Alina Jidkova, Tatiana Panova. They all have babies by now and it’s great. We have a big community of tennis moms!”

Whether she can emulate rival and former No.1 Kim Clijsters, who won three major titles after starting a family of her own, depends on how her body responds to its return to the gym.

“I’m going to start trying to get back into shape because sport is part of my life and I want to get back in shape. I don’t know if I’ll be back on the tour or not; it’s tough to say at the moment, but for myself, I want to back into the shape I was in before and play tennis again – even if it’s just for fun.

“I want to start going to the gym three times a week, and I’ll probably start in about a week. Hopefully by October, I can start running a little bit. My first goal will be to participate in some of those five or 10K runs, because I like those a lot. From there, we’ll see, but definitely being an athlete for all of my life, I want to get back in athletic shape. I don’t know if I’ll ever come back to tennis, but I want to be in a good shape, no matter what!”

No matter what, Zvonareva has already had a career to remember, reaching a pair of Grand Slam singles finals in 2010 and winning four majors in women’s and mixed doubles. But her greatest memory remains rounding out an all-Russian podium at the 2008 Summer Games.

“For all the girls in Russia, the Olympics gives a lot of motivation. When I was younger, I watched Yevgeny Kafelnikov and Elena Dementieva when they were playing in Sydney. Yevgeny got the gold medal and Elena got the silver; it inspired all of us to continue doing what we like and to continue dreaming. It was an exciting moment for Russian tennis.

“We saw how many Russians came on tour afterwards; there was a time when we had five players inside the Top 10. It was great.”

2008 Olympic Tennis Podium

Watching a new wave of Russians rise in her absence, she has high hopes for another strong showing at the Summer Games, especially after 2016’s gold medal in women’s doubles, won by Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina.

“I think Russian tennis has a great future. We have names like Daria Kasatkina and Margarita Gasparyan; they’re already inside the Top 100, and Daria’s been doing really well this year. I never played against her – because she was still a junior when I was playing! – but I’ve seen a couple of matches on TV, and I think she’s been doing great.

“There are also junior girls winning Wimbledon like Anastasia Potapova, so maybe we’ll yet have another Golden Era of Russian tennis.

“I’ll be happy to see a new generation of Russian players on tour, and I’ll be happy to see if they can produce the same results and maybe win gold, silver, or bronze medals in tennis as well.”

She’ll continue to enjoy the game from afar for now, and though Zvonareva admitted that little could compare with the emotions of being on court herself, the memories will always remain close to her heart – however this next chapter ends.

“I got the chance to travel around the world, and meet different people and athletes the world over. It’s not easy being a professional athlete, but tennis taught me a lot and gave me a lot. It taught me discipline, how to fight, and all different things that help me in life.

“I miss the feeling of being on the Centre Courts and the big crowds. That’s something that’s very difficult to get in life, those feelings of when you walk onto a big court at a Grand Slam to play a big match, get through tough challenges to win in the end. That’s a feeling I miss a lot, but they will always be inside me. I can always remember them, and they make me smile, and proud of my career.”

All photos courtesy of Getty Images.

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Venus Serves Up 70th Win At US Open

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

NEW YORK, NY, USA – Venus Williams recorded her 70th match win at the US Open to sweep past Julia Goerges in straight sets and clinch a spot in the third round.

The No.6 seed shined in her first match under the roof of Arthur Ashe Stadium to reach the third round for the 15th time in her storied career, improving her record at her home Slam to 70-14.

“I’m grateful that I can still play the game I want to play right now,” the 36-year-old said. “As an athlete, as a tennis player, that’s what you want. You want to be out there and play the game you want to play.”

After trading breaks to opening the match, it was a decidedly one-sided affair as Williams took charge, covering the court and staying rock-solid at the net, allowing Goerges to commit the errors. She broke the German three more times to take the first set and a lead into the second.

Goerges’ aggressive returning brought up two break points just as Williams was serving out the match, but the American replied with a pair of huge serves into the body to jam her opponent and erase the opportunity. After masterfully chasing down a drop shot, Williams eased her way into the third round, winning 6-2, 6-3.

“I just felt like I had to dial it back a little bit, maybe play a little bit more percentage tennis, play within myself, keep my errors down,” Williams explained after the match. “Very happy that it worked out against an opponent who is seasoned, who can play, who can serve, who has a lot of big shots. So it was a nice test to come through.”

The 27-year-old German will likely rue her missed chances, having brought up five break opportunities but only able to convert one. Though their winner’s count was nearly the same – 18 for Venus and 17 for Goerges – they were separated by their unforced errors count, 17 for Venus and 22 for Goerges.

Williams awaits the winner in the match between No.26 Laura Siegemund and fellow American Nicole Gibbs.

More to come…

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Insider Podcast: Comeback Kids

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

NEW YORK, NY, USA – It was a day for comebacks on Day 5 of the 2016 US Open.

Former No.1 Caroline Wozniacki continued her New York renaissance with a comprehensive victory over Monica Niculescu to reach the second week of a Grand Slam for just the second time since making the final here two years ago. The Dane is taking her biggest wins of the season in stride as she prepares to play Madison Keys for a spot in the quarterfinals.

Speaking of Keys, the No.8 seed had to fight back from a 1-5 final set deficit to Japan’s Naomi Osaka, one of the fastest rising stars on the game’s major stages. Hear from both Keys and Osaka as they reflect on their exciting showcase of next generation talent.

Plus, the WTA Insider team previews Day 6 as the Williams sisters headline the order of play, along with No.4 seed Agnieszka Radwanska and No.5 seed Simona Halep. It’s all happening on the latest Daily Dispatch:

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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US Open Monday: Spotlight On Radwanska

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Serena Williams will continue her quest for Grand Slam history on Monday as the top half contests the Round of 16. We’re previewing the matchups at WTATennis.com, courtesy of contributor Chris Oddo.

Monday

Round of 16

[1] Serena Williams (USA #1) vs. Yaroslava Shvedova (KAZ #52)
Head-to-head: Williams leads, 4-0
Key Stat: Williams is bidding to pass Roger Federer for the all-time lead in Grand Slam match wins on Saturday.

Serena Williams waltzed through the first week in New York, dropping a mere 15 games and proving to the field that her serve is on point. The shoulder is fine, the footwork is fine and the game is dialing in. Now, the 22-time major champion moves on to the business section of the draw. It starts with a fifth career meeting with hard-hitting Kazakh Yaroslava Shvedova. Williams has taken all four of the pair’s previous meetings, but one shouldn’t discount the talents of Shvedova. The World No.52 has won all six sets she’s played in New York to reach the second week at a major for the sixth time. She has the firepower to challenge Williams, but does she have the nerve? Approaching 35, and closing in on the all-time Open Era Grand Slam title record, Williams seems more motivated than ever to win. “I don’t know,” she said on Saturday after storming past Johanna Larsson of Sweden. “I just am not ready to throw in the towel yet or just to have enough yet. I’m still having fun out there. I’m still able to compete with the best. I think that’s what matters most for me.”

Pick: Williams in two

[4] Agnieszka Radwanska (POL #4) vs. Ana Konjuh (CRO #92)
Head-to-head: Radwanska leads, 1-0
Key Stat: Radwanska is one of four players to have reached the round of 16 at all four majors this year (along with Serena Williams, Keys and Suárez Navarro).

The last time Agnieszka Radwanska and Ana Konjuh locked horns, intense drama ensued. The pair battled into extra time in the second round at Wimbledon this year, with Radwanska saving three match points in the final set before winning, 6-2, 4-6, 9-7. Making the experience all the more painful for Konjuh was the fact that she turned her ankle after stepping on a ball at 7-7 in the decider and was severely hobbled at the finish. Less than two months later promising 18-year-old Konjuh has put the past behind her and raced into the round of 16 at a major for the first time in her career. On Monday the youngest player remaining in the draw gets to try to erase the memory of a Wimbledon gone awry. Can she possibly produce the type of tennis that earned her the three match points against Radwanska at the All England Club? Or will the No.4 seed have the perfect gameplan to ensure that Konjuh is kept at bay all day?

Pick: Radwanska in three

[5] Simona Halep (ROU #5) vs. [11] Carla Suárez Navarro (ESP #12)
Head-to-head: Tied, 5-5
Key Stat: Halep has won 20 of her last 22 matches.

Simona Halep really had to work to get past No.31-seeded Timea Babos on Day 6. Down a break in the third set and playing at a level or two below her best, Halep had to double-down on intensity and grind her way to a win. She did that, despite Babos’ inspired form, and lives to see another day in New York. “I don’t know how I came back,” a relieved Halep said on court after her 20th hardcourt win of 2016. Will Halep’s narrow escape fuel her belief when she faces the proven veteran Carla Suárez Navarro for a spot in the quarterfinals? “Even if today I didn’t play my best, I played good tennis, good level,” said a confident Halep to reporters. “I was moving very well. I am happy to be back in the fourth round two years in a row, so it’s a good thing.” Halep and Suárez Navarro have gone the distance in each of their last three meetings, and they’ve split a total of ten matches since they first met in 2010. Who will break the tie on Monday?

Pick: Halep in three

[10] Karolina Pliskova (CZE #11) vs. [6] Venus Williams (USA #6)
Head-to-head: Williams leads, 1-0
Key Stat: The last time No. 6-seeded Williams was seeded this high in New York was 2010, when she was the No. 3 seed.

Finally, Karolina Pliskova has reached the second week of a major. The hard-serving Czech had been pining for the milestone ever since she emerged as a formidable force among the WTA’s elite at the start of 2015, but in the last two years she’s had nothing but hard luck at the majors. Not anymore. The 24-year-old surged past Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova on Saturday and will now set her sights on legendary Venus Williams in what promises to be scintillating round of 16 encounter. Two-time US Open champion Williams continued her fine showing in New York by blasting past Germany’s Laura Siegemund, 6-1, 6-2, on Saturday. The American defeated Pliskova in the Zhuhai final last year but Pliskova will likely carry more confidence into this tilt. She has won eight matches in a row, four of which came against members of the WTA’s Top 20.

Pick: Pliskova in three

By the Numbers:

36 – The age of Venus Williams, who is one of just three thirtysomethings (also Serena Williams and Robert Vinci) remaining in the draw.

3 – Radwanska is one of three players that could finish the tournament at No. 1 in the rankings, along with Serena Williams and Angelique Kerber. The Pole will need to win the title to become No. 1.

307 – Matches won by Serena Williams at majors. She’ll bid to pass Roger Federer’s all-time record of 307 on Day 8.

428 – Pliskova leads the Tour with 428 aces in 52 matches this year.

9 – Of the nine teenagers that started in this year’s US Open main draw, Konjuh is the only one remaining.

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Wozniacki Fights For SF Spot

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

WTA Insider | On the latest WTA Insider Live Blog, quarterfinal action begins at the US Open; can Caroline Wozniacki end Anastasija Sevastova’s fairytale run?

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#tbt: When Dasha Met Dasha

#tbt: When Dasha Met Dasha

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Same name, same game? Not if you’re Daria Gavrilova and Daria Kasatkina, two of the most impressive young risers of the 2016 season.

Each have earned career-high rankings this year despite a fire and ice on-court contrast. Gavrilova’s boundless energy and big cuts at the ball have earned her big wins over Petra Kvitova and Simona Halep. Kasatkina’s steadier rise and smoother swings helped her begin the season by beating Venus Williams and Timea Bacsinszky.

Off the court, the pair are completely in-sync, finishing each others sentences and joking about everything from their first meeting on the singles court at last year’s US Open to their decision to play doubles this summer. Celebrate the one-year friendaversary of “The Dashas” – or Dasha and DashKa – courtesy of a chat with WTA Insider, held after their first round win over Gabriela Dabrowski and María José Martínez Sánchez:

On how they met…

GAVRILOVA: Well, I was meant to play Maria Sharapova…
KASATKINA: It’s a nice story! I got lucky loser.
GAVRILOVA: She got a lucky loser, and I only found out two hours before I was going to bed, and I was like, ‘Who is this girl?’ I had no idea.
KASATKINA: I knew her for a lot of years, and she didn’t remember.
GAVRILOVA: She was telling me that she and her brother both knew me.
KASATKINA: Short memory; it’s ok, Dasha!
GAVRILOVA: They were watching me when I was younger.
KASATKINA: Oh yes, we were big fans!
GAVRILOVA: After the French Open this year, we decided to play doubles together.
KASATKINA: No! I think at the end of the year, we’d already started talking about it…
GAVRILOVA: But at the time, I was set with Svitolina and she was playing with Vesnina. So we were thinking, ‘What are we going to do?’
KASATKINA: We started at Wimbledon.
GAVRILOVA: We did all right there.
KASATKINA: We did two rounds!

On becoming friends…

GAVRILOVA: First, we said hello to each other last year. After I lost to her, I came up and said, ‘Hey Dasha, good luck tomorrow!’ But she was so scared of me. She was shy.
KASATKINA: Because after the match, you went off the court and you started to scream at your coach.
GAVRILOVA: She was 18 and super new on tour. She was scared of everything…
KASATKINA: …And she was so experienced already.
GAVRILOVA: Our match was a big battle, and I had a few tough calls there.
KASATKINA: It was such big motivation for me; I had to take my chances.
GAVRILOVA: But I went up to her after the match because I’m kind of normal, I guess.
KASATKINA: And I was still under pressure, saying, ‘Thank you.’
GAVRILOVA: Now we practice more together with the doubles and stuff. But Montréal was our first singles practice. In Indian Wells, we still didn’t really know each other much. I don’t know when we started hanging out.
KASATKINA: I’m not sure either. Little by little.

On whether they talk tennis…

KASATKINA: This year, I asked her what it’s like to defend points, because of Rome.
GAVRILOVA: I did all right there.
KASATKINA: You made it pretty good.
GAVRILOVA: But her coach is experienced, so he gives good advice.
KASATKINA: My coach, he is. He is.

On doubles strategy

GAVRILOVA: Well, we know we’re good from the baseline…
KASATKINA: You mean good from behind?
GAVRILOVA: And at Wimbledon, it really works, you know, to just grind on the grass.
KASATKINA: Yeah, it really works. Spin the ball, kick serve.
GAVRILOVA: We probably do a lot more of standing across from each other at the baseline, more than other doubles teams.
KASATKINA: But now we’re starting to play more of a doubles game. More normal.

Daria Gavrilova, Daria Kasatkina

On beating doubles specialists in their first round…

GAVRILOVA: I’d played them at the French Open with Elina, so I kind of knew what to expect. Our coaches studied them a little bit. We knew what was coming, so we played to our strengths. Yesterday we practiced for two hours…
KASATKINA: Only doubles.
GAVRILOVA: We didn’t really have a chance to practice doubles. Before Montréal, we got a wildcard and didn’t have to do anything.
KASATKINA: Montréal? Cincinnati!
GAVRILOVA: Oh, Cincinnati, yeah.
KASATKINA: Before the Olympics, we didn’t play doubles because of that. So I played with a Russian player. Dasha had to play with Australian player.
GAVRILOVA: So in our first match Cincinnati, we didn’t know what was happening, or what to do.
KASATKINA: We played not so good.
GAVRILOVA: But now that we’re doing some doubles training, we’ll get our stuff together.

On doubles helping singles

GAVRILOVA: Well, after losing in the first round, we were really excited to be playing doubles!
KASATKINA: Hey, our singles matches were very good!
GAVRILOVA: No, we saw each other in the locker room. I think I finished just before her…
KASATKINA: I came into the changing room, and she was sitting, talking on the phone. I looked at her; she looked at me.
GAVRILOVA: We just gave each other a big hug.
KASATKINA: And time stops!
GAVRILOVA: We hugged for like 10 minutes, sitting there like, ‘Oh, man…’
KASATKINA: It was so bad, asking each other what happened in our matches.
GAVRILOVA: We were complaining like, ‘I worked so hard,’ and she was saying, ‘I did too.’ We didn’t talk about doubles though.
KASATKINA: We forgot about doubles.
GAVRILOVA: But we had dinner together – actually, she’d already had dinner, but we hung out after for a little bit.
KASATKINA: We had a little lemonade!
GAVRILOVA: We ordered lemonade, asking like, ‘There is no alcohol, right?’ So we had to have two lemonades.
KASATKINA: The lady comes and asks us what we want to drink; they had Sprite, and the lemonade.
GAVRILOVA: She told us it was French, and I was like, ‘It’s not champagne, right?’ They said no, and we were like, ‘Great!’

Follow Dasha on Twitter @Daria_gav, and DashKa on Twitter @DKasatkina.

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