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Lepchenko, Tatishvili Bask In Bol Sunshine

Lepchenko, Tatishvili Bask In Bol Sunshine

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

BOL, Croatia – A quartet of Americans shined in the Croatian sun at the Bol Open, a WTA 125K Series event staged in the coastal town of Bol, Croatia. No.2 seed Varvara Lepchenko, Anna Tatishvili, Sachia Vickery and Jennifer Brady took advantage of the famously mild Adriatic climate and all notched wins at the inaugural event.

Watch free live streaming from Bol, Croatia all week right here on wtatennis.com!

The No.2 seeded Lepchenko tamped down a late surge from Croatian wildcard Ana Vrljic on her way to a 6-1, 7-5 victory. Despite Vrljic keeping the score line more competitive in the second set, the American showed more consistency during the key points throughout the match – Lepchenko converted on all five of the break chances she created, compared to Vrljic’s two of seven.

Earlier in the day, Anna Tatishvili survived a two-hour-and-forty-minute battle against Paula Kania to advance 6-4, 6-7(4), 7-5. Her countrywomen Sachia Vickery and Jennifer Brady had a more straightforward road to the second round, advancing past both of their opponents in straight sets. Vickery posted a 6-2, 7-5 win against Croatian wildcard Tena Lukas while Brady scored the upset of the day over No.8 seed Patricia Maria Tig.

Ipek Soylu – who made Turkish tennis history at the French Open when she became one of two players to compete in the main draw of a Grand Slam for the first time – was back to her winning ways in Bol against Israel’s Julia Glushko. Soylu weathered a second-set shutout to come back with a 6-3, 0-6, 6-1 win.

Also through to the second round are Stefanie Voegele, who defeated Andreaa Mitu 6-3, 6-2; Ivana Jorovic, who defeated qualifier Isabella Shiniakova 7-5, 6-2; and Bulgarian qualifier Elitza Kostova, who defeated qualifier Ekaterina Alexandrova 6-1, 7-6(4).

Tomorrow the No.1 seed Anna Karolina Schmiedlova and Croatian favorite Ana Konjuh highlight Day 3 action as they take the court in their Bol openers.

Bol Open

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Insider Notebook: The Strong Survive

Insider Notebook: The Strong Survive

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

PARIS, France – There was tennis at Roland Garros on Wednesday, where the bottom half semifinals and top half quarterfinals were set. Garbiñe Muguruza and Samantha Stosur will face off in the semis on Friday, while Serena Williams, Yulia Putintseva, Timea Bacsinszky and Kiki Bertens will battle it out on Thursday in the quarters.

Adapt and Survive: That’s the name of the game in this second week at Roland Garros, where weather continues to wreak havoc on the playing conditions. With the cold weather and damp air – thankfully there was no rain on Wednesday – players have had to adapt their games to battle through the slog. Some have done it better than others.

Kiki Bertens notched her 11th consecutive singles win with a 7-6(4), 6-3 victory over No.15 seed Madison Keys. The young American, playing in her first French Open Round of 16 was baffled by the heavy court, which mitigated her big-hitting weapons.

“The conditions today were definitely very heavy and slow,” Keys said. “So I think it favored her more than it favored me. But everyone had to deal with the conditions and try to figure it out, and I think she did a better job today.

“I was surprised by how many balls she got. I think part of it was just because the court was a little bit slower and my ball wasn’t doing as much. But I think she just kept continuously making me hit one more ball, one more ball, one more ball. I think I started going for things too soon, and she definitely took me out of my rhythm.”

No.8 seed Timea Bacsinszky has been the queen of adaptation throughout the fortnight, adjusting her game not only to her opponent but to the conditions. Her ability to problem-solve during each match has been the key to run back to the quarterfinals. She has yet to lose a set. On Wednesday it was No.9 seed Venus Williams who fell victim, as Bacsinszky won 6-2, 6-4 to earn her first win over the American.

Timea Bacsinszky, Venus Williams

“I struggled with my rhythm at the beginning,” Bacsinszky said. “I mean, the conditions, as you could see for the last couple of days, has been pretty tough. We’re not used to playing on such a heavy clay. She was playing really deep. I couldn’t really put my speed into the ball.

“After those two first games, I figured I might have to use my legs a little bit more. So I tried to tell myself, ‘Okay, I’ll move more or try to just push on your legs, anyway. It’s gonna turn around sometime. Maybe not right away.’ I didn’t know I would win eight games in a row.

“I was just focusing on playing deep and tried to mix also the rhythms with some slices, short balls, quick balls, balls with no spin, nothing, no power that she had to move into the court or maybe coming to the net. So I think variation was the key for me today.”

Said Venus: “The courts have been heavy all tournament. But there are some shots I went for, and they landed a lot shorter because the balls were so heavy. You know, you get in trouble with those short balls. Sometimes it’s hard to change the pattern of kind of how you have been playing all week, so the conditions are definitely heavy.”

Serena Williams

Serena Powers Through: One player who looked unfazed by anything on Wednesday was World No.1 Serena Williams. The tournament favorite needed just 62 minutes to beat No.18 seed Elina Svitolina, 6-1, 6-1. The match was previously scheduled for Tuesday before it was cancelled due to rain.

“I hit yesterday a little bit in an indoors facility, and I took a nap and stayed here until I got canceled,” Serena said. “I don’t know what I did the day before. Probably something similar. I’m really okay with the rain, though. It doesn’t bother me at all.”

By advancing to the quartefinals, Serena is one win away from moving to No.1 in the Road to Singapore Leaderboard. She will play surprise quarterfinalist Yulia Putintseva, after the young Kazakh played a strong match to knock out No.12 seed Carla Suárez Navarro 7-5, 7-5. Ranked No.60, Putintseva heads into her match against Serena without losing a set. Only Serena and Bacsinszky can match that feat.

“I think I have been always playing well,” Putintseva said, when asked to explain her surge in form. “It’s just in last few years I had some troubles with sometimes fitness, sometimes my game that I have to a little bit of change it in the more aggressive way. But I think it’s just the moment came and now I’m playing better in this tournament.”

Garbiñe Muguruza makes her semifinal debut: The 22-year-old was playing her third straight French Open quarterfinal and she finally broke her duck, beating No.108 Shelby Rogers 7-5, 6-3. Since being pushed to three sets in her opening round, Muguruza has looked incredibly confident, brushing aside the competition to make her first semifinal here.

Samantha Stosur proves the doubters wrong: It’s been four years since Stosur made the quarterfinal of a Slam, let alone a semifinal. But the 2011 US Open champion and 2010 French Open finalist has built on a strong clay court season to book a spot in the semis here, beating Tsvetana Pironkova, 6-4, 7-6(6). Stosur rallied from being down a break and 0-40 in the first set, down a break in the second set, and down 1-5 in the tiebreak to get the win.

Stosur struggled after 2011 to maintain her Top 10 level, nearly dropping out of the Top 30 last year. But the 32-year-old Aussie never doubted she had the ability to get back to the top. The tennis was in her, she just had to work to get it out.

“I think tennis in general is very reactive,” Stosur said. “You can have a great year or two and then you have a slump and everyone writes you off. I think even people write off Roger and Rafa. If they will write them off they will write off everyone else.

“But I think it all really comes down to how you feel about what you’re doing. If you feel like, [you’re] still healthy, doing everything you need to, training well, training hard, and feel like you can still compete with the best players in the world. I always still felt like that.”

Stosur struggled after 2011 to maintain her Top 10 level, nearly dropping out of the Top 30 last year. But the 32-year-old Aussie never doubted she had the ability to get back to the top. The tennis was in her, she just had to work to get it out.

“I think tennis in general is very reactive,” Stosur said. “You can have a great year or two and then you have a slump and everyone writes you off. I think even people write off Roger and Rafa. If they will write them off they will write off everyone else.

“But I think it all really comes down to how you feel about what you’re doing. If you feel like, [you’re] still healthy, doing everything you need to, training well, training hard, and feel like you can still compete with the best players in the world. I always still felt like that.”

The Evolution of Timea Bacsinszky: “I can adapt my style to the conditions. This is what I constantly work on and try and develop in my life, my personal life, but also when I’m on the courts each time I practice. Even though I might be in a tricky position, sometimes there are days that are not good for you. And even then I try and react and change and turn around the game.

“It’s like a negative spiral, if it’s the case, I will do my utmost to change the trend in my favor. It’s the same for my game. The fact that I know how to play many different types of shots and spins, I can play well on clay. Also on other surfaces, as well.

“What is amazing is that when you don’t set any limits to what you do. You know you can develop many, many aspects of your game. In this respect, Roger is an incredible source of inspiration. He is 34 and last year he invented a new shot. I am not the new revolution. I don’t want to invent a new shot for tennis, but I’d like to add more shots to my palette of shots.

“For instance, those who knew my game, let’s say, before 2010, well, they have not seen me slice a point. Whereas now, this is one of my good shots. I’m not going to serve and volley in a year, but who knows? Why couldn’t I develop that type of style? It could help me. This is what I try and work on throughout the year, and it’s bearing its fruits.”

Kiki Bertens

The Curious Case of Kiki: Bertens has no real explanation for her incredible run of form. “I have no idea,” she said after beating Keys. “I’m just doing it every day, doing every day, I’m going to try to do my own thing.

“Yeah, it’s just keep on going, keep on going, so I don’t want to think about it too much. I’m just really enjoying it at the moment, and, yeah, hopefully it goes on tomorrow again.”

Bertens said the washout and rain delays have helped her physically. She’s played a lot of tennis over the last two and a half weeks — 18 matches, if you count singles and doubles — but she’s adapted to all the curveballs well. Maybe it’s the magic of Nürnberg, which she won two weeks ago.

“I think in Nürnberg we had everything,” she said. “We had sun, we had rain, we had like 6 degrees, we had 20 degrees. It was like every day was different. So you have to make the best out of every day, and that was really a lesson from there. I’m just taking it here with me. So every day is new day. We’re gonna try and give everything. Then we will see how it goes.”

Venus Backs Her Fellow Players: Not surprisingly, the players were asked about the comments made by Simona Halep and Agnieszka Radwanska about the suitability of the playing conditions on Tuesday. Both women complained that the courts and balls were simply unsafe and expressed their disappointment in having to play through it.

“I think the conditions were not playable yesterday,” Venus said. “It was really bad. It’s hard to see. The balls are wet, the courts are wet. I wasn’t out there the whole time that some of the matches were on, but it just seemed terrible. It should be fair. You know, some players shouldn’t have to play in that weather and others not. It doesn’t seem quite equal.”

Venus Williams

Back-to-Back: While the men’s schedule has been crunched by the rain delays, the women say they’re prepared to play matches on back-to-back days. While Slams normally afford them a day off between matches, the players are used to playing without a day’s rest. After all, that’s what they do at tour events. But if the rain continues to wash out play, the prospect of having to play two matches in one day will be met with opposition.

“Back to back is fine,” Venus said. “That’s what we do all year. But two matches in one day, especially if the rest of the draw isn’t doing it, I don’t think that’s a good idea.”

“I have done that once before, actually,” Serena said when asked about two-a-days. “Charleston I think I played like the 1:00 and the 7:00 match. It was crazy.

“No, I don’t think they would do that though here. This is a Grand Slam, and I think we would have to find a different solution.”

A Different Generation: How about this story from Timea Bacsinszky on her brief interaction with the juniors competing here at Roland Garros.

“Yesterday I was at Jean Bouin at the practice facilities for the French Open,” she said. “They uncovered two courts for Murray and for myself. Well, my hitting partner told me that some juniors were complaining because they were saying, Oh? Who is Bacsinszky? Why does she need a court? So I don’t know if I’m such a big inspiration then.

“I don’t know. I remember when I was myself a junior, believe me. I remember seeing Likhovtseva. She was probably top 20, maybe even 20, and she was playing in the second week. I saw her and like she was not my idol, but still, I was shaking in front of her. I was like, Ahh, she’s in the same locker room as I am.

“But I think maybe now I don’t know if juniors are feeling differently. I have no idea. But I got to talk [as a] junior with Monica Seles in Hungarian and it was like probably one of the best days of my life. I will remember that forever. When she just answered me in Hungarian I was like, Okay, I can lose in first round.”

Timea Bacsinszky

From Weakness to Strength: Stosur’s backhand wing has always been a vulnerability. The slice can sit up, she can rely on it too much to make up for lateral speed to the ball, and her two-handed backhand can let her down. That hasn’t been the case at all in Paris. Against Pironkova, she hit just 7 unforced errors on the backhand (she hit 17 on the forehand). In the previous match against Halep she hit 10 unforced on the backhand to 13 on the forehand.

“We haven’t spent a ton of time hitting backhands every practice session,” Stosur said, when asked about the improvement. “I think when you’re playing well and setting up points well and I’m in control of it, then it really can be a strength.

“I feel like I have been hitting it very well. I have been able to mix in the slice. Probably hit too many slices first six games of the match. Kept constantly telling myself to hit over the ball. I guess if I’m telling myself that it’s a good thing.

“I guess a lot of it is the mindset I have got on it. If I’m putting myself in a good position on the court and wanting to hit it, then I know it can be a good shot. I’ve got to really do that.”

Slicing and Dicing: The backhand slice has been a key shot for two players this week: Bacsinszky and Stosur. With the courts damp and the balls picking up moisture, the slice and dropshot have been incredibly effective, as the ball has been dying on the bounce. While Stosur has used the slice all her life on the backhand side, it’s a relatively new shot for Bacsinszky. The shot developed out of a suggestion from her coach. It took her some time to get her head around it.

“At the beginning I was a bit reluctant. To tell you the whole truth, it was the first time I managed to play one in a match. It was in Andrezieux-Boutheon in 2014 against Sramkova in the first game. It was a small backhand slice shot like Roger’s, and it surprised my opponent so much that I thought, Maybe that’s a good thing to play.

“And then I’m not saying I have total control of this shot or technique today, but then to gain more confidence and a new shot, you have to do is to try it. Not just during practice, but also during matches. Because otherwise it’s only an intention.

“And last year at the end of the year in Beijing, I won key points. I was in a tricky situation at that moment. And thanks to the slices, I won the point. I gained more confidence. But there are so many things that I can still work on in my game. I love doing that. When Dimitri says, Let’s try this, let’s try that. You know what? I’m immediately enthusiastic about it. I like to try those.

Except if I miss them all the time.”

Yulia Putintseva

Puntintseva’s Shuffle: So what was Yulia Putintseva doing during the rain delays and washouts of the last few days? Rebooking her hotel. Putintseva’s reservation was only for the first week of the tournament.

Lucky Ladybug: Don’t ask how ladybugs came up in Bacsinszky’s press conference, but they did. A reporter asked her about saving a ladybug that landed on the court earlier in the week.

“It’s a lucky charm,” Bacsinszky said. “I cannot step on it. Also on the social media, one of my first practices on clay I took a picture and I posted it on Instagram. There was a ladybug. Landed just on a tennis ball just in front of me.

“Here I saw quite a few of them. On my match against Bouchard I think I saved one. The ball kid just stepped on it. I was like, Oh, poor ladybug. He’s like ‘Someone is saving my life.’

“I’m not superstitious. Just saying like why should I step on it? I’m not saying we should like be super careful about every insects and animals, but just like don’t need to murder a poor insect because it’s bothering you.

“You can just push it a little bit. Like, Go on. Go away. That was my feeling about this poor ladybug.”

And…scene.

All photos courtesy of Getty Images.

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Road To Roland Garros: The Newcomers

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Shelby Rogers and Yulia Putintseva have both enjoyed reputation-enhancing fortnights in Paris. Along with the fame and prize money came another perk: the Road To Roland Garros treatment…

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Bouchard Burned By Dutch Customs

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Eugenie Bouchard got a cold welcome in The Netherlands, where she is set to play the Ricoh Open next week in ‘s-Hertogenbosch.

Maybe they were basking in the glow of having their first Roland Garros semifinalist since 1971 in Kiki Bertens. Maybe they were unaware the festivities in Paris are winding down, as the tournament enters its final stage. Or maybe, just maybe, the Dutch are incredibly adept at constructing the perfect burn.

Whatever the reason, this exchange between Bouchard and a Dutch border control agent escalated quickly:

Bouchard lost in the second round of the French Open last week to Timea Bacsinszky. The Dutch immigration officers must not follow Genie on Twitter. She’s been training and relaxing in London since leaving Paris.

The Ricoh Open begins on June 6th. Jelena Jankovic, CoCo Vandweghe, and Jelena Ostapenko are in the draw, along with Belinda Bencic, who is scheduled to make her return after a lower back injury.

A Wimbledon finalist in 2014, Bouchard is scheduled to play a full grass court schedule over the upcoming weeks. After the Ricoh Open she will head to the WTA’s new grass court event at the Mallorca Open, then to the Aegon International in Eastbourne, England before heading to Wimbledon.

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Notes & Netcords: June 6, 2016

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

THE WINNERS

Garbiñe Muguruza played the best tennis of her career to stun defending champion Serena Williams and claim her maiden Grand Slam title at Roland Garros.

With the win Muguruza also adds her name to Spain’s storied history at Roland Garros: she’s the first Spanish woman to win the title since Arantxa Sanchez-Vicario accomplished the feat in 1998.

Muguruza also climbs two spots in the rankings to World No.2, matching another one of Sanchez-Vicario’s feats by becoming the first Spaniard to hold that ranking since 1996. She sits behind Williams, who retains her No.1 ranking.

Read the full match recap here. | WTA Insider: Game-By-Game Analysis

But Muguruza isn’t the only one who took home some silverware in Paris: No.5 seeds Caroline Garcia and Kristina Mladenovic earned the biggest win of their young careers to win the French Open over former champions and No.7 seeds Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina, 6-3, 2-6, 6-4, becomng the first all-French pair to capture their home Slam since 1971.

“It’s never logical to win a Grand Slam,” Mladenovic said in their post-match press conference. “It’s never obvious. You know, you don’t win a Grand Slam every single day. Two young French women players who win Roland Garros. So there are the big tournaments that we have already won, which is a good success in itself, but, you know, winning a Grand Slam, and here in Roland Garros, it’s ten steps above what is logical or normal.”

Read the full match recap here.


GAME, SET, MATCH: WTA Insider

Game: Garbiñe Muguruza makes her mark in Paris.

Spaniards and Roland Garros go together like crepes and Nutella. At 22 years old, Muguruza became the youngest Slam champion since two-time major champion Victoria Azarenka won the 2012 Australian Open, and the second woman born in the 1990s to win a major, joining another two-time champion, Petra Kvitova. By every metric, Muguruza dominated her two weeks in Paris. She dropped just one set and defeated three Slam champions en route to her maiden title, defeating No.1 Serena Williams 7-5, 6-4 in the final.

Despite her youth, Muguruza played throughout the fortnight like a veteran. Less than a year ago, she looked the nervous ingénue in her first Slam final, losing to Serena 6-4, 6-4 at Wimbledon. This time there was a methodical, steely resolve to how Muguruza plowed through the field. In Saturday’s final, she fended off Serena’s repeated attempts to mount one of her famous comebacks, snuffing out any hope a well-timed ace, gutsy backhand winner, or, as it was on match point, an impossibly good lob to secure the win.

On Monday, Muguruza became the first Spaniard since 1996 to hold the No.2 ranking and she vaulted up to No.4 on the Road to Singapore Leaderboard. And her story does not end here. She’ll be one of the favorites at Wimbledon in a few weeks time and look to add her name to the list of seven women in the Open Era to complete the Channel Slam.

Read more about Muguruza’s evolution from young upstart to Slam champion here.

Set: Serena Williams’ quest for No.22 continues.

You have to scroll back to 2004 to find the last time Serena Williams lost three finals in a single season. This year she has played five tournaments, made the final at four, and lost in three, upended by Angelique Kerber at the Australian Open, Victoria Azarenka at the BNP Paribas Open, and now Muguruza. Her quest to match Stefanie Graf’s Open Era record of 22 major titles now shifts to Wimbledon, the site of her last major title. To add even more intrigue to the upcoming grass season, Serena’s No.1 ranking, which she has held since February 2013, will be in play at the All England Club.

Read more about the shrinking the gap between Serena and the field, here.

Match: On to the grass.

There’s no time to kick the clay from our shoes. The five-week grass court season gets underway this week at the Aegon Open Nottingham and Ricoh Open in the Netherlands. Karolina Pliskova and Johanna Konta are the top seeds in Nottingham, which also sees the return of Caroline Wozniacki. The Dane, who fell out of the Top 30 for the first time since 2008, is back in action after an ankle injury force her out of the clay season.

Over in ‘s-Hertogenbosch, No.8 Belinda Bencic is also back in competition after a lower back injury kept her on the sidelines during the clay season. She’s the top seed along with Jelena Jankovic, Roland Garros doubles champion Kristina Mladenovic, and Jelena Ostapenko.


RANKING MOVERS:
Notable singles ranking movers for the week of June 6, 2016.

Shelby Rogers (USA), +48 (No.108 to 60): The biggest ranking mover of the week is Rogers, the 23-year-old American whose dream run to the French Open quarterfinals turned heads in a major way. She breaks the Top 100 and now sits at No.60, her career highest ranking.

Kiki Bertens (NED), +31 (No.58 to 27): Shelby had some completion in the French Open Cinderella story department, though, in the form of Bertens’ surprise run to the French Open semifinals. It was the culmination of a season of great results: Bertens’ impressive clay win-loss record is 19-3, a figure dating back to Fed Cup in April. No.27 is the Dutch phenom’s highest ranking ever.

Yulia Putintseva (KAZ), +25 (No.60 to 35): Putintseva has also reached her own career highest ranking this week, following her appearance in the French Open quarterfinals.

Sam Stosur (AUS), +10 (No.24 to 14): Stosur’s run to the French Open semifinals boosts her ranking up 10 spots to No.14, making her now the highest ranked Australian, male or female.

Garbiñe Muguruza (ESP), +2 (No.4 to 2): Last but certainly not least, Muguruza claimed her first Grand Slam at Roland Garros this past week and along with the trophy she also claims the World No.2 ranking, her career highest. She is the first Spaniard to hold the ranking since Arantxa Sanchez-Vicario in 1996.


UPCOMING TOURNAMENTS

Aegon Open Nottingham
Nottingham, Great Britain
International | $226,750 | Grass
Monday, June 6 – Sunday, June 12

Ricoh Open
‘s-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands
International | $226,750 | Grass
Monday, June 6 – Sunday, June 12

Aegon Classic Birmingham
Birmingham, Great Britain
Premier | $780,900 | Grass
Monday, June 13 – Sunday, June 19

Mallorca Open
Mallorca, Spain
International | $226,750 | Grass
Monday, June 13 – Sunday, June 19

TOP 20 PLAYER SCHEDULES
1. Serena Williams
2. Garbiñe Muguruza
3. Agnieszka Radwanska – Birmingham
4. Angelique Kerber -Birmingham
5. Simona Halep – Birmingham
6. Victoria Azarenka
7. Roberta Vinci
8. Belinda Bencic – ‘s-Hertogenbosch, Birmingham
9. Venus Williams
10. Timea Bacsinszky
11. Petra Kvitova – Birmingham
12. Svetlana Kuznetsova
13. Flavia Pennetta
14. Samantha Stosur
15. Carla Suárez Navarro – Birmingham
16. Madison Keys – Birmingham
17. Karolina Pliskova – Nottingham, Birmingham
18. Johanna Konta – Nottingham, Birmingham
19. Elina Svitolina – Birmingham
20. Sloane Stephens


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

Ekaterina Makarova (RUS) – June 7, 1988
Olivia Rogowska (AUS) – June 7, 1991
Timea Bacsinszky (SUI) – June 8, 1989
Jelena Ostapenko (LAT) – June 8, 1997
Kaia Kanepi (EST) – June 10, 1985

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Bencic Back In Business At Ricoh Open

Bencic Back In Business At Ricoh Open

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

‘S-HERTOGENBOSCH, Netherlands – Last year’s finalist Belinda Bencic was made to work in her first match back from a two month injury layoff, but the No.1 seed edged into the second round of the Ricoh Open in a thriller over Alison Van Uytvanck, 6-2, 4-6, 7-6(3).

Watch live action from ‘s-Hertogenbosch this week on WTA Live powered by TennisTV!

Bencic, the 19-year-old World No.8, was playing in her first match since April in Charleston when a back injury kept her off the court for over two months. Her opponent, Van Uytvanck, knows that feeling all too well: the Belgian was also on the comeback trail and competing for the first time since she sustained a foot injury in Miami.

“I’m just very happy to be back on the court again, without pain,” Bencic said after the match. “I missed the competition and playing matches like this. I was very happy today: nothing hurt, and even if I lose this match, I’m just really happy to be back on the court and fight for every point.

“I think it was a very tough way to come back, but I just want to go like this match by match.”

Van Uytvanck didn’t give Bencic any favors in their ‘s-Hertogenbosch opener, despite Bencic’s clinical start to the match breaking twice to run away with the first set 6-2. The Belgian’s slice and topspin gave Bencic trouble throughout the second half of the match, building up a 5-1 lead in the second set. Van Uytvanck was serving for the set – she even held a set point – when Bencic broke to start mounting her comeback. She rattled off the next three games and was just two points away from leveling the score before the Belgian could finally close the set 6-4.

The pair stayed toe-to-toe in the deciding set, sending their long standoff into a tiebreaker. They were even at 2-2 before Van Uytvanck blinked and Bencic ran away to a 6-2 lead.

A timely ace from Bencic on her second match point ended their two hour and two minute battle.

“We always have tough battles,” Bencic said of her No.132-ranked opponent. “She plays very different. It’s hard for me to play her, and I think it’s hard for her to play me. Of course, she likes grass, her game suits grass and she played very good today as well.

“But the important thing is I am very healthy, and no pain on the court. Just happy to win first round.”

Joining Bencic in the second round is No.2 seed Jelena Jankovic, who overcame a slow start to put away Katerina Siniakova, 6-4, 6-2.

Jankovic found herself down a 0-3 deficit in the opening set before she was able to find her footing on the new surface, rattling off three straight games to get back on par and breaking Siniakova for the set.

“I’m very happy to be through in my first match on grass,” Jankovic said. “It’s my first tournament on this surface so I did not start very well.

“I tried to fight a little more and tried to stay low and hit every point as much as I could because it’s completely different. I’m happy that I was able to stay strong and win in straight sets.”

No.3 seed Kristina Mladenovic, half of the French Open doubles title-winning duo, had no problem transitioning from clay to grass against Yaroslava Shvedova, advancing 6-4, 6-3. No.4 seed Jelena Ostapenko similarly cruised into the second round, easing past Serbian qualifier Jovana Jaksic 6-1, 6-0.

Also through are Viktorija Golubic, who downed No.8 seed Anna-Lena Friedsam 6-3, 7-5; Japanese qualifier Risa Ozaki, who beat Kirsten Flipkens 6-4, 6-2; Aleksandra Krunic, who beat Mirjana Lucic-Baroni 7-6(0), 6-1; and Dutch wildcard Richel Hogenkamp, who defeated Japanese qualifier Eri Hozumi 6-2, 6-2.

Jelena Jankovic

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Wimbledon Monday: Full Circle Moments

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Ready? Set? Go! The third major of 2016 is about to get underway, and we’ve got your Wimbledon Day One preview right here at WTATennis.com, courtesy of contributor Chris Oddo.

Monday

First Round

[2] Garbiñe Muguruza (ESP #2) vs. Camila Giorgi (ITA #68)
Head-to-head: Giorgi leads, 2-1
Key Stat: Giorgi owns a 6-7 record against the Top 10, but has gone 1-6 against the Top 5.

How will Garbiñe Muguruza handle the pressure of playing the first women’s match on Wimbledon’s fabled Centre Court on Monday? All indications are that she’ll be fine. “Nothing has changed for me to look at Wimbledon different,” Muguruza confidently told a roomful of reporters on Saturday in London when she was asked about coming to Wimbledon as a Grand Slam champion for the first time. “I’m going for the first match, like everyone else, from zero.” Muguruza will have to find a way to block out all external expectations so that she may focus on getting past a very dangerous first-round opponent in Camila Giorgi. The Italian has successfully passed the first round in her last four appearances at Wimbledon and she owns a 17-11 record on grass despite losses in her last three tilts on the surface. Giorgi will certainly take her shots at using her explosive serve and flat ground strokes to expose Muguruza’s movement on the grass, but can the 24-year-old do it well enough to knock off one of the game’s rising forces on Day One?

Pick: Muguruza in three.

[8] Venus Williams (USA #9) vs. Donna Vekic (CRO #112)
Head-to-head: First meeting
Key Stat: Williams is 4th on the Open Era win list at Wimbledon with 76.

Venus Williams and Wimbledon’s grass have been a perfect fit for 19 years running, and on Monday the five-time Wimbledon champion will look to cash in on her experience and grass-court karma when she takes on Croatia’s Donna Vekic for the first time. Vekic was predicted to have a bright future on the grass when she reached the Birmingham final in 2013, but the former World No.62 has struggled of late, losing five of six on the grass since then, and producing a disappointing 4-12 record on all surfaces in 2016. Williams, meanwhile, is hoping to put up back-to-back beauties at the majors. The 36-year-old reached the second week at Roland Garros for the first time since 2010 in Paris this spring and will look to begin what could potentially be a run for the ages here at Wimbledon.

Pick: Williams in two.

[4] Angelique Kerber (GER #4) vs. Laura Robson (GBR #294)
Head-to-head: Kerber leads, 2-1
Key Stat: Robson defeated Kerber in a first-round Wimbledon meeting in 2011.

Many thought that Great Britain’s Laura Robson would be a fixture in Wimbledon’s second week for years to come when she produced a rousing run to the round of 16 in 2013 as a 19-year-old. But injuries have since sabotaged the progress of the promising Brit. Still working her way back to becoming a steady participant at the tour-level, world No.294 Robson will be in for a stern test on Monday as she faces Germany’s Angelique Kerber. Grass may not be Kerber’s greatest love, but she has racked up some very notable Wimbledon wins. She knocked off Kim Clijsters and Sabine Lisicki en route to the semifinals in 2012, and stunned Maria Sharapova during a quarterfinal run in 2014. Sounds like even years work well for Kerber at Wimbledon; does this year’s Australian Open champion have another deep run up her sleeve in 2016?

Pick: Kerber in two.

Sabine Lisicki (GER #81) vs. Shelby Rogers (USA #61)
Head-to-head: Lisicki leads, 1-0
Key Stat: Lisicki owns a 25-7 lifetime record at Wimbledon. She’s 28-24 lifetime in the other three majors, combined.

Welcome to another edition of Sabine Lisicki, Wimbledon fairy tale. Lisicki is a top pro on all surfaces and at all majors, but on the grass of Wimbledon the German takes her game – and emotions – to a higher level. “The first time that I was here, I don’t remember when it was, but when I was here I fell in love with Wimbledon,” Lisicki said in 2013 during her magical run to the final. The love affair has been mutual. Fans in London have warmed to Lisicki, who reached the quarterfinals or better at Wimbledon for five consecutive years until finally having that streak stopped by Timea Bacsinszky in the third round last year. In order to begin another streak, the German will have to find her way past rising American Shelby Rogers. The Charleston, S.C. native will look to notch her first career win at Wimbledon on Monday, but she’ll have to create her own fairy tale at SW19 to do so.

Pick: Lisicki in three.

Around the Grounds: They’ve always been great friends, even on the court where they’ve won two major doubles titles together, but on Monday Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Lucie Safarova will meet on the singles court for the first time since 2010 on Court 8. Simona Halep will open Wimbledon accounts on Monday with a first-round tussle with Anna Karolina Schmiedlova on Court 2. Schmiedlova has gone 3-16 this season after breaking out in 2015 with a career-best 37 wins.

By the Numbers:

51 – Number of consecutive Grand Slams played by Jelena Jankovic, who now holds the active record in that category. Ai Sugiyama holds the all-time record with 62.

3 – Three Americans (Keys, Serena Williams, Venus Williams) are seeded at a major for the first time since the 2005 U.S. Open (Davenport, Serena Williams, Venus Williams).

120 – The all-time record for Wimbledon wins, held by Martina Navratilova. Serena Williams leads all active players with 79.

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Insider Doubles Take: Surface Switch

Insider Doubles Take: Surface Switch

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Santina On Defense: Reigning Co-No.1s Martina Hingis and Sania Mirza captured their first major title together nearly 52 weeks ago at this very tournament, cementing their status as the sport’s top team and foreshadowing an impressive 41-match winning streak that took them to two more majors and the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global title.

The pair has since seen their period of uninterrupted dominance come to a close – at least for the time being – with back-to-back final defeats to French Connection Caroline Garcia and Kristina Mladenovic, who went on to win their home Slam at Roland Garros. Looking to complete the Non-Calendar Year Grand Slam, Hingis and Mirza were stunned by Czech youngsters Barbora Krejcikova and Katarina Siniakova in straight sets in the third round.

Still, it has been another amazing year for Santina, who became the first players to qualify for Singapore in singles or doubles, having already won five titles in the first six months of the season. Top seeds at the All England Club, they play their first match against a pair of Germans, Anna-Lena Friedsam and Laura Siegemund, but face threatening opposition in their half of the draw, including No.13 seeds Vania King and Alla Kudryavtseva, who knocked them out early at the Miami Open. King won the Wimbledon doubles crown back in 2010 with Yaroslava Shvedova – who is seeded No.5 with Timea Babos in the Santina quarter – and together with Kudryavtseva reached their first final of 2016 at the Aegon Classic. 

Their semifinal opponents could be No.3 seeds Chan Hao-Ching and Chan Yun-Jan – the last team to defeat Santina before their winning streak began last summer – or No.7 seeds Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Lucie Safarova, who were the team to beat early last year with a pair of major victories at the Australian Open and French Open. The grass court certainly favors Mirza’s power and Hingis’ quick hands, and the team should be feeling a boost at the Grand Slam that started their meteoric rise.

Kristina Mladenovic, Caroline Garcia

French Across The Channel: Taking a winning streak through much of the clay court swing, Garcia and Mladenovic won three straight titles at the Volvo Car Open, Porsche Tennis Grand Prix, and Mutua Madrid Open – defeating Hingis and Mirza at the latter two finals.

Battling through a quartet of talented Russians in the semis and finals, the French women won an emotional three-setter over former champions Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina to earn their first major title in women’s doubles.

The pair haven’t played since Paris, but both have proven capable of translating their games to the grass, with Garcia winning her first title on the surface in Mallorca two weeks ago, and Mladenovic having previously reached a pair of Wimbledon finals, winning mixed doubles with Daniel Nestor in 2013 and finishing runner-up in women’s doubles with Timea Babos in 2014.

Seeded second, Garcia and Mladenovic open against qualifiers Demi Schuurs and Renata Voracova, and could face the power of No.8 seeds Julia Goerges and Karolina Pliskova or the guile of No.12 seeds Margarita Gasparyan and Monica Niculescu in the quarterfinals.

Ekaterina Makarova, Elena Vesnina

Russians, Reunited: Looming for the Frenchwomen in the semifinals could be No.4 seeds Makarova and Vesnina, who spent nearly a year apart due to injuries to the former, but have hardly skipped a beat since coming back together in Madrid. Celebrating the four-year anniversary of their first tournament together, Makarova and Vesnina roared into the semifinals, and nearly toppled Hingis and Mirza in the finals of Rome a week later.

Narrowly losing to Garcia and Mladenovic at Roland Garros, the Russians have to like their chances of replicating their run to last year’s Wimbledon final, where they led Santina 5-2 in the final set. Their first round will be against British wildcards Jocelyn Rae and Anna Smith, with Australian Open finalists and No.6 seeds Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka their projected quarterfinal opponents.

Venus Williams and Serena Williams are unseeded in the Russian’s quarter; a meeting in the last eight would mark a rematch of their US Open encounter back in 2014, which Makarova and Vesnina won in straight sets en route to the title. The Americans played their first major tournament since that loss at this year’s French Open, where they fell in the third round to Kiki Bertens and Johanna Larsson.

Anastasia Rodionova, Darija Jurak

Unseeded & Looming: Darija Jurak and Anastasia Rodionova may be the most dangerous floaters in the Wimbledon draw. The veterans and Mylan World TeamTennis stalwarts won the Aegon International last week in Eastbourne, defeating not only Hingis and Mirza, but also the Chan sisters to take the title in a match tie-break.

“It was a great performance, all the way from the first round,” Rodionova said after the final. “I think we gelled as a team from the beginning, and that’s what got us to the title.

“I’m very happy with the way we’re playing right now; it’s a great way to go into a Slam.”

Jurak and Rodionova will have to keep up their giant-killing game from the first round at Wimbledon, taking on No.9 seeds and Australian Open semifinalists Xu Yi-Fan and Zheng Saisai, with No.5 seeds Babos and Shvedova also looming in their section before they could earn a rematch with Hingis and Mirza in the quarters.

All photos courtesy of Getty Images.

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