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From around the world

Boserup Ends Bellis' Québec Challenge

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

QUÉBEC CITY, Canada – Julia Boserup held off a spirited challenge from CiCi Bellis to win their all-American quarterfinal at the Coupe Banque Nationale.

Two years on from her only previous venture this far at a WTA event, World No.125 Boserup displayed great composure to close out a 7-6(0), 6-4 victory, setting up a semifinal showdown against Océane Dodin.

Boserup, who is enrolled in an online degree at Penn State, does not graduate until December, and recent success is providing a welcome distraction from looming deadlines. In July, then ranked outside the Top 200, Boserup came through qualifying to reach the third round at Wimbledon.

Her latest run could well take her into the Top 100. And against Bellis she showed enough to suggest that this may not be her ceiling. After a shaky start, Boserup pinched the first set, then played the more assured tennis at the conclusion to the second, fending off a break point before striking decisively in the following game.

Earlier on, Dodin, appearing in her maiden WTA quarterfinal, made another breakthrough by defeating Alison Van Uytvanck, 6-2, 6-4. While Dodin is entering uncharted waters this week, it should come as no real surprise given her recent form on the ITF Circuit, where she has won 13 of her last 15 matches.

In the top half of the draw, qualifier Lauren Davis withstood a late fightback to defeat Alla Kudryavtseva, 6-3, 7-6(4). Davis had won all three of the pair’s previous meetings and was made to work hard for number four, closing out the contest after spurning three match points and a comfortable second set lead. In the last four Davis will face either Tereza Martincova or Jessica Pegula.

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Cibulkova, Kvitova Move Into 2nd Round In Tokyo

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

TOKYO, Japan – No.6 seed Dominika Cibulkova came back from a set down against Lucie Safarova to move into the second round of the Toray Pan Pacific Open after a two-and-a-half-hour thriller.

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

Cibulkova drew a tough first-round match against Safarova, last year’s French Open finalist. After suffering a bacterial infection that derailed her season, Safarova has slipped down the rankings and sits at No.43, making her a dangerous floater. But Cibulkova got the job done, edging past the Czech 4-6, 6-1, 7-5.

Under the roof at the Ariake Tennis Forest Park, Cibulkova pounced on Safarova’s vulnerable second serve to keep her under pressure throughout the first set. But the momentum soon shifted after Safarova finally won a second serve point to bat away Cibulkova’s break point chance. Safarova found another gear, breaking Cibulkova’s serve in the next game with a blistering cross-court backhand return.

Cibulkova rebounded in the second set, floating a drop shot just out of reach to grab an early break for a 3-1 lead. The drop shot was Cibulkova’s go-to weapon throughout the match, employing nine of them during the three sets. A double fault from Safarova cost her a second break as Cibulkova quickly rattled off five games in a row to take the second set.

Both players wrestled with the momentum in the deciding set, trading breaks twice and keeping each other under pressure before Cibulkova finally got the edge at 6-5. She hit her boldest drop shot of the match to clinch the victory after two and a half hours.

Cibulkova sets up a clash with 18-year-old wildcard Naomi Osaka, Japan’s No.2 player and a hometown favorite, in the next round.

2013 champion Petra Kvitova is also through to the next round after scoring a 6-3, 6-3 victory over Madison Brengle.

Kvitova broke the American’s serve three times and fought off six of her chances to ease past her in an hour and thirteen minutes. She’ll take on Olympic gold medalist Monica Puig next for a spot in the quarterfinals.

More to come…

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Radwanska, Muguruza Touch Down In Tokyo

Radwanska, Muguruza Touch Down In Tokyo

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970
The Toray Pan Pacific Open Kids’ Day kicked off with an appearance by two of the tournament’s biggest names: Dominika Cibulkova and Caroline Wozniacki.

The Toray Pan Pacific Open Kids’ Day kicked off with an appearance by two of the tournament’s biggest names: Dominika Cibulkova and Caroline Wozniacki.

Cibulkova and Wozniacki answered questions from the young fans…

Cibulkova and Wozniacki answered questions from the young fans…

…as well as taught them a thing or two on the tennis court!

…as well as taught them a thing or two on the tennis court!

Wozniacki and Cibulkova at Toray Pan Pacific Open Kids’ Day.

Wozniacki and Cibulkova at Toray Pan Pacific Open Kids’ Day.

Wozniacki and Cibulkova at Toray Pan Pacific Open Kids’ Day.

Wozniacki and Cibulkova at Toray Pan Pacific Open Kids’ Day.

We challenged Agnieszka Radwanska to show off her origami skills – and of course she made herself a trophy!

We challenged Agnieszka Radwanska to show off her origami skills – and of course she made herself a trophy!

The No.2 seed talked to the media during All Access Hour…

The No.2 seed talked to the media during All Access Hour…

…and signed lots of autographs.

…and signed lots of autographs.

Someone else who signed lots of autographs was Naomi Osaka – known as “Nao-chi” to her delighted Japanese fans.

Someone else who signed lots of autographs was Naomi Osaka – known as “Nao-chi” to her delighted Japanese fans.

Spain’s Carla Suárez Navarro manned the autograph booth for a bit…

Spain’s Carla Suárez Navarro manned the autograph booth for a bit…

…and of course, she kept signing autographs for her many fans even after she was done.

…and of course, she kept signing autographs for her many fans even after she was done.

Japanese fan favorite Nao Hibino is enjoying her time on home soil.

Japanese fan favorite Nao Hibino is enjoying her time on home soil.

Toray’s top seeds and biggest stars – Caroline Wozniacki, Petra Kvitova and Garbiñe Muguruza – held a Q&A session at the Fan Zone.

Toray’s top seeds and biggest stars – Caroline Wozniacki, Petra Kvitova and Garbiñe Muguruza – held a Q&A session at the Fan Zone.

Monica Puig, Puerto Rico’s trailblazing gold medalist, was back to her winning ways in Japan.

Monica Puig, Puerto Rico’s trailblazing gold medalist, was back to her winning ways in Japan.

Top seed Muguruza and Wozniacki left the tournament a memento and signed the autograph board at Toray.

Top seed Muguruza and Wozniacki left the tournament a memento and signed the autograph board at Toray.

During a rain delay, Radwanska, Puig and Australia’s Jessica Moore donned kimonos and played a round of hanetsuki.

During a rain delay, Radwanska, Puig and Australia’s Jessica Moore donned kimonos and played a round of hanetsuki.

Hanetsuki is a traditional Japanese game similar to badminton (but minus the net). Usually played by girls on New Year’s, players who lose a point get a mark on their forehead – like Puig and Moore!

Hanetsuki is a traditional Japanese game similar to badminton (but minus the net). Usually played by girls on New Year’s, players who lose a point get a mark on their forehead – like Puig and Moore!

Now the players are ready to take to the court at Toray!

Now the players are ready to take to the court at Toray!

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How SAP Tennis Analytics Goes Beyond On-Court Coaching

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Although fans are most familiar with SAP Tennis Analytics for Coaches powered by SAP HANA during on-court coaching breaks, it goes beyond the match to provide players and coaches with real-time insights throughout the season.

“Using SAP stats to review matches is an ongoing thing,” said Nicole Pratt, who coaches Daria Gavrilova. “We use it to prepare for the next match, for the next tournament, for the year ahead.”

SAP Tennis Analytics for Coaches allows for real-time statistics and data provided via Hawk-Eye during matches, with coaches now able to take an iPad tablet out on court during on-court coaching timeouts as well as practice sessions to deliver more detailed messages to their players.

Watch the video above to hear how Angelique Kerber, Lucie Safarova and Daria Gavrilova and their coaching teams use SAP Tennis Analytics to regroup after a match and prepare for the season ahead.

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Arruabarrena Masters Niculescu In Seoul Final

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

SEOUL, South Korea – Lara Arruabarrena won a topsy-turvy Korea Open Tennis final against Monica Niculescu on Sunday to capture her second WTA title.

Four years on from her only other WTA silverware, on the clay of Bogotá, Arruabarrena mastered the cement – and Niculescu’s unorthodoxy – to triumph, 6-0, 2-6, 6-0, in just under two hours.

Arruabarrena came out on the losing side in the pair’s only previous hardcourt encounter, last summer in Washington DC. But attacking Niculescu’s slice with gusto, she dominated the rematch from the outset.

Yet after racing through the first set the Spaniard handed Niculescu a lifeline, double faulting twice to surrender her serve in the fourth game of the second. It was an opportunity Niculescu grasped with both hands, producing some gloriously inventive tennis – and the odd head-scratching miss – to level the match.

When Arruabarrena then snatched at a routine volley in her opening service game of the decider, the contest looked in danger of slipping away. She found a way out of this hole and when she broke with a wonderful lob a few games later the match swung decisively in her favor.

Niculescu battled to the last, saving one match point. It was merely delaying the inevitable, Arruabarrena wrapping up victory at the second time of asking.

In the doubles final, No.2 seeds Kirsten Flipkens and Johanna Larsson had too much for Akiko Omae and Peangtarn Plipuech, running out 6-2, 6-3 winners in just over an hour.

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

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

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

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

Tuesday

Second Round

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

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

Pick: Kerber in two

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

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

Pick: Radwanska in three

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

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

Pick: Muguruza in three

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

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

Pick: Wozniacki in two

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

WTA Finals: Get Your Tickets!

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Kristyna Pliskova Into Tashkent QF

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

TASHKENT, Uzbekistan – Success is running in the Pliskova family these days as Karolina’s twin sister Kristyna took out No.5 seed Kurumi Nara, 6-2, 6-2, to reach the quarterfinals of the Tashkent Open.

“I expected a tough match,” she said after the match. “I served very well, and my ground stokes found the right angles. I was playing confidently today.”

The same week Karolina Pliskova made her major breakthrough at the US Open, Kristyna won a title of her own at the WTA 125K Challenger event in Dalian. The big-serving Czech has continued her solid form in Tashkent, dropping just four games to Nara to reach her first WTA quarterfinal of the season.

“I’m happy to break my jinx and move into the quarterfinals. This win here today will help me defend major points. I will have easy start to the year next year and also probably make it to my best ranking.”

She and sister Karolina had a solid result in doubles earlier in the year – reaching the semifinals in Nottingham, which Karolina won in singles – but Kristyna cites a coaching switch with helping her return to the Top 100.

“I have a new coach since Dalian and he has been very positive and changed my thinking. That has helped me. I have played good singles this year, and am currently I’m playing solid tennis.”

Karolina may be the ace leader for 2016, but Kristyna has a formidable delivery of her own, hitting a record 31 aces in a three-setter against Olympic Gold medalist Monica Puig at the Australian Open.

“I’m very confident about my service it’s my favorite shot. I like to serve hard and normally get speeds up to 180km/hr outdoors and 200km/hr indoors.”

Up next for Pliskova is a fellow former junior prodigy in Irina Khromacheva, who knocked out No.8 seed Naomi Broady, 6-2, 6-4; the extended stay in Tashkent has given her a chance to enjoy the city.

“I lost in the first round last year and didn’t have time to go around. But now that I’m here for four days, I have been moving around more. I feel it’s a great city to be in, and I will surely take back good memories of the city.”

Completing the quarterfinal line-up is No.2 seed Kirsten Flipkens, who edged past young Greek star Maria Sakkari, 7-6(0), 3-6, 7-6(4).

“It was great being out there,” Flipkens said in her post-match press conference. “It was tough to stay for nearly three hours and quite hot too, but I had good starts in the tie-breaks, which made the difference.

“Sakkari played very well. It was good match for both of us, and I’m very happy with the way I played.”

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Kuznetsova Continues Mastery Of Radwanska To Reach Wuhan SFs, Boosts Singapore Hopes

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

WUHAN, China – Svetlana Kuznetsova came from match point down to defeat Agnieszka Radwanska once again and advance to the semifinals of the Dongfeng Motor Wuhan Open.

Watch live action from Wuhan on WTA Live powered by TennisTV!

Stepping onto court having tasted defeat just once in her previous eight encounters with Radwanska, Kuznetsova had the right to feel confident. In the end, though, she was forced to draw on every ounce of self-belief to close out a thrilling 1-6, 7-6(9), 6-4 victory.

“I was getting better as the match was going on. Aga played well in the first set, but I wasn’t moving so well,” Kuznetsova said. “In the second set I wasn’t playing my best game. But I was trying to stay in there, trying to fight, trying to be smart and turn things around.

“Then I served good in the third set and took control of the game. I don’t know how many match points I saved, I was just trying to play normal points as it was very even. I had some set points, so I was just trying to stay calm.”

For the first half an hour, Kuznetsova looked distinctly second best, Radwanska pulling out the party pieces to pocket the first set. The Pole was unable to sustain this level in the second set and as her level dipped, Kuznetsova got a belated foothold in the match.

However, it still appeared that her efforts would be in vain, Radwanska canceling out an early deficit to serve for the match at 6-5. The Russian chose this moment to up her level, fine winners off either wing earning the opportunity to get back on level terms, which she took when the No.3 seed’s drop shot drifted wide.

The ensuing tie-break contained more drama than many matches, Kuznetsova surging 6-3 ahead, then fending off a match point before rifling a backhand down the line to close out the set at the sixth time of asking.

When she quickly slipped 2-0 behind in the third set, it looked like the effort of dragging herself back into the contest had taken its toll. Yet Kuznetsova had one last push in her, reeling off five of the next six games, closing out the match with 51st winner.

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