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News | WTA Tennis English

News | WTA Tennis English

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

It’s semifinal time on Thursday in Miami. We preview both of today’s must-see matchups at wtatennis.com.

Thursday

Semifinals

Head-To-Head Venus-Konta

[10] Johanna Konta (GBR #11) vs. [11] Venus Williams (USA #12)
Head-to-head: Konta leads, 2-1
Key Stat: Konta became the first British woman to reach the Miami semifinals with her win over Simona Halep on Wednesday.

The last time Venus Williams and Johanna Konta locked horns it was an historic day for the British No.1. Konta claimed a three-set victory over the legendary American last summer to claim her first career title and become the first British woman to win the Bank of the West Classic title since 1977. Afterwards Konta summed up the experience aptly. “I wanted to leave it all out there, but also absorb everything that I could possibly reinvest in my career moving forward,” she said. “I’ve played her twice before and knew I’d be playing a magnitude of experience. Venus Williams doesn’t need an introduction.”

Williams and Konta split 144 points evenly in that entertaining final, but in the midst of her breakout season it was Konta who won the bigger points. Their fourth career battle should be similarly close, and if Williams’ form in her last two matches is any indication, she’s going to aggressively attack Konta and look to get to net often. The American became the oldest player to take out a reigning No.1 in WTA history on Wednesday night when she worked her way past Angelique Kerber, 7-5, 6-3, and while it’s easy—and inspiring—to focus on the fact that Williams is 36, the caliber of tennis she is playing belies her age. The three-time Miami Open champion has played brilliantly to reach the semifinals here for the eighth time, not dropping a single set and knocking off back-to-back Top 10 opponents in the process.

Will Williams take it a step further and avenge her loss in Stanford to Konta? The American will have her chances, but she’ll have to improve on her 45 percent first-serve percentage from her quarterfinal win over Kerber to do so. Konta picked apart Halep’s second-serve on Wednesday in her three-set victory over the Romanian, and Williams will need to keep the Dangerous 25-year-old on the back foot as much as she can to succeed.

Pick: Konta in three

Head-to-Head Wozniacki-Pliskova

[2] Karolina Pliskova (CZE #3) vs. [12] Caroline Wozniacki (DEN #14)
Head-to-head: Wozniacki leads, 3-1
Key Stat: Pliskova leads the WTA with 23 wins in 2017

They are very different stylistically, but Karolina Pliskova and Caroline Wozniacki share the same sinister approach to tennis warfare. Both are calm, composed and ruthless—eager to expose their opponent’s liabilities and unflappable under duress. That’s why Thursday’s matchup between the No.2-seeded Czech and the No.12-seeded Dane is so intriguing. The experienced, wily and extremely well-rounded Wozniacki will look to keep the powerful, blossoming Pliskova at bay, and she knows she’ll have to pull out all the stops to do it.

“She beat me last time we played, so she’s clearly in good shape,” Wozniacki said on Tuesday after defeating Lucie Safarova for her 22nd win of the season. “I’m looking forward to getting another try, to see if I can beat her this time.”

Wozniacki won the first three times she faced Pliskova, but the Czech hit back earlier this season breaking Wozniacki’s serve four times in a 6-3, 6-4 win at this year’s Doha final. Despite that loss, Wozniacki is pretty confident that she has a good read on the towering Czech’s game. “I know her game, what her strengths and weaknesses are,” Wozniacki told reporters on Tuesday after her quarterfinal win.

Like Wozniacki, Pliskova has yet to drop a set this week in Miami. But she knows things will get tougher as the stakes get higher. “Anything can happen in the next semi,” she told reporters on Tuesday. “I would expect a tough one because I know she has been playing quite good here in last few years. … It’s the last tournament on hard court, so I just want to enjoy it.”

Pick: Pliskova in two

By the Numbers

7-1 – Konta’s lifetime record at Miami. She reached the quarterfinals on her debut last year.

2 – Pliskova is the only player left in the draw that has won multiple titles this season.

22 – Wozniacki has dropped just 22 games in her four matches en route to the semis. Pliskova, who has also yet to drop a set, has lost 24 games. Williams has dropped 27 games, and also not dropped a set.

14 – Number of wins that Williams has notched over reigning World No.1 players, including her win over Angelique Kerber in the quarterfinals.

49 – Number of career titles for Venus Williams, which is 14 more than the other three semifinalists’ career titles combined (Wozniacki, 25, Pliskova, 8, Konta, 2).

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Insider Notebook: Serena & The Shrug

Insider Notebook: Serena & The Shrug

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

PARIS, France – World No.1 Serena Williams survived a scare from No.60 Yulia Putintseva, while No.58 Kiki Bertens of the Netherlands continued her incredible run in Paris, stunning No.8 seed Timea Bacsinszky.

Kiki Bertens puts cancer scare behind her: Confession time: Heading into the quarterfinal round of Roland Garros, there was only one permutation of results that was going to leave me truly shocked in Paris. Yulia Puntintseva beating Serena Williams? I could understand that. Tsvetana Pironkova beating Samantha Stosur or Shelby Rogers beating Garbiñe Muguruza? I could see a situation where that could happen.

But Kiki Bertens knocking out No.8 seed Timea Bacsinszky in straight sets to make her first Slam semifinal? No, that one I did not see coming. Neither did Bertens. Or her family. On match point she fell to the ground in disbelief, stood up, and looked at her box, which was full of family and friends.

She shrugged.

“I was like, Can you believe it?” Bertens beamed, while speaking to reporters. “Because I cannot. And also my parents were like, No, this is not happening.

“But, yeah, it is.”

Yeah. It is.

On yet another cold wet day in Paris, Bertens became the first Dutch woman since 1971 to advance to the French Open semifinal, beating Bacsinszky, 7-5, 6-2, to score her 12th consecutive win. She’ll face World No.1 Serena Williams on Friday. Behind in much of the first set, Bertens battled back from a break down time after time until she was able to reel off the last three games to take the set. She continued her roll in the second set, racing to a 4-0 lead, before holding off Bacsinszky for the win.

Kiki Bertens

“The circumstances were really tough,” Bertens said. “The court is really slow. The balls are heavy. It’s really tough to play aggressive, and especially with Timea. She is like changing a lot, like with some slower balls and some higher ones, so it was pretty tough for me.

“But I think afterwards I was 4-2 down, and then I was just like, Okay, we are just gonna be calm and try to fight for each point. I did it and I won the first set.”

It sounds so simple. It’s been anything but.

“The last two years were pretty hard for me,” Bertens said. “First I had my ankle surgery and afterwards I had some issues with my health, so that was like pretty tough two years. But since this season we worked really hard to be healthy again, to be fit again. So, yeah, I feel really good now.”

It was a year ago here at Roland Garros, after a 6-1, 4-6, 6-2 first round loss to Svetlana Kuznetsova, that Bertens gave a tearful interview to the Dutch press revealing a cancer scare that had plagued her for over a year. According to the Dutch press, Bertens went in for a WTA health exam during the Miami Open in 2014 and a WTA physiotherapist discovered a lump on her thyroid gland.

Bertens sought out tests in the Netherlands but continued to play for over a year not knowing if the lump was cancerous or not. She had scheduled surgery on the lump after the French Open that year but after a miracle run to the fourth round as a qualifier, she canceled the surgery for fear of the risks.

The stress led to sleepless nights and anxiety. She told Dutch reporters that she was resigned to the idea that she had cancer, trying to prepare herself for the worst. But the uncertainty continued to eat at her. It wasn’t until last year, right before Roland Garros, that she got the green light. She had done a test in America and the lump was benign. The tears she shed with reporters were tears of relief and joy. She could finally move on.

“Now I can start again at zero,” she said last year at Roland Garros. “Stress does so much with your body. I have not slept for a year.”

But Bertens’ struggles didn’t end there. Due to the stress of the cancer scare she was unable to train at an elite level and her fitness slipped. She struggled to get through matches for the rest of the year. She lost 6-1, 6-0 to Petra Kvitova in the first round a few weeks later. With her ranking outside the Top 100, she played mainly on the ITF Circuit, popping up only a the tour’s lower level events.

Last September she hired Raemon Sluiter, a former ATP player, as her new coach. Their off-season priority was to get her back to a top-level of fitness.

“In the preseason I did a lot of work,” Bertens said. “Like the first three weeks was only physical practices, like two, sometimes three times a day. It was hell really, but I’m really glad we did it. Like with my whole team we were like working every day like really hard.”

Timea Bacsinszky, Kiki Bertens

The hard work has paid off. Along with a new diet – she doesn’t eat carbohydrates in the evening and says she’s sleeping better and has more energy in the mornings – Bertens looks as fit as ever. It’s translated directly into her game. When the tour transitioned to her favorite clay, the wins began to come in bunches.

She beat Caroline Garcia and Kristina Mladenovic in Fed Cup, then proceeded to make the semifinals of Rabat, where she had match point to make the final but lost to Marina Erakovic.

“I had match point there I [lost] the match and in my head I was so stressed and all the time and we were like talking with my coach after that match for so long. I think after that match I just was so calm in my head and just trying to go out there every day and just give everything and then just do my own thing. I think that’s the most important thing.”

Then came Nürnberg. Playing the week before the French Open, Bertens won the title as a qualifier, her first trophy since Fes in 2012. Heading into the French Open only Samantha Stosur had more clay court wins than Bertens this year. Back in action immediately in Paris, she scored the biggest win of her career, beating No.3 Angelique Kerber in the first round and has since knocked out Camila Giorgi, No.29 Daria Kasatkina, No.15 Madison Keys, and now No.8 Bacsinszky.

“Mentally I feel pretty good,” Bertens said. “But physically, yeah, it was tough today out there. I think I had some problems with my calf today, so especially in the second set it was really hard to push off with the serve.”

Her physically state will surely be tested against Serena. Bertens took a medical timeout after the first set against Bacsinszky to get her calf taped. Regardless of how the match turns out, this has been the most surprising of fortnights for Bertens.

Timea Bacsinszky

Bacsinszky undone: Timea Bacsinszky has spent much of the last two months adapting to the conditions and her opponents. But she couldn’t solve the puzzle of Kiki Bertens. The Swiss struggled in the heavier conditions and simply couldn’t execute her game plan to keep Bertens off-balance.

“The conditions, they were heavier than yesterday,” Bacsinszky said. “I was really struggling with my ball length, so I couldn’t really find a good spot to bother her. Well, she was probably having also a great momentum.

“So I think we played kind of equal all the first set. I mean, I could have won also those games. It could have gone either way. And it was the same in the second set, too. So congrats to her, because she she was able to win the important points.”

After the match, Bacsinszky pointed out that she hasn’t been as in the zone as people think.

“People think, Okay, you get to win many matches and it’s like, Oh, just playing too good and you’re just feeling it. Last year I was mentioning two matches that I had my eyes shut and everything was going in. But all year long, like this year, it didn’t happen yet for me to have such a match. So many times I was feeling kind of not that well in the match but I was able to turn it around.

“Luckily for me it doesn’t happen quite often that I cannot turn it around, but this time I really couldn’t.”

Serena Williams, Yulia Putintseva

Serena Williams fends off The Feisty One: To paraphrase Andy Murray after the 2012 Wimbledon final, “She’s getting closer.” Yulia Putintseva had twice taken Serena Williams to a first set tie-break only to see the American run away with the match in straight sets. This time Putintseva played a fantastic match to keep Serena off-balance, taking the first set 7-5 and earning break point late in the second set for a chance to serve out the match, only to see Serena roar back to win, 5-7, 6-4, 6-1 in the quarterfinals.

“I think I have more experience now, because I played two times before with Serena on the big courts,” Putintseva said. “This time I was just more confident when I was serving for a set. I was just not thinking. I was just doing it and it went well.”

As for Serena, it wasn’t her best day. It was a frustrating performance from the American, who is trying to defend her French Open title and match Steffi Graf’s Open Era record of 22 major titles. “I just was not playing my best,” Serena said. “I kept missing, just misfiring. Honestly, at one point I didn’t see the light at the end of the tunnel. I guess I was not the most positive mentally, but obviously I didn’t want to stop.”

Despite coming so close to a massive upset – she was just five points away from the win and joked afterwards that a couple of let-cord winners would have sealed it – Putintseva took nothing but positives from her performance.

“I think the match was very close and very far from being on my side,” Putintseva said. “I was trying to do everything what I can, to run, to cover, to attack when I can, to go forward. But it just was unlucky situation end of the second set for me. But it’s okay. I mean, still have some years to play Grand Slams.”

Simultaneous Semifinals Set for Friday: Starting at 1pm it will be Serena vs. Bertens on Court Philippe Chatrier. Garbiñe Muguruza vs. Samantha Stosur will also start at 1pm on Court Suzanne Lenglen.

In the doubles, the semifinals are also set. No.5 seed Caroline Garcia and Kristina Mladenovic take on Margarita Gasparyan and Svetlana Kuznetsova, while No.7 seeds and 2013 champions Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina play Barbora Krejcikova and Katerina Siniakova.

Ekaterina Makarova, Elena Vesnina

All photos courtesy of Getty Images.

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News | WTA Tennis English

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Vote: March’s WTA Shot Of The Month

April 03, 2017

Kirsten Flipkens, Elena Vesnina, Bethanie Mattek-Sands, Venus Williams, and Caroline Wozniacki – who will win March’s WTA Shot Of The Month presented by Cambridge Global Payments? Vote now!

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Insider Podcast: Serena vs. Garbiñe

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

On the final Dropshot Edition of the 2016 French Open, Courtney Nguyen and David Kane preview what promises to be a thrilling conclusion to the two weeks on the terre battue, as World No.1 Serena Williams stands just one match from winning her 22nd Grand Slam title, which would tie her with Steffi Graf.

Across the net from the illustrious American is No.4 seed Garbiñe Muguruza, a 22-year-old playing in her second Grand Slam final in under 12 months, who is vying to become the second Spaniard to lift the Coupe Suzanne Lenglen after Arantxa Sánchez Vicario, who won the tournament three times.

Hear from the finalists and Sánchez Vicario herself as Nguyen and Kane give their analysis of the budding big stage rivalry between Williams and Muguruza.

Who has the edge in the second Grand Slam final of the season? Allez we go:

Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes or on any podcast app of your choice and 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.

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News | WTA Tennis English

News | WTA Tennis English

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

MIAMI, FL, USA – Winning the Miami Open trophy after a rollercoaster two weeks of action was hard enough, but Johanna Konta’s work wasn’t done yet – there’s always the traditional champions Key Biscayne photo shoot.

After a quick chat with WTA Insider on the way to the shoot, Konta was ready to relax and pose in front of a throng of photographers as she celebrated the win at Cape Florida Light, Key Biscayne’s iconic lighthouse.

Here’s a few photos of Konta with the Miami Open trophy, all courtesy of Getty Images:

Johanna Konta

Johanna Konta

Johanna Konta

Johanna Konta

Johanna Konta

Johanna Konta

Johanna Konta

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Muguruza & The Trophy Hit Paris

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Garbiñe Muguruza took the Coupe Suzanne Lenglen for the traditional French Open champion’s trophy shoot at Place de la Concorde. See all the best pics here.

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News | WTA Tennis English

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

CHARLESTON, SC, USA — Monica Puig was the first of two main draw winners as the Volvo Car Open got underway in Charleston on Monday, as Katerina Siniakova was forced to retire with a back injury in the final set.

Siniakova received medical attention earlier in the match, and retired as the match hit the two-hour mark, trailing 6-4, 2-6, 1-4 to send the Puerto Rican in to the second round.

“It’s always nice to come back and play on the clay again — unfortunately she had to retire there in the third set,” Puig said after the match. “I thought it was some pretty good, high-quality tennis up until that point.

“She was definitely holding, clutching her back a little bit there in the second set, so I was obviously a little bit aware something was going on. I had to try and keep focus because sometimes when a player is feeling a little bit of discomfort, they start hitting the ball hard, going for their shots a little more. I had to really focus and pay attention.”

Puig, who reached the third round in Charleston last season, fell behind early as Siniakova broke in the first game and rode the advantage to a one-set lead. She flipped the script in the second set, breaking Siniakova at the first opportunity to open up a 3-0 lead en route to sending the match to a decider. While the Czech fought through valiantly in the decider, she dropped serve in the fourth game and was unable to continue much further from there.

The Puerto Rican played her first WTA main draw in Charleston in 2011 after coming through qualifying and the World No.40 is eager to use one of her most successful tour stops as a springboard on the road to the French Open

“I love the clay. I really enjoy playing on it. Not so much the green clay because you don’t really notice that you’re on clay as much as the red clay — I love getting off the court and seeing I’m all dirty!” she joked.

“You don’t really have to change up your game style, but you have to adjust to what you have to do as far as tactics and things like that,” Puig assessed, as she’ll face the winner of the match between Daria Kasatkina and Danka Kovinic in the second round. “That’s what my coach and I were trying to work on coming into this clay season, just to really be smart of there.” 

Joining Puig in the second round as an early winner was Japan’s Naomi Osaka, who rallied for her first career main draw win in Charleston after dropping the first set against Johanna Larsson, 6-7(4), 6-4, 6-2.

Check out the rest of the opening round results here.

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RTS Update: Muguruza On The Move

RTS Update: Muguruza On The Move

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Garbiñe Muguruza’s maiden Roland Garros victory earned her one of the most impressive moves of the fortnight on the Road To Singapore; the Spaniard shot up 13 spots from No.17 to put herself at No.4 in line for qualification for the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global.

Up to a career-high ranking of No.2 on the WTA rankings, Muguruza is now in pole position to play the WTA Finals for a second straight year. In her 2015 debut, she roared through the round robin stage without dropping a match, losing to eventual champion Agnieszka Radwanska in three grueling sets.

The Top 3 shuffled on the Road To Singapore leaderboard, giving us a new No.1 in 21-time Grand Slam champion Serena Williams. Despite finishing second to Muguruza at the French Open, the American has nonetheless enjoyed a near-perfect start to 2016, one that has seen her reach the finals or better at four of her five tournaments this season.

Semifinalists Samantha Stosur and Kiki Bertens enjoyed the biggest bumps; former US Open champion Stosur nearly cut her Road To Singapore ranking in half to go from No.16 to No.9, while Bertens put herself in Singapore contention by moving from No.35 to No.12.

RTS Ranking Movers

Serena Williams: No.3 to No.1 (+2)
Garbiñe Muguruza: No.17 to No.4 (+13)
Samantha Stosur: No.16 to No.9 (+7)
Kiki Bertens: No.35 to No.12 (+23)
Irina-Camelia Begu: No.27 to No.19 (+8)
Elina Svitolina: No.31 to No.20 (+11)
Yulia Putintseva: No.45 to No.24 (+21)

Click here to see the full Road To Singapore leaderboard standings with Paris in the books.

RTS Leaderboard

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News | WTA Tennis English

News | WTA Tennis English

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

MONTERREY, Mexico – Hundreds of Monterrey locals got a chance to be up close with the WTA’s biggest stars as the Abierto GNP Seguros put on a colorful display at one of the city’s most popular avenues, San Pedro de Pinta.

World No.1 and Monterrey top seed Angelique Kerber joined Donna Vekic in a mini-tennis exhibition match, before covering each other – and the crowd – in colorful powdered paint.

The pair even took to the stage afterwards, joining a local band to sing some tunes at Monterrey’s weekly festival.

Check out the best photos below, courtesy of the Abierto GNP Seguros!

Angelique Kerber & Donna Vekic

Angelique Kerber & Donna Vekic

Angelique Kerber & Donna Vekic

Angelique Kerber & Donna Vekic

Angelique Kerber & Donna Vekic

Angelique Kerber & Donna Vekic

Angelique Kerber & Donna Vekic

Angelique Kerber & Donna Vekic

Monterrey band

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