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Champions Corner: Monica Puig

Champions Corner: Monica Puig

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

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

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

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

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

Monica Puig

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

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

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

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

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

Monica Puig

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

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

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

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

Monica Puig

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

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

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

Monica Puig

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

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

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

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

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

Monica Puig

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

All photos courtesy of Getty Images.

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Kerber Moves Past Mladenovic

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

CINCINNATI, OH, USA – No.2 seed Angelique Kerber began her quest to become World No.1 in earnest on Wednesday, dispatching the always dangerous Kristina Mladenovic, 6-0, 7-5, to reach the third round of the Western & Southern Open.

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

“It wasn’t so easy to come to a tournament with just one or two days to prepare, and first rounds are always tough,” she told Andrew Krasny during her on-court interview. “But I was trying to play my game, and it’s so nice to be back in Cincinnati; I have great memories from the last few years, and the fans are amazing. It’s just so nice to be back here on the Center Court.”

Kerber arrived in Cincinnati fresh off her run to the final of the Olympic tennis event – where she became the first German woman since Stefanie Graf in 1992 to medal in tennis.

“It was really special, one of the really special weeks in my career so far. Winning a medal was a dream; when I was young, I was the Olympics at home and to go back home with a medal right now is an incredible feeling. I had an incredible week there.”

The World No.2 ultimately showed few showed few signs of fatigue against Mladenovic, who was playing her second match of the day after Tuesday’s rain interrupted her first round match against Kateryna Bondarenko. While both players hit 18 winners, it was Kerber’s consistency that won the day, with 20 unforced errors to 44 from the Frenchwoman, who was a game from forcing a deciding set before the German clinched the match in one hour and 15 minutes.

Up next for Kerber is the unseeded and looming World No.20 Barbora Strycova; the Olympic Bronze medalist in women’s doubles will be playing with Co-No.1 Sania Mirza for the first time this week in Cincinnati, but has been equally impressively in singles this season. Surviving a topsy-turvy first set against No.14 seed Samantha Stosur, Strycova saved a set point in the first set tie-break – and needing six of her own – to ultimately beat the Aussie, 7-6(11), 6-3.

Kerber leads their head-to-head 4-1 but the two have split their 2016 meetings and Strycova won their most recent encounter at the Mutua Madrid Open.

It’s an important week for the reigning Australian Open champion and Wimbledon finalist; should she win the Western & Southern Open title, she would end Serena Williams’ 183 straight weeks atop the WTA rankings and become the top seed at the US Open, the final Grand Slam tournament of the year.

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Kvitova Visits WTA Media TV Truck

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Petra Kvitova paid a visit to the WTA Media TV truck to learn about everything that goes into producing a tennis match. Ride along right here at wtatennis.com.

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Zvonareva Ties The Knot

Zvonareva Ties The Knot

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Vera Zvonareva broke her social media silence to make a big announcement – a couple of big announcements, actually. The former WTA World No.2 has been busy in her year away from the tennis courts.

Zvonareva announced via her Instagram that she’d recently tied the knot and became a mother.

Vera Zvonareva

But that’s not all: Zvonareva had a few more announcements in store for her fans, including a return to tennis (of sorts). She’s set to join the Eurosport team and take on a commentating role during this year’s US Open.

Congratulations Vera!

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Vinci Vaults Past Konjuh In New Haven

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

NEW HAVEN, CT, USA – No.2 seed Roberta Vinci made her way to the quarterfinals of the Connecticut Open for the first time after a 6-2, 6-2 win over Ana Konjuh.

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

“It was not an easy match,” Vinci admitted afterwards. “It’s always tough, the first round for me. She played well, but the court is so fast. I played consistent and tried to stay focused every point.”

Eighteen-year-old Konjuh was making her New Haven debut after coming through three rounds of qualifying, and she came out swinging against the No.2 seed. She brought up two break points right away against the Italian’s serve, unleashing her powerful groundstrokes to yank Vinci from line to line.

The Italian held on, though, and took advantage of a loose service game – including two double faults – to get the first break to love at 4-2. She rattled off another two games and took the opening set. The second set unfolded in the same pattern as the first, with Vinci grabbing two late breaks to take the match after just under an hour.

With the win Vinci advanced to the New Haven quarterfinal and notched her ever best result at New Haven, having reached just two second round appearances in 2011 and 2015.

“I love to play here in New Haven, I have great memories here from last year,” she said. “And now I’m in quarterfinals, for the first time, so I’m so happy. I will try my best for tomorrow.”

Vinci is set to play Johanna Larson in the next round for a spot in the semifinals.

Also in action today was lucky loser Kirsten Flipkens, who upset the higher-ranked Caroline Garcia, 7-6(3), 7-5.

Her reward? A quarterfinal clash with top seed Agnieszka Radwanska.

“She’s a great player, she’s very talented,” Flipkens said. “I’ve already had some matches against her in the past.

“I just hope that I can go out there and do my best and have a good match, no matter what the result.”

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Radwanska Ends Flipkens’ New Haven Run

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

NEW HAVEN, CT, USA – Top seed Agnieszka Radwanska ended lucky loser Kirsten Flipkens’ dream run at the Connecticut Open, winning 6-1, 6-4 to book a semifinal against defending champion Petra Kvitova.

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

Flipkens became one of two lucky losers to reach the semifinals after replacing the ailing Lesia Tsurenko and powering past Belinda Bencic and Caroline Garcia, but she just didn’t have enough in her arsenal of slices and volleys to grab her first win over the World No.4.

Radwanska dug from her own bag of tricks against Flipkens, switching up the pace between line to line rallies and killer dropshots.

But the Belgian didn’t roll over, and produced some spectacular tennis – and razor sharp shot-making – to earn the break right back and level the match at 2-1.

 It was the last game Flipkens would win for a while, though, as Radwanska’s cerebral style of point construction kept her seemingly always a step ahead. She rattled off five games in a row to take the set and an early break in the second.

Finally finding her footing late in the match, Flipkens rallied to get the break back and began to meet Radwanska blow for blow, creating for some incredible rallies.

“It’s always entertaining for us, as well, playing rallies like this,” Radwanska said of the rally above. “Of course, she’s a very tricky opponent. You can really expect from her those kind of shots. Very good touch, very good hands. We had a lot of matches with rallies like this.”

Radwanska just stayed more consistent throughout and finally earned the decisive break at 5-4, taking the match after an hour and 22 minutes. The top seeded player hit 25 winners to 16 unforced errors – a high number for the usually tidy Radwanska – against Flipkens’ 21 winners and 27 unforced errors.

With the victory Radwanska is through to her first semifinal at the Connecticut Open, where three-time champion Petra Kvitova awaits across the net.  

“I’m just very happy to make the first semifinal,” Radwanska said. “Especially that it’s a very strong tournament. It means I had a couple of good matches, a couple of good wins.

“Well, I guess now I have really nothing to lose, especially I’m playing Petra next.”

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