Tennis News

From around the world

Champions Corner: Halep

Champions Corner: Halep

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

MONTRÉAL, Canada – It wasn’t a “Perfect 10”. But it was close!

Simona Halep won her 10th consecutive match and her second straight title on Sunday, beating Madison Keys, 7-6(2), 6-3, to win the Rogers Cup. It capped off a strong week for the Romanian, who became the first woman since Martina Hingis in 2000 to make the final of both the singles and doubles at the Rogers Cup  – Halep and her partner Monica Niculescu lost to Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina.

The title run in Montréal  moves Halep up to No.3 in both the rankings and the Road to Singapore, where she has qualified the last two years. But perhaps the most impressive takeaway from Halep’s week was her ability to run through gauntlet of top players, losing just two sets all week. She beat No.2 Angelique Kerber, No.9 Madison Keys, No.10 Svetlana Kuznetsova, No.17 Karolina Pliskova and Daria Gavrilova. That’s not an easy path to any title.

Equally impressive was Halep’s ability to turn matches around. Though she lost just two sets, she went through stretches where she looked on the verge of coming undone mentally. Against Svetlana Kuznetsova in the quarterfinals she came out nervous and fell behind 0-4 quickly. She went on to win the next two sets 6-1, 6-1. Against Kerber she lost six consecutive games after building a commanding lead. She would win the last six games to close the match.

The key for the turnarounds? A broader perspective. That’s something her coach Darren Cahill preached throughout the week during their increasingly rare coaching timeouts.

“Actually when he says I have to look at the big picture, it makes me more relaxed and I can easily do my job on court…. The on-court coaching [timeouts] were a little bit tough. I had many emotions. I was nervous when I spoke. I was too negative I think these two days. But he said he understands because I’m tired. So all good.

“But, yeah, it helps me when he’s more relaxed than me and he just shows me that I have a good game and it’s good if I practice everything for the future, not just for the tournament. So it’s good.”

Simona Halep

Fighting through the fatigue was a big win for Halep. Injury and illness derailed the start of her season and the first six months of the season were about rebuilding her strength, fitness, and endurance to where they should have been in January. Playing both singles and doubles exhausted in Montréal, but she battled through it.

“In the morning, I moved the practice,” Halep said after the final. “I had at 11:00 and I moved it at 12:00 because I couldn’t move. I said it’s good to practice just before the match, to be warm, to go on court and see how I can be.

“But I think doubles help me to exercise my return and also the serve. So I take it everything like positive things and just enjoying. Today was just in my mind that is the last match of the tournament and I have to leave everything on court.”

WTA Insider sat down with Halep after the final to recap her winning week in Montréal.

WTA Insider: What does this week mean to you?
Halep: It means a lot because it’s a big tournament, and it’s my second final in a row here. The first one, I couldn’t finish it; I was very sick and I had to stop. But here, I also had nice support from the crowd, and that makes it more special. It’s one of my biggest tournaments that I’ve won, so it’s nice. I want just to enjoy the moment, even if I’m tired! I want to enjoy it.

WTA Insider: You played singles and doubles this week. How different did that make your entire tournament?
Halep: It was very different because I’m not used to playing doubles. I got a little bit tired in the end. But it also helped me to play some doubles matches because I practiced the return, the serve. That helped me a lot in singles; I had tough opponents there. It’s been a great week in both singles and doubles. I am dead, but I have a few days break, and I will be fresh again for Cincinnati.

WTA Insider: What’s it like playing doubles with Monica?
Halep: It’s not easy because she’s very motivated for every ball, and I’d get tired a little bit. But it’s nice because we had a lot of fun and she knows doubles; she’s into it all the time, every second. It’s been good, and hopefully we will play together at one tournament or another.

Simona Halep

WTA Insider: Talking about your game, what is the thing you’re most pleased with this week?
Halep: The serve, first of all. Then, I hit the balls pretty strong and pretty good. I had good angles, and I moved really well. I ran, like a marathon.

WTA Insider: Do you think that’s the best you’ve moved all year?
Halep: Yes, because I have the best feeling from my body now. Strong legs, and I don’t get tired during the matches, so that’s a big plus. I think everything went very well for me this week, and I improved a lot in every single part of my game.

WTA Insider: You played a lot of different types of players – a big hitter like Madison, athletes like Kerber and Kuznetsova – which match made you most proud to win?
Halep: I think the most difficult match was today with Madison, because you don’t get a rhythm. You’ll get some winners where you can’t even see the ball, let alone touch it. It was an unpredictable match, where I didn’t know what to expect point by point. So that makes more stress for me when I’m not sure what I have to do next point. I’m a person that likes to have it in my mind what I have to do. The match with Kerber was also tough, because I had to run, but every match was difficult in one way or another. But I had good wins, and tough opponents, so it makes it more special and tougher.

WTA Insider: Why do you get mad at yourself when you might be leading in the score, and it doesn’t seem like a moment when you should be negative?
Halep: My physio Dragos is new and he doesn’t know tennis very well. He asked Darren during the match where I had a set and 5-0, ‘Why is Simona angry at this moment?’ I don’t know how to answer, because it happens. It’s coming from inside where I get frustrated because I’ve missed a ball. I always want perfection. I know that doesn’t exist, but I’m looking for it a lot anyway. I don’t know if I’ll ever find out why I do this, but if I do, I will change it because I really want to change this and be more patient and positive with myself.

Simona Halep

WTA Insider: Has your opinion or thought process when it comes to the US Open Series changed over time?
Halep: I think I play better tennis on hardcourts here at the US Open Series because the courts are faster and I started to play well on this surface. I feel more confident because I had a great result last year at all the tournaments, so I’m looking forward to the next tournament because I feel confident that I can win some more matches. I just have to be careful with my body, to take a rest and recover, and then to work again.

WTA Insider: With the Olympics this year there is now a two week break. Is it weird to have a two-week break before the next event? Your schedules are usually so regimented.
Halep: Every year is usually the same, so it’s a bit weird, but it’s good to have an extra week, to be honest. I have time to recover, and take a break. I didn’t have one after Wimbledon because I played at home, so that was a bit tough. Something changed, so we just have to adjust, and take it like it is and think positive things and be relaxed.

WTA Insider: Having had a slow start because of the injuries you had, you’ve been on the outside or on the bubble of the RTS. How much is qualifying for the WTA Finals a goal for you?
Halep: It’s goal to go to Singapore every year. I knew at the beginning of the year, or even the first half of the year, that it was going to be tough to qualify again. But now I think I’m close. It’s going to be a new experience there. Hopefully I can do better than last year. I have great memories from 2014. I like the court there, and the atmosphere. I just have to do my job until Singapore and then go there, because it’s one of the goals every player has.

WTA Insider: This week in Montréal, have you had any special routines throughout the week?
Halep: I had the same breakfast every morning for the 10 days at the hotel. Scrambled eggs and a chocolate croissant. At lunch, plain pasta with chicken – very boring. In the evening, I’d have a fish I don’t normally eat, but this week I had it every day. Cheesecake for dessert every night, and that worked pretty well.

WTA Insider: I guess playing doubles means you could afford a few extra calories.
Halep: I have dessert every day, never miss a day. It makes me feel better.

Simona Halep

WTA Insider: Good to know that you can eat cheesecake and chocolate croissants and still win a Premier tournament.
Halep: That’s good!

WTA Insider: Looking forward, do you know what you plans are between now and Cincinnati?
Halep: I will stay in the US to practice. I just have to enjoy myself a little bit; I’m tired and need more energy to go ahead to the next tournament. I’m not going home because it’s too far and I don’t want to chance having jetlag. It’ll be a long trip for me, but it’s going to be nice because I’m enjoying my time more now in the US.

WTA Insider: You said in your press conference that you’ll probably have three or four days off, depending on how good of a negotiator you are.
Halep: I am pretty good! I got four already! Today, Darren said I could even take five, but four is ok (laughs).

WTA Insider: So if Simona Halep has four days off…
Halep: Sleeping the first two days, and then to the spa for beauty salon and nails, everything. I like to spend hours there. Then I will go visit something in the city where I’ll be and then shopping, because I promised myself that the doubles prize money will go towards shopping. I have enough, and it’ll take me more days now (laughs).

Hear more from Halep in the latest episode of the WTA Insider Podcast:

Source link

Begu & Babos To Battle In Brazil

Begu & Babos To Battle In Brazil

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

FLORIANOPOLIS, Brazil – No.2 seed Irina-Camelia Begu battled past a spirited challenge from Monica Puig to earn her spot in the final of the Brasil Tennis Cup, where she’s set to face the No.6 seed Timea Babos for the title.

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

“It was a tough one because she is playing really aggressive and hit the ball very hard,” Begu said of her Puerto Rican opponent. “I served well in the important games. It was difficult but I think I managed it well.”

Begu is the second Romanian player to reach the final of the Brasil Tennis Cup after Monica Niculescu won the title at the tournament’s inaugural staging in 2013. Standing in Begu’s way as she tries to emulate her countrywoman is Babos, who spoiled what would have been an all-Romanian final when she edged past Ana Bodgan in a tight straights sets rollercoaster, 7-6(10), 6-3.

The Hungarian looked to be firmly in the driver’s seat from the start after she built up a 5-2 lead, but a mental lapse gave Bodgan a way back. Bogdan rattled off four games straight and even held three sets points at 6-5, 40-0.

Babos reigned in her mounting frustration to send the set to a tiebreak, and Bodgan raced ahead to a 5-0 lead, only to see it dashed away again as the No.6 seed clawed back to take the opening set.

“It was definitely a silly, silly match,” she said afterwards. “I mean, I was really controlling the match in the beginning of the first set and then I lost control – especially of my emotions.”

“It was ridiculous, very unbelievable that first set.”

The second set would prove to be just as difficult as the first, featuring eight breaks of serve total. Babos, who had been very defensive in her service games thus far, finally changed her strategy at the end and raised her level of aggressiveness to take the decisive seventh break at 4-3, then once again to close out the two hour long battle and make her way to the Florianopolis final.

Her day wasn’t over yet, though, as later Babos was back on court after suitable rest to join her partner Reka-Luka Jani for the doubles final against Ukrainian sisters Lyudmyla Kichenok and Nadiia Kichenok.

It was one way traffic for the Kichenoks as they routed the all-Hungarian duo 6-3, 6-1.

Both teams were fine tuning their Olympic preparations and are scheduled to be back on the courts after the Olympic tennis event kicks off this weekend in nearby Rio de Janeiro.

“For sure this tournament was great preparation for the Olympics,” Lyudmyla said. “We are really looking forward to it now after winning here in Florianopolis.”

Kichenok 600

Source link

Olympic Memories: London

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

The seventh and final stop-off on wtatennis.com’s trip down Olympics memory lane is the 2012 Games in London, which saw Serena Williams add a golden sheen to a magical summer…

London, United Kingdom, 2012
All England Club
Grass

Twelve years after watching courtside as her sister won gold in Sydney, Serena Williams produced arguably the performance of her career to finally follow in her footsteps.

Injury in 2004 and a shock defeat to Elena Dementieva four years later left Serena, the outstanding player of her generation, with one gap remaining on an otherwise flawless resume: an Olympic singles gold medal.

Of all the players in the draw, perhaps only Venus could match Serena’s joy at hearing of the All England Club’s selection as an Olympic venue. With a record second to none on Wimbledon’s hallowed lawns – she lifted the Venus Rosewater Dish for a fifth time three weeks prior to the start of the Games – even as No.4 seed, Serena started as most people’s favorite for the tournament.

So often a slow starter at tennis’ flagship events, Serena hit the ground running at a curiously liveried All England Club. She fired out an early warning shot, brushing aside former No.1 Jelena Jankovic for the loss of four games in the opening round.

Ominously for her title rivals, she got better as the rounds progressed, clinically dispatching the top seed Victoria Azarenka in the semifinals.

This set up a showdown with French Open champion Maria Sharapova. Serena had won the pair’s last seven meetings, and she continued this mastery of the Russian, whom she brutally overwhelmed with a combination of masterful serving and bullet-like groundstrokes.

At one point near the end of the first set, Serena had hit more aces than her opponent had won points. The American struck 10 aces and 24 winners in all and made only seven unforced errors in her 63 minutes on court.

Gold saw the 30-year-old become the first player ever to win all four Grand Slams and the Olympics in both singles and doubles, an achievement which dotted the i’s and crossed the t’s in modern tennis’ most comprehensive of careers.

“Oh, my gosh, this one is so high up there,” Williams said after the final. “Being Olympic gold champion, being Golden Slam champion in singles and doubles, that’s pretty awesome.

“I did something nobody’s done. So I’m really excited about that.”

——

Olympic Memories: Beijing
Olympic Memories: Athens
Olympic Memories: Sydney
Olympic Memories: Atlanta
Olympic Memories: Barcelona
Olympic Memories: Seoul

Source link

Ask The Olympians: Rio Anticipation

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

“It’s a tournament everyone wants to play, but it’s all about the medal,” says two-time Wimbledon winner and 2012 Olympian Petra Kvitova.

What are her fellow players looking forward to most ahead of the Olympic tennis event in Rio de Janeiro? Watch the video above to find out!

Source link

Ask The Olympian: Spectator Sports

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Which sports are the WTA stars most eager to watch at the Summer Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro? Johanna Konta, Petra Kvitova, Eugenie Bouchard, and Angelique Kerber weigh in.

Source link

Swiss Misses Sail Into Rio Semis

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil – World Co-No.1 Martina Hingis kept her hopes of a first Olympic medal alive as she and countrywoman Timea Bacsinszky blasted past No.3 seeds Chan Yung-Jan and Chan Hao-Ching, 6-3, 6-0 to reach the semifinals of the Olympic tennis event in women’s doubles.

Bacsinszky bounced back from a disappointing first round defeat in singles to play just her second doubles tournament of 2016 alongside Hingis, the reigning US Open, WTA Finals and Australian Open champion.

Together, the pair have dropped just one set through their first three matches, and were particularly dominant against the Chans – a formidable pair who were the last team to defeat Hingis and then-partner Sania Mirza before the duo went on a 41-match winning streak – winning the second set in just 35 minutes.

After going down an early break to start, the No.5 seeds broke serve six straight times to book a semifinal encounter No.6 seeds Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka of the Czech Republic. Hlavackova and Hradecka captured the silver medal at the London Olympics, falling to three-time Olympic champions Venus and Serena Williams, and saved three match points to defeat Russians Daria Kasatkina and Svetlana Kuznetsova, 6-1, 4-6, 7-5.

Hingis is playing her first Olympic tennis event since 1996, when she was 15 years old.

On the top half of the draw, Czechs Lucie Safarova and Barbora Strycova kept up their giant-killing run with a three-set win over former World No.1s Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci. The Italians reunited for the Olympics, but fell in a tough 4-6, 6-4, 6-4 defeat to Safarova and Strycova, who began their tournament with a win over the Williams sisters.

Rogers Cup champions Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina had a rough itinerary down to Rio for the Olympics, but the Russians have made up for lost prep time in impressive fashion, easing past No.4 seeds Garbiñe Muguruza and Carla Suárez Navarro, 6-3, 6-4.

Source link

Insider Podcast: Pica Power Goes Gold

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Monica Puig cemented her status as Puerto Rico’s favorite daughter by becoming her country’s first gold medalist in any sport on Satuday at the Olympic tennis event. Upsetting World No.2 Angelique Kerber in the final, Puig showed off the potential first exhibited back in early 2013, when she pushed the German to a third set tie-break at the Brisbane International.

Hear more from Puig as she adjusts to life after gold and how she hopes to take this Olympic sized achievement back onto the WTA circuit on this Dropshot edition of the WTA Insider Podcast:

Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn or on any podcast app of your choice to ensure you never miss an episode when they go live. Reviews are always helpful, so if you like what you’ve heard so far, leave us one. You can also get new episode alerts by following us on Twitter @WTA_Insider.

Follow @WTA_Insider

Source link