Moscow: Svitolina vs. Konjuh
Elina Svitolina takes on Ana Konjuh in the quarterfinals of the Kremlin Cup.
Elina Svitolina takes on Ana Konjuh in the quarterfinals of the Kremlin Cup.
LOS ANGELES, CA, USA – On Wednesday night, Kobe Bryant hit the court for the last time in his career. After 20 extraordinary seasons, ‘The Black Mamba’ will hang up the purple and gold for good. With a sold-out crowd, Bryant dropped a season-high of 60 points and led the Los Angeles Lakers to a 101-96 comeback win against the Utah Jazz.
It was a night to remember and current WTA players, as well as a few WTA Legends, took to Twitter to show their support and say #ThankYouKobe…
#MambaDay pic.twitter.com/RoTVyYmDC3
— Serena Williams (@serenawilliams) April 10, 2016
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— Genie Bouchard (@geniebouchard) April 14, 2016
Amazing career @kobebryant 5 rings 60 point exit. #MambaDay looking forward to your continued journey
— Billie Jean King (@BillieJeanKing) April 14, 2016
YAAAAAAAAAS MAMBA!!!! #notevenalakersfan #clutchcity
— Nicole Gibbs (@Gibbsyyyy) April 14, 2016
This guy!! 60 points in his last game … ??? amazing ! #mambaout pic.twitter.com/lpTnrXi8Dj
— Kim Clijsters (@Clijsterskim) April 14, 2016
Legendary Mamba.. #EndofanEra
— Sloane Stephens (@SloaneStephens) April 14, 2016
Great speech @kobebryant emotional funny grateful full of love!!
— Pam Shriver (@PHShriver) April 14, 2016
What a career! #Legend #DreamEpic @kobebryant @Nike pic.twitter.com/xlT2UbUY3z
— Sabine Lisicki (@sabinelisicki) April 14, 2016
An interview with Svetlana Kuznetsova after her win in the semifinals of the Kremlin Cup.
SINGAPORE – Karolina Pliskova is set to make her tournament debut on Monday, when she faces Roland Garros champion Garbiñe Muguruza in her opening match at the at the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global. Pliskova will be pulling double duty in Singapore, having qualified in both singles, where she’s been drawn into the White Group, and doubles with her partner Julia Goerges.
While playing both events in the past may have been physically taxing, Pliskova is less concerned this year. The doubles competition has moved from a round-robin event to a single elimination draw which begins on Thursday.
“I’m used to playing singles and doubles so I’m not really worried about this,” the No.4 seed told reporters at All-Access Hour on Saturday. “I just take it match by match. I am starting singles on Monday, and this year it’s a little bit different than last year, so there is a draw of the doubles, not a group. It can be different – can be potentially be only one match in doubles. It’s starting on Thursday, so I have those few first days only singles. So I think it’s definitely better.
“But I’m ready for anything. I’m ready to play two matches in a day.”
The US Open finalist secured her spot in Singapore at the China Open and comes into Singapore well-rested.
“I was tired a little bit in Asia because when I came back from [the] States I didn’t have much time to practice and rest and prepare for the tournaments as I did for the ones in States,” she said. “Now I just took a few days off. I skipped those tournaments in Linz and Moscow, so I prepared for this last few weeks of tennis. There is Fed Cup for me after, and now I feel ready. I’m able to do anything to play [my] best tennis. I know it’s [the] last two or three weeks of tennis in this season for me, so I will try to do my best.”
Media day and selfie with @TheRealPatCash pic.twitter.com/e5XGBvS15H
— Karolina Pliskova (@KaPliskova) October 22, 2016
Pliskova’s late season surge on the US hardcourts set up her Singapore debut, having won the title at the Western & Southern Open and making her first major final at the US Open, beating both Venus and Serena Williams en route. Prior to New York the 24-year-old had never progressed past the third round of a Slam and it was her second-round loss to Misaki Doi that seemed to light a fire under her.
“At Wimbledon, I was really feeling well. I think I had a pretty good draw as well to make it even far and just didn’t make it,” Pliskova said when asked to recall her toughest loss of the season. “I didn’t play good tennis there. Yeah, lost in second round with the opponent I beat the week before. I think [that] was the worst week for me.
“I don’t feel any pressure [in Singapore]. I would say there is pressure during all the year on all the players, but this is the best tournament that you can play, so I don’t feel pressure. There are other girls which are in front of me, so I would say I’m not the favorite for winning this one. I will just do my best [tp] win every match and do anything what I can to go out of the group.
“I have a very tough group: Aga, defending champion, so it’s not going to be easy. I’m just going to enjoy. It’s not happening every year that you’re going to get here. [I’m] just going to enjoy the chance that I have to play here.”
Looking ahead to her showdown with Muguruza, Pliskova has reasons to be confident. She leads the head-to-head 3-1 and has won their last three matches, all on hard courts (Muguruza’s sole win came at the French Open in 2013).
“She’s a player [whose game I like]. She has a similar game as me. It’s possible to lose to her, and to win as well if you play good tennis. I’m really confident about the match and just on the positive from the last meeting what we had in Cincinnati. I was playing really good tennis there. For me it’s still the same. I have to serve well and play fast so she doesn’t have time to dictate the game. She has to be the one who’s running and not me.”

An interview with Simona Halep ahead of her participation in the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global.
Caroline Wozniacki will be sitting out much of the clay court season, as the former No.1 has announced Monday that she has pulled out of clay court tournaments at the Mutua Madrid Open and the Internazionali BNL d’Italia in Rome.
A finalist at the 2015 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix on the red clay of Stuttgart, the Dane was due to play Fed Cup last week when a rolled ankle forced her out of Denmark’s Zonal ties in Egypt and this week’s International tournament in Istanbul.
Rolled my ankle during practice today? Very sad to miss Fed Cup & Istanbul, but I'll be back soon! Thx for the ❤️! pic.twitter.com/IIXtvCdxql
— Caroline Wozniacki (@CaroWozniacki) April 7, 2016
Wozniacki has yet to rule out a return in time for the French Open, but the former No.1 already appears to be hard at work rehabbing her injured foot – as seen on her Twitter account.
My morning view! #keepgrinding #gettingstronger #monaco #mondays #gym pic.twitter.com/thGk0ypnDf
— Caroline Wozniacki (@CaroWozniacki) April 18, 2016
Unfortunately my foot still needs time to heal so had to withdraw from Madrid and Rome! Two great tournaments, I'll be there next year!??
— Caroline Wozniacki (@CaroWozniacki) April 18, 2016
An interview with Agnieszka Radwanska ahead of her participation in the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global.
SINGAPORE – Karolina Pliskova marked a memorable debut at the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global by defeating Garbiñe Muguruza from match point down on Monday.
Watch live action from Singapore on WTA Live powered by TennisTV!
A couple of hours on from Svetlana Kuznetsova’s back-from-the-brink victory over Agnieszka Radwanska, Pliskova produced an even more unlikely turnaround to triumph, 6-2, 6-7(4), 7-5.
“Inside I’m still in shock that I won this one. Inside I still believed that I could win, but she was playing so well in the second and third sets,” Pliskova told BT Sport after stepping off the court. “There’s always a chance in tennis until it’s done, so I’m really happy with the win today.”
No.4 seed Pliskova was quick out of the blocks, dropping only seven points on serve en route to the first set. When she then broke at the start of the second, a comfortable victory looked on the cards. However, Muguruza, making her second appearance at the Finals, made a better fist of the second set, drawing level before recovering from 3-0 down to take a scrappy tie-break.
With confidence now coursing through her game, Muguruza surged 4-0 ahead in the decider. Try as she might, though, the Spaniard could not find the knockout blow, dropping serve in a 15-minute sixth game to leave the window ajar for a comeback.
At 5-2 she arrived at match point, only to snatch at a routine volley. The mistake proved costly as Pliskova found a second wind, rattling off 15 of the last 19 points to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat.
Karolina Pliskova hit some major aces today! See how she stacks up to the rest of the #WTAFinals field! @WTA @WTAFinalsSG #ace #wtatennis pic.twitter.com/xe4G7gXbYi
— SAP Sports (@SAPSports) October 24, 2016
Despite being broken five times, Pliskova still struck 14 aces in her two and a half hours on court, taking her annual tally to 522. This number is nearly 200 more than her nearest competitor on tour, Serena Williams (324), or at the WTA Finals, Madison Keys (277).
Pliskova will next play on Wednesday, taking on fellow comeback queen Kuznetsova.

SINGAPORE – World No.1 Angelique Kerber took control of the Red Group on Tuesday, beating No.4 Simona Halep 6-4, 6-2 to move perilously close to qualifying for her first semifinals at the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global.
Read how the match unfolded in the WTA Insider Live Blog.
– This is the Kerber we’ve watched all year.
There were questions surrounding Kerber coming into Singapore. She was, arguably, the least in-form player in the Red Group and had not played particularly well since the US Open. But through two matches now, especially in her win over Halep, she’s proved to herself and everyone else that she’s ready to play.
Kerber’s defense and counter-punching was top notch against Halep. She prolonged rally after rally with her speed into the tramlines and then pounced on anything Halep left short. The decision-making was there, the shots were there, and most importantly, the confidence was there.
This was the Angelique Kerber who can win this tournament.
The dropper of the highest order from @angeliquekerber! #WTAFinals pic.twitter.com/iOVgdzp45C
— WTA (@WTA) October 25, 2016
– The two “Fs” let Halep down.
The Romanian played well in spurts and she deserved a better scoreline for her efforts, but her forehand and finishing let her down. As she battled hard to penetrate Kerber’s defensive shell, she lacked the rhythm on her forehand side to pressure Kerber consistently. Halep chalked it up to a bad day at the office.
“The court here is slow and the ball doesn’t bounce,” Halep said. “Her balls are very low, so it’s tough to go from down, deep down, to make a winner.
“So I tried just to restart the points all the time, and just when I had the opportunity, good opportunity to finish the ball, I took it. But I missed a lot with the forehand, so I think that was the problem.”
Coach @Darren_Cahill telling @Simona_Halep to hit the high balls hard. Can she comeback? #WTAFinals pic.twitter.com/VgJ0AD7i0P
— WTA (@WTA) October 25, 2016
– Kerber will qualify for her first semifinals if she wins a set, though she may not have to.
On Thursday, Halep will face Dominika Cibulkova in the first singles match (starting at 4pm local time) and Kerber will follow against Madison Keys (starting at 7:30pm). The only scenario in which Kerber does not qualify out of the group stage is if Halep beats Cibulkova in straight sets and Kerber loses to Keys in straight sets. If she wins a set, she’s through.
To the extent there may be additional pressure on Kerber, she’ll know the result of the Halep match before she takes the court. If Halep goes three sets, meaning Cibulkova wins one set, Kerber is through as well. But if Halep wins in straight sets, Kerber will know she has to win a set off Keys to qualify. The good news for the German is that she’s won five of her six matches against Keys.
Turning point: @AngeliqueKerber saves break point at 3-4, goes on to win nine of last 11 games vs Halep @WTAFinalsSG pic.twitter.com/mCxuZ2v70q
— WTA Insider (@WTA_insider) October 25, 2016
A cornerstone of Kerber’s 2016 story is of course her failure to pull off this very feat 12 months ago. Last year, Kerber took the court in Singapore knowing she just needed to win a set off an ailing Lucie Safarova to advance. She lost in straights.
“Of course I have much more confidence right now because I know how to win very big matches, tight matches,” Kerber said. “I know what to do to go for it and just take the game in my hands. Of course I believe much more in my game and in myself than like 12 months ago, especially after Singapore one year ago.”
The press conference for @Simona_Halep, who is still well alive in @WTAFinalsSG! #WTAFinals https://t.co/M0hdDW5SsR pic.twitter.com/z9eJLDiSw9
— WTA (@WTA) October 25, 2016
– Kerber’s biggest fan on Thursday? Halep.
While Kerber’s fate is entirely in her hands on Thursday, Halep needs some help from Kerber. And so the vanquished becomes the cheerleader.
If Kerber wins on Thursday, the only scenario in which Halep would not advance is if she loses in straight sets to Cibulkova. Taking a single set off the Slovak would put her through so long as Kerber wins.
But if Keys beats Kerber in straight sets, and Halep loses a set to Cibulkova, she’s out.
How do you say “Auf geht’s Angie!” in Romanian?
