Stuttgart: Radwanska Interview
An interview with Agnieszka Radwanska after her win in the quarterfinals of the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix.
An interview with Agnieszka Radwanska after her win in the quarterfinals of the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix.
Angelique Kerber had Saturday’s shot of the day at the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix.
Angelique Kerber takes the Parking Challenge at the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix.
SINGAPORE – Eight-time WTA Finals champion Martina Navratilova believes this year’s tournament is gearing up to be the most competitive in recent memory.
Speaking at the official ticket launch for the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global, Navratilova gave her take on an intriguing start to the 2016 season and its early pacesetters.
In recent years, the indomitable Serena Williams has ruled the roost at the top of the game, however, the opening quarter to the new campaign has seen the emergence of a couple of rivals to her crown in the shape of Angelique Kerber and Victoria Azarenka.
It is a development that Navratilova thinks can only help the game. “We’ve been saying we need rivalries and right now there’s some competition – maybe not a rivalry quite yet – but certainly there’re a lot of players snapping at Serena’s heels in 2016,” she said.
“So the gap has gotten smaller and it may keep getting smaller because Serena won so many Slams last year – she won three out of the four – and has a lot of points to defend.”
While talk of Williams’ demise is premature – despite competing in only four tournaments, she sits in fourth place on the Road To Singapore leaderboard – her current reign atop the rankings could come under threat sooner rather than later.
“It will be difficult for her to keep this cushion [Williams is nearly 3,000 points ahead of No.2 Agnieszka Radwanska], but at the same time she’s still the queen! But it’s great that the players have been able to step up. I’ve been impressed by Victoria Azarenka winning both Indian Wells and Miami in pretty convincing fashion and of course Angelique Kerber beating Serena in a Grand Slam final.”
Kerber, Azarenka, Radwanska and Williams are the early leaders on the Road To Singapore. However, as last year proved, the identity of the eight qualifiers has the potential to go down to the wire.
“Last year we had I think four players trying to get the last spot in the last week of the season,” Navratilova added. “Players were going all around the world trying to get those points to get to the WTA Finals.
“It’s important to be consistent during the year so you don’t have to chase them at the end, but it’s exciting because you don’t know who’s going to be there and the players feel privileged to make that final eight – it means something.”
The tournament holds a special place in the heart of Navratilova, who believes it stands side-by-sde with the four Grand Slams: “It’s a great opportunity to finish the year on a great note and spring you into the next year. Or for some people the chance to salvage something from a season that wasn’t great, because for me it’s a fifth major.”
This year, the WTA Finals is once again offering the opportunity to rub shoulders with past and present players through its official hospitality program, Racquet Club.
“It’s a great way for people to get a feel for the tournament, feel for the sport and get close to the players. It’s a one-of-a-kind experience that you really don’t get anywhere else, where you can mingle with the athletes themselves rather than just watch them from a distance,” Navratilova, who has also been appointed as the first ever ambassador for the Racquet Club, said.
“So it’s a fantastic experience for the fans, the media and also the players. Because we’re kind of removed – you see the people but you don’t really pay attention but this way you can really mingle.”
Selected tickets for the tournament will go on sale this Friday and can be purchased on the revamped WTAFinals.com website. From May 6, further offerings will go on sale, including the new Family Day Package and All Singles Evening Pass.
For more information on hospitality and booking enquiries, please e-mail info@RacquetClub.sg or call +65 6826 2718.
RABAT, Morocco – Timea Bacsinszky saved some of her best tennis for Saturday’s final against Marina Erakovic; the Swiss star faced few problems against the former World No.39, 6-2, 6-1, to capture her first title of 2016 at the GP SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem.
Watch live action from Prague & Rabat this week on WTA Live powered by TennisTV!
Bacsinszky reached the semifinals of last year’s French Open, and appears to be settling into similar form after racing through Rabat – losing just one set in five matches. Against Erakovic, she played a near-perfect match over the course of an hour and seven minutes, winning 75% of the Kiwi’s second serve points without facing a break point off her own delivery. Her fourth career WTA title, the only WTA tournament in Africa Bacsinszky’s first on red clay – all three of her previous victories came on hardcourts.
It might not have been the ideal finish for Erakovic in the final, but it was still an awe-inspiring week from the qualifier, who had nearly dropped outside the world’s Top 200 due to various injuries. Taking out Fed Cup hero Kiki Bertens in three grueling sets, the 28-year-old jumps up nearly 60 spots to within spitting distance of the Top 100.
More to come…
An interview with Petra Kvitova before her first round match at the Mutua Madrid Open.
An interview with Victoria Azarenka after her win in the second round of the Mutua Madrid Open.
MADRID, Spain – Last year, the biggest names in women’s tennis put down their phones and pulled their best faces in the first ever WTA Emoji Challenge.
Watch highlights, interviews and more video from Madrid right here on wtatennis.com!
This week, they’re at it again at the Mutua Madrid Open; co-No.1s Martina Hingis and Sania Mirza join reigning Australian Open champion Angelique Kerber, Sunshine Double winner Victoria Azarenka, Agnieszka Radwanska, Simona Halep, Garbiñe Muguruza, Petra Kvitova, Roberta Vinci, Carla Suárez Navarro, and Sloane Stephens to have some fun, flex some muscle, and imitate some of the newest and most memorable textual expressions.
How do they fare? Check out the video and some of the best pictures from the Second Annual WTA Emoji Challenge:
Sania Mirza & Martina Hingis

Simona Halep

Garbiñe Muguruza

Sloane Stephens

Roberta Vinci

Carla Suárez Navarro

Agnieszka Radwanska

Angelique Kerber

Victoria Azarenka

Petra Kvitova

Two years ago inside the Estadio Manolo Santana, the tennis world stood still to mourn the loss of one of its most beloved daughters, Elena Baltacha.
In the early hours of the previous morning, Baltacha had lost her brief battle with liver cancer, leaving the sport in a state of shock.
On the second anniversary of her passing, many of those lucky enough to cross paths with Baltacha paid tribute to her memory. One of the most touching and heartfelt came from the ATP’s Nick Kyrgios, who dedicated his victory over Stan Wawrinka in Madrid to the former British No.1.
I want to dedicate my win today to Elena Baltacha & the @ElenaFoundation as well as anyone else affected by cancer in some way. #RIPBally ??
— Nicholas Kyrgios (@NickKyrgios) 4 May 2016
Thank you Nick that means allot to us x https://t.co/yVjXe6T6rs
— Elena B Foundation (@ElenaFoundation) May 4, 2016
Remembering Elena Baltacha and her Olympic pinnacle: https://t.co/XJ3YSmfZxS pic.twitter.com/sqEOohzXVf
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) 4 May 2016
Today is 2 years since Elena Baltacha passed away. These lovely childhood pics remind us of good times. #RIPBally https://t.co/0SCUdT209y
— Women's Tennis Blog (@womenstennis) 4 May 2016
Tennis remembers Elena Baltacha today, two years on from her tragic passing pic.twitter.com/3Apd3v3K4a
— PA Sport (@pasport) 4 May 2016

MADRID, Spain – Simona Halep is just two matches from another Premier Mandatory title, but an Aussie veteran in Samantha Stosur will look to stop the Romanian’s run, while marathon woman Dominika Cibulkova takes on a young challenger from the United States; 19-year-old Louisa Chirico qualified for the main draw and is having the week of her life. Who will make it into Saturday’s final?
Friday, Semifinals
[6] Simona Halep (ROU #7) vs Samantha Stosur (AUS #23)
Head-to-head: Tied at 3-3
Key Stat: Halep won their last three meetings (all in 2013).
After an up and down start to 2016, Halep appears to have finally slid into a vein of good form, overcoming compatriot Irina-Camelia Begu to earn her biggest result of the season by reaching the semifinals in Madrid. Standing between her and a second final at the Caja Magica in three years is 2010 French Open finalist Samantha Stosur.
The Aussie veteran dominated her rivalry with the Romanian early in the latter’s career, but in her breakout 2013 season, Halep won all three of their meetings – though two went to three sets in Cincinnati and Sofia at the Tournament of Champions. Halep was the highest ranked woman left in the tournament as of the quarterfinals – and the only seed – but Stosur is no slouch on the big stages, and tends to play at her best when she can play hunter to a higher ranked opponent’s hunted.
Facing off qualifier Patricia Maria Tig in two tight sets, Stosur will like her chances against Halep, who has yet to reach a final this year and has dropped from No.2 down to No.6, but Halep herself has endured a difficult draw, one that put her up against one of last year’s French Open semifinalists and rival Timea Bacsinszky, who returns to the Top 10 on Monday.
Dominika Cibulkova (SVK #38) vs Louisa Chirico (USA #130)
Head-to-head: First meeting
Key Stat: Both women are playing in their first Premier semifinal of 2016 (Chirico: career debut)
Cibulkova has had to battle throughout her week in Madrid, but began her campaign with a quality win over top seed and World No.2 Agnieszka Radwanska, and recovered from a set down to defeat an unseeded but dangerous trio in Caroline Garcia, Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, and Sorana Cirstea.
With three WTA semifinal appearances already under her belt in 2016, Cibulkova credits her title run at the Katowice Open with giving her the confidence to play her best tennis on the big stages – having narrowly missed out on upset opportunities in Indian Wells and Miami against Radwanska and Garbiñe Muguruza, respectively.
For Chirico, this may be her first appearance this far in a WTA tournament, but the run hardly came from nowhere. The American teenager made good on a wildcard into the Volvo Car Open main draw to reach the third round – taking out No.4 seed Lucie Safarova en route – and qualifid for the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix just two weeks ago. In Madrid, she outlasted former No.1 and 2008 French Open champion Ana Ivanovic, and backed up the upset with a two-set win over 2015 Rome semifinalist Daria Gavrilova in the quarterfinals.
The first set could well be crucial for the 19-year-old, but the Slovak has proven she can brush off an early deficit to win in the end.
Also in action: The women’s doubles semifinals will take place back-to-back on Estadio 3, with a potential for a rematch of the Stuttgart final on the menu. No.5 seeds Caroline Garcia and Kristina Mladenovic will attempt to win a 13th straight match over the recently reunited No.8 seeds Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina, while top seeds and Co-No.1s Martina Hingis and Sania Mirza will be in the hunt for revenge against Vania King and Alla Kudryavtseva, who upset them in straight sets at the BNP Paribas Open. The only unseeded pair left in Madrid, King and Kudryavtseva are currently No.9 on the Road to Singapore standings and reached their second straight semifinal after saving two match points to defeat No.4 seeds Chan Hao-Ching and Chan Yung-Jan.