Australian Open: Kristyna Pliskova vs Irina-Camelia Begu
Kristyna Pliskova takes on Irina-Camelia Begu in the second round of the Australian Open.
Kristyna Pliskova takes on Irina-Camelia Begu in the second round of the Australian Open.
Victoria Azarenka takes on Zhang Shuai in the third round of the BNP Paribas Open.
Life is a rollercoaster for Svetlana Kuznetsova, and while in Melbourne she stopped by Luna Park to take a ride on one in real life. (Fiona Hamilton, Tennis Australia)
Before the action, Sveta made sure to grab some popcorn and cotton candy, standard amusement park treats! (Fiona Hamilton, Tennis Australia)
Luna Park is a very historic amusement park – it opened in 1912! (Fiona Hamilton, Tennis Australia)
Sveta eased into the amusement park spirit with a ride on the Magical Carousel. (Getty Images)
Next up, Sveta took her whole team onto the Scenic Railway rollercoaster. (Fiona Hamilton, Tennis Australia)
Sveta looks like she’s having fun! Coach Carlos Martínez? Not so much… (Fiona Hamilton, Tennis Australia)
Opened in December 1912, the Scenic Railway is the oldest continually operating roller coaster in the world! (Getty Images)
“I was a little bit nervous before getting on, but it was not too big!” Sveta said after the ride. (Getty Images)
Scenic Railway is one of only three roller coasters in the world that require a brakeman to stand in the middle of the train – he looks pretty calm! (Getty Images)
“I don’t remember the last time I’ve been to a park like this! Visiting somewhere other than the tennis club, it’s already very good,” she added. (Fiona Hamilton, Tennis Australia)
Highlights from the third round action at the BNP Paribas Open.
Six-time champion Serena Williams came through her first significant test at this year’s Australian Open, defeating Lucie Safarova in two high-quality sets.
Serena Williams takes on Kateryna Bondarenko in the fourth round of the BNP Paribas Open.
MELBOURNE, Australia – Mirjana Lucic-Baroni caused the biggest upset of this year’s Australian Open by knocking out No.3 seed Agnieszka Radwanska in the second round.
In little over an hour on Margaret Court Arena, Lucic-Baroni struck 33 winners to complete a 6-3, 6-2 victory and set up a third-round meeting with another unseeded player, Maria Sakkari.
Lucic-Baroni will turn 35 in March and last progressed beyond the first round at Melbourne Park in 1998. However, even after dropping serve at the start of the second set, she refused to be derailed, reeling off the next six games to seal victory, and hand Radwanska her earliest loss at Melbourne Park in eight years.
Mirjana #LucicBaroni has that winning #AusOpen feeling in 2R pic.twitter.com/i3WQOQLBTS
— #AusOpen (@AustralianOpen) January 19, 2017
A one-time teenage prodigy, Lucic-Baroni has returned to the limelight in recent years, winning a third career title at Québec City in 2014, and upsetting Simona Halep at the French and US Opens. These performances have imbued the Croat with the confidence that on her day she can compete with the game’s best.
“That was my first big win in a while and it was a shock,” Lucic-Baroni said when asked about her win over Halep at the 2014 US Open. “I know I have some good tennis in me still, that’s the reason I’m still out here playing at 34 – I’m no spring chicken – to get these moments and these feelings. It was really fun tonight.
“I know that I have the game to win a big match. I didn’t go in there to see a big court, I went in with a gameplan. I’ve been around too long to just gain experience.”

Like Halep, Radwanska proved powerless in the face of a barrage of winners, responding with just eight of her own.
“There’s not a lot I could do; she’s playing without pressure, full power. It’s hard to comment because it all went so fast,” Radwanska said in her press conference. “It’s always disappointing when you lose in the first week of a Grand Slam. I need to come back next year and do better.”
Lucic-Baroni now faces Sakkari, another player appearing at this stage of the tournament for the first time.
“I don’t feel like I’m that old. I’ve missed a few years on tour, but this time around I don’t have anything to prove, I’m just enjoying myself, playing for myself. I’m enjoying it, enjoying the moments and just trying to go as far as I can,” Lucic-Baroni added.
INDIAN WELLS, CA, USA – The bottom half of the draw will take the court on Thursday to finish off the quarterfinals at the BNP Paribas Open. We preview the matchups here.
[13] Victoria Azarenka (BLR #15) vs. Magdalena Rybarikova (SVK #97)
Head-to-head: Azarenka leads, 2-0
Key Stat: Rybarikova is the lowest-ranked player to reach the quarterfinals at Indian Wells since 2012.
Victoria Azarenka continues to play the type of tennis that elicits strong conviction from pundits that she will one day return to the top of the game. Already one of the best returners, the World No.15 is developing into one of the best servers this season. The former No.1 has only faced six break points in her three matches here in the desert, and credits additional power for improvement of her serve. “I worked a lot on my serve to be able to create easier serving games and going for my shots,” Azarenka said after defeating Samantha Stosur in three sets on Tuesday, a match in which she faced only one break point. “Developing power and speed, and now I need to work a little bit more on accuracy.” Azarenka could make her return to the Top 10 with a title at Indian Wells, but down the road she’d like to achieve a lot more than that. “I think getting to No.1 of course it’s a goal. My main goal is to win Grand Slams,” she said. “That’s what I want really bad and that’s what I’m working towards.”
Meanwhile, Slovakia’s Magdalena Rybarikova is playing some of the best tennis of her career, and has notched her biggest result at a Premier Mandatory event. The 27-year-old former World No.31 has now won three consecutive matches against the Top 10, and four of her last six.
Pick: Azarenka in two
Daria Kasatkina (RUS #48) vs. [18] Karolina Pliskova (CZE #19)
Head-to-head: First meeting
Key Stat: Kasatkina already has five more main draw wins in 2016 (12) than she managed in all of 2015 (7).
Clearly, there is something about the thin desert air that 23-year-old Karolina Pliskova enjoys. She improved to 7-2 lifetime at Indian Wells with a takedown of Great Britian’s Johanna Konta on Tuesday to reach the quarterfinals here for the first time. Pliskova is tied for the tournament lead in aces and has won 87 percent of her service games over her first three matches. After dropping back-to-back first-rounders in the Middle East, Pliskova retreated to her residence in Monaco to regroup. “Last year I didn’t lose any first rounds,” Pliskova said after defeating Ana Ivanovic in the third round. “Now I’d lost twice in a row so I’m just happy to have some matches and looking forward to the next one.”
Though not widely known, Pliskova’s next opponent promises to provide her most difficult challenge of the week. 18-year-old Daria Kasatkina, the youngest player in this year’s draw, has created quite the buzz around the grounds with her sparkling game and fine mental focus. The young Russian backed up a big three-set win over Monica Puig with an eyebrow-raising straight-sets thumping of No.12 seed Timea Bacsinszky on Tuesday night. Kasatkina dealt with Bacsinszky’s eclectic strokes and world-class defense clinically, peppering the Swiss’ forehand with heavy topspin forehands of her own, patiently waiting for her opportunities to strike. On Thursday she’ll face Bacsinszky’s polar opposite in the hard-serving Pliskova and it will be interesting to see how the Indian Wells debutant handles the challenge.
Pick: Pliskova in three
– Chris Oddo, wtatennis.com contributor
Catch up with all of the third-round results from Day 5 of the Australian Open.
INDIAN WELLS, CA, USA – Four years ago, Victoria Azarenka arrived at this juncture of the BNP Paribas Open feeling invincible.
Riding the crest on a 20-match unbeaten run that had taken her to Australian Open glory and top of the rankings, Azarenka looked set to embark on a period of dominance at the summit of the women’s game.
However, it has not panned out quite like that for the Belarusian, whose status as her generation’s standard bearer has been undermined by a succession of injuries.
Azarenka would go on to defend her Australian Open crown and reach a couple of finals at the US Open – both times coming out on the losing side in classic battles with Serena Williams. Yet problems – of varying severity – to feet, ankles and back soon saw Azarenka spending as much time on the treatment table as the court.
Her absence was keenly felt, robbing the sport of the one player perhaps capable of challenging Williams’ hegemony. After a number of false dawns, this season Azarenka finally looks in a position to resume this rivalry.
Now ranked No.15, Azarenka can return to the Top 10 by reclaiming the title she first lifted during her annus mirabilis. And while her fitness woes have tested her patience, the 26-year-old has never lost sight of the end goal.
“I’m in a different stage of my career. You know, I think getting to No.1 of course it’s a goal. My main goal is to win Grand Slams. That’s that I want really bad and that’s what I’m working towards. I always think that ranking is a bonus that comes with it. Once you have results, you win tournaments, it comes automatically.
“And at first it was something that you just, you want to get there since you’re a kid. You know, it’s a big dream. And once you achieve it, sometimes it brings the level of motivation down. Right now my level of motivation is different. I’m not that kid with a big dream of becoming No.1. I have been there.”
Azarenka started the year like a freight train, romping to the title in Brisbane then cantering through the opening week of the Australian Open. Many tipped her for a third title Down Under, but it was not to be, an inspired Angelique Kerber – whom Azarenka had outclassed in the Brisbane final – dashing the dream.
Worryingly for the rest of the tour, and quarterfinal foe Magdalena Rybarikova, she insists the best is yet to come: “Oh, I don’t think I am close to fulfilling my potential. Just to see what I can do on practice court and physically what I can improve, I’m far from that. That’s what I’m looking forward to improve.”
Perhaps burnt by her experience in Melbourne, or just eager to make up for lost time, the former No.1 is leaving no stone unturned in her pursuit of tennis’ biggest prizes.
“Now I don’t really think ahead. There is a difference between creating a big picture and goals, to set the goals where you work day in and day out towards. But what’s going to happen, I don’t really think about it. I just want to make sure that on every single day I do whatever I can. I think the great quote, you know, anybody can outwork you, but nobody will out prepare me.”