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Wozniacki Cruises To Hong Kong Title

Wozniacki Cruises To Hong Kong Title

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Hong Kong, SAR – Caroline Wozniacki’s strong finish to the season continued when she lifted the Prudential Hong Kong Tennis Open singles title at the expense of Kristina Mladenovic.

The Dane, who won the Toray Pan Pacific Open at the end of September, put in a fine performance to breeze past the 23-year-old, 6-1, 6-7(7), 6-2 and complete her impressive end to the season, having had a 13-14 win-loss ratio before the US Open and a 19-3 one since.

Wozniacki started the match at a canter, breaking the World No.54 in her opening service game, coming to net on break point after running Mladenovic off the court.

Wozniacki was hitting the ball sweetly, able to get her groundstrokes deep and powerful and a second break was to follow after she forced a tame backhand into the net.

After just 23 minutes, Mladenovic found herself serving to stay in the set and avoid a bagel, which she achieved thanks to a measured backhand volley into the corner. All it did was delay Wozniacki, who was undeterred in wrapping up the set.

Mladenovic underwent lengthy treatment before the second set, but returned to hold the first game, although she was still struggling with her first serve.

Wozniacki had looked likely to cement her advantage and break once more but, serving at 1-2, she contrived to let a 40-0 lead slip thanks and lost serve after sending a routine forehand into the tramlines. The advantage was short-lived, with Mladenovic sending a stroke wide to hand Wozniacki a break.

Mladenovic moved ahead once more thanks to a wayward backhand from the Dane, who struck back again to level the set immediately thanks to a pair of excellent returns at deuce.

The match settled into a rhythm from then on and a tie-break was needed to decide the set. After a frenetic breaker, Wozniacki sent a backhand into the net to hand Mladenovic two set points, and she only needed one.

However, her recovery was only brief and after Wozniacki had saved three break points in the opening game of the decider, she raced into a commanding lead.The first break came when Mladenovic sent a shot into the net and a second followed with an overcooked forehand.

Mladenovic had a partial recovery, holding serve then breaking back when Wozniacki was serving for the title, but the 26-year-old finally got over the line with her second match point.

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Inside Serena's WTA Finals Withdrawal Announcement

Inside Serena's WTA Finals Withdrawal Announcement

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Serena Williams has decided to shut down her 2016 season, announcing her withdrawal from the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global due to a shoulder injury. Serena has not played a tour-level match since losing to Karolina Pliskova in the US Open semifinals in September.

Four thoughts on Serena’s withdrawal and what it means for the WTA Finals.

1. Serena relinquishes the year-end No.1 ranking to Angelique Kerber.

Serena’s decision means there will be no battle for the year-end No.1 ranking. No.1 Angelique Kerber snapped Serena’s record-tying 186-week streak at No.1 after winning the US Open, but the German’s sub-par swing through Asia left the door open for Serena to take it back in Singapore.

With Kerber’s loss to Daria Gavrilova in the quarterfinals of the Prudential Hong Kong Tennis Open last week, the German has a 950 point lead on Serena in the rankings. Singapore offers 1500 points to the winner. Serena has won the WTA Finals the last four times she’s has played it, including back-to-back-to-back titles from 2012-2014. Kerber, by contrast, has never made it out of the round robin stage. Given their respective histories at the tournament, Singapore offered Serena a chance to finish the season where she started: at No.1.

Angelique Kerber, Serena Williams

2. Serena shuts it down early…again.

For the second straight year, Serena has shut down her season after taking a tough loss at the US Open. Given the trend, her announcement shouldn’t be a surprise. Since playing a career-high 82 matches in her astounding 2013 season, posting a 78-4 record and winning 11 titles, Serena has played fewer matches with each passing year:

2013: 82 matches, 78-4 record, won 11 titles.
2014: 60 matches, 52-8 record, won 7 titles.
2015: 56 matches, 53-3 record, won 5 titles.
2016: 36 matches, 30-6 record, win 3 titles.

Serena herself has affirmed her shift in priorities, to focus her energies on the Slams. Her win at Wimbledon this year moved her into a tie with Stefanie Graf for the Open Era record for most major titles. Healthy and rested, she’ll make her charge to break the record in 2017.

Serena Williams

3. This decision feels different than last year.

When Serena announced last fall she would not play the Dongfeng Motor Wuhan Open, China Open, or WTA Finals, the break felt more necessary on an emotional level rather than physical. While she was struggling with elbow and knee injuries, she cited “heartbreak” as a reason too, referring to her loss to Roberta Vinci in New York that ended her historic bid for the calendar Grand Slam.

Not to discount the psychological toll this year took out of Serena as well, wherein she was trying to catch or surpass Stefanie Graf’s records for majors and consecutive weeks at No.1, but 2016 has been a particularly tough year physically. She struggled with noticeable shoulder and knee injuries during the summer hard court season and pulled out of tournaments during the clay season due to the flu.

An extended physical break to get her body teed up for the 2017 season wouldn’t be a bad thing.

Simona Halep, Serena Williams

4. Singapore breaks open.

Much like in 2015, Serena’s absence from the WTA Finals opens up a significant opportunity for the qualifying Elite Eight. Seven of eight qualifying spots are now confirmed, with Kerber leading the pack along with Simona Halep, defending champion Agnieszka Radwanska, Garbine Muguruza, and first-timers Karolina Pliskova, Madison Keys, and Dominika Cibulkova. The final spot will come down to either Johanna Konta, Carla Suárez Navarro, or Svetlana Kuznetsova.

The eight women represent the full range of WTA tennis, from pure power to rangy athleticism to crafty point construction. That the court at the Singapore Indoor Stadium has played like a slower hard court only neutralizes things even more. It’s no surprise that over the last two editions of the WTA Finals in Singapore, both a power-player and a counter-puncher has been represented in the final. In 2014 it was Serena defeating Halep, while last year it was Radwanska getting the better of Petra Kvitova.

Take a diverse group of the game’s best players and stick them on a neutral surface and you get a tournament that will be anything but predictable on any given day.

All photos courtesy of Getty Images.

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WTA Breakthrough Of The Month: Gibbs

WTA Breakthrough Of The Month: Gibbs

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Nicole Gibbs

Nicole Gibbs’ rapid rise up the rankings hit its zenith during the Sunshine Swing. The American was coming off a run to the quarterfinals of the Abierto Monterrey Afirme but truly showed what she is made of in Indian Wells and Miami.

In only her second BNP Paribas Open appearance, she qualified by upsetting top seed Anna-Lena Friedsam and took out World No.24 Madison Keys to reach the round of 16, where she pushed two-time Wimbledon winner Petra Kvitova to three sets.

Making her main draw debut in Miami, Gibbs continued grabbing headlines – on and off the court.

“Hundreds of fans were filing in as the announcer sent my name flying up into the night sky and it was met with energy,” she said in her latest WTA Insider blog. “Not final round qualifying on Court 1 energy, and not even first on Stadium Court at 11am. This felt like the real deal in a way that no prior experiences had prepared me for. Meanwhile, for my opponent, No.4 in the world, this was nothing new. This was unexceptional – just another evening at the office.

A loss to Garbiñe Muguruza does little to dampen an excellent month for the former Stanford All-American, who was fighting for more than just herself in Miami as the issue of equal prize money returned to the fore.

“For me, being told that what I am doing is second class is second nature. Moments after Raymond Moore’s comments at Indian Wells a few weeks ago, I received messages from ATP players, goading me, asserting that Moore’s reasoning was sound. I have had countless individuals, men and women alike, suggest to me that tennis skirts are the principle driver of revenue on the women’s tour. From average, high school aged male tennis players challenging me to matches because they’re sure they could never lose to a girl, to male coaches telling me, “In women’s tennis, you don’t even have to be talented to succeed.”

“Billie Jean King tells me that I have a platform, so I plan to use it. Because I, for one, would love for my future daughter to fight for a game down 6-1 2-0 because she hates getting bageled, not because she’s worried that a bagel might undermine her right to equality.”

Final Results for March’s WTA Breakthrough Performance Of The Month

1. Nicole Gibbs (64%)
2. Timea Babos (16%)
3. Daria Kasatkina (15%)
4. Naomi Osaka (4%)

2016 Breakthrough Player Of The Month

January: Zhang Shuai
February: Jelena Ostapenko


How it works:

Finalists are selected by wtatennis.com
Winner is then determined by a fan vote on wtatennis.com

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Garcia Battles Into Luxembourg Second Round, Allertova Trips Up Bouchard

Garcia Battles Into Luxembourg Second Round, Allertova Trips Up Bouchard

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

LUXEMBOURG – Caroline Garcia battled into the second round of the BGL BNP Paribas Luxembourg Open thanks to a 7-6(2), 2-6, 6-4 victory over Anett Kontaveit.

Watch live action from Luxembourg & Moscow this week at WTA Live Powered By TennisTV!

The World No.25 made a fast start to the match, coming back from 40-15 down to break in the Estonian’s serve thanks to an excellent backhand that just about found the line. However, Garcia soon surrendered her advantage, as Kontaveit found her range, producing a stunning return on break point.

Though Garcia managed to stop Kontaveit’s run of three straight games, a poor service game at 5-5 gave the 20-year-old the chance to take the first set, only to succumb to the pressure. She paid for her error, with Garcia taking a one-sided tie-break.

Kontaveit started the second set well and a wild groundstroke from Garcia gave the youngster a crucial break to go 4-2 up. A second break followed following an error-strewn game from the 23-year-old and the Estonian levelled the match.

Garcia began the decider with renewed vigor, two breaks helping her charge into a 3-0 lead. Kontaveit tried to rally, and managed to claw back half of the deficit but Garcia held firm and made it into the second round after an almighty struggle.

Meanwhile, Monica Niculescu secured her progress in the tournament after a 6-4, 6-2 win against Kirsten Flipkens.

The Romanian had a frustrating start to the match, squandering four break points in the opening game before being broken to love, but she was soon back on level terms finally her converting one of the chances afforded to her on the Flipkens serve. Flipkens moved ahead once more at 4-2, but was soon pegged back, failing to win another game in the first set.

Both players were similarly successful when returning in the second set. Niculescu went a break up immediately but the Belgian levelled the set, only to surrender her serve immediately. A further break at 5-2 cemented the World No.51’s advantage but she was able to serve out the match and book her place in the next round.

Denisa Allertova

In the evening session, there were wins for Anna Karolina Schmiedlova and Denisa Allertova. Schmiedlova won a topsy-turvy encounter with Yanina Wickmayer, 6-0, 1-6, 6-3, while Allertova recovered from the disappointment of losing five consecutive games in the first set to upset No.7 seed Bouchard, 3-6, 6-3, 6-3.

“I just tried to fight for every point and play the best that I can, because I knew she is a great player and that it would be a tough match,” Allertova said. “I think I played good tennis; I tried not to make a lot of mistakes and recovered well from the first set when I was leading and then lost 3-6.

“In these games I didn’t feel so comfortable but then I started to play well at the start of the second set and I managed to come back.”

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