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Osaka Sweeps Lucic-Baroni, Gets Halep

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

18-year-old Naomi Osaka backed up her impressive run at the Australian Open by reaching the third round of the French Open in her debut, where she’ll meet World No.6 Simona Halep.

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Insider Podcast: Coaching With Cahill

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

PARIS, France – On a special Dropshot edition of the podcast, top tennis coach and commentator Darren Cahill joins the team at Radio Roland Garros to discuss why he chose to team up with Simona Halep, what his time in Romania has been like, and he expands on his coaching philosophy.

As Cahill says, he coaches Simona because he wants to, not because he has to. “I don’t have to do this,” he says. “I’m very lucky. I’ve worked with many great players, like Hewitt and Agassi. I want to do it. I think the world of her, I think she’s a great person, I think she’s a wonderful talent. I’m away from my family 25-30 weeks a year. Some people see it as a sacrifice. I look at it as a choice.”

More from Cahill: “I think a coach has to do their job and sometimes that is delivering a tough message. I haven’t always delivered the positive message to Simona, there have been times like in Rome, I delivered a couple of tough messages to her. They were not taken in a positive way straight way, but in time you go back on them and you talk about those discussions and you try and learn from them.

“And a coach is not always right either. Part of a coach’s job is to try and coach through the player’s eyes. I look at tennis a certain way and there are certain things that happen on the court and I don’t understand why they’re happening. So I have to sit down and ask questions to the player as to why they’re making certain decisions in those moment and quite often I’m wrong because the player doesn’t see tennis the way I do. So a good coach I think learns to coach a player through their eyes.”

Tune in to Radio Roland Garros for more interview and commentary from the French Open.

Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes or on any podcast app of your choice and 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.

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Mladenovic & Garcia Grab Last QF Spot

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

PARIS, France – No.5 seeds Caroline Garcia and Kristina Mladenovic rounded out the French Open doubles quarterfinals, becoming the last team to advance to the final eight with a dominating victory over German duo Anna-Lena Friedsam and Laura Siegemund, 6-3, 6-2.

Mladenovic recovered from Saturday’s heartbreaker against Serena Williams to continue to delight the French crowd alongside partner Garcia by squeezing in a doubles win before the rain halted play for the rest of the day. The Frenchwomen are the No.2 doubles team on the Road To Singapore Leaderboard and have been a regular force on the tour since the start of the year when they teamed up in hopes of an Olympic berth.

Into their first Grand Slam quarterfinal as a team, Garcia and Mladenovic will face the on-form duo of Kiki Bertens and Johanna Larsson in the next round. The Dutch-Swedish team is fresh off of a title last week at Nürnberg and on Sunday in the third round they dealt Serena Williams and Venus Williams a 7-6(8) 4-6 6-0 upset.

The No.3 seeded team of Hao-Ching Chan and Yung-Jan Chan will have to wait another day to complete their match against No.7 Russians Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina. The Russians vaulted ahead to a commanding 6-1 lead, but the Chan sisters were just beginning to mount their comeback in the second set by opening with a break when the rain forced the match to be postponed at 1-2.

The Chans are the highest seeded team remaining in the doubles draw after the shock straight sets defeat of Martina Hingis and Sania Mirza on Sunday at the hands of Barbora Krejcikova and Katerina Siniakova. Nicknamed “SanTina,” the pair sit at No.1 on the Road To Singapore Leaderboard and share the No.1 ranking in doubles, but they couldn’t muster up any magic against the Czechs as their bid for a “SanTina Slam” came to an end.

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Insider Podcast: Serena vs. Garbiñe

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

On the final Dropshot Edition of the 2016 French Open, Courtney Nguyen and David Kane preview what promises to be a thrilling conclusion to the two weeks on the terre battue, as World No.1 Serena Williams stands just one match from winning her 22nd Grand Slam title, which would tie her with Steffi Graf.

Across the net from the illustrious American is No.4 seed Garbiñe Muguruza, a 22-year-old playing in her second Grand Slam final in under 12 months, who is vying to become the second Spaniard to lift the Coupe Suzanne Lenglen after Arantxa Sánchez Vicario, who won the tournament three times.

Hear from the finalists and Sánchez Vicario herself as Nguyen and Kane give their analysis of the budding big stage rivalry between Williams and Muguruza.

Who has the edge in the second Grand Slam final of the season? Allez we go:

Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes or on any podcast app of your choice and 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.

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RTS Update: Muguruza On The Move

RTS Update: Muguruza On The Move

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Garbiñe Muguruza’s maiden Roland Garros victory earned her one of the most impressive moves of the fortnight on the Road To Singapore; the Spaniard shot up 13 spots from No.17 to put herself at No.4 in line for qualification for the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global.

Up to a career-high ranking of No.2 on the WTA rankings, Muguruza is now in pole position to play the WTA Finals for a second straight year. In her 2015 debut, she roared through the round robin stage without dropping a match, losing to eventual champion Agnieszka Radwanska in three grueling sets.

The Top 3 shuffled on the Road To Singapore leaderboard, giving us a new No.1 in 21-time Grand Slam champion Serena Williams. Despite finishing second to Muguruza at the French Open, the American has nonetheless enjoyed a near-perfect start to 2016, one that has seen her reach the finals or better at four of her five tournaments this season.

Semifinalists Samantha Stosur and Kiki Bertens enjoyed the biggest bumps; former US Open champion Stosur nearly cut her Road To Singapore ranking in half to go from No.16 to No.9, while Bertens put herself in Singapore contention by moving from No.35 to No.12.

RTS Ranking Movers

Serena Williams: No.3 to No.1 (+2)
Garbiñe Muguruza: No.17 to No.4 (+13)
Samantha Stosur: No.16 to No.9 (+7)
Kiki Bertens: No.35 to No.12 (+23)
Irina-Camelia Begu: No.27 to No.19 (+8)
Elina Svitolina: No.31 to No.20 (+11)
Yulia Putintseva: No.45 to No.24 (+21)

Click here to see the full Road To Singapore leaderboard standings with Paris in the books.

RTS Leaderboard

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Roland Garros: The 20 Best Moments

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

With Roland Garros in the books, relive in photos the 20 best moments from the fortnight: the Cinderella stories, the agony of defeat, and the moments of victory.

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Bencic Back In Den Bosch Semifinals

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

‘S-HERTOGENBOSCH, Netherlands – Belinda Bencic returned to the semifinals of the Ricoh Open courtesy of a hard-fought win over qualifier Viktorija Golubic on Friday afternoon.

Watch live action from ‘s-Hertogenbosch this week on WTA Live powered by TennisTV!

Twelve months ago, Bencic made it all the way to the final in ‘s-Hertogenbosch. Understandably given her recent injury lay-off her tennis is yet to sparkle this time, and against Golubic she dug deep to eventually prevail, 7-6(6), 7-6(2).

“Like yesterday I just fought with everything I had obviously. I think she played very well and it was a very intense match and I’m happy that I fought through it,” Bencic, who let leads slip in both sets, said afterwards. “It’s good for both of us that we’re in the quarterfinal here and I’m very happy to be back in the semifinals here.”

There she will face her good friend Kristina Mladenovic, a relatively comfortable 7-5, 6-3 winner earlier in the day over the draw’s other remaining qualifier, Elise Mertens. Coincidentally, their only previous meeting also came in ‘s-Hertogenbosch, Bencic winning in three tight sets en route to last year’s final.

“It’s like every normal match – you try to prepare as best you can. It will be different because actually she’s my very good friend, but I’ll try and take it like a normal match and improve everything I can,” Bencic added when asked about putting their friendship to one side on Saturday afternoon.

The other semifinal will be an all-American affair, pitting the big-serving CoCo Vandeweghe against Madison Brengle. Vandeweghe continued her impressive progress by swatting aside Evgeniya Rodina, 6-2, 6-2, while Brengle defeat Kateryna Kozlova, 7-5, 6-4.

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