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Hot Shot Radwanska Impresses In IW

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

INDIAN WELLS, CA, USA – World No.3 Agnieszka Radwanska was nearly out of the BNP Paribas Open less that 48 hours ago, but the Pole rebounded in spectacular style on Sunday, dismissing Monica Niculescu, 6-2, 6-1, behind a barrage of her signature trick shots.

Down a match point to Dominika Cibulkova in the second round, Radwanska faced an opponent almost as wily as herself in Niculescu, splitting their last two encounters in the last year.

“I played her just two weeks ago in Doha, so that also helped,” Radwanska told the media in her post-match press conference. “I really know what to expect there. Of course she’s little bit different player than the others. Never easy. Always tricky opponent.

“I knew I would have to be patient. I think that’s the most important thing in that kind of matches. And really try to play my game. She can be really tough. Just very happy to win that match actually in those two quick sets.”

As quickly as the 87 minute match went, Radwanska still had time for some impressive play, leaving fans, media, and even Belinda Bencic begging for more:

“It’s just pretty much the reaction and things that I do on court. I think is the way I play,” the Pole said of her trick shots.

“I definitely have a couple of favorite ones. Also a couple of ones I play against Vinci in Doha; couple of ones as well from Singapore.

“Everything is just happening so fast and I always have like couple of them each tournament, so I am even forgetting what happen in last few months,” she said with a smile. “That would be good to have actually those highlights on internet that I can watch again and see what I did.”

Ask, believe, receive: check out some of those hot shots below:

Check out more of Radwanska’s shots here and here.

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Santina Shocked In Second Round Stunner

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

INDIAN WELLS, CA, USA – Their 41-match winning streak had come to an end at the Qatar Total Open, but Martina Hingis and Sania Mirza’s hopes of claiming a second straight BNP Paribas Open title were halted by an unseeded but dangerous pair in Vania King and Alla Kudryavtseva, 7-6(7), 6-4.

“We had a game plan and I feel like we executed it really well,” King, who won back-to-back Grand Slam titles with Yaroslava Shvedova at the 2010 Wimbledon and US Open, said after the match. “We tried to take control of the points and not let them dictate the match play, and I think we did that really well. That’s why we won.”

King and Kudryavtseva are playing just their second tournament of 2016 – King sat out much of 2015 with a back injury – but already have a Grand Slam quarterfinal under their belt at the Australian Open. After edging past the top seeds in a tense tie-break, the American/Russian duo raced out to a 5-2 lead in the second set – eventually breaking at love to hand Santina their first straight-sets loss since the summer of 2015 (Rogers Cup).

“I’m feeling very glad that I have a partner like Vania; she had a great game plan. We stuck with each other through the goods and the bads, and it pays off for a doubles team to do that,” Kudryavtseva said.

“That’s what I’m useful for; I just have good game plans, and that’s all!” King added with a laugh.

“And she has good energy, and she’s a fantastic, phenomenal tennis player,” Kudryavtseva continued. “She’s really motivated. It’s nice to be around someone who has so much positive energy and love for tennis. I think we’re really enjoying ourselves on the court, good chemistry.

“We obviously complement each other well; Vania moves a lot, and I try to move a lot. We have good returns.

“I feel like as a team, all the pieces kind of fit together, and it’s only our second tournament, and we obviously have a long way to go – hopefully – but we’re playing well and we’re enjoying each other’s company; it’s great.”

Into their second straight quarterfinal, fast-rising duo face a rematch of their Australian Open encounter with Julia Goerges and Karolina Pliskova; the big-hitting pair survived a tough match against Daria Kasatkina and Elena Vesnina – the very team who ended the Santina Streak in Doha – in a match tie-break, 6-1, 6-7(5), 10-4.

Deciding to pair up at the end of last season, Kudryavtseva has told WTA Insider that she and King are looking to make 2016 a season to remember; each have qualified for the WTA Finals before – King in 2010 and 2011, Kudryavtseva in 2014 – but are trying to keep a return to the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global in the back of their minds for the time being.

“I think we have to take it match by match, tournament by tournament,” King said. “Our communication is really good, we get along on and off the court, which is important. We don’t feel any pressure to not say something to one another; we can easily talk to each other about how we feel on or off the court – if we want to work on something, or if one sees something and the other one doesn’t.

“Obviously we hope can get to Singapore. If we take it one match at a time, that’s how we will play our best at the end of the day, enjoying each day on the court, going for our shots and going from there.”

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Indian Wells Monday: Youth In Revolt

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

The last of the third round encounters take place on Monday; can Belinda Bencic and Eugenie Bouchard continue their solid starts to 2016, or will veteran Roberta Vinci take center stage?

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Serena Outpaces Putintseva

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

World No.1 Serena Williams overcame a slow start to roar past Yulia Putintseva to reach the fourth round at the BNP Paribas Open.

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Insider Notebook: Renewed, In And Out

Insider Notebook: Renewed, In And Out

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

– Zhang Shuai knocks out Caroline Wozniacki in thriller: It took three hours and 24 minutes, but Zhang Shuai pulled off yet another upset in her splendid season, beating Caroline Wozniacki 4-6, 7-6(8), 7-5 to make the third round. Zhang told WTA Insider that she planned her post-Australian Open around the BNP Paribas Open, which she says is her favorite tournament.

“Last year in Tokyo my target was I wanted to come to Indian Wells and Miami because this tournament is my favorite,” Zhang told WTA Insider. “I like to see the mountains, so beautiful. At the courts, and everyone is like family. But the last two years I had really bad luck. I could not come. I had injuries or something.

“So this year I did not go to Dubai, Doha, or Kuala Lumpur or Taiwan because I want to come here. I want to be 100% ready for this tournament. Very happy and thanks to Mr. Raymond Moore for giving me the wildcard. At the Australian Open we contact him. He was very fast to reply the email but we didn’t tell everybody. That’s why we go to [the $50K ITF in] Rancho Santa Fe to prepare for this tournament.

“If I stay in China or if I go to Dubai or Doha I have a long trip and big time change. I need some time to keep relaxed, not always in the tour, to not play too much. I almost [retired], so I want to be happy in the tour, not to play every week. A few years ago, at the big tournaments I was so tired or with injury. Now I want to focus on the big tournaments.”

Zhang says she’ll play the Miami Open and Volvo Cars Open in Charleston before returning to China to rest for the clay season.

“I really like Charleston,” she said. “Nice town, really nice everything. After Charleston I need a rest like after the Australian Open. I’m not young anymore. [I need to] keep healthy. I want high quality every tournament, not many tournaments but low quality, no points. And also I want more time to stay home with family and enjoy the life.”

Talk about enjoying life: Zhang told me she’s been powered by legendary California burger chain In & Out all week. I saw her at a nearby In & Out around midnight after her hard-earned win. Much deserved.

Christina McHale

– Christina McHale’s burgeoning confidence: Since the Australian Open, McHale is now 11-3 at all levels after upsetting No.4 Garbiñe Muguruza 7-5, 6-1. It was McHale’s first win over a Top 5 player in four years. Her last win came over Petra Kvitova right here in Indian Wells in 2012.

“I thought I had a really good offseason,” McHale said after being asked about her form in 2016. “I put in a lot of work both in the gym and off the court. Unfortunately in Australia, I had a tough draw there, but I really wanted to get matches. So then I went after the second week and played a [ITF $50K] in Hawaii and got some matches there. That really helped.

“I just have played a bunch the last few weeks. I think that’s given me confidence. Playing matches is what I needed, and being healthy this year. I had a shoulder injury at the start of last year. Just being able to play a lot I think has helped.”

McHale reached a career-high No.24 in 2012 but has been out of the Top 50 for much of the last three years. “I definitely feel like there were a lot of matches where I was really close to maybe having some big wins and they kind of, yeah, just didn’t get that win,” McHale said when asked about her dip in results.

“But I feel like I have been working extremely hard all these years. I think it’s a combination of being healthy and just getting a lot of matches in and kind of getting into a groove.

“It wasn’t like I felt like I was playing poorly these past couple years, though. I think I just had a few tight matches that didn’t go my way that maybe could have changed some things.”

– Eugenie Bouchard rolls back the clock: The Canadian continued her resurgent form, earning her first Top 25 win since the 2014 Dongfeng Motor Wuhan Open by beating No.22 Sloane Stephens 7-5, 7-5. With Wayne Gretzky cheering from her player’s box, Bouchard notched her tour-leading 15th win of the season. She had 12 wins in the entirety of 2015.

“It’s important to me because it’s kind of on my comeback as I have kind of called this year,” Bouchard said. “It gives me confidence looking forward. You know, I don’t want to look back or don’t want to think about 2014 or 2015 really, so this one is important. It’s kind of a step forward, and I just want to keep going.”

– 16 of 32 seeds fall in the second round: The unpredictability continued in Indian Wells after another day of upsets. No.2 Angelique Kerber bowed out to Denisa Allertova, as other notable seeds – Garbiñe Muguruza, Caroline Wozniacki, and Carla Suárez Navarro (withdrew with an ankle injury) suffered an early exit.

– German Exodus: Nine German women were in the draw. They went winless.

Sloane Stephens

– Sloane Stephens rues her missed opportunities: Stephens had multiple chances to close out the second set to force a third against Bouchard, none better than a short forehand at the net that flew wildly long. The tour leader in titles just couldn’t find her best when she needed it.

“There are always things to work on, obviously,” she said. “I played pretty good this year so far. Today was just unfortunate. Like I said, I played to protect. When you get out there you have to play to win. It was unfortunate, but this whole tennis thing it’s definitely a learning process. So I know that I have things to work on, and hopefully going into next week I can get myself together and have a good week next week.”

– Victoria Azarenka hits the tape: Azarenka won her opening match, 6-3, 6-2 over Zarina Diyas. She’s says she’s able to play pain free after withdrawing from Acapulco with a wrist injury.

I asked Azarenka whether she’s been able to put her Australian Open quarterfinal loss behind her. “Yeah, it wasn’t pleasant, that’s for sure,” she said. “I think the most difficult was to rewatch that match.” So what did she see on the rewatch?

“That it was my match to win, and that’s painful to see sometimes.”

All photos courtesy of Getty Images.

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