WTA Shot Of The Month: Radwanska
We asked you to vote for your favorite WTA Shot Of The Month, and you picked Agnieszka Radwanska’s sensational shotmaking. Watch it again now!
We asked you to vote for your favorite WTA Shot Of The Month, and you picked Agnieszka Radwanska’s sensational shotmaking. Watch it again now!
Groups, schedule, results and BBC Sport coverage times for the ATP World Tour Finals in London, which feature Andy Murray.
The center court stage was set for the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global final…
Two of the most popular players on the tour, Petra Kvitova and Agnieszka Radwanska, took the court.
After Radwanska stormed out to a 6-2, 2-0 lead, Kvitova and her huge lefty game began catching fire.
The Czech won eight of the next 10 games to sneak out the second set, 6-4, and go up 2-0 in the third.
But Radwanska didn’t panic – she steadied the ship to break back and get the decider back to 3-all…
And, with her crouch shots in full flow, she pounced – she reeled off the last three games in a row.
The Pole got a bit emotional after closing out a hard-fought 6-2, 4-6, 6-3 championship victory.
The WTA Finals represents the biggest title of Radwanska’s career – it was her 17th overall WTA title.
Beyond that, she went in as a big underdog – Kvitova had won six of their eight career meetings.
But she has one advantage now – she’s 3-2 against Kvitova at the WTA Finals, and 2-0 in Singapore.
Kvitova and Radwanska posed with WTA legend and WTA Finals Ambassador extraordinaire Chris Evert.
Going into the fall, Radwanska hadn’t won a WTA title in more than a year – she’s won three since.
By virtue of reaching the final, the Pole also passed $20 million in career prize money. Kvitova too.
She’s the first player in WTA Finals history to win the title after going 1-2 in the round robin.
And she’ll now be No.5 on the year-end WTA Rankings – just edging Kvitova, who will finish at No.6.
Alexander Peya and Bruno Soares break down Dodig/Melo’s impressive comeback against Herbert/Mahut.
Flavia Pennetta, who played the last tournament of her career – the WTA Finals – as the World No.7, isn’t the first player to go out at the top of her game. Here are the 15 players who retired while in the Top 10, including six players who retired while in the Top 5 – and someone who retired at No.1:
Margaret Court (AUS)
Court, who won 24 Grand Slam titles in her career, which still stands as the record for most Grand Slam titles all-time, was ranked No.5 in the world when she retired from professional tennis in 1977.
Olga Morozova (RUS)
Morozova, a two-time Grand Slam finalist, retired in 1977 when she was still No.10 in the world.
Kerry Melville Reid (AUS)
Melville Reid, who won the Australian Open in 1977, retired in 1979 when she was ranked No.9.
Greer Stevens (RSA)
South Africa’s first Top 10 player, Stevens – pictured center – was No.10 when she retired in 1980.
Chris Evert (USA)
Evert was a fixture at the top of the WTA Rankings, finishing Top 3 every year from 1975 to 1988. She was ranked No.4 in the world when she played the last tournament of her career, the 1989 US Open.
Manuela Maleeva-Fragnière (SUI)
Pictured right, Bulgarian-born Swiss Maleeva-Fragnière retired in 1994 at No.9 in the world.
Martina Navratilova (USA)
Navratilova retired from singles competition in 1994 when she was No.6. She would keep playing doubles, though, until 2006 – she also played a handful of singles events between 2002 and 2005.
Kimiko Date-Krumm (JPN)
Date-Krumm, then Date, retired at the end of 1996 when she was No.8 in the world. Almost a dozen years later, in the fall of 2008, the ageless Japanese returned to the tour and is still going strong.
Steffi Graf (GER)
After a phenomenal Channel Slam – winning the French Open, the finals of Wimbledon – Graf, the Open Era record-holder for most Grand Slam titles with 22, announced her retirement. She was No.3.
Kim Clijsters (BEL)
Clijsters retired from the tour in 2007 as a one-time Grand Slam champion and World No.4. She came out of retirement as a mom in 2009 and went on to win three more majors before re-retiring in 2012.
Justine Henin (BEL)
A seven-time Grand Slam champion and dominant World No.1, Henin suddenly retired a few weeks before the 2008 French Open while still ranked No.1. She came back in 2010 before re-retiring in 2011.
Elena Dementieva (RUS)
Two-time Grand Slam finalist Dementieva called it a career at the end of 2010 at No.9 in the world.
Marion Bartoli (FRA)
Two tournaments after winning her first major at Wimbledon in 2013, then-World No.7 Bartoli retired.
Li Na (CHN)
Two-time Grand Slam champion and former World No.2 Li retired in the fall of 2014 ranked No.5.
Flavia Pennetta (ITA)
Last but not least, talk about going out on a high. Pennetta, who had never been ranked higher than No.10 in the world beforehand, broke back into the Top 10 at No.8 after winning her fairytale first Grand Slam title at the US Open this year, and subsequently announced she’d be retiring at the end of the season. She made it as high as No.6 and played her last tournament, the WTA Finals, as the No.7.
Agnieszka Radwanska turned her season around in style to capture the biggest title of her career in Singapore – and for that reason you voted her October’s WTA Player Of The Month.
Watch Hot Shot as Roger Federer closes out the first set against Novak Djokovic. Watch live tennis at tennistv.com.
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There’s much more to come from the new Power To Inspire campaign – stay tuned on wtatennis.com!
Andy Murray will face Rafael Nadal, while Stan Wawrinka takes on David Ferrer.