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Mladenovic Unveils IPTL Trick Shot

Mladenovic Unveils IPTL Trick Shot

  • Posted: Dec 16, 2015

Leading the OBI UAE Royals, Kristina Mladenovic thrilled the home crowd at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Stadium en route to a 26-22 victory over the Legendari Japan Warriors.

Up against former Wimbledon semifinalist Kirsten Flipkens, Mladenovic played an impressive trick shot at the net, eventually winning the women’s singles set 6-2, in 21 minutes. Though Flipkens got her revenge in mixed doubles – pairing with Pierre-Hugues Herbert, she Belgian eked out the win against Mladenovic and Daniel Nestor, 6-5(3) – it wasn’t enough to make up the deficit for the Warriors, who won just two sets to the Royals’ three.

Earlier in the day, Agnieszka Radwanska continued to impress on behalf of the Micromax Indian Aces; the Pole defeated Belinda Bencic 6-3  in women’s singles. It was Bencic’s teammate, Karolina Pliskova, who pulled off the biggest upset of the night in mixed doubles. Partnering the always entertaining Dustin Brown, Pliskova defeated top ranked doubles player Sania Mirza. Playing with Rohan Bopanna, Pliskova and Brown won 6-5(5), and won the final two sets to lead the OUE Singpaore Slammers to a 27-16 victory over the Aces, who lost just their second match of the season.

Check out some of the best tweets of the night:

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WTA Global Interest At All-Time High

WTA Global Interest At All-Time High

  • Posted: Dec 16, 2015

St Petersburg, Florida – The Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) today announced key media metrics from the 2015 end-of-season global audience report, by SMG Insight, which indicate that interest in women’s tennis is at an all-time high.

Excitement around the competitive 2015 WTA season stimulated interest in broadcast coverage worldwide, boosting overall viewership* by 25% year-on-year, with 395 million cumulative viewers in 2015 versus 316 million in 2014. This is the second consecutive year that the WTA has seen a substantial increase in audience; broadcast viewership rose by 23% in 2014.

Digital viewership** for the 2015 season was up 44% year-on-year, with 44.6 million viewers watching women’s tennis through online broadcast platforms in 2015, compared to 31 million in 2014.

The two most-viewed tournaments of the 2015 season were held in Asia, with tournaments in the US and Canada completing the top five. The China Open in Beijing, won by 22-year-old Spanish sensation Garbiñe Muguruza, drew a global viewership of 34.64 million, while the season-ending BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global – where Poland’s Agnieszka Radwanska won her biggest career title to date – drew 32.49 million.

Top five tournaments according to global broadcast viewership in 2015:
1) China Open, Beijing (34.64 million)
2) BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore (32.49 million)
3) Rogers Cup presented by National Bank, Toronto (29.70 million)
4) Miami Open presented by Itau (29.37 million)
5) BNP Paribas Open, Indian Wells (26.81 million)

The 2015 broadcast viewership growth was matched by increases across the WTA’s own media platforms, with the number of unique users and number of overall visits to the official WTA website up 14% year-on-year and 15% year-on-year respectively. The number of fans following official WTA and player social media pages, meanwhile, was up 16% year-on-year in 2015 and reached 120 million cumulatively, while the number of views of video content across the official WTA website and WTA social media pages hit 48 million in 2015.

Several reasons contribute to the all-time peak of interest in women’s tennis. WTA coverage is being seen by more TV viewers, with the number of households reached by WTA programming*** hitting 954.4 million in 2015, a 38% increase on 2014. The greater number of ways fans can consume WTA content, meanwhile, is adding viewers who consume sport online, or looking to supplement TV coverage with extra content online.

The WTA also remains hugely competitive on the court and is therefore a strong and attractive sporting spectacle for both tennis fans and sports fans more generally. The 21 Premier Tournaments and WTA Finals in Singapore were won by 12 different women in 2015, the same number as in 2014. So too is there a captivating new generation of players: six of the players in the current WTA top 20 are aged 25 or under, and of the 12 women who won tournaments in 2015, four are aged 25 or under.

Additionally, the WTA has invested in a number of youth-orientated social media platforms to reach the fans of tomorrow, including Instagram, WeChat, IQIYI, Snapchat and Spotify. They provide unique content for younger fans hungry to follow WTA players on platforms native to them.

From 2017, when the extended partnership with Perform Group comes into full force, WTA Media will produce over 2,000 singles matches a year and increase news content by 40 per cent. By increasing the amount of content available to fans, the WTA can expect the strong rise in media engagement reported in 2015 to continue to rise in the future.

Steve Simon, WTA CEO, commented, “The continued rise in audiences show the WTA strategy to grow the product and reach more fans is working, and the number of stars coming up through the sport will continue to excite interest. The depth of the playing field in our sport is unprecedented right now, and the competition is outstanding. We have the platform to continue growth in the future.”


* Cumulative audience for live, delayed and highlights coverage on WTA broadcast partner platforms across 2015’s 21 WTA Premier events and the WTA Finals

** Cumulative audience for live, delayed and highlights coverage on WTA broadcast partners’ online platforms across 2015’s 21 WTA Premier events and the WTA Finals

*** Realistic WTA TV household reach, based on existing broadcast takers

Source: SMG Insight

WTA TV & Digital Audience 2015-600

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Another Twitter Milestone For Serena

Another Twitter Milestone For Serena

  • Posted: Dec 16, 2015

It’s been a big two weeks for Serena Williams – last week she was voted WTA Player Of The Year for the seventh time, and earlier this week she was named Sports Illustrated’s Sportsperson Of The Year.

And now, the World No.1 has achieved another milestone – a more social kind of milestone.

She’s become the first women’s tennis player ever to surpass 6 million followers on Twitter.

Here are the Top 5 most-followed WTA players on Twitter as of the time of publishing:

1. Serena Williams (6.00M)
2. Sania Mirza (3.24M)
3. Maria Sharapova (1.91M)
4. Venus Williams (1.35M)
5. Caroline Wozniacki (0.98M)

Additionally, Williams is the second-most-followed professional tennis player on Twitter, male or female, with only one ATP World Tour player passing 5 million (Rafael Nadal has 8.80M followers).

And here’s another look at her big SI cover story from Monday – she crossed 6 million that night:

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Murray retains Mauresmo as coach

  • Posted: Dec 16, 2015

Andy Murray will continue to work with coach Amelie Mauresmo in 2016, but Jonas Bjorkman will no longer be part of the Scot’s team.

Mauresmo gave birth to her first child in August, but is planning to work 22 to 24 weeks with Murray, 28, next year.

The world number two hopes to have a new assistant coach in place for the first Masters event of the year in Indian Wells in March.

“For me there were a lot of positives last year,” said Murray.

“But the last step is the most important thing and we need to work hard together to get back to winning the Slams. I’ve just got to find the way to get the wins against the top players in the biggest matches again.”

Murray, who was speaking in Dubai, where he is playing for the Singapore Slammers in the International Tennis Premier League, added: “Amelie did come in at a difficult time, when I had just come back from back surgery, which was tough.

“When I started working with her officially I was ranked 11 in the world – I had just dropped out of the top 10 for the first time in eight years – and I’m now back up to number 2, which is my highest ranking.”

Murray has also revealed he will withdraw from the first Grand Slam of the year, the Australian Open, which takes place in Melbourne on January 18-31, if his wife, Kim, goes into labour.

The couple’s first child is due in mid-February and Murray told the Daily Mail: “I want to make sure at the beginning I am there as much as I can be to try and help out, just be there for whatever is really required of me.”

‘A huge boost’ – Analysis

“Murray had been very keen to retain the services of Mauresmo but was adamant she would need to commit to at least 20 weeks of the year – so it is a huge boost she has signed up just four months after becoming a mother.

“Murray still has a huge amount of time for Bjorkman but the relationship was not an unqualified success.

“Murray won the Masters event in Montreal after Mauresmo went on maternity leave, but was beaten in the fourth round of the US Open and his on-court demeanour has at times been unduly negative.

“The new assistant coaching role may end up as a full-time position – in the way Dani Vallverdu complemented Murray’s former coach Ivan Lendl so well.”

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FedEx Performance Zone: Best By Surface

  • Posted: Dec 16, 2015

FedEx Performance Zone: Best By Surface

Look at how players fared by surface using the FedEx ATP Win/Loss Index

The ability to quickly adjust to different surfaces and conditions is a neccessity on the 62-tournament circuit. Here’s a look at some of the best performers in 2015 by surface this year:

Clay Courts (minimum 10 tie-breaks)
With victory at Munich in May, Andy Murray became the first British player to capture a clay-court title since Buster Mottram at 1976 Palma. He went on to beat Rafael Nadal for the first time on red dirt to clinch his 10th ATP World Tour Masters 1000 crown at Madrid. Novak Djokovic’s only loss came to Stan Wawrinka in a four-set Roland Garros final.

Player
W-L Record
Winning %
Andy Murray
17-1
.944
Novak Djokovic
16-1
.941
Kei Nishikori
15-3
.833
Rafael Nadal
26-6
.813
David Ferrer
19-5
.792

Hard Courts (minimum 10 matches)
Djokovic put together 11 and 16-match winning streaks on hard courts in 2015, contesting 11 finals on the surface (8-3). He lost three times to Roger Federer at Dubai, ATP World Tour Masters 1000 Cincinnati and in the round robin stage at the Barclays ATP World Tour Finals. Federer went 4-3 in hard-court title matches.

Player
W-L Record
Winning %
Novak Djokovic
59-5
.922
Roger Federer
39-6
.867
David Ferrer
36-10
.783
Andy Murray
42-12
.778
Stan Wawrinka
37-12
.755

Grass Courts (minimum 5 matches)
Djokovic dropped three sets – two to Kevin Anderson in the fourth round and one to Federer in the final – en route to his third Wimbledon title, which equalled the record of his coach, Boris Becker (1985-86, ’89). He is now 14 matches unbeaten on grass courts. Rajeev Ram was also unbeaten on lawns, picking up the Newport crown (d. Karlovic).

Player
W-L Record
Winning %
Novak Djokovic
7-0
1.000
Rajeev Ram
5-0
1.000
Andy Murray
12-1
.923
Roger Federer
11-1
.917
Nicolas Mahut
6-1
.857

Outdoors (minimum 10 matches)
Nine of Djokovic’s 11 titles in 2015 came outdoors, with a 28-match winning streak from early March to his Roland Garros final loss to Stan Wawrinka. Murray improved on his 2014 hard-court tally (45-16, .738) to finish year-end No. 2 in the Emirates ATP Rankings for the first time.

Player
W-L Record
Winning %
Novak Djokovic
72-5
.935
Andy Murray
58-10
.853
Roger Federer
51-9
.850
Kei Nishikori
46-13
.780
David Ferrer
41-12
.774

Indoors (minimum 10 matches)
Djokovic captured his 26th ATP World Tour Masters 1000 trophy – one behind all-time leader Rafael Nadal – at Paris, before going on to lift his fifth title at the Barclays ATP World Tour Finals in London. Federer added a seventh Basel crown in his 12th hometown final.

Player
W-L Record
Winning %
Novak Djokovic
10-1
.909
Roger Federer
12-2
.857
Richard Gasquet
11-3
.786
David Ferrer
14-4
.778
Rafael Nadal
10-3
.769

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Watch Serena Accept Her SI Award

Watch Serena Accept Her SI Award

  • Posted: Dec 16, 2015

NEW YORK, NY, USA – Serena Williams accepted her Sports Illustrated Sportsperson Of The Year award at Chelsea Piers on Tuesday night, and as you’ll see it was definitely a night to remember.

First of all, there was an emotional introduction speech from her sister and fellow WTA legend, Venus Williams – here are some highlights from the seven-time Grand Slam champion’s time at the podium:

Then it was Serena Williams’ turn to take the microphone. From her inspirational words about what the award means to letting her part-time comedian out and some deep words courtesy of her favorite poet, Maya Angelou, it was a speech to remember. Watch the World No.1’s speech in its entirety here:

And of course, their dresses – check out Serena and Venus’ stunning red carpet looks right here:

 Getty Images

 Getty Images

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CNN Open Court: Special Singapore

CNN Open Court: Special Singapore

  • Posted: Dec 16, 2015

The WTA Finals’ two visits to Singapore have been nothing if not eventful.

While the identity of the first winner, Serena Williams, was unsurprising, the same could not be said of her path to the title – recovering from a chastening round robin defeat at the hands of Simona Halep to exact revenge in an equally one-sided final. And this year’s tournament was no less absorbing, with women’s tennis’ eternal bridesmaid, Agnieszka Radwanska, upsetting the apple cart to finally get her hands on one of the game’s major prizes.

The event is the jewel in crown of the Asian leg of the tennis calendar, and there is no doubting that the city itself has played its part in creating such memorable spectacles. In the latest editions of CNN’s Open Court series Martina Navratilova, Chris Evert, Li Na and several other famous names give their take on the outstanding performers this time around, as well as Singapore’s special place in the hearts of the tennis public.

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Robson Sleighs Christmas Competition

Robson Sleighs Christmas Competition

  • Posted: Dec 16, 2015

Laura Robson is optimistic her bad run of luck is finally over. The 21-year-old is still working her way back up the rankings after a serious wrist injury took her off the tour for 17 months. Since her return in Eastbourne she was able to play just four tour-level tournaments in 2015. She cut her season short after the US Open due to recurring wrist pain and last week it was reported that she plans to skip the Australian Open in January, which she could have entered using a protected ranking.

Despite all that, Robson looked relaxed and fit at the Maria Sharapova & Friends, presented by Porsche exhibition event this weekend at UCLA. Robson paired up with Andy Roddick for a mixed doubles match against Madison Keys and Mardy Fish on Saturday and then took on Sharapova and Kei Nishikori with Jack Sock on Sunday.

It was the first time since the US Open that Robson – former British No.1, junior Wimbledon champion at 14-years-old, with two fourth round runs at the majors before she was 20 – played in a non-practice setting and she more than held her own. “It’s fun for me to get out of Florida for a weekend and come play and have a partner like Roddick and Jack Sock, it’s just different.”

Robson sat down with WTA Insider to talk about everything from her embarrassing love of Justin Bieber’s Christmas album to her current injury status – spoiler alert: she’s pain free and able to hit full out – the frustrating rehabilitation process, and when we can expect to see her back on the WTA tour.

And if there are any concerns that her competitive spirit might be rusty, don’t worry. She’s currently engaged in a tough battle for the Spirit of Christmas on her Florida street.

WTA Insider: First off, how are you feeling and what are you looking forward to in 2016?

Robson: “I’m very happy with the progress that’s been made. After the US Open I obviously hurt my wrist a little bit again. Not in a serious way at all. There was just some leftover scar tissue that wasn’t healing. I just had to get that taken care of. I would have loved to have played another couple of tournaments at the end of the year but I didn’t want to rush into it again and I didn’t want to come back and take six weeks off and so on. So we decided to just shut it down and get the proper rest and proper rehab and I started hitting again just over a month ago. So I’ve been in Florida for a good while already, hitting a lot, hitting full.”

WTA Insider: News came out last week that you’ve decided to skip the Australian Open. Can you talk me through that decision?

Robson: “That was more of a protected ranking decision. I would have loved to have played. I obviously wanted to be there just as everyone else does. It’s my favorite place to start the year off.

“I get two Slams with my protected [ranking]. One I used in New York. I figured I’d get as many matches behind me as possible and use the second one in Paris [for the French Open]. I could have asked for a wildcard but at this point I think it’s better for me to play [ITF] $25Ks, $50Ks, everything. Get as many matches as I can in, get my ranking up to where I can get into tournaments by myself and not worry about asking for wildcards and using my protected. I think I have seven tournaments left including one Slam so there’s plenty of time.”

WTA Insider: Do you know where you plan to use your remaining protected ranking entries?

Robson: “I know what I want to play, my coach knows what I want to play, but I feel like everyone else has been guessing a little bit and writing about it already. It feels a little frustrating for me because I don’t want to correct it every time. I initially planned to start a couple of weeks before Indian Wells with the protected [ranking] again and then play that, play through the clay season, and my protected will run out in Eastbourne. I would have to use it all before then. But I haven’t actually said which tournaments.”

WTA Insider: What have been the toughest moments of being off tour?

Robson: “The hardest part was from a couple of weeks before the US Open when I started feeling pain again. That really sucked. It was pain where it was going on and off, and on and off, and I didn’t know what it was and I didn’t tell anyone about it for a while because I didn’t want to go through that whole process again. So after New York when it was more on than off I went and saw my surgeon again and fixed it all up. But it was a tough few weeks there. Being in the brace again was just awful.

“It’s definitely been a long process. When everyone else says oh I’ve been injured I’m like no, I think I have you there.

“It’s been a long process and it’s still not over. I have a ranking again which is nice. But still a lot of work to put in. It’s going to be a long way back. But if I didn’t want to do it I would have quit a long time ago.”

WTA Insider: How much have you been keeping tabs as to what’s happening on tour?

Robson: “The first time when I was injured I didn’t watch any tennis because it was just depressing. Especially when I didn’t have a diagnosis – this was after the Australian Open last year – I didn’t care about any results or anything and I didn’t care about watching. But once I started my rehab process and started hitting again, yeah. I like tennis and I was interested in results and who’s playing. It’s been tough to watch everyone get better and improve and play matches, but I’m obviously happy for the people that are doing well and hopefully I’ll be back there.”

WTA Insider: I know you to be a rabid consumer of pop culture. You’re always listening to music or watching the latest TV shows. So what’s Laura Robson been up to these days?

Robson: “I know you’re going to judge me but I have been listening to Justin Bieber’s Christmas album and Jessie Decker’s Christmas album. She’s got a good looking husband, but who knew she had that sort of festive personality in her? I really enjoy that Christmas album. I just finished Jessica Jones, which was intense.

“Recently, I didn’t know that everyone the day after Thanksgiving goes in on the Christmas lights. I live on a street where everyone is retired. I’m the youngest person by about 60 years. I woke the day after Thanksgiving and all of a sudden there were inflatable snowmen, everything. So then the competitive nature kicked in.

“I’ve been to Walmart eight times. I have about 2,000 lights outside the house right now. I’ve got these icicles that you can control with an app on your phone. And then they keep adding more to their house, so I keep adding more to my house. You find entertainment everywhere in Florida.”

WTA Insider: Anyone who follows you on social media knows you’re a big fan of the undefeated Carolina Panthers. I know you’re not a bandwagon fan, but can you explain how you became such a big fan?

Robson: “Cam Newton used to train at IMG and he was there maybe five years ago between Indian Wells and Miami and I was there. I was watching him work out and I’ve never seen anyone that athletic before. You’re watching him in the gym and you’re like this is the ultimate physical specimen. My trainers and I were totally freaking out about it. We started watching his games and then I became an actual Panthers fan rather than just a Cam Newton fan.

“It’s a bit embarrassing because he’s represented by [IMG agent] Carlos Fleming and I know Carlos. Every time he’s like “Yeah, I was telling Cam about you.” And I’m like no, don’t. Please don’t. It’s just so awkward.”

WTA Insider: Well you must be feeling pretty good about this season.

Robson: “I’m kind of hoping that they lose. I think they’ll lose to the Giants but as long as we lose one game before the playoffs I’m good. We’re not going to lose to the Bucs. It’s going to be to the Giants or the Falcons. We’ll see.”


Listen to the full interview with WTA Insider in this week’s podcast:

 

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