Serena Outguns Giorgi In Melbourne
Top seed Serena Williams won her first match since last year’s US Open with a hard-fought win against the always-dangerous Camila Giorgi.
Top seed Serena Williams won her first match since last year’s US Open with a hard-fought win against the always-dangerous Camila Giorgi.
Which sports are the WTA stars most eager to watch at the Summer Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro? Johanna Konta, Petra Kvitova, Eugenie Bouchard, and Angelique Kerber weigh in.
MELBOURNE, Australia – World No.133 Zhang Shuai played the best tennis of her career to dismantle No.2 seed Simona Halep on Margaret Court Arena, 6-4, 6-3, in 78 minutes.
The Chinese veteran first came to prominence in 2009 when she became the lowest ranked player to defeat a reigning World No.1 – Dinara Safina at the China Open – but the 26-year-old had never won a Grand Slam match in 14 previous attempts.
Against Halep, Zhang displayed stunning form from the outset, hitting 31 winners and racing out to a 4-0 lead in the opening set before breaking serve in the 10th game to take the early lead.
Though the Romanian appeared to right the ship early in the second, Zhang weathered the storm and remained aggressive to win the last five games of the match to reach the second round.
“Thank you to everyone for supporting me,” a speechless Zhang said in her on-court interview.
“I think today is the best moment.”
For the former French Open finalist, the loss marked another abrupt end to an Australian Open campaign, having lost in back-to-back quarterfinals in straight sets. It is also her earliest exit from a hardcourt major tournament since the 2013 Australian Open, where she also lost in the first round.
Zhang will next play Hobart International champion Alizé Cornet; the Frenchwoman has dropped just six games in her last three matches – including a 6-1, 6-2 win over Eugenie Bouchard in the final of Hobart – and was equally ruthless to open her Australian Open against Bojana Jovanovski, winning, 6-1, 6-0.
MELBOURNE, Australia – Playing in the Australian Open under the local flag for the first time, Daria Gavrilova pulled off the upset of the night, shocking the No.6 seeded Petra Kvitova 6-4, 6-4 on Margaret Court Arena.
Gavrilova – who scored wins last year over Maria Sharapova, Ana Ivanovic and Lucie Safarova and was voted WTA’s Most Impressive Newcomer – wasn’t intimidated by the two-time Wimbledon champion across the net. And with the yellow-clad Aussie crowd firmly behind her, the 21-year-old was relentless.
“It was unreal,” a smiling Gavrilova said to the crowd after the win. “I was so nervous in the end… you probably could tell!”
In the second set, Gavrilova surged to a 5-2 lead and actually had a match point at 5-3 on her serve, but her nerves got the best of her and she sent a backhand into the net.
When the match point came again at 5-4, Gavrilova used a different tactic.
“In that last game I told myself, ‘You’re actually down 5-3 and you’re trying to stay in the match,'” Gavrilova said. “And obviously that helped.”
Kvitova did her best to tamp down her surging opponent and silence the raucous Aussie crowd, but her unforced errors got the best of her. The Czech’s reliable groundstrokes and serve became vulnerable: she hit 35 errors to 17 winners and seven double faults, including one when she was serving to stay in the match.
Gavrilova, who began competing for Australia in 2015, was feeling the Aussie spirit even down to her fingernails, which were painted royal blue and featured Australian flag designs.
“You guys are crazy!” she laughed, thanking the crowd who had been cheering and chanting for her all match long. “But obviously good crazy – you helped me a lot. It was unreal, I’m just really proud.”
Gavrilova now stands alone as the single Australian woman left in the draw – Ajla Tomljanovic, Samantha Stosur, Storm Sanders, Priscilla Hon, Maddison Inglis, Kimberly Birrell, Jarmila Wolfe and Tammi Patterson were all defeated in the first round.
With the win, Gavrilova improves to a 4-10 record against Top 10 players and is into the third round of a Grand Slam for the first time. She’s set to play the No.28 seed Kristina Mladenovic in what will be the pair’s first meeting.
After reaching her first Grand Slam semifinal at the Australian Open, American CoCo Vandeweghe stopped by SportsNation to tell all about her breakout run in Melbourne.
Chatting with a round table that includes ESPN tennis analyst LZ Granderson, Vandeweghe discussed how she deals with mid-match frustrations – typically with a crack of a racquet – and how her on-court coordination doesn’t always translate off the court.
Plus, who inspired the 25-year-old to do the dab after defeating World No.1 Angelique Kerber Down Under?
Check out the full video right here on wtatennis.com!
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil – Timea Bacsinszky and Martina Hingis staged a stunning comeback on Friday night to defeat Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka and keep alive their dream of an Olympic gold medal.
Four years ago in London, Hlavackova and Hradecka won silver and they looked on course for a return to the final when took the first set and surged ahead in the second. However, their Swiss opponents hung doggedly onto their coattails, escaping from a dramatic second set to complete a 5-7, 7-6(3), 6-2 victory.
The turning point came with Hradecka serving at 5-4 in the second set. Having already saved one match point, Hingis fended off another with a ferocious volley that struck Hlavackova in the eye from point-blank range.
Despite a lengthy injury timeout, it was a blow from which Hlavackova and Hradecka were unable to recover. The Czechs lost the first two points on the resumption to drop serve and while they did manage to force a tie-break, it was one that never looked like going their way.
Bacsinszky and Hingis compounded this misery in the decider, rattling off four straight games to complete the comeback.
Heading into Rio, an Olympic medal was one of the few prizes missing from Hingis’ resume. Her hopes of winning one were dealt a double blow by the withdrawal or first Roger Federer and then Belinda Bencic. Bacsinszky, though, has deputized ably and on Saturday the first-time partnership will meet Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina for gold.
Makarova and Vesnina were quarterfinalists in London and have picked up a couple of Grand Slam titles since then. Against Lucie Safarova and Barbora Strycova they needed to draw on all this experience to overcome a slow start and edge through, 7-6(7), 6-4.
Dreams are coming true for @EVesnina001 who's guaranteed an Olympic medal after reaching the women's doubles final pic.twitter.com/iQtGsEjjWm
— ITF Olympic Tennis (@OlympicsTennis) 12 August 2016
Doubles partners Darija Jurak and Xenia Knoll paid a visit to some reindeer ahead of the St Petersburg Ladies Trophy.
Angelique Kerber, Serena Williams, Victoria Azarenka, Agnieszka Radwanska – who will win January’s WTA Player Of The Month? It’s up to you – vote now!
ST. PETERSBURG, Russia – Kristina Mladenovic continued her stunning run at the St. Petersburg Ladies Trophy with another shock victory, this time in the quarterfinal over the reigning champion, Roberta Vinci, 6-1 6-4.
The unseeded world No.51 continued with the approach that had seen off Venus Williams in the surprise of the second round. She tore into the 33-year-old’s serve in the first set, winning all three of the Italian’s service games. Facing set point at 30-40 in the final game, Vinci produced a wonderful drop shot down the line from deep in the court to take it to deuce, but Mladenovic was undeterred and came through for a 6-1 win.
A rocket of a return from @KikiMladenovic! @Formula_TX pic.twitter.com/2eXZkScAly
— WTA (@WTA) February 3, 2017
Vinci, facing Mladenovic for the first time since the 2015 US Open, faced break point once again at the start of the second set. This time, though, she proved more resilient and held for the first time in the match.
“Roberta is a big fighter,” said the 23-year-old of a more even second set, “and she is very smart on the court. She tried different tactics and almost turned it around in the second set. I’m happy I stayed calm and all the time responded with a game plan as well.”
The second serve increasingly proved key. Mladenovic won 50% of the points behind hers in contrast to 25% for Vinci and, although the French player served three double faults to her opponents’ one, it was that one that was crucial. A double fault from Vinci at 30-40 and 4-4 in the set gave the underdog the chance to serve for a meeting with Russia’s Natalia Vikhlyantseva in the last four.
Wonderfully delicate touch from @Roberta_Vinci! ? pic.twitter.com/LU8a5BBLaR
— WTA (@WTA) February 3, 2017
Mladenovic grew more aggressive, coming forward more with the win in sight. Serving at 5-4 she rushed too quickly to the net and gave up three break points. However she showed great composure to save all three. In a tense finale, the pair went to deuce four times before, at the third time of asking, Mladenovic converted match point with a top-spin heavy cross-court winner to qualify for her third career Premier semifinal.
“We played against each other last year in Hertogenbosch on grass and I won in three sets,” she said of Vikhlyantseva. “I discovered this young lady there for the first time and I thought she had an amazing great quality and game and potential for the future. I’m not surprised at her improvement and her ranking climbing up.”
Meanwhile the defeated champion said: “It was a difficult match, a tough match. Kiki played incredible tennis first set. In the second set I started to play much better than in the first – a bit more aggressive – I had some chances to break her, but she played too good. I played so so – this is tennis! I’m happy I managed to make it back to the quarter-final.”
ST. PETERSBURG, Russia – WTA Charities brought together Ana Konjuh, Donna Vekic and dozens of young Russian players and wheelchair tennis players for a Masterclass Clinic at the St. Petersburg Ladies Trophy.
With the help of two local coaches, Konjuh and Vekic took to the Sibur Arena to run through drills with the children, as well as give them pointers on their game.
Afterwards, the pair signed WTA inspirational quote notebooks as gifts for the wheelchair tennis players.
Check out the best photos from the WTA Charities event right here!









– Photos courtesy of St. Petersburg Ladies Trophy