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Puig Pummels Muguruza At Olympics

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil – No.3 seed Garbiñe Muguruza was sent crashing out of the Olympic tennis event in Rio after a decisive 6-1, 6-1 defeat at the hands of Puerto Rico’s Monica Puig.

Competing in her first ever Olympic Games, 22-year-old Puig notched her first ever victory over a Top 5 player against the No.4-ranked Muguruza to claim the biggest win of her career.

“I think it is. I consider it the biggest win of my career because it’s at the Olympics. This happens once every four years,” Puig said, grinning in the mixed zone after the match. “Right now, I’m in the clouds. I can’t even believe it because truly it was incredible.”

Muguruza’s usually aggressive game was lacking its bite, and she couldn’t seem to find her rhythm, getting caught a step or two late to the ball time and time again. The Spaniard struck almost twice as many unforced errors as Puig, 29 to 15. Her powerful serve fired off seven double faults, and she was broken six times throughout the hour-long encounter.

Puig took advantage of Muguruza’s lapse and came out of the gate on fire, breaking in the fourth game to quickly build up a 4-1 lead, which she backed up by breaking again and snapping up the opening set. Puig’s zinging forehand and dogged, line-to-line defense powered her through the next set as she broke Muguruza four more times to reach her first ever Olympic quarterfinals.

“I still have goose bumps,” Puig said of serving for the match and her emotional reaction afterward. “You just go into shock, you are trying to keep it together the whole time because you know in that last game, serving at 4-1 especially to consolidate that break, you’re so close to winning you start getting emotional, there’s no hiding it, you start feeling those butterflies, those nerves.

“So I think it’s all that coming out, you keep it bottled up. It’s like a Coca Cola bottle if you shake it, you shake it, you shake it, it’s going to explode. I just tried to not explode till the right moment and it worked.”

The win is a banner result for Puig, who started out the year ranked No.94. Her newly-found consistency has seen her reach the quarterfinals or better at six events as well as climb all the way to a career-high No.33.

“I know what I want to achieve and I’m letting the world know that Monica Puig is here. It’s my time,” she said. “I’ve always been there, but I’ve never been able to maintain the level. But I’m doing it now and I’m in such a good moment.

“I want the medal, and I’m going to do what it takes to reach this goal… I always seem to play my best when I play for my country.”

Puig is set to play against Germany’s Laura Siegemund in the next round for a spot in the semifinals.

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Coach's Corner: Scott Byrnes

Coach's Corner: Scott Byrnes

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Welcome to the Coach’s Corner, a new WTAi series that speaks to the coaches, physios, and fitness trainers tasked with helping turn the WTA players into Grand Slam champions. In this first edition, get to know Scott Byrnes, the man who helped Ana Ivanovic to her maiden major victory, and Eugenie Bouchard to her first major final at the 2014 Wimbledon Championships.

MELBOURNE, Australia – Maria Sharapova, Victoria Azarenka, Ana Ivanovic, and Eugenie Bouchard all have something in common. Each has entrusted Scott Byrnes with her physical training. The 44-year-old Queenslander has become a staple on the tour since he first began as former Australian No.1 Alicia Molik’s traveling trainer in 2001.

Byrnes’ most successful turn came with Ivanovic. Brought onto the team in 2006, Byrnes helped transform Ivanovic into a Slam champion in 2008 at the French Open. He has also worked extensively with Sharapova, Azarenka, Bouchard, and Vera Zvonareva in many of their training blocks in the United States. Now he hopes to do the same for another young hitter in 21-year-old American Madison Keys, with whom he’s worked since the middle of last season.

An entrepreneur and self-described “gypsy”, Byrnes sat down with WTA Insider to discuss his experience as full-time traveling fitness coach, how the physical side of the women’s game has evolved over the years, and his unique methodologies that have made him one of the most sought after trainers in the sport.

Scott Byrnes, Ana Ivanovic

WTA Insider: How did you first start in this business?
Byres: I had a personal training business called Complete Fitness in Sydney, Australia. I started training some of the young Australian players out of the gym and then they asked me to travel with them. Back then in 1997 the physical side of things in women’s tennis really wasn’t focused on. It was still in its infancy. There was a niche for having someone working on a player’s fitness.

At that time there wasn’t a lot of physical trainers traveling. Coaches used to do most of the training for the players and I used to look at them and think ‘Oh my god what’s going on here’? It was really old school stuff.

My first private player was Alicia Molik. She was ranked in the 100s at the time and finished with her highest ranking at No.8 in the world. Then it just snowballed from there.

Then there was Ana. She went through a great transformation. I got her at an age when she wasn’t as athletic. We worked hard for 1.5 years before we really had results. She made the final here in 2008 and lost to Maria and then a few months later she won the French Open.

Once you get known in the industry and people see what you’re doing, it gets going from there. Vera Zvonareva for two years, Maria Sharapova for just under a year, Azarenka for just under a year. Then Genie for a year and a half and then I started with Madison.

WTA Insider: That’s quite the resume.
Byrnes: Yeah, it is. I’ve been very fortunate and lucky to work with them. I have a great relationship with all of them. I consider myself privileged.

WTA Insider: Why is it important for players to have a traveling full-time fitness trainer?
Byrnes: What’s important for a trainer traveling with a player is you should have to know the blocks you’re working on. Every session is going to have a different tempo and different loading. So if Madison is in a power block, there’s going to be no slow-twitch repetition. It will all be done in a fast, powerful manner. And the technique has to be correct. So with the trainer being there you’re following the block and he or she can make sure you’re doing it correctly.

There’s also tennis specific exercises which I’ve designed myself since being on the tour since 1997. There’s a lot of tennis specific exercises that are about stability of shot, speed out of the corners and movement. What I do with band work is kind of unique.

What works is that when I work on these exercises with the players they buy into it. It clicks with them and it improves their movement on court. The minute the player sees the work they’re doing off-court pays off on-court, they’re more motivated. Eventually you get a system in place. So you need to have someone who knows what they’re doing and overseeing your fitness on a daily basis.

Scott Byrnes

WTA Insider: Why tennis? How did you become a sport-specific trainer?
Byrnes: I only played recreationally but I liked the sport. It was just a niche at the time. I grew up watching Pat Cash win Wimbledon and I loved Ivan Lendl. So to be on the tour was really special. You get really hooked on it, that whole competitiveness, the build up to big tournaments. When you’re part of the team it’s very special.

WTA Insider: What specific things do you have to be mindful of as a tennis-specific trainer?
Byrnes: With tennis it’s a very specific sport and, I think, one of the hardest sports to do periodization for because the tournaments run throughout the year. You’re trying to peak for specific tournaments but you’re trying to peak for the Grand Slams which are so spread out, or in the case of Wimbledon and the French Open, back-to-back.

It’s almost impossible to have your player peak for those big events. But there are ways you can periodize and have them at 80-90%. So periodization is one of the hardest things and that comes with experience. You have to do a lot of maintenance. The benefits of traveling with your player is if they bomb out of one tournament you can make up for some lost time as well and train. That’s the advantage of having a traveling trainer.

Scott Byrnes, Eugenie Bouchard

WTA Insider: What specific things do you have to be mindful of when training the women?
Byrnes: With women specifically there has to be a lot of work on the hips. I find there’s a lot of instability with the women in the hips, with female athletes in general. When there’s dysfunction in the hips it can either go up or down the chain. Usually you’ll find problems through the groin area. A lot of the women are pulling their adductor for example.

A lot of the women have an anterior pelvic tilt, which puts pressure on their back as well. There’s too much back extension. So you work on that by building their core muscles, and loosening up the hamstrings and strengthening their posterior chain.

The way you go about training the core has changed. The last year or two years have totally blown out the old crunches and old school exercises that really aren’t helping in a sport specific movement. Especially in tennis, when the hips and racket have to come through together, if there’s a break in the chain the technique breaks down. So a lot of anti-rotation work is required, medicine ball, plank work, as opposed to the old school “six-pack for show” type of work.

WTA Insider: What are the biggest developments on the fitness that you’ve seen from when you first started?
Byrnes: The biggest thing is the way periodization (systematic training to peak for specific competitions by rotating focused training blocks) is coming into the training. You don’t just work endurance-based strength training. People are beginning to understand the power that goes into the sport. Tennis is an anaerobic sport with lots of different interval efforts. So the old school hopping on the treadmill and running may not be appropriate.

Also pre-hab. The trainer really needs to work in with the medical side of things. The top players now have their own medical teams. The therapist and the trainer have to work hand in hand so that you’re not loading on dysfunction. Let’s say your pelvis is rocked. If you go into the weight room and do heavy lifting, you’ll make it worse. So the team has to communicate and work together to keep the player healthy.

Scott Byrnes, Ana Ivanovic

WTA Insider: Is it difficult for players to be patient when it comes to their fitness? Given the tennis season I would think it takes years to get a player to their optimum fitness level.
Byrnes: It is. Honesty is the best policy. If you take a job and tell them great things are going to happen in the next three months, you’re screwed. That’s not going to happen. Don’t focus on long-term goals. Breaking the goals down to smaller goals is important. That keeps the athlete more motivated.

WTA Insider: The season goes for 10 to 11 months. Where are the actual training blocks when you can really focus on fitness as opposed to tournaments?
Byrnes: The greatest time for me is the actual off-season. That’s where you can really make some gains. The second block is after Wimbledon. You can also get a block after the Australian Open depending on the tournaments they play. Madison won’t be going to the Middle East so we’ll have a block after that.

There’s also a short one after Miami depending on how they do there. That works out well because you’re going from hard court to clay, so you want to work on footwork and movement. It’s good because the gaps usually correspond with the surface changes, except from clay to grass. Then you’re just trying to get them into Wimbledon healthy.

WTA Insider: How difficult is it to get a player physically ready for Wimbledon? When I see them in Birmingham and Eastbourne they’re usually sore in the lower back or quads or glutes from having to behind down lower to hit the balls.
Byrnes: It’s funny because the guys are almost treating the grass court like a hard court. They wear hard court shoes and slide on the grass. The majority of the women don’t have the speed after the shot to get that slide. Because of that if there’s any problems with the surface, lumps of grass or sand, then you’ll slide. You’re trying to get them familiar with the surface so that they feel stable so they can play confidently while also avoiding injury.

Eugenie Bouchard, Scott Byrnes

WTA Insider: This may be a minor question, but how much training equipment do you have to travel with?
Byrnes: I’ve probably paid off a house when it comes to excess baggage. I carry a small suitcase of equipment. I travel with a 1kg medicine ball so you can do speed work, which is important. One of the most useful tools which is light is the bands. I use them a lot.

But now, compared to 15 years ago, the gyms at the tournaments are much better. There are smaller tournaments where you need to be adaptable and come up with some things. But it’s good for the players. It gives them something different.

WTA Insider: What gives you the most job satisfaction?
Byrnes: Knowing that you’ve prepared the player to the best of your ability. That should be the focus on the whole team, that we’re focusing on the whole process and not the result. That will translate to the player’s confidence as well. Where they know they had a good off-season or training block and a 10-15 shot rally comes up they know they’ve been pushed hard and they can handle it.

When you’re traveling with the player you want them to be happy, that’s the second thing. You need to do the little things to take pressure off them or little things that make them smile. It’s tough, you know? Madison is 21 years old. They’re spending 5-6 days under strenuous labor. You’re traveling with them 24-7 so you need to be able to have that side of your personality to make them smile.

Scott Byrnes

WTA Insider: What’s the most stressful situation for you?
Byrnes: Injuries. It’s inevitable. These women are throwing themselves around the court and there’s not a lot of down time between tournaments. If they go deep one week there’s going to be some niggling thing that could add up to the next week as well. Unfortunately it takes time to heal, but you have a tournament straight after. So you have decide whether to play the tournament or not.

WTA Insider: What was it like being in the support box and watching Ana win the French Open?
Byrnes: That was huge. That’s by far my standout moment in my career because we worked damn hard for it. I know how hard she worked for it and the sacrifices she made to get there. Especially coupled with the fact that we made the final the year before and Justine [Henin] won there. Just being part of a team was just such a great moment.

WTA Insider: How are you with all the travel?
Byrnes: I’m a bit of a gypsy. I’m a bit of a free spirit. I guess it’s my Sagittarius zodiac. I get itchy feet when I’m in one place for too long. I love traveling, I love the whole sporting environment, I like watching other people train. I’m just lucky to be 24-7 around a sport I love. I think if I was stuck in an office I’d go crazy.

All photos courtesy of Getty Images and Scott Byrnes.

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Hingis & Mirza Storm Into Round 2

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Doubles co-World No.1s Martina Hingis and Sania Mirza stormed past Mariana Duque-Mariño and Teliana Pereira to extend their win streak to 31 and advance into Round 2.

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Radwanska Powers Past Puig

Radwanska Powers Past Puig

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

MELBOURNE, Australia – No.4 seed Agnieszka Radwanska applied her clinical game against the Puerto Rican Monica Puig, overpowering her 6-4, 6-0 in the third round of the Australian Open.

Even though this was the first time she’s ever played against Puig, Radwanska knew to be wary of unseeded younger players, especially since they’ve already caused quite a few big upsets during the fortnight.

“As we see now the ranking, it sometimes didn’t really show the game, what the player actually showing,” Radwanska told the press before the match. “You play against the player, not the ranking.

“As we see, those players are beating top players here.”

Both Radwanska and Puig came through some tough second-round matches: Radwanska passed the test of a resurgent Eugenie Bouchard, and Puig fought for over two and a half hours against Kristyna Pliskova, who fired a record-breaking 31 aces.

When they took to the court under the roof at Margaret Court Arena, the two seemed evenly matched. Puig came out of the gates playing aggressively, keeping pace with Radwanska during a close first set until the Puerto Rican got the first break of the match at 3-4. But in the very next game when she had the chance to add to her lead, Puig flubbed an overhead into open court and handed the break right back to Radwanska.

After that, the World No.4 took control of the match and never let go, rattling off nine consecutive games in her trademark decisive fashion. Puig’s errors were her undoing – her flat groundstrokes misfired and coughed up 29 unforced errors compared to Radwanska’s 17.

“She started really well,” Radwanska said after the win. “Everything was just coming so fast and she was playing with an amazing intensity. I was really in big trouble that first set.

“In that second set I think I just find my rhythm, and I was serving much better as well.”

Radwanska is set to play Anna-Lena Friedsam, who overcame a 0-6 deficit to defeat No.13 seed Roberta Vinci 0-6, 6-4, 6-4. Radwanska leads Friedsam 1-0 in their head to head – the Polish player beat her in straight sets on her way to the title in Shenzhen.

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Kvitova Claims Olympic Bronze Medal

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil – A day after missing out on the final, No.11 seed Petra Kvitova found redemption at the Olympic tennis event to claim the bronze medal with a 7-5, 2-6, 6-2 win over Madison Keys.

Follow all the action from the medals matches at the Olympics on WTA Insider’s Live Blog.

Despite a painful loss against Monica Puig in the semifinals yesterday, Kvitova in her country’s colors always finds another gear and her inspired performance brought home her first Olympic medal and the Czech Republic’s third medal overall in the 2016 Games.

“I’m still a bit emotional, so if I cry, sorry,” Kvitova said afterwards. “It means almost everything, definitely. Having a medal from the Olympics is one of the best things that’s happened in my career definitely, along with the two Wimbledon titles and winning Fed Cups and WTA.

“It’s definitely one of the best days today. I hope I’m going to celebrate it. I’m very proud that I could bring it to the Czech Republic.”

The match between the two big hitters was ultimately decided by a handful of points where Kvitova proved to play a tidier game than her younger counterpart. She struck 12 winners and 38 unforced errors to Keys’ 24 and 49.

Keys and Kvitova traded blows throughout the tightly drawn opening set. Where Keys was aggressive on the return to bring up a break point at 2-2 and painting a backhand down the line right onto the line just out of reach, Kvitova replied in kind with a gutsy mid-rally drop shot to see away the American’s chance.

An injection of pace from Keys brought up break points for a chance at the opening set at 5-4, but she let two slip by as Kvitova’s clutch serving bailed her out of trouble. Kvitova leveled it up, aided by a pair of backhand unforced errors from Keys, and rallied to take the first set.

Keys’ frustration visibly mounted with every missed opportunity – in her last match she was 0 for ten in break point chances against Angelique Kerber, and on Saturday the stretch continued another six opportunities went unanswered across the first and second sets.

The American got another chance as Kvitova’s first serve numbers had dipped considerably – from 73% in the first set to 54% in the second – and Keys pounced on the opportunity to finally get her first break and create a 4-2 lead. She quickly it carved up to take the second set 6-2.

But the tortuous match had another turn left as Kvitova’s rock-solid net work brought up an immediate break in the opening game of the deciding set. The Czech dodged break points of her own and got another lead for 4-0.

A nervy final game from Kvitova – which included a double fault at deuce after being up 40-0 – extended the American’s stay in the match, but Kvitova shut the door on her fourth try to claim the singles bronze medal for the Czech Republic.

More to come…

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Mattek-Sands & Sock Capture Mixed Gold

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – In a thrilling encounter between two tough American teams, Bethanie Mattek-Sands partnered Jack Sock to take out four-time gold medalist Venus Williams and Rajeev Ram, 6-7(3), 6-1, 10-7 and win gold in mixed doubles of the Olympic tennis event.

“I’m still pretty emotional,” Mattek-Sands said after the match. “I think, going into this final, we knew the American national anthem was going to be played either way, but I was actually kind of surprised I was so emotional. It’s my first Olympics, first time being up on the podium. It’s hard to describe it in words, but I’m so excited having this guy next to me, we played awesome. It was a lot of fun this whole week.”

After disappointing results in singles and doubles with sister and fellow four-time Olympic Gold medalist Serena Williams, Venus and Ram were late additions to the mixed doubles squad and played incredible tennis to reach the final. With Venus hoping to become the first tennis player to win gold medals in all three disciplines, they took the first set over Mattek-Sands and Sock, a team playing their first Olympic Games.

But Mattek-Sands and Sock are experienced doubles players in their own right, each a former Grand Slam champion in mixed doubles. Roaring through the second set, they recovered from a 3-6 deficit in the match tie-break to clinch the gold medal.

“I was feeling pretty down and out after singles, but I just wanted to enjoy the experience and get the most out of it,” said Sock, who fought off a bout of walking pneumonia to win medals in mixed and men’s doubles with Steve Johnson. “To come away with two medals, one being gold, I’m speechless. It’s a surreal moment for both of us.

“I had a blast with Bethanie all week; she definitely carried me through every match, but it was a ton of fun and it’s going to be something I have with Bethanie for the rest of our lives.”

Overcoming multiple injuries in the latter part of her career, Mattek-Sands was understandably emotional in her post-match interview.

“After a couple of hip surgeries and all of the months I’ve been out where you’re watching all of this happen on TV. Standing on the podium, I was just thinking of everything I’ve gone through to be here.”

Gracious in defeat, Venus nonetheless took home her fifth Olympic medal in her fifth Olympic appearance, and took great pride in being part of an all-American Gold medal match.

“It’s been an honor to play at so many Olympic Games. We’ve had a blast this whole tournament and it was awesome to see two US teams on the podim. We’re just on Cloud 9 today.”

Ram echoed his partner’s sentiment.

“It’s fantastic. To play the final against our teammates, it was a great match and they were just a little better than us. It was just an unbelievable experience to play with Venus at the Olympics and get a medal.”

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WTAi Podcast: The AO Ker-Boom

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

WTA Podcast Episode 15: Ker-Pow! Angelique Kerber wins the Australian Open

On this Episode 15, WTA Insider Senior Writer Courtney Nguyen recaps the stunning result Down Under, as New World No.2 Angelique Kerber became the first German woman to win a major since Steffi Graff in 1999, stunning No.1 Serena Williams 6-4, 3-6, 6-4 to win the Australian Open.

Joining Courtney to discuss Kerber’s mind-bending run to her first major title as as well as the two weeks that were here in Melbourne, is Reem Abuleil, tennis correspondent for Sport360, a daily sports newspaper based in Dubai.

Finally, in the Champion’s Corner you’ll hear from the Kerber herself. She spoke to Nguyen a day after winning the title about what inspired her chilly jump into the Yarra River and how her work ethic and perseverance made the victory all the sweeter.

Kerber: “I think I’m a person that needs a little bit of time. Of course, I believed in myself, but I had a lot of up and downs in my career where I was thinking, is this the right way? Could I reach my goals? But I had a great team around me always telling me that, ‘You’re a great player and you’re practicing and working so hard. One day you will deserve it.’ I was trusting my team more than myself.”

Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes or any podcast app of your choice. Reviews are always helpful so if you like what you’re hearing, leave us a review. You can also get new episode alerts by following us on Twitter @WTA_Insider.

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WTA 101: Olympic Eligibility

WTA 101: Olympic Eligibility

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

When: This year’s Olympic tennis event begins on Saturday, August 6th, one week after the Rogers Cup in Montreal, Canada. The gold medal women’s doubles match will be played on Saturday, August 13th. The gold medal singles and mixed doubles matches will take place on Sunday, August 14th.

The Western & Southern Open in Cincinnati, Ohio begins a day later on Monday August 15th. The US Open begins on August 29th.

Where: Unlike the 2012 Olympics, where the tennis event was held at the All England Club, the tennis event in Rio takes place right in the heart of the Olympics. The event will take place on hardcourts at the Olympic Tennis Centre in Barra Olympic Park. The Centre Court seats 10,000, with nine secondary courts ranging in 250-5,000 in capacity.

Defending champions: 2012 London Olympics results.

Singles:
Gold: Serena Williams (USA), Silver: Maria Sharapova (RUS), Bronze: Victoria Azarenka (BLR).

Doubles
Gold: Serena Williams/Venus Williams (USA), Lucie Hradecka/Andrea Hlavackova (CZE), Bronze: Maria Kirilenko/Nadia Petrova (RUS).

Mixed Doubles:
Gold: Victoria Azarenka/Max Mirnyi (BLR), Silver: Laura Robson/Andy Murray (GBR), Bronze: Lisa Raymond/Mike Bryan (USA)

Serena Williams

Format: The women’s singles event will be a 64-player draw. The women’s doubles event is a 32-team draw and the Mixed Doubles will be a 16-team draw. Players are entitled to enter all three events if they qualify. There are no wildcards at the Olympics.

Singles: Best of 3 tiebreak sets (Note: Men’s final will be best of 5 tiebreak sets)
Doubles: Best of 3 tiebreak sets.
Mixed Doubles: Best of 3 sets (tiebreak in first 2 sets, match tiebreak in the third set).

No WTA ranking points will be offered.

Player Eligibility:

To be eligible for the Olympics, a player must be part of the final Fed Cup team at the time of the draw and be present at the tie a minimum of three times in the four-year Olympic cycle. One of those ties must occur in either 2015 or 2016.

Alternatively, a player may be part of just two ties during the Olympic cycle, provided one of those ties occurred in 2015 or 2016, if she (a) reaches the milestone of 20 weeks in her Fed Cup career (Francesca Schiavone, Sam Stosur, and Daniela Hantuchova qualify for this exemption) or (b) if a nation plays a zone group round robin event for at least three of the four years in the current Olympic cycle, a player from that country only needs to be nominated twice. For example, Caroline Wozniacki has played just one tie for Denmark in the current Olympic cycle, which means she needs to play in Denmark’s upcoming zonal tie to be eligible.

All athletes must be in good standing with their national tennis federation and the ITF. The ITF may also take into consideration the following special circumstances when determining a player’s eligibility: (1) a player is injured or otherwise unable to compete in any authorized tennis tournament for a minimum of six months; (2) A player only reaches a ranking level sufficient for Fed Cup selection by her federation during the latter part of an Olympic cycle; or (3) A nation has a large number of highly-ranked players resulting in strict competition for selection, or its Fed Cup selection policy limits the opportunities for singles players.

Maria Sharapova

Player Entry Rules:

Singles entry: The Top 56 eligible players will be entered as Direct Acceptances based on their WTA rankings on June 6th, 2016. This does not mean the main draw cut-off is at No.56. In the event a player ranked in the Top 56 is otherwise ineligible, the next highest-ranked player will earn main draw entry.

Six Qualification Entries will be allocated by the ITF according to the following priority (“Qualification System”): 1) host nation (if no Brazilian qualifies via direct acceptance, the top-ranked player will be entered), 2) Regional Representation (if one of the six ITF Regions has no representation, the highest-ranked player from that region will be entered if they are in the top 300), 3) Gold Medalist/Grand Slam Champion (a maximum of two singles gold medalists and Slam champions will be entered if they are ranked in the top 200), 4) Universality (if any places remain they will be allocated to the next best ranked player from a National Olympic Committee (NOC) that has no representation in that singles event).

The remaining two places will be allocated by the Tripartite Commission.

Doubles and Mixed Doubles entry: 24 doubles teams and 12 mixed doubles teams will qualify directly based on their combined rankings. To determine their combined ranking for the purposes of entry, each player may use the best of their singles or doubles ranking. An additional eight doubles teams and four mixed doubles teams will be given entry based on the ITF’s Qualification System.

Lucie Hradecka, Andrea Hlavackova

Automatic Top 10 Rule: Doubles players ranked in the Top 10 will earn direct entry so long as their partner has a recognized ranking, they are entered by their respective NOC, and their nomination does not bring the number of athletes for that NOC to more than 6 men/women.

For example, if Sania Mirza is still ranked in the top 10 on June 6th, she could choose any player from India as her doubles partner so long as they have a tour ranking and satisfy all other eligibility requirements. That’s a powerful tool given India has no singles player ranked in the Top 300 and no doubles player ranked in the Top 250.

This rule does not apply to the mixed doubles competition. For mixed doubles, entry is determined solely by a team’s combined ranking.

On Site Rule: In addition, any player entered in singles is automatically eligible for the doubles and mixed doubles events, though direct entry is not guaranteed.

Victoria Azarenka, Max Mirnyi

National Team Composition:

A national team may consist of a maximum of six women per country, of which a maximum of four women may compete in singles, and a maximum of two doubles teams may compete in doubles.

If a country has more than four players eligible for direct acceptance into the singles event it must select its four highest-ranked eligible players based on the WTA rankings.

This rule impacts the heavily represented countries in the Top 50, including the United States (7 in the Top 60), Germany (7 in the Top 60), Czech Republic (5 in the Top 60), and Russia (5 in the Top 60). And that’s with more players pushing up from behind. For these countries, the race to qualify doesn’t just mean being Top 56, but being one of the top four players from your country. This is the race we’ll be keeping an eye on over the next five months.

A maximum of two mixed doubles teams from any country may compete in the mixed doubles event.

Full Qualification and Entry Rules can be found here.

All photos courtesy of Getty Images.

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Wozniacki Named Olympic Flag Bearer

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Two-time Olympian Caroline Wozniacki will make a third trip to the Games this summer in Rio, and this time will be leading out the Danish team during the opening ceremony.

Former World No.1 Wozniacki was unveiled as her nation’s flag bearer during a press conference at Copenhagen City Hall on Friday afternoon, where she was presented with the Danish flag by Crown Prince Frederik.

“It’s an honor for me! The Olympics mean a lot to me, and I have some fantastic memories from my two previous appearances,” Wozniacki said. “I enjoy competing for the Danish team and feel the team spirit, which I do not get to experience in my everyday life.

“Carrying the flag in Rio will be one of the highlights of my career and something I will never forget.”

In both of her previous Olympic appearances, Wozniacki fell to the eventual Gold medalist: Serena Williams at the 2012 London Games in the quarterfinals, and Elena Dementieva in the third round in Beijing four years earlier.

Wozniacki, 25, will be the fifth WTA player to carry their country’s flag at the Games, following in the footsteps of Maria Sharapova, Agnieszka Radwanska, Stephanie Vogt, and Claudine Schaul.

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