Miami: Sorana Cirstea Vs Monica Puig
Highlights from the clash at the Miami Open between Sorana Cirstea and Monica Puig.
Highlights from the clash at the Miami Open between Sorana Cirstea and Monica Puig.
Simona Halep has Thursday’s shot of the day at the Apia International Sydney.
What’s the best thing to do on your downtime in Miami? Kristina Mladenovic and Daria Kasatkina headed to the beach – and tried out footvolley.
An interview with Svetlana Kuznetsova after her win in the final of the Apia International Sydney.
Venus Wiliams takes on Beatriz Haddad Maia in the second round of the Miami Open.
MELBOURNE, Australia – Simona Halep and Garbiñe Muguruza will open their 2016 Australian Open accounts on Tuesday in Melbourne, as will Venus Williams and a host of other top players. Here’s a rundown of what’s to come.
Tuesday, Day 2
First Round
[3] Garbiñe Muguruza (ESP #3) vs. Anett Kontaveit (EST # 85)
Head-to-head: First meeting
Key Stat: Muguruza owns a 7-3 record at the Aussie Open in three appearances.
What can one of the WTA’s biggest breakout stars of 2015 possibly do for an encore in 2016? We’ll soon find out as the explosive Garbiñe Muguruza readies herself for a first-round encounter with Estonia’s Anett Kontaveit. “For sure I want to do better,” Muguruza told reporters when asked about how she’d like to perform in 2016. “I know this is a very important tournament for us, so it’s where you want to do well.” Though inexperienced, the Spaniard’s first-round opponent has proven to be a tough out at majors already in her young career. Kontaveit won her first career Grand Slam match then rolled all the way to the second week of last year’s U.S. Open, before finally falling to Venus Williams in the round of 16.
Pick: Muguruza in three
[8] Venus Williams (USA # 10) vs. Johanna Konta (GBR # 47)
Head-to-head: Williams Leads 1-0
Key Stat: Konta served for the match against Williams at Wuhan last year, but ended up losing 7-5 in the third.
Venus Williams reached the quarterfinals of both hard court majors in 2015—a feat that she hadn’t accomplished since 2010—and the 35-year-old has experienced a run of form that has landed her the No. 8 seed in Melbourne. So is it high time for the seven-time major champion to defy our expectations once again and wreak some havoc down under? To do that Williams will have to get past rising Brit Johanna Konta. Ranked 98 spots higher in the rankings than she was at this time last year, Konta has grown by leaps and bounds. She upset Garbiñe Muguruza at the U.S. Open last year en route to her first round of 16 at a major, and despite the fact that she’s gone 0-2 thus far in 2016, she comes in with newfound confidence in her game on the big stage.
Pick: Williams in three
[14] Victoria Azarenka (BLR #16) vs. Alison Van Uytvanck (GER# 43)
Head-to-head: First meeting
Key Stat: Van Uytvanck has jumped 66 rankings spots in the last year, rising from 106 to her current perch at 44.
With all the injuries ailing the top five players heading into Melbourne, many have tabbed two-time Australian Open champion Azarenka as a favorite to take the title down under. And why shouldn’t they? For the first time in what feels like eons, Azarenka is in perfect health. And she started the season by ripping through the Brisbane draw, tying the record for fewest games dropped during a title run. Though she’ll face a stern test in rising star Alison Van Uytvanck in the first round, Azarenka isn’t about to let the pressure get to her. “I just feel excited,” Azarenka said. “Not thinking about the chances. As I said, I try to live in the moment. Carpe diem.”
Pick: Azarenka in two
[2] Simona Halep (ROU #2) vs. [Q] Shuai Zhang (CHN # 132)
Head-to-head: Halep leads, 1-0
Key Stat: Halep entered 2014 with a 10-14 record at the majors. She’s gone 27-8 at Grand Slams in the last two seasons.
Despite being troubled by left Achilles soreness off and on for the last two weeks, No. 2 seed Halep told reporters over the weekend that she’s in good stead. “I feel good now,” she asserted. “I played many days without pain. So I feel ready to start and hopefully to be healthy till the end.” If that’s the case then Halep could very well make a deep run in Melbourne. The 24-year-old freely admits it is on her to-do list. “I think to win a Grand Slam, I don’t know if it’s going to happen this year, but this is my biggest goal,” she told reporters on Sunday. Halep’s opponent, Shuai Zhang, will certainly have her hands full with the world No. 2. She enters Melbourne with a 0-14 record in Grand Slam main draw matches, having won just two sets.
Pick: Halep in two
Around the Grounds: Still seeking a major breakthrough, 9th-seeded Karolina Pliskova will face the youngest woman in the draw, 17-year-old wild card Kimberly Birrell of Australia… A semifinalist last year in Melbourne, American Madison Keys gets things underway with a battle against Zarina Diyas of Kazakhstan… American Victoria Duval will play her first Grand Slam match since being declared cancer-free last year. She enters on a protected ranking, and will play her first tour-level match since Wimbledon 2014. Her opponent will be 18th-seeded Elina Svitolina.
MIAMI, FL, USA – No.7 seed Svetlana Kuznetsova overcame a slow start and an inspired Taylor Townsend to beat the American qualifier, 6-4, 6-2, joining No.10 seed Johanna Konta, who beat Pauline Parmentier, 6-4, 6-0 in the fourth round of the Miami Open.
Townsend has long been a talented prospect, having won the 2013 Australian Open junior title and finishing runner-up to Belinda Bencic at that year’s Wimbledon Championships. Qualifying for the main draw and upsetting Roberta Vinci in her previous match, the American looked on course for another upset as she took the first break from Kuznetsova in the opening set.
“I’d never played her before, but still, to face her it’s a bit different,” she told WTA Insider after the match. “It took me time to adjust to her game. I got broken right away, and I was serving against the sun, so it was a little bit difficult.”
But Kuznetsova is in good form herself, reaching the final at last week’s BNP Paribas Open; relaxed and focused, the Russian took four straight games to reclaim the break and the opening set from Townsend, who put up quite a fight in the final game before dropping serve.
“She plays good tennis, different than other girls. I took time to adjust, changed my strategy, and in the end it worked pretty well. But she’s very talented.”
.@TaylorTownsend is still fighting! #MiamiOpen pic.twitter.com/mjVHUCAPvJ
— WTA (@WTA) March 26, 2017
The 2006 champion and 2016 finalist raced ahead to start the second and never looked back, despite some impressive variety from the 20-year-old.
Up next for Kuznetsova is either former No.1 Venus Williams or qualifier Patricia Maria Tig, who stunned No.22 seed and Top 20 debutante Kristina Mladenovic in the preceding round.
“It’s a great match-up, and it’s great to play Venus again, one more time. We’re both having great results, so I’m looking forward to that match.”
Absolutely INCREDIBLE get from @SvetlanaK27! ??? #MiamiOpen pic.twitter.com/HUGwo3qNiD
— WTA (@WTA) March 26, 2017
Earlier in the day, Konta worked through a tense opening set to roll through against Parmentier.
“I’m happy to have come through that,” Konta said after the match. “Although the scoreline doesn’t show it in the second set, I still had to work hard within every single point. I really tried hard not to take my foot off the gas and stay focused on what I wanted to achieve.”
The Frenchwoman has displayed impresisve tennis of late, and nearly beat World No.1 Angelique Kerber in Indian Wells.
.@JoKonta91 slaps away the backhand! #MiamiOpen pic.twitter.com/DKRY56Taqr
— WTA (@WTA) March 26, 2017
“She’s been very strong with her forehand, and her serve is actually quite a big weapon, as well. I was quite happy with how I could neutralize it and look towards having good variety on my returns. I also made it difficult for her to find her spots on the forehand; I didn’t give her too many opportunities to set up, because when she does, she can be very tough to play.”
With 19 winners to just five unforced errors to advance, it was night and day for the British No.1 on Sunday after her tough opening round win over Aliaksandra Sasnovich, which went deep into a third set.
.@JoKonta91 comes flying out of the blocks in the second! #MiamiOpen pic.twitter.com/Iy5BofgqVJ
— WTA (@WTA) March 26, 2017
“The bonus of getting through any match is having the opportunity to play again. I have another opportunity to get better and to perform well.
“Those stats obviously look better on paper, and that’s good to hear. There’s other moving factors in a match, but I was still very happy I was able to stick with my plan and not divert from that in any way.
“Each match puts forward different challenges, so it’s hard to compare and decide which has been my best performance. My first round was very good, for example, because I could get through a difficult situation. Today was a cleaner match, so in that sense, it was also a good performance.”
.@JoKonta91 is flying through the second set! ? #MiamiOpen pic.twitter.com/qLxVIX2SNl
— WTA (@WTA) March 26, 2017
Standing between Konta and a second straight quarterfinal in Miami will be the winner of No.8 seed Madison Keys and Lara Arruabarrena.
“I played Madison in Beijing last year. I think I played Lara once before, but not for many years. We all know Madison has a big game, so if I end up playing her, I’ll be expecting to play someone with a lot of weight of shot. I haven’t watched Lara play too much, but she’s been around a while and won a title at the end of last year. She’s a tough player, so either way it’ll be a tough match.”
.@JoKonta91 reaches @MiamiOpen Round of 16!
Cruises past Parmentier 6-4, 6-0! pic.twitter.com/5VqbM7wsYO
— WTA (@WTA) March 26, 2017
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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.
Check out Venus Williams’ shot of the day at the Miami Open.
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.