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Kuznetsova Tireless Against Makarova

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

MIAMI, FL, USA – Svetlana Kuznetsova emerged the victor after a late night, two-hour and forty-three minute battle against fellow Russian Ekaterina Makarova for a spot in the Miami Open semifinals, 6-7(3), 6-4, 6-3.

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While on paper the indefatigable Kuznetsova came into the match with all the advantages – she leads the head-to-head 5-1, has won the Miami title before and last round she knocked out defending champion Serena Williams – she was facing a monumental task against Makarova.

Would her fitness hold up or would all the time spent on court take a toll?

All of Kuznetsova’s previous matches on her road to the quarterfinals had gone to three sets and lasted longer than two hours. Facing off against Makarova, her compatriot and Fed Cup teammate, Kuznetsova saw no reason to change the pattern while it’s working, though it did take some extra motivation to keep the 30-year-old going.

“I told myself just keep fighting and keep running,” Kuznetsova said afterwards. “I was feeling a little bit low on energy, so I was trying to keep myself going.”

Things looked more straightforward for the 30-year-old as she went up 5-2 in the first set against Makarova. But it started to slip away from her as the fatigue began to creep up leaving her unable to run down her compatriot’s shots. Makarova fought her way back to force a tiebreaker and win the first set.

“I lost a little bit of momentum in the first set when I had three set points and a 5-2 lead,” Kuznetsova reflected after the match. “Then Ekaterina got on top and she played really well.

“I was just trying to hang in there and trying to serve better. That’s it.”

Kuznetsova turned things around in the second set, coming up to the net more often and playing more aggressively to keep the rallies shorter. The change in tactic worked, and she took the second set 6-4. She had just enough in the tank to do it again in the final set, closing out the match after two hours and forty three minutes on court.

The Russians were very evenly matched during the whole encounter – Kuznetsova hit 66 percent of first serves in, Makarova hit 64 percent; Kuznetsova hit 32 winners, Makarova hit 35 – but their unforced errors count set them apart: Kuznetsova hit just 27 winners to Makarova’s 46.

The win sends Kuznetsova into the Miami Open semifinals for the first time since 2009 and sets up a clash against Timea Bacsinszky, but Kuznetsova can’t even think that far ahead to Thursday:

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Mattek-Sands & Safarova Continue Winning Streak

Mattek-Sands & Safarova Continue Winning Streak

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

BEIJING, China – No.5 seeds Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Lucie Safarova defeated wildcards Christina McHale and Peng Shuai on Friday to reach the China Open semifinals and extend their unbeaten run.

Titles at the US Open and Wuhan have established Mattek-Sands and Safarova as the form team on tour and despite falling an early break behind the always looked in control against McHale and Peng, closing out a 6-4, 6-2 victory after an hour and 10 minutes.

The next team charged with snapping their winning streak – which now stands at 14 matches – is Gabriela Dabrowski and María José Martínez Sánchez after they edged past recent BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global qualifiers Julia Goerges and Karolina Pliskova, 6-4, 6-4.

In the top half of the draw, top seeds Caroline Garcia and Kristina Mladenovic stayed on course for their first title since June thanks to a 6-4, 6-3 win over wildcards Timea Bacsinszky and Jelena Ostapenko. Meeting the French duo for a place in the final will be No.3 seeds Chan Hao-Ching and Chan Yung-Jan.

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Mattek-Sands, Safarova Move On In Miami

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

MIAMI, FL, USA – No.3 seeds Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Lucie Safarova are moving on in the Miami Open after booking their spot in the doubles semifinals with a win over the No.5 seeded team of Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka, 7-5, 6-3.

The Mattek-Sands and Safarova partnership had a very successful 2015, winning two WTA titles and two Grand Slams as well as qualifying for the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global. This year the pair took some time apart, though, as Safarova focused on her singles game and Mattek-Sands put together her bid for a spot on the US Olympic team with CoCo Vandeweghe.

They picked up right where they left off as they reunited for Miami, flying through all of their matches en route to the quarterfinals in straight sets. They faced more resistance in the form of the No.5 seeded Czech duo, longtime partners who earlier this year reached the final of the Australian Open.

Hlavackova and Hradecka – known to their fans as ‘The Silent Hs’ – broke Mattek-Sands and Safarova (‘Bucie’) early on to go up 4-2 in the first set. They had a chance to break again to extend their lead but the No.3 seeds halted their progress, winning three straight games to dig out of the hole and take back the lead at 5-4. The two teams stayed on pace until Mattek-Sands and Safarova struck again, breaking once more to take the first set.

Team Bucie was more clinical in the second set – they broke the Silent Hs twice right away to go up 5-1. They quelled any ideas of a late comeback from the Czechs to claim the match in just over an hour and fifteen minutes and advance to the Miami Open semifinals.

Also into the semifinals are No.4 seeded Kazakh-Hungarian duo of Timea Babos and Yaroslava Shvedova, who knocked out the Ukrainian pairing Kateryna Bondarenko and Olga Savchuk 6-2, 6-4.

Babos and Shvedova were dominant from the start, going up a double break and getting off to a 4-1 lead. Though Bondarenko and Savchuk broke back to narrow the gap, but the No.4 seeds broke a third time to take the first set 6-2. They broke the Ukrainian’s serve one last time in the second set and stayed steady to close out the match.

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Insider Notebook: State Of Serena

Insider Notebook: State Of Serena

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Is it time to hit the panic button on Serena Williams?: No, of course not. But things just never seemed quite right with Serena throughout her week in Miami. She carried an air of exhaustion all week and looked sluggish against eventual semifinalist Svetlana Kuznetsova on Monday in a 6-7(3), 6-1, 6-2 loss in the round of 16. It was Serena’s earliest exit from the tournament since 2000, when she lost to Jennifer Capriati at the same stage. Going into the match Serena was a three-time defending champion of a tournament she’s won a record eight times; her loss snapped a 20-match win streak in what has been considered her backyard tournament.

Serena offered no excuses or explanation for her loss when she spoke the press in a brief interview after the match. “I can’t win every match,” Serena said. “The players come out and play me like they’ve never played before in their lives. You know, the best that I could do today. I have to be 300% every day.”

Serena now heads into clay without a title under her belt. The last time she played four tournaments without winning a trophy was in 2012. Her next scheduled tournament won’t come until the end of April at the Mutua Madrid Open.

Despite the numbers and the losses any rush to panic is premature. The theories for her inability to close are rampant. Is this a continued emotional hangover from her incredibly stressful 2015 season, which she shut down early after losing to Roberta Vinci in the US Open semifinals? After that near-historic season, is she struggling with her motivation when there is (marginally) less on the line? As she nears 35-years-old, are the bad days at the office coming more and more frequently? Or are these one-off losses that can explained by extreme emotional circumstances (US Open, Indian Wells), a quality opponent having a career day (Australian Open), or simple exhaustion (Miami)?

Serena keeps her cards close to her chest so a definitive answer won’t come anytime soon. But she has made it clear that her season revolves around the Slams, especially as she’s just one major title away from tying Steffi Graf’s Open Era record of 22 major titles. It’s easy to sit and scratch our heads after her surprising results in March, but it’s important to remember there are three more majors left in the season. I’m not inclined to worry until after Wimbledon.

Champions are human. Never forget that.

Serena Williams, Svetlana Kuznetsova

Here’s Svetlana Kuznetsova’s take on the “Serena Slump”: “I mean, you say drama when somebody, No.1, which is probably one of the greatest in the history of athletes didn’t win four slams,” Kuznetsova said. “This is drama. For me this would be miracle of the year. For us it’s drama that she didn’t win the fourth Grand Slam of the year.

“She struggled a little bit probably because she lost Australian Open, but, I mean, she is still No. 1 and she still plays great. I don’t see much to be depressed about.”

Timea Bacsinszky back on track: After a knee injury ended her breakout season, Bacsinszky started 2016 behind the 8-ball. With only an abbreviated preparation she knew she was undercooked when she made the decision to play in Australia. The cautious player might have skipped that swing to stay home and continue training. Bacsinszky chose to put herself out there, take the bad losses, and try and train and play herself into form.

It wasn’t easy and there were a few bumps in the road – she got horribly sick after Fed Cup – but with her semifinal run in Miami, beating two Top 5 players en route in Agnieszka Radwanska and Simona Halep, Bacsinszky is rounding into form just in time for her favorite part of the season.

“I think I physically got back more or less where I was I don’t know last year,” she said. “I’m slowly getting it back. It feels great to be able to win four matches in a row, especially that I played yesterday and it’s the first time I played two days in a row and I’m able to win against such a great player.

“So it shows me that I’m on a good way and that we’re working well. Gives me a lot of motivation also for my future.”

Simona Halep

Simona Halep and Garbiñe Muguruza head to clay on the rise: It was an undoubtedly disappointing start to the season for both women, who were ranked No.2 and No.3 in the rankings respectively back in January. But Muguruza began to show signs of life at the Qatar Total Open in February and Halep’s level improved dramatically in Indian Wells and Miami, where she made back-to-back quarterfinals.

For Muguruza, the positives come from how she battled through three tough sets to beat Dominika Cibulkova in the second round in Miami, blitzed Nicole Gibbs in straight sets, and then played her part in the best match of the tournament so far in a 7-6(6), 7-6(4) loss to the hottest player on tour, Victoria Azarenka. The level is there. She just needs that extra nudge.

For Halep, there’s no shame in losing to Serena Williams, which she did in Indian Wells, but the loss to Bacsinszky will sting. That’s a match she needs to win but she ran into a physical wall early in the second set and never recovered. Hopefully she can use that disappointment as motivation on the practice court as she prepares for her best surface, clay.

Santina slumping?: The most dominant doubles team of the last 12 months is suddenly in a rut. Since their 41-match win-streak was snapped by Elena Vesnina and Daria Kasatkina in Doha, Sania Mirza and Martina Hingis have yet to win back-to-back matches. They lost to Vania King and Alla Kudryavtseva in Indian Wells 7-6(7), 6-4 and Margarita Gasparyan and Monica Niculescu in Miami 6-4, 6-2.

All photos courtesy of Getty Images.

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Kerber Faces Battle In Hong Kong

Kerber Faces Battle In Hong Kong

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

HONG KONG, SAR – Angelique Kerber will be forced to dig deep to reach the quarterfinals of the Prudential Hong Kong Tennis Open after a gutsy second-set performance from Louisa Chirico.

The World No.1 and top seed breezed through the first set, which she eventually won 6-2 after a series of unforced errors from the 20-year-old allowed the German to race into a 4-1 lead.

However, Chirico returned with renewed vigour in the second set and Kerber did not look the same after a brief rain delay. An error-strewn service game at 2-3 gave Chirico the break and she held on to her lead, only for rain to strike at 40-30 when she was serving for the set. After a lengthy delay, she held her nerve to force a decider, despite being dragged into an epic 37-shot rally.

Kerber’s out-of-sorts form continued in the first three games of the third set, which remains on serve although Chirico was set to defend a break point when the bad weather returned, forcing the postponement of play until Thursday.

Jelena Jankovic at the Hong Kong Open

Jelena Jankovic continued her defence of the tournament with a routine straight sets victory over fellow Serb Aleksandra Krunic.

Having held her own against the former World No.1, the 23-year-old faltered on serve at 4-4, with two double faults and two weak shots into the net giving Jankovic a first-set lead she did not surrender.

The two compatriots exchanged two breaks apiece at the start of the second set but, serving for a 4-3 lead, Krunic sent a wayward drop shot wide and a backhand into the net to give Jankovic the advantage. The 31-year-old made no mistake from there, holding and breaking once more to book her place in the next round.

Eighth seed Daria Gavrilova’s match with Katerina Siniakova fell victim to the rain with the Australian leading 6-2, 1-0, with a break of serve in the second set. Venus Williams’ match with Alizé Cornet was postponed due to the bad weather.

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Cornet Delighted With Win Over Dejected Venus

Cornet Delighted With Win Over Dejected Venus

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

HONG KONG, SAR – There were contrasting emotions on display after Alizé Cornet beat Venus Williams 6-2, 3-6, 6-2 in Hong Kong.

Cornet could not have been more delighted to reach the quarterfinals by beating a player who had always bested her previously.

We have played many times and I was losing in straight sets. Now I can beat her in Hong Kong!” the French player enthused. “It means I used a good tactic, I played a very good match, and I believed in it.”

Her American opponent, unsurprisingly, was very downcast.

“My opponent played well, there wasn’t much I could do against her,” said Williams. “You work hard to win matches – it’s always disappointing [to lose].”

Cornet will face Jelena Jankovic next up — and is anticipating a very difficult match.

“I’m expecting a really tough battle,” she admitted. “She has a really solid baseline game. I expect some good rallies from both of us.”

Describing her current mood as “great, tired, happy”, Cornet said that she still had some trouble with the same heel issue that has plagued her for the past four years — but that she would be running with just as much energy in the morning.

She added that she was enjoying her time in Hong Kong — the city and the tournament.

“The welcome is really amazing and the city is great,” she said. “For me, every match [on tour] is the same intensity.”

Earlier in the day, Caroline Wozniacki took less than an hour and a half to secure her quarterfinal spot, beating Great Britain’s Heather Watson, 6-3, 6-3.

Neither player looked solid on her serve – Watson won three of her four break points, but Wozniacki broke her six times in return. Next up for Wozniacki is Wang Qiang, who received a walkover after Johanna Konta withdrew from the tournament with an abdominal injury.

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