Roland Garros: Stosur vs Halep
Samantha Stosur takes on Simona Halep in the fourth round of Roland Garros.
Samantha Stosur takes on Simona Halep in the fourth round of Roland Garros.
BOL, Croatia – No.5 seed Ana Konjuh eased past Grace Min, 6-1, 6-3, in her Bol Open 125K opener. Despite rain dampening much of the afternoon action, the Croatian favorite notched her first WTA win in her home country to book a Round of 16 clash against Turkey’s Ipek Soylu.
Watch free live streaming from Bol, Croatia all week right here on wtatennis.com!
Also through is another Croat, wildcard Tereza Mrdeza, who took on fellow countrywoman Ani Mijacika. A lucky loser, Mijacika came up short once again in the first round and bowed out 6-3, 6-4.
Joining Konjuh and Mrdeza in the second round are a pair of seeded players, No.4 Nao Hibino and No.7 Polona Hercog. Hercog had to come back from a mid-match wobble to advance Petra Martic, who was looking to make it three Croatians through today. The Slovak defeated her 6-2, 4-6, 6-1. Hibino had little trouble against French qualifier Marine Partaud, making her way to the Round of 16, 6-2, 6-1.
But it wasn’t all smooth sailing for the seeds in Bol. No.1 seed Anna Karolina Schmiedlova bowed out to Kristina Kucova in the day’s biggest upset, while No.3 Shuai Zheng suffered a 6-4, 7-6(4) defeat at the hands of Ysaline Bonaventure.
Tsvetana Pironkova takes on Agnieszka Radwanska in the fourth round of Roland Garros.
PARIS, France – No.4 seed Garbiñe Muguruza was made to work in the first set of her much-anticipated French Open quarterfinal against Shelby Rogers, but from set point down, the Spaniard rallied and never looked back, easing past the American, 7-5, 6-3, to reach her first career semifinal at Roland Garros.
Rogers had enjoyed a most impressive run into the last eight, upsetting No.17 seed Karolina Pliskova, Volvo Car Open finalist Elena Vesnina, No.10 seed Petra Kvitova, and No.25 seed Irina-Camelia Begu to reach her first Grand Slam quarterfinal. Muguruza herself had played solid tennis to reach this stage for a third year in a row, but it was the young American who steadied first, edging out to a 5-3 lead and getting within a point from the opening set.
The 2015 Wimbledon runner-up had only dropped one set through her first four matches, and promptly saved the set point and only lost three more points to sneak off with the opening set a few games later.
Rogers stopped the rot at six straight games, and took one last stand when she recovered from a 0-3 deficit to level the second set at three games apiece.
Muguruza ultimately had too much experience for the American, duly serving out the match to reach the final four for the first time at the French Open.
In a battle of first strike tennis, the No.4 seed proved far more consistent, striking 21 winners to Rogers’ 16, and only 13 unforced errors to 21 from the American. Coverting four of her six break point opportinities, the Spaniard also hit five aces in the 81 minute affair.
Up next is either 2010 finalist and No.21 seed Samantha Stosur or Tsvetana Pironkova.
More to come…
Garbiñe Muguruza takes on Svetlana Kuznetsova in the fourth round of Roland Garros.
Timea Bacsinszky continued her serene progress through the Roland Garros draw with a straight set victory over former finalist Venus Williams.
Twenty-seven years on from her major breakthrough, the Barcelona Bumblebee Arantxa Sánchez-Vicario has not lost her love of the game, signing up as the latest ambassador for the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global.
However, for many the Spaniard will forever be the effervescent 17-year-old who snatched victory from the jaws of defeat against the then-queen bee Steffi Graf in the 1989 French Open final.
This was one of many enduring memories to have occurred at a tournament that has become synonymous for first thrusting iconic names into the public eye. And as Roland Garros 2016 enters the home stretch, CNN Open Court asked some of the famous old venues’ most fêted competitors to share their memories.
Radwanska and Halep sound off: Losing will never sit well with any player. Losing when feeling like your health has been put at risk? That will result in some angry players.
Both No.2 seed Agnieszka Radwanska and No.6 seed Simona Halep were the favorites to win their suspended matches from Sunday, with both women holding an advantage on the scoreboard when play resumed in their fourth round matches on Tuesday. Radwanska led No.102 Tsvetana Pironkova 6-2, 3-0 and Halep led No.21 seed Sam Stosur 5-3 in the first set.
After a late start due to the never-ending rain that triggered the first washout at Roland Garros in 16 years on Monday, the players took to their respective courts with rain and drizzle still coming down. Fans in the stadium had their umbrellas up and ponchos on, and the damp conditions clearly got into Radwanska and Halep’s heads.
Radwanska lost 10 consecutive games on the restart and lost to Pironkova 2-6, 6-3, 6-3. Halep struggled to find a way to solve a top-form Stosur, who rallied to win 7-6(0), 6-3. Afterwards, the women on the losing ends let their frustration out.
“I’m just so surprised and angry, that we have to play in the rain,” Radwanska said. “It’s not a $10,000 tournament. It’s a Grand Slam. How can you allow players to play in the rain? I cannot play in that conditions.”
Radwanska called a medical timeout at 0-4 in the third set for her right hand, which required surgery a few years ago. “Playing with those balls in that kind of court is pretty much impossible,” she said. “So, I mean, I tried. Maybe I played worse, did worse things other days than when we start to play that match, but it definitely shouldn’t be like this. We shouldn’t play in that kind of rain. Why? We still have couple of days of tournament. What’s the point?”
Halep said she did not feel safe on the court from the moment they walked out. “I don’t care that I lost the match today, but I was close to get injured with my back, so that’s a big problem.”
“I mean, in my opinion [Stosur] played really well and she deserved to win. Her ball was very heavy to return, and her serve especially. She did a great match.”
Radwanska voiced her concerns to the umpire when it began to drizzle again in the third set, but Halep did not raise any concerns until after the match in her press conference. Both women complained about the wet balls and slippery conditions. When told the men’s matches that followed theirs ended when the players complained to the umpire and supervisor and ultimately walked off the court, Halep gave them the literal ‘thumbs up’. “Well done to them.”
“I have no words,” Halep said. “It was impossible to play, in my opinion. And to play tennis matches during the rain I think it’s a bit too much. But everyone was in the same situation, and who was stronger won today.”
Asked why she believed the players were put on court despite the damp weather, Halep deferred to tournament organizers. “Maybe they are scared because the tournament is going, the days are going on and they don’t play matches.
“But is not our fault. Is not their fault. But the decisions were not, I think, the best.”
Samantha Stosur returns to the quarterfinals: For the first time since 2012, Stosur is back into the quarterfinals of a major. The 32-year-old, who made the final here in 2010, backed up her big third round win over Lucie Safarova with another self-assured performance to beat Halep for her first Top 10 win since 2014.
“I don’t typically like the heavy, wet, damp conditions, but today I was able to use them I think a lot better, I think, than she was,” Stosur said. “I didn’t necessarily think about hitting with heavy spin, but more higher over the net I guess to get the same kind of result.
“Having a slice backhand I can then hit it a bit shorter, keep it low over the net. The court is dead and wet. If you keep it low it doesn’t bounce that much. I think that really kept her off-balance when I was hitting my slice, whether I was going deep or short. Yeah, when it’s harder to move, that makes it just that a little bit harder. Like I said, then with my forehand, just that little bit of extra height to push her back was working well for me.”
As for the court conditions, Stosur did as an Aussie does: She sucked it up and just played. “I guess in this situation they need – every minute counts, and I’m just playing,” the 2011 US Open champion said. “If the umpire says we’re stopping, we’re stopping. I don’t know what the forecast is. I know what it feels like out there and I know it was raining for the first time we went out today, but the court was okay for the most part.
Samantha Stosur est en quarts de finale après sa victoire contre Simona Halep 7-6 6-3 #RG16 https://t.co/SV1bmkbnbo
— Roland Garros (@rolandgarros) May 31, 2016
“I don’t think Simona was complaining about it. Again, we’re told to play, we play. If it gets too wet you’ve got to say something. Yeah, I mean, like it’s not good out there, but it was fine for us.”
Despite a good run to the final of the J&T Banka Prague Open, where she lost to Safarova, and the semifinals of the Madrid Open, where she lost to Halep, Stosur came into Paris under the radar. She withdrew from the Internationaux de Strasbourg quarterfinals with a left wrist injury, which clouded her chances here at her, arguably, best Slam. Clearly it hasn’t been an issue. She’s hitting her backhand and slice better than ever.
“Yeah, look, I didn’t know what kind of result or performance I was going to have regardless of the wrist injury,” Stosur said with a laugh, “but I did exactly what I needed to do for that and sort it out and came here early.
“It was unfortunate I had to pull out of Strasbourg, but I needed those days to recover. Thankfully, touch wood, it’s been okay so far. I’m not struggling with it at all. I’m not even thinking about it now. I still have it taped, but it’s not bothering me and I’m able to play some of my best tennis.”
Tsvetana Pironkova sheds her grass court label: The conventional book on the Bulgarian was she was a danger on fast, low-bouncing surfaces like grass. She was a Wimbledon semifinalist in 2010, quarterfinalist in 2011, and made the Round of 16 in 2013. Two years ago she came out of nowhere to win the Sydney International, another fast hardcourt event, as a qualifier.
But muddy, wet, heavy clay? As even Pironkova admitted, “It’s not my thing.”
“I’m not a player who likes slow courts, heavy balls, obviously, but I kind of tried to leave the fact that it’s raining out of my mind and just focus on each and every point. Obviously that worked.”
Ranked No.102, Pironkova hasn’t shown the results to telegraph her first quarterfinal run at Roland Garros, but results can be deceiving.
“I could say I’m surprised, but I think coming to the tournament I was in a very good shape,” Pironkova said. “My results in the previous tournaments didn’t show it, but I was feeling good. Every time someone from the media or my friends asked me, How are you feeling? I was like, It’s strange, but I feel very good.
“So obviously the time came, and right now I showed that actually I’m feeling in a good form.”
Her win over Radwanska was her first Top 10 win since that run to the Sydney title in 2014, and it backed up a dominant win over No.19 seed Sloane Stephens, 6-2, 6-1, in the third round. But it was her opening win over 2012 finalist Sara Errani in the first round that made her believe something big could happen in Paris.
“I played really well, and that match showed me that I have the chance and I should fight for it,” she said.
Update: The R16 match between Svitolina and Serena has been postponed until Wednesday. #RG16 pic.twitter.com/3qz02MxpC4
— Roland Garros (@rolandgarros) May 31, 2016
Rain postpones completion of the Round of 16: The tournament was able to get just over two-hours of play in the books before play was eventually called for rain before 7pm. While the bottom half quarterfinals are now set (Shelby Rogers vs. Garbiñe Muguruza, Samantha Stosur vs. Tsvetana Pironkova), the remaining four fourth round matches – Serena Williams vs. Elina Svitolina, Venus Williams vs. Timea Bacsinszky, Carla Suárez Navarro vs. Yulia Putintseva, and Madison Keys vs. Kiki Bertens – were pushed to Wednesday.
Any Given Week: Fortunes can change in a heartbeat in tennis, and we’ve seen that play out week after week in 2016. Stosur lost to Safarova and Halep in the two biggest results of her clay court run up. She avenged both loses in back-to-back matches in Paris. A couple of forehands here, an ace on break point there, a backhand that floats in instead of long, the margins in the sport are tiny.
“Tennis is something – it can change quickly,” Stosur said. “I was reading the other day, Shelby Rogers, she lost in qualifying in Strasbourg and now she’s in the quarters. One tournament to the next, smallest tournament on tour and the biggest one. She’s had polar opposite results. Shows how quickly things can turn around. Also, the margins are so small. You can make big changes very quickly if you’re prepared to, you know, take them.”
All photos courtesy of Getty Images.
Tsvetana Pironkova produced a spectacular comeback to knock out No.2 seed Agnieszka Radwanska and book a place in the quarterfinals of the French Open.
PARIS, France – No.5 seeds Caroline Garcia and Kristina Mladenovic rounded out the French Open doubles quarterfinals, becoming the last team to advance to the final eight with a dominating victory over German duo Anna-Lena Friedsam and Laura Siegemund, 6-3, 6-2.
Mladenovic recovered from Saturday’s heartbreaker against Serena Williams to continue to delight the French crowd alongside partner Garcia by squeezing in a doubles win before the rain halted play for the rest of the day. The Frenchwomen are the No.2 doubles team on the Road To Singapore Leaderboard and have been a regular force on the tour since the start of the year when they teamed up in hopes of an Olympic berth.
Into their first Grand Slam quarterfinal as a team, Garcia and Mladenovic will face the on-form duo of Kiki Bertens and Johanna Larsson in the next round. The Dutch-Swedish team is fresh off of a title last week at Nürnberg and on Sunday in the third round they dealt Serena Williams and Venus Williams a 7-6(8) 4-6 6-0 upset.
The No.3 seeded team of Hao-Ching Chan and Yung-Jan Chan will have to wait another day to complete their match against No.7 Russians Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina. The Russians vaulted ahead to a commanding 6-1 lead, but the Chan sisters were just beginning to mount their comeback in the second set by opening with a break when the rain forced the match to be postponed at 1-2.
The Chans are the highest seeded team remaining in the doubles draw after the shock straight sets defeat of Martina Hingis and Sania Mirza on Sunday at the hands of Barbora Krejcikova and Katerina Siniakova. Nicknamed “SanTina,” the pair sit at No.1 on the Road To Singapore Leaderboard and share the No.1 ranking in doubles, but they couldn’t muster up any magic against the Czechs as their bid for a “SanTina Slam” came to an end.
Turning in to twins @KikiMladenovic @CaroGarcia? ? #RG16 pic.twitter.com/sJRFgUX1wd
— Roland Garros (@rolandgarros) May 31, 2016