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Dubai Duty Free: Always Full Of Surprises

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

With nonstop action every week, the WTA tour is always surprising and exciting. Now Dubai Duty Free, official partner of the WTA, brings you the “Always Full Of Surprises” video series to capture the most exciting moments.

What better way to kick things off than with Sara Errani’s huge win at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships?

“There is no explanation,” Errani said of the victory, one of the biggest of her career. “Of course you work to be ready to the matches, but you never know which days you can play better or worse.”

Check out the video above and keep your eyes peeled for more surprises!

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Doha Kicks Off In Style

Doha Kicks Off In Style

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970
The WTA’s biggest stars took a break from their preparations to join the Qatar Tennis Federation and Total E&P Qatar at the Qatar Total Open players’ party.

The WTA’s biggest stars took a break from their preparations to join the Qatar Tennis Federation and Total E&P Qatar at the Qatar Total Open players’ party.

Daria Gavrilova is hoping to follow up her incredible run at the Australian Open.

Daria Gavrilova is hoping to follow up her incredible run at the Australian Open.

Swiss player Timea Bacsinszky is the No.11 seed.

Swiss player Timea Bacsinszky is the No.11 seed.

Simona Halep – the 2014 champion here in Doha – is the No.2 seed.

Simona Halep – the 2014 champion here in Doha – is the No.2 seed.

Lucie Safarova, Barbora Strycova and Andrea Hlavackova had some fun checking out the props.

Lucie Safarova, Barbora Strycova and Andrea Hlavackova had some fun checking out the props.

The Qatar Total Open player party festivities kicked off in style at the Al Gassar Ballroom in the St. Regis Doha.

The Qatar Total Open player party festivities kicked off in style at the Al Gassar Ballroom in the St. Regis Doha.

The players were treated to the best of Qatari hospitality… from a banquet to a magic show!

The players were treated to the best of Qatari hospitality… from a banquet to a magic show!

 Agnieszka Radwanska – known to her peers as “the Ninja” – had a few tricks up her sleeves, too.

Agnieszka Radwanska – known to her peers as “the Ninja” – had a few tricks up her sleeves, too.

Kerber came up to the stage for a magical demonstration.

Kerber came up to the stage for a magical demonstration.

Halep looked a little skeptical…

Halep looked a little skeptical…

…which Radwanska found to be hilarious.

…which Radwanska found to be hilarious.

After the show and the speeches, Kristina Mladenovic and Elena Vesnina were ready for some food.

After the show and the speeches, Kristina Mladenovic and Elena Vesnina were ready for some food.

Mladenovic kept a watchful eye over Belinda Bencic and Caroline Garcia, too.

Mladenovic kept a watchful eye over Belinda Bencic and Caroline Garcia, too.

Caroline Wozniacki stopped for a chat with Nasser Al-Khelaifi, president of the Qatar Tennis Federation.

Caroline Wozniacki stopped for a chat with Nasser Al-Khelaifi, president of the Qatar Tennis Federation.

Garbiñe Muguruza was all smiles by the end of the night.

Garbiñe Muguruza was all smiles by the end of the night.

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Wozniacki Returns To Winning Ways

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

DOHA, Qatar – Caroline Wozniacki survived a late wobble on Monday evening to edge past Ana Konjuh and into the second round of the Qatar Total Open.

Watch live action from Doha & Acapulco this week on WTA Live powered by TennisTV!

Success has proven hard to come by for Wozniacki this year, and getting over the finishing line against a hungry young opponent proved anything but straightforward.

Having weathered an early storm, the former World No.1, appeared to be cruising towards victory at 5-2 in the final set. However, liberated by the apparent hopelessness of the situation, Konjuh started to swing from the hip, clawing her way back level before eventually succumbing, 4-6, 6-3, 7-5.

By the time one of her thumping forehands finally found the tape, the Croatian had saved eight match points and put Wozniacki and her camp through the emotional wringer.

“It’s the first match and you just want to get going,” Wozniacki said in her on-court interview. “I wasn’t hitting it well, and she was, but then I was 5-2 up in the third set. But I thought we’d give the crowd a little bit more excitement!”

After a sluggish start, the Dane tightened things up in the second set – in which she coughed up just four unforced errors – to turn the tide. She admitted that a faster start will be required next time out, when she takes on Daria Gavrilova, an impressive 6-1, 6-1 winner over Misaki Doi.

“Hopefully the next match is going to be better and I’ll get a better start,” Wozniacki said. “I’ve practiced with her a couple of times, but I’ve never played against her in a match.

“Yeah, she’s a fighter. She likes to come with a lot of different shots out there and she’s going to have you play that extra point.”

In the preceding match, Roberta Vinci celebrated her first day as a member of the Top 10 with a near-faultless 6-2, 6-1 victory over Lesia Tsurenko. Also advancing was her fellow Italian, Sara Errani, a 1-6, 7-5, 6-3 winner over Tsvetana Pironkova.

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Insider Notebook: Qatar Kicks Off

Insider Notebook: Qatar Kicks Off

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

– Roberta Vinci ends the seed drought: On the day she makes her top 10 debut, No.9 seed Vinci snags the first win for a seed in the Middle East this year, beating Lesia Tsurenko 6-2, 6-1 in the first round of the Qatar Total Open.

– Eight is not enough: 18-year-old Ana Konjuh saved eight match points against No.13 seed Caroline Wozniacki, but eventually lost 4-6, 6-3, 7-5 in Doha. It was a much needed win for Wozniacki, who fell out of the Top 20 on Monday. She plays Daria Gavrilova in the second round.

– Rankings news in Doha: A few notes on what’s at stake in Doha (read our full preview here):
– Angelique Kerber will remain at No.2 unless Agnieszka Radwanska wins the title.
– Simona Halep and Garbiñe Muguruza need to advance to the final for a chance to move to No.3.
– Muguruza will overtake Halep if she finishes one round better.
– Maria Sharapova will be at No.6 unless Belinda Bencic makes the quarterfinal, Petra Kvitova makes the QF, Vinci makes the semifinal, or Carla Suárez Navarro makes the final.
– Defending champion Lucie Safarova needs to make the final for a chance to get back into the Top 10.
– Caroline Wozniacki needs to make the final for a chance to return to the Top 20.

– Dark horse doubles: Could Elena Vesnina and Daria Kasatkina be a dark horse doubles team for Russia in Rio? Vesnina has not been playing doubles with Ekaterina Makarova and has paired up with Kasatkina with good success over the last few months. Keep an eye on them.

– Who’s on first?: Here’s a confusing, but ultimately telling exchange between Wozniacki and a reporter in Doha:

Q. If the world ends tomorrow, what tennis match would you chose, to play or to see?
CAROLINE WOZNIACKI: If I had to choose a match.

Q. To play or to see a tennis match?
CAROLINE WOZNIACKI: To play.

Q. Who?
CAROLINE WOZNIACKI: Who?

Q. Yeah.
CAROLINE WOZNIACKI: What game I would like to play?

Q. Yeah.
CAROLINE WOZNIACKI: The US Open finals.

Q. Against?
CAROLINE WOZNIACKI: Someone I beat. So if I win, I don’t care who I play against. Doesn’t matter.

– Tricky conditions in Doha: Here’s how Vinci saw it after her opening round win: “So windy. The court is little bit strange. Sometimes it’s fast. Sometimes it’s slow. Completely different than Dubai the last week.”

Eugenie Bouchard

– How “open” is “open”?: Agnieszka Radwanska was asked about the perceived parity in the women’s game right now. “Of course Serena is always there, especially last year, but other years totally different,” Radwanska said in Doha. “She’s definitely dominating if she’s on fire. When she’s playing her best tennis, she just playing unbelievable and too good, but otherwise it’s open.”

– Radwanska and Halep planning for Fed Cup: Both women told reporters in Doha that they were planning to play in their respective April ties in hopes of keeping their countries in World Group I. Halep’s Romanian side takes on Germany at home. “Yeah, I can say 50/50,” Halep said, when asked to handicap the tie, before joking “And 51 for us.”

– Experience matters: Garbiñe Muguruza has been very conscious of the perils of early success. Just weeks after making he first Slam final at Wimbledon last year, she was already telling me how worried she was about a let-down. Six months later, you can still tell it’s on her mind.

“I don’t think there’s an age to reach the top,” she said in Doha. “I think it’s great when you’re playing good. But being young and also having success, it can be very good and it can be very bad.

“We’ve seen some cases, you’re young and you’re like, I’m playing good, I’m doing a lot of things. But it’s also hard because you’re not as mature. Like Angelique Kerber said, she can maybe handle more or she’s used to more.

“It’s a very thin line there keeping that balance. With time, you can deal better with that.”

– Steve Tignor for Tennis.com on last week’s “Decimation in Dubai.”

Where some see chaos, we see an opportunity to watch lesser-known favorites get a shot at a title and gain some momentum. To me, Strycova, with her mix of melodrama and resourcefulness, is an underrated entertainer; maybe she can build on this run. If you’re interested enough, there’s always a storyline to follow.

On balance, I find upsets exciting, and I like a tour where rank-and-file players aren’t scared to challenge the elite. But I also like to see an elite. The two losses in Dubai that were dispiriting were those of Halep and Muguruza.

– Bustle.com has a nice look back on how women’s tennis has changed through the years.

Victoria Azarenka’s dispatch for SI.com on the Super Bowl and understanding the pressures of being an elite athlete.

– Tweet of the Week: It’s still early, but this exchange between Andrea Hlavackova and Jiri Fencl (coach of Hlavackova’s doubles partner Lucie Hradecka) was wonderful:

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Champions Corner: Sara Errani

Champions Corner: Sara Errani

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Sara Errani was as shocked as anyone on Sunday, as she routed Barbora Strycova 6-0, 6-2 to win the biggest title of her career at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships. The title, the ninth of her career, capped off a surprising week in Dubai, which saw the 28-year-old Italian rebound from a poor start to the season and emerge from a decimated draw that saw upsets after upsets, day after day.

After finishing inside the Top 20 for the fourth consecutive year, Errani had struggled to string together wins before Dubai. Entering the tournament she had just two wins on the tour level – both in Sydney – and was coming off an 0-2 weekend in Fed Cup, where she lost to Caroline Garcia and Kristina Mladenovic. Errani said after that Fed Cup weekend, she considered withdrawing from Dubai.

“Yeah, [I thought about] maybe taking two or three weeks to just relax, try to recharge the energy and everything,” Errani told reporters. “But in the end with my coach we think it, and he say, Come on. Let’s go. You are ready to suffer. You are ready to fight.

“This is important. Doesn’t matter how it goes. If it goes Love and Love in the first round, doesn’t matter for me. I just want to go there and try to do the best that we can because there are many weeks that you don’t feel 100%. So you just have to be ready to whatever comes.”

Errani couldn’t have asked for a better draw in Dubai to get her confidence back in check. She opened with back-to-back wins over qualifiers Zhang Saisai and Yaroslava Shvedova, before rallying to beat Madison Brengle in three sets and then rolling past Elina Svitolina and Strycova. Errani will be back in the Top 20 on Monday.

Sara Errani

“There is no explanation,” Errani said, when asked about her turnaround week. “Of course you work to be ready to the matches, but you never know which days you can play better or worse.

“The only thing I know is that I was ready to suffer, to stay on the court also in bad moments, or when I was not playing really good and just stay there. This is my mentally always. I know that doesn’t matter if you play good, bad, or whatever. Just the more important thing is just to stay there and try your best.”

But Errani may be selling herself short when she dismissed any explanation for her title run. After all, the theme of last week was resilience, and if you want to put a finer point on it, Italian resilience. Errani’s win kick-started a banner three days for the Italian veterans on tour, as 35-year-old Francesca Schiavone won her first title in nearly three years at the Rio Open, and 33-year-old Roberta Vinci became the oldest woman to make her top 10 debut. Who would have thought any of these results were in the cards 12 months ago.

“I can come here and lose first round, but if I try, everything is good for me,” Errani explained. “Doesn’t matter. You never know what can happen.

“Even in 2012, never thinking to do a final in Roland Garros and then it comes. So you cannot have objectives before because maybe can come something more or something worse.”

WTA Insider caught up with Errani after her triumph in Dubai for a quick chat before she was whisked away by the tournament director for more handshakes and congratulations. She was, undoubtedly, the woman of the hour.

Sara Errani

WTA Insider: How does it feel to win such a big title in Dubai?
Errani: It’s amazing for me. It’s the biggest title that I won in my life so I’m really happy for sure.

WTA Insider: You actually considered not playing Dubai this week after a tough pair of losses at Fed Cup. What changed your mind?
Errani: Yeah. It was a tough moment and my coach and I were thinking to rest some weeks to recover the energy. Then we decided to come and it was really good for me.

WTA Insider: You came to Dubai with just two wins this season. I think it’s fair to say no one saw this result coming. How surprised are you?
Errani: I’m really surprised. Even in the first round I was down 5-1 in the first set to Zhang so there were tough moments throughout the week. But I’m really happy.

WTA Insider: What will a win like this do for your confidence going forward?
Errani: Of course, winning matches at a tournament like this is nice for my tennis. I hope to continue, to improve more, and make more results.

WTA Insider: You said you were experiencing some “tough moments” after Fed Cup that almost kept you out of this tournament. Can you explain what was going on?
Errani: Ah, that is something that will stay with me and my family and my team, so sorry, I will not speak about this.

WTA Insider: At the end of last season, when you spoke to your coach about the season, what was your assessment?
Errani: It was a good year for me. I finished in the Top 20, I won a tournament in Rio. It was not the best year for me but I had some good results so I was happy about that.

WTA Insider: So what was your mentality going into 2016?
Errani: Just to improve, to keep going, to improve every day. to put the good work in the pre-season and try to be ready for the next year.

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Inside The Racquet Bags

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

Ever wonder what Agnieszka Radwanska, Caroline Wozniacki and Petra Kvitova carry with them on court inside their racquet bags? Find out right here!

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Radwanska Meets The Press

  • Posted: Jan 01, 1970

DOHA, Qatar – On Monday, Agnieszka Radwanska met the press ahead of the Premier 5 level event in Doha, the Qatar Total Open, and she discussed everything from her strong start to the season, her Fed Cup plans and the next generation of tennis. Here’s what the World No.3 had to say…

On her red-hot start to the season, which saw her win a title in Shenzhen and reach the semifinals at the Australian Open…
“I had very good start, and I just hope I can keep going and playing the same good tennis I was playing in Australia. I have a good rest after that. I was practicing at home and working hard. Hopefully I can really do well here.”

On the challenge of the “openness” of the women’s game…
“For us, for some players that being in the Top 10 for a while, it’s also tough to stay there. There are a lot of talented, young players coming up and playing great tennis. This is another challenge for us to stay there.

There’s a lot of players deserve to be Top 10. We can also see everything is changing every week about the majors as well.”

On how Serena Williams’ dominance affects that openness…
“Of course Serena is always there, especially last year, but other years totally different. She’s definitely dominating if she’s on fire. When she’s playing her best tennis, she just playing unbelievable and too good, but otherwise it’s open.”

On her plans to play in Poland’s Fed Cup tie against Taiwan…
“I want to help my team in April to stay in that World Group, so this is my plan and I hope I can play that. Of course we can see individually busy schedule and tight schedule because of the Olympics, so I really want to stay healthy the whole year. But here we have match at home, so I’m ready to play.”

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