Tag Archives: WTA

Jessica Pegula vs. Anastasia Potapova | 2023 Miami Round of 16 | WTA Match Highlights – WTA

  1. Jessica Pegula vs. Anastasia Potapova | 2023 Miami Round of 16 | WTA Match Highlights WTA
  2. Bianca Andreescu exits Miami Open in wheelchair after suffering agonizing injury: ‘Worst pain I’ve ever felt’ Fox News
  3. Elena Rybakina emulates one impressive Serena Williams feat Tennis World USA
  4. Tennis Superstar Bianca Andreescu Shares Heartfelt Message On Twitter Hours After Suffering Gruesome Injury BroBible
  5. “One of the things you just don’t know why”: Former Federer coach Annacone sends best wishes to Andreescu TennisUpToDate.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Jessica Pegula vs. Magna Linette | 2023 Miami Round of 16 | WTA Match Highlights – WTA

  1. Jessica Pegula vs. Magna Linette | 2023 Miami Round of 16 | WTA Match Highlights WTA
  2. WATCH: Coco Andreescu makes Tennis Channel debut with proud mom Bianca at Miami Open Tennis Magazine
  3. Anastasia Potapova: I just let it go, did not think what Cori Gauff was going to do Tennis World USA
  4. Martina Trevisan vs Jelena Ostapenko | 2023 Miami Round of 16 | WTA Match Highlights WTA
  5. Andreescu and Stubbs praise Hurkacz for apologizing to Kokkinakis and his box after defeating him: “The cutest and nicest dude on tour” TennisUpToDate.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Maria Sakkari vs. Aryna Sabalenka | 2023 Indian Wells Semifinal | WTA Match Highlights – WTA

  1. Maria Sakkari vs. Aryna Sabalenka | 2023 Indian Wells Semifinal | WTA Match Highlights WTA
  2. “They have no idea what the problem is”: Sabalenka-Sakkari showdown delayed by technical issue Tennis Magazine
  3. BNP Paribas Open: Barbora Krejcikova and Katerina Sinikova reach women’s doubles final Desert Sun
  4. ATP/WTA Quarterfinals By-The-Numbers: One Teenager Left Standing, Medvedev And Swiatek Still Can’t Lose bnpparibasopen.com
  5. How to Watch BNP Paribas Open, WTA Semifinals, ATP/WTA Doubles Semifinals: Stream Tennis Live, TV Channel Sports Illustrated
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Jelena Ostapenko vs. Aryna Sabalenka | 2023 Dubai Round of 16 | WTA Match Highlights – WTA

  1. Jelena Ostapenko vs. Aryna Sabalenka | 2023 Dubai Round of 16 | WTA Match Highlights WTA
  2. “They running from Iga” – Tennis fans react as yet another of Iga Swiatek’s opponents withdraws from match-up in Dubai Sportskeeda
  3. Iga Swiatek vs. Liudmila Samsonova | 2023 Dubai Round of 16 | WTA Match Highlights WTA
  4. Aryna Sabalenka wants to dominate like Steffi Graf and Serena Williams Gulf News
  5. “When a male player does this, they are regarded the GOAT”: Tennis fans defend Iga Swiatek from accusations of making the WTA ‘boring’ with dominance Sportskeeda
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Zhu Lin vs. Venus Williams | 2023 Auckland | WTA Match Highlights – WTA

  1. Zhu Lin vs. Venus Williams | 2023 Auckland | WTA Match Highlights WTA
  2. WTA Auckland Day 4 Predictions Including Coco Gauff vs Sofia Kenin Last Word On Sports
  3. Coco Gauff vs Sofia Kenin: Where to watch, TV schedule, live streaming details and more | ASB Classic 2023 Sportskeeda
  4. Live updates: ASB Classic women’s tournament at Auckland’s ASB Tennis Centre, Day Four Newshub
  5. ‘Holding on to My Seat..’ – 42-Year-Old Venus Williams Turns Nostalgic as She Remembers Retired Sister Serena Williams’ Final Glory EssentiallySports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Jessica Pegula vs. Sloane Stephens | 2022 Guadalajara Quarterfinal | WTA Match Highlights – WTA

  1. Jessica Pegula vs. Sloane Stephens | 2022 Guadalajara Quarterfinal | WTA Match Highlights WTA
  2. Veronika Kudermetova vs Maria Sakkari Prediction, Betting Tips & Odds │22 OCTOBER, 2022 Telecom Asia
  3. Guadalajara Open 2022: Jessica Pegula vs Sloane Stephens preview, head-to-head, prediction, odds and pick Sportskeeda
  4. Victoria Azarenka vs. Coco Gauff | 2022 Guadalajara Quarterfinal | WTA Match Highlights WTA
  5. Paula Badosa, Belinda Bencic, Elena Rybakina all out of WTA Finals race after defeats in Guadalajara Eurosport COM
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Caroline Garcia, 28, tops Coco Gauff at US Open to reach first Grand Slam semifinal; faces Ons Jabeur next

NEW YORK — Caroline Garcia never really let Coco Gauff — or the crowd — get fully involved in their US Open quarterfinal Tuesday night.

From early on, Garcia played high-stakes tennis and put strokes where she wanted, sometimes right at Gauff’s feet, sometimes well out of reach. In contrast to the early success Gauff, still just 18, has experienced, it’s been a long journey for Garcia, who now gets to play in the first Grand Slam semifinal of her career at age 28.

The 17th-seeded Garcia took charge at the start and never relented in a 6-3, 6-4 victory over the 12th-seeded Gauff at Arthur Ashe Stadium.

“I just go for my shots,” Garcia said, “even when I’m stressed.”

She had lost both of her two previous matches against Gauff, who was the runner-up at the French Open in June, but was by far the better player this time.

“Her level was great and I knew it was going to be great coming in, and I feel like I didn’t play at the level I needed to come out with the win today — but overall I’m super proud of myself for this tournament,” Gauff said. “But I’m hungry for more, so maybe next year.”

Garcia, who is from France, hasn’t ceded a set at Flushing Meadows so far this year and stretched her winning streak to 13 matches overall, solidifying her status as someone playing as well as anyone in women’s tennis at the moment.

She finished last season ranked 74th, but now is projected to rise into the top 10 next week.

“The last couple of months,” Garcia said, “I feel healthy again.”

She will face Wimbledon runner-up Ons Jabeur of Tunisia on Thursday with a berth in the final at stake.

“I’m looking forward to the next challenge and what I can achieve,” Garcia said.

Jabeur became the first woman representing an African nation to make the semifinals at the US Open during the professional era with a 6-4, 7-6 (4) victory over the player who beat Serena Williams in the third round, Ajla Tomljanovic.

Jabeur said her run to the title match at the All England Club allowed her to “believe more in myself” and realize, “I had it in me that I can win a Grand Slam.”

Tomljanovic exchanged a lengthy hug at the net with Jabeur, who is a close friend, following the match.

“Just trying to do my job and hopefully I inspire more and more generations from Africa,” Jabeur said. “It really means a lot to me.”

In the Garcia versus Gauff match, it was 4-0 merely 17 minutes in, as spectators were still filing in. All in all, there was less vociferous support for Gauff than she heard in her previous victory in Ashe.

During that fairly perfect start, Garcia capped one 17-stroke exchange with a down-the-line forehand winner. She raised a fist and held that pose while looking at her guest box, where her father and coach were on their feet. It was a sequence that would be repeated.

Both are big servers: Gauff hit the fastest by a woman in the tournament this year, at 128 mph; Garcia leads the WTA in aces in 2022. Each delivered one at 117 mph in her opening service game.

But it was Garcia who read Gauff’s offerings far more effectively. Garcia often returned deep enough to seemingly startle Gauff, who rushed some responses. After one of several attempted replies by Gauff settled in the net, she jutted her racket toward the ground, as if to indicate: “Why do these keep landing right there?!”

That sort of constant pressure, and Garcia’s tendency to stay way inside the baseline to receive second serves, could have contributed to Gauff’s six double faults.

Garcia also quickly gained the upper hand from the baseline with her clean, crisp strokes. During a brief TV interview on the way from the locker room to the court, Garcia had said she hoped to be “more aggressive.”

She certainly was.

In a nod to her volleying expertise — something she has displayed in doubles, where she has won two Grand Slam titles with French partner Kristina Mladenovic — Garcia moved forward whenever an opening presented itself. She wound up winning 13 of 16 points when she went to the net.

Rather than fearing, and trying to stay away from, Gauff’s stronger backhand side, Garcia went after it, drawing repeated mistakes.

“I had a lot of unforced errors today; I think I had a couple of balls where I could have finished the point, especially when she was coming to the net — I missed a lot of passing shots when they were open,” Gauff said. “I think I just need to cut back on [the unforced errors], especially when you’re playing an aggressive player like Caroline — you can’t make that many unforced errors.”

Gauff occasionally would show a bit of frustration at her play, slapping herself on the thigh or knocking her racket on a courtside towel holder. She was trying to become the youngest American woman in the US Open semifinals since Serena Williams won her first Grand Slam title in New York in 1999 at age 17.

Garcia would not allow it.

The Associated Press and ESPN Stats & Information contributed to this report.

Read original article here

Top-ranked Iga Swiatek questions why US Open still uses different tennis balls for men and women

Reigning world No. 1 and two-time major champion Iga Swiatek called the balls used at the US Open “horrible” during a news conference at the Western & Southern Open this week, and questioned why women and men use different balls at the tennis major. It is the only Grand Slam tournament not to use the same balls for all players.

“I don’t know why they are different than men’s ones,” Swiatek said on Wednesday. “I don’t know, like, 15 years ago probably women had some elbow injuries because the balls were heavier and they changed them to women’s balls, but right now we are so physically well prepared that I don’t think it would happen. Plus we can’t get those balls in Europe, or actually, when we buy them at store, they are totally different than the tournament balls, so when I’m practicing with US Open balls at home [in Poland], I’m practicing with men’s ones …

“I feel, it’s really hard to control [the women’s balls], but everybody has same conditions, so we are trying to deal with that. I don’t get why they are different, honestly.”

The balls are also used during the lead-in swing, including the Western & Southern Open and last week’s Canadian Open. Swiatek, who had a 37-match win streak earlier this season, lost in the round of 16 to Madison Keys on Thursday in Cincinnati, and fell in the same round in Toronto.

Players have complained about the difference among one another, Swiatek said, and she and Paula Badosa, currently ranked No. 4, spoke to WTA CEO and chairman Steve Simon last year and asked whether they could switch to use the same ball as the men.

“I don’t think it would be a problem because it’s still the same company, it’s Wilson, but, yeah, maybe we should push a bit more,” Swiatek said. “I stopped actually pushing and trying to convince WTA, because the war in Ukraine happened and I refocused on something else. Yeah, but honestly, any tournament I play with these balls, I didn’t feel well.”

In a statement to ESPN, Amy Binder, the WTA’s senior vice president of global communications, said the organization was listening to player concerns and would explore the matter further.

“The WTA has always utilized regular felt balls for hardcourt play, and we have now begun to hear from a select number of our athletes that they would like to consider a change to using the extra duty ball,” Binder said. “The basis behind using the regular felt ball was that it limited the potential of arm, shoulder, elbow and wrist injuries. This is something that we will continue to monitor and discuss further with both our athletes and our sports science teams.”

Swiatek is not the first to publicly voice her displeasure about the ball disparity. Former world No. 1 Ashleigh Barty’s longtime coach Craig Tyzzer told reporters after her Australian Open victory earlier this year that Barty would never win the US Open with the current balls. Barty has since retired from tennis.

“The US Open really needs to change the ball for the girls, the fact they still use a different ball for guys and girls, it’s a terrible ball for someone like Ash,” Tyzzer said in January. “It was the only tournament last year and really for two years where she uses a gut racket, but I had to change her to a poly just to get any sort of control of the ball. If they keep that ball the same, no one like Ash will win that tournament.

“So I think you see the result at the US Open, it was two players who, you go, ‘Wow, that was, two different players won that?’ There’s no surprise when the ball is like it is.”

Five of the previous seven US Open women’s champions, including reigning victor Emma Raducanu, have been first-time major winners. The 2022 US Open gets underway on Aug. 29 in New York with Swiatek as the top seed.

Read original article here

Wimbledon finalist Elena Rybakina pushes back on questions over Russian ties, says she’s ‘happy’ to rep Kazakhstan

LONDON — After advancing to the Wimbledon final with a 6-3, 6-3 victory over Simona Halep on Thursday, Elena Rybakina was faced with questions about her ties to Russia, despite representing Kazakhstan.

Rybakina, 23, was born and raised in Moscow, and originally represented Russia, but switched to represent Kazakhstan in 2018 in order to gain additional funding for her career. But with Wimbledon’s controversial ban of Russian and Belarusian players, due to the ongoing invasion of Ukraine, Rybakina’s country of origin has become of interest.

Having been asked about her connection to Russia throughout the tournament, Rybakina was brief in her responses on the topic after her semifinal match.

“I’m playing already for Kazakhstan for a long time,” Rybakina said. “I’m really happy representing Kazakhstan. They believed in me. There is no more question about how I feel. It’s just already long time my journey as a Kazak player. I played Olympics, Fed Cup.”

Believed to still live and train primarily in the Russian capital, Rybakina didn’t answer a question directly from a reporter about her current residence.

“I think I’m based on tour because I’m traveling every week,” Rybakina said. “I think most of the time I spend on tour. I practice in Slovakia between the tournaments. I had camps in Dubai. So I don’t live anywhere, to be honest.”

Rybakina said she felt badly for the Russian players who were unable to participate but didn’t say if she was in touch with any of them, or had heard from them during her run. Instead she said she hadn’t been checking her phone often.

Ranked No. 23 in the world, Rybakina became the first player representing Kazakhstan to reach a major final. She will take on Ons Jabeur, another first-time Grand Slam finalist, on Saturday with the Wimbledon title on the line.

The Duchess of Cambridge is expected to present the trophy to the champion.

Read original article here

Simona Halep cruises into Wimbledon quarterfinals; Amanda Anisimova ends Harmony Tan’s run

Simona Halep is living up to her status as the only former Grand Slam champion left in this year’s women’s draw.

The Romanian beat fourth-seeded Paula Badosa 6-1, 6-2 on Centre Court on Monday to return to the Wimbledon quarterfinals and extend her winning streak at the All England Club to 11 matches.

Halep will next face 20th-ranked American Amanda Anisimova, who ended Harmony Tan’s time at Wimbledon with a 6-2, 6-3 victory. The 115th-ranked Tan, from France, had become one of the toasts of the tournament after a remarkable run that included ousting seven-time Wimbledon champion Serena Williams in the first round.

It is Anisimova’s first Grand Slam quarterfinal since the semis at the French Open in 2019, when she also beat Tan along the way. Anisimova, 20, lost in the first round of Wimbledon last year.

The 16th-seeded Halep won the title in 2019 but missed last year’s edition with a left calf injury, while the 2020 tournament was canceled because of the pandemic. This was, however, Halep’s first win over a top-five ranked player on grass.

“I worked really hard in the past two, three months. I’m really happy with all that I’ve done,” Halep said. “I got the confidence. I really feel this is my game. I’m pushing myself to do it as much as possible. I want to improve still.”

The former No. 1, who also won the French Open in 2018, has yet to drop a set in this year’s tournament and consistently got the better of Badosa in the baseline rallies. She finished with only nine unforced errors and saved the only break point she faced.

“I was just missing,” Badosa said. “Some days it goes in the line. And some days, like today, all of them go out.”

Badosa’s loss means No. 3 Ons Jabeur is the only top-10 seed left in the women’s tournament.

Halep, 30, has said the injury made her consider retirement. There doesn’t seem to be any thought of that now.

“It means a lot that I’m back in a quarterfinals after I struggled so much with injuries and self-confidence,” Halep said. “But, as I said, I’m working hard every day. I feel like if I do that, I will get better. Actually I’m really happy with the way I’m playing. I’m really confident. It’s a pleasure to be on court.”

Ajla Tomljanovic, meanwhile, came from a set down to beat Alize Cornet and reach her second straight Wimbledon quarterfinal. The Australian won 4-6, 6-4, 6-3 on No. 2 Court to set up a meeting with Elena Rybakina, and was in tears after a grueling match that lasted 2 hours, 35 minutes.

“I didn’t really think I could do it,” said Tomljanovic, who lost to eventual champion Ash Barty in last year’s quarterfinals. “I can’t believe a year later I’m in the same position.”

Cornet, 32, ended No. 1 Iga Swiatek’s 37-match winning streak in the previous round. The French veteran was playing in her 62nd straight Grand Slam tournament — equaling the WTA record held by Ai Sugiyama — and 65th overall, but only reached her first major quarterfinal at the Australian Open this year.

Rybakina reached the Wimbledon quarterfinals for the first time after beating Petra Martic 7-5, 6-3.

The 17th-seeded Rybakina broke in the final game of the first set and then again for a 4-2 lead in the second. She finished with 26 winners to 13 for her opponent.

Rybakina reached the French Open quarterfinals last year, when she made the fourth round at Wimbledon in her first appearance at the All England Club.

Martic was playing Wimbledon for the 10th time but has never been past the fourth round.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Read original article here