Sunday, April 15, 2018

Wk.15- Schmiedy Is As Schmiedy Does

My, what a long, strange trip back it's been for Schmiedy. But she made it. Finally.



Three seasons ago, Anna Karolina Schmiedlova was one of the NextGen "players to watch." She reached the 2012 Roland Garros girls final in 2012, then quickly became a Top 75 pro player in '13 and '14. In 2015 she was challenging for the WTA Top 20. That season the Slovak, just 20 years old for most of the year, reached six tour singles semifinals, played in three finals, winning two (on hard and clay courts), advanced to her second career slam 3rd Round (U.S. Open), defeated four Top 20 players, posted her first Top 10 win (then-#6 Wozniacki), and attained her highest ranking (#26 in October) late in the year.

And then things went bad. Real bad.

Showing just how much of a role confidence plays in the (sometimes) wild swings of fortune of up-and-coming tennis stars, AKS's "would-be breakthrough" 2016 season started slowly, then snowballed in a hurry. A near double-bagel loss to Monica Puig in Sydney, 6-1/6-0, sent her down the steep slope. She didn't win a tour-level match between mid-January and July, dropping sixteen consecutive matches in WTA/WTA 125 events, all but three of them in straight sets. While she found some measure of hope during the stretch with a 2-2 record in Fed Cup play, the die was cast for a season that would forever be known for what it wasn't rather than what it had been hoped it would be. She ended the year in which she was *supposed* to crack the Top 20 ranked outside the *Top 200*. After a brief stretch of mediocrity in the early summer, AKS had another four match losing streak, which included a 3rd set TB loss to Alona Ostapenko in Cincinnati nine months before the Latvian would win Roland Garros. She finished '16 on a 2-9 bender, finishing her season a combined 6-28 in pro events (aside from her four FC matches) even while her two tour-level singles trophies had barely had time to collect a layer of dust on her mantle back home.

But Schmiedy didn't give up, or give in, no matter how easy it may have been to do so.

Seeking to rebuild her confidence from the ground up, she gradually found her way plying her trade on the lower levels of the ITF challenger circuit last season. She reached a QF in the $100K event in Midland in February, but mostly rediscovered her footing in $25K events. She followed up Midland with a semifinal in her next event on hard court, then did it again on clay in the Wiesbaden $25K in early May, even as her ranking slipped outside the Top 250. She finally broke through in June, winning back-to-back $25K titles, and reaching another final during the summer. She fell one set short of qualifying at Flushing Meadows, but soon after reached a $60K semi, and won an $80K in late October to get her season-ending ranking up to #133.

With perhaps a new lease on her tennis life, Schmiedlova made it through qualifying in Melbourne. She lost a 1st Rounder to Dasha Kasatkina, but it was still her first slam MD match since the '16 U.S. Open. A SF result at a $60K challenger in Zhuhai (she lost to superteen Marta Kostyuk) set the stage for her April attempt to reestablish a foothold on the WTA tour. Last week in Monterrey, she nearly recorded her first WTA MD win since October '16, falling to Ajla Tomljanovic after having led 6-3 in the deciding TB. After failing to convert three MP, she saw the Aussie win the match's final five points to get the win.

Still, she was *close." All she needed was for a few things to go her way in Bogota. And they did.

Coming in ranked #132, Schmiedlova drew 2016 tournament champ Irina Falconi in the 1st Round. After winning a tight 1st set, her game fell apart in the 2nd. She lost the set a love, committing six double-faults, winning just 43% of her service points, and going 0-for-3 on break points chances. But AKS surged back to claim the 3rd 6-1 to get her first WTA win in a year and a half. It wasn't easy, and she needed some extra support. But the proverbial hump had finally been traversed.



Other than having to clear one last hurdle on Sunday, she never looked back.

Down went Mexican qualifier Renata Zarazua in straight sets, then on-fire Colombian teen Emiliana Arango was hobbled and forced to retire in the 2nd set of their QF match-up as AKS reached her first tour-level semi since Seoul in September '15. #7-seed Ana Bogdan, playing in her second tour SF in two weeks, was sent out 3 & 2, placing Schmiedlova in her first final in thirty-three months.

Against #5 seed Lara Arruabarrena, another former Bogota champion (2012, and the '17 runner-up), the Slovak was broken in her first serve game. But the two traded breaks of serve over the first four games, after which AKS got the first hold to lead 3-2. Soon, she led 6-2/5-1, with the Spaniard having yet to hold serve all day, and held a MP on her own serve. She didn't get the win there, then likely had her amazing comeback week flash before her eyes as she failed to serve out the match again two games later. But with things back on serve at 5-4, she broke the Spaniard to seal the win and claim her first tour title since winning #2 in Bucharest in July '15.

So, add another entry to the tour's ever expanding 2018 "storytime hour," as perseverance finally paid off for Schmiedlova, as did the loyalty of her coach, Milan Martinec, who stuck with her through the bad times. The Slovak offered her thanks in her post-match acceptance speech. "He was with me in the bad times, now he's with me in the better times," she said.



Having reached four tour finals, with a 3-1 record in them, since 2015, as well as having seven SF-plus results over that span and winning three ITF titles, Schmiedlova's career top-level numbers in recent seasons don't look too bad on the surface.

But numbers can sometimes be oh so deceiving.

Schmiedlova has earned her warrior stripes the last three seasons. Hail the conquering (again) Slovak. It's nice to have ol' Schmiedy back.





*WEEK 15 CHAMPIONS*
BOGOTA, COLOMBIA (Int'l/Red Clay)
S: Anna Karolina Schmiedlova/SVK def. Lara Arruabarrena/ESP 6-2/6-4
D: Dalila Jakupovic/Irina Khromacheva (SLO/RUS) d. Mariana Duque/Nadia Podoroska (COL/ARG) 6-3/6-4
LUGANO, SWITZERLAND (Int'l/Red Clay)
S: Elise Mertens/BEL def. Aryna Sabalenka/BLR 7-5/6-2
D: Kirsten Flipkens/Elise Mertens (BEL/BEL) d. Vera Lapko/Aryna Sabalenka (BLR/BLR) 6-1/6-3


PLAYER OF THE WEEK: Elise Mertens/BEL
...well, Mertens is truly one of this season's movers-and-shakers, isn't she?



Through the first three and a half months of 2018, the Waffle has defended her maiden tour singles title in Hobart, and swept to the doubles championship in the event, as well. She notched her first career Top 5 win (Svitolina) in Melbourne on her way to her first slam semifinal in just her fifth appearance in the MD of a major. It all got her her first Top 20 ranking. While she slumped a bit after the Australian Open, going 2-4 in MD tour matches, she returned to her "Belgian Rumble" form on the clay in Lugano. After an opening win over Mandy Minella, Mertens took down defending champion Marketa Vondrousova (though, to be fair, that was when the tournament was an indoor hardcourt event), then managed to survive a pair of three-setters on Saturday (due to numerous rain-outs during the week) against both Mona Barthel and Vera Lapko. In the singles final, she defeated Aryna Sabalenka 7-5/6-2 to win her third career title, and will climb to another new career high (#17) this week. Oh, but that wasn't all -- Mertens swept both titles AGAIN, claiming the WD with countrywoman Kirsten Flipkens in a straight sets win over two of the players Elise defeated in singles, Sabalenka & Lapko.

It was a long, mostly-backloaded, week. But it was surely worth the effort.


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RISERS: Aryna Sabalenka/BLR, Lara Arruabarrena/ESP and Ana Bogdan/ROU
...Sabalenka may eventually be the Top 10 player that her talent and competitiveness say she might be, but the 19-year old will have to remain content with a gradual climb up the WTA ranking ladder. At least for this week. The Belarusian put together her second career WTA singles final run (w/ Tianjin '17) in Lugano, knocking off Mihaela Buzarnescu, Polona Hercog, Camila Giorgi and Stefanie Voegele (she played both matches, as well as one in doubles, on Saturday after a week of rain delays), as well as reaching her maiden WD final with countrywoman Vera Lapko. In both matches, Sabalenka lost to Elise Mertens. The Belgian defeated her 7-5/6-2 in singles, then (w/ Kirsten Flipkens) 1 & 3 in doubles. Sabalenko and Lapko had defeated the #4 seeded Knoll/Adamczak before losing to the #1 Waffles. Still, Sabalenka will make her Top 50 singles debut on Monday as she heads into the big World Group Playoff match-up with Slovakia next weekend in Minsk as the '17 FC runner-up Belarusians try to stay in the World Group for 2019.



On red clay in Bogota, one week after her hard court semi in Monterrey, Bogdan reached a second consecutive final four stage in a tour-level event. Wins over Mariana Duque, Anna Blinkova (saving a MP) and Daniela Seguel set the Swarmette up for what was an unsuccessful encounter with eventual champion Anna Karolina Schmiedlova, but her week will lift her to a new career high of #66 on Monday.



Arruabarrena hasn't exactly been burning up the courts over the past year. The 26-year old Spaniard arrived in Bogota having not won multiple MD matches in a tour-level event since Eastbourne last summer, and was just 3-8 in such contests in the season's first fourteen weeks. Not only that, but she had a horrific Fed Cup weekend back in February, being on the wrong side of the worst scoreline in World Group play (winning just two games vs. Sara Errani) and being bested by FC newbie Deborah Chiesa in the resurgent Italian squad's win over Team Espana. But Bogota has always been friendly to Arruabarrena. She picked up her maiden WTA singles title there in 2012, returned to the final a year ago, and won a pair of doubles crowns at the event in 2014 and '16. Wins over Victoria Rodriguez, Sara Sorribes Tormo, Johanna Larsson and Dalila Jakupovic got the #79-ranked Spaniard into her third Bogota final this weekend, and she had the chance to become the first '18 WTA singles champ to win a title without dropping a set. It didn't happen for her in the final, though, as Anna Karolina Schmiedlova picked up her first crown in three years via a 6-2/6-4 score, though only after Arruabarrena made things interesting after trailing 6-2/5-1 and facing a MP before *finally* holding serve for the first (and only) time in the entire match.


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SURPRISES: Daniela Seguel/CHI and Tamara Korpatsch/GER
...there were almost too many potential players for this category to count, but let's go with these two (and another, Dalila Jakupovic, who is actually listed in the DOUBLES category) because they managed to string together multiple MD wins while some of the other contenders were held to just one.



Seguel, 25, has racked up fourteen ITF titles in her career, and been a member of Chile's Fed Cup team as far back as 2010. But nothing compares to her week in Bogota. Spurred on by the memory of her father, who died in 2016 watching her play an ITF final, the #191st-ranked woman on tour made it through qualifying and then became the first Chilean to notch a WTA MD win since 1980 (Silvana Urroz in Nagoya) with her 1st Round win over Nicole Gibbs, then followed up to reach the QF after defeating top-seeded Tatjana Maria. Since showing a new commitment to improve her fortunes in the middle of last season, Seguel had already claimed the biggest title of her career ($60K Barcelona last summer), reached a new career high (#189 last summer), and won her first slam qualifying match (AO '18, after saving 3 MP vs. Jamie Loeb). She'll rise to *another* new career-high of #175 this week.

Korpatsch, 22, has made her mark in recent seasons on the ITF circuit, going 6-0 in singles finals from 2015-17. Before this past week, though, she hadn't recorded a tour-level MD win since reaching the QF in Gstaad last July. Back in Switzerland, this time in Lugano, the German reached her second career WTA QF by following up a qualifying run with a win over a retiring #1 seeded Kristina Mladenovic, then fellow qualifier Kathinka von Deichmann. She lost to wild card Stefanie Voegele a round later, but will rise over thirty spots in the new rankings into the Top 145.


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VETERAN: Kirsten Flipkens/BEL
...the 32-year old Waffle had a full week. She began things by shining in singles, winning a pair of three-set matches in Lugano over Carina Witthoeft and Aliaksandra Sasnovich, then ended it by joining forces with countrywoman Elise Mertens to win the doubles title. After winning a 10-1 3rd set TB in the 1st Round over Dzalamidze/Kudermetova, the duo swept the next six sets to claim the crown, defeating Sabalenka/Lapko in the final (Mertens also defeated Sabalenka in the singles final, while Flipkens lost to Lapko in the QF). They're the first #1-seeded doubles team to actually *win* a WTA title this year. Flipkens now has three tour-level WD crowns, with all of them coming since she turned 30 ('16 Seoul w/ Johanna Larsson, and '17 at Rosmalen w/ Cibulkova) in January 2016.


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COMEBACKS: Anna Karolina Schmiedlova/SVK, Stefanie Voegele/SUI and Allie Kiick/USA
...aside from her triumph over her own personal story of recent seasons, AKS three-years-in-the-making return to the winner's circle has made her, at #132, the lowest-ranked tour singles champion of 2018 and the 10th-lowest since the 2012 season. Two of those who were ranked lower than her over that span were also crowned champions in Bogota -- #174 Lara Arruabarrena (AKS' final opponent) in '12 and #168 Francesca Schiavone last year.

She'll be at #84 on Monday, her highest position since her 1st Round U.S. Open loss (to Anastasija Sevastova) in 2016.



Voegele's comeback from her '17 wrist injury added another deep '18 run in Lugano. A first-time tour singles finalist in Acapulco earlier this season, a tournament in which she posted her first Top 20 win (over Sloane Stephens) since 2013, the Swiss posted wins last week over Magdalena Frech, Alize Cornet (saving 2 MP) and Tamara Korpatsch en route the semifinals, where she fell to Aryna Sabalenka. A former Top 50 player (#42 in '13), 28-year old Voegele will jump twenty-three spots into the Top 100 on Monday.



In Pelham, Alabama, 22-year old Bannerette Kiick reached her first final since her return to the court last summer following a two-year break during which she dealt with a bout with mononucleosis, the diagnosis of a rare skin cancer, four knee surgeries and the public acknowledgement of the early-onset Alzheimer's condition of her father Jim, a former running back for the Miami Dolphins. Last summer, while ranked #633, Kiick made headlines with her successful qualifying run at the U.S. Open, when her reached the MD by taking a Q3 match-up with fellow cancer survivor Vicky Duval when she retired in the 2nd set. This past week, Kiick dropped just one set en route to the final, where she lost 2 & love to 16-year old would-be Polish superstar Iga Swiatek.


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FRESH FACES: Vera Lapko/BLR and Renata Zarazua/MEX
...with the tour's high-level Belarusian contingent already three strong, Lapko has gone about securing her spot as #4 in the rotation. The 19-year old's week in Lugano included a qualifying run, her biggest career win over #28 (and '17 finalist) Anett Kontaveit, and additional victories over Danka Kovinic and Kirsten Flipkens to reach her first WTA singles semifinal. Playing with countrywoman Aryna Sabalenka (in what might be a Fed Cup doubles pairing next weekend), Lapko advanced to her second career WTA WD final (the first was with another Belarusian, Olga Govortsova, in Guangzhou in '16), where Flipkens got some measure of revenge, and Mertens served herself up a second helping of Vera, as the Belgian Waffles defeated the Belarusians in straights. The Australian Open junior champ just two seasons ago, Lapko has nearly raised her WTA ranking into the Top 100. She'll be at #111 on Monday.

Weeks after posting her first career tour MD win in Acapulco (over Kristyna Pliskova), 20-year old Zarazua got her second in Bogota. She did it the hard way, too. After winning two matches to qualify, her 1st Round match with Ajla Tomljanovic was one of the many contests played havoc with by the rain. The Mexican was serving while trailing the Aussie 4-5, 15/30 in the 3rd when play was stopped, then returned (eventually) the next day on a back court and somehow found a way to win. The chaos the rain played with the schedule, along with the placement and conclusion of matches, even made her victory, at first, seem to only be an online rumor, as there was debate whether it was an actual result, a hoax or maybe even some sort of Colombian myth. All right, I made that last one up. There really were questions, though, but Zarazua's victory was indeed a fact (even if, as of this weekend, the WTA site's list of up-to-the-minute results still listed Zarazua/Tomljanovic under "Playing" -- with Ajla up 5-4 -- along with the qualifying matches taking place in Zhenghou for this coming week's WTA 125 event). She lost in the 2nd Round to AKS, but Zarazua's name is surely circulating in the suddenly swirling Mexican tennis scene that has seen herself, Victoria Rodriguez, Ana Sofia Sanchez and Giuliana Olmos all playing significant matches in recent weeks. Now, maybe one of them can find a way to make my preseason prediction of a Mexican woman in a 2018 slam singles MD a reality in the coming months. (Crossing fingers.)



Meanwhile, if Poland's top WTA cheer will soon switch over from "Go Aga!" to "Go Iga!" then 16-year old Swiatek is now officially traveling back down that path following an unscheduled timeout last season. After missing six months (June-February) with ankle surgery, Swiatek has quickly found her form since she's returned. Her dominating run to the title in the $25K challenger in Pelham, Alabama this week gives her her two titles in '18 (she's 21-2 overall), biggest career title and a so far spotless (5-0) mark in pro singles finals. She defeated Allie Kiick 6-2/6-0 in a 49-minute Sunday afternoon final, meaning the most games the Pole gave up in any of her five matches this week was six (to Louisa Chirico).
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DOWN: Marketa Vondrousova/CZE
...Vondrousova's April trip to Switzerland this week was very different from the one she undertook exactly one year ago. After having missed the back half of 2016 with an elbow injury, the then 17-year old hit the ground running in '17, winning her first twenty matches on all levels, claiming a pair of ITF titles and reaching two more finals. Her momentum carried over to the tour-level event in Biel, where the #233-ranked qualifier pulled upsets over countrywomen Kristyna Pliskova and Barbora Strycova en route to her maiden tour title in just her second career appearance in a WTA main draw. Looking for all the world like "Czech Lefty, version 2.0," Vondrousova was the lowest-ranked WTA champ in a decade, the youngest on tour in nearly two years, and stood at a frighteningly good 40-4 overall just four and a half months into the season. She'd make her Fed Cup debut a week later, win a $100K title in May, then added a slam debut after a Q-run at Roland Garros, where she posted a 1st Round win. While the Czech ultimately finished the season at #67, a rise of 309 spots over the course of a year, she failed to follow up her Biel success with another run in a tour-level event. After winning five MD matches that week (8 overall), Vondrousova won just three in WTA events the rest of the season. While she briefly rose into the Top 50 for the first time last month, her three MD wins in Indian Wells (including victories over the likes of Konta and Sabalenka) made that outing her only multiple-win tour-level since Biel.

When she returned to attempt to defend her title this week, *everything* was different. The tournament had a new name, was being held in a new Swiss city (Lugano), and had switched from an indoor hardcourt event to one played on outdoor red clay. The change in venue was most noticeable in the large number of rain delays and match suspensions that plagued the event, so much so that some matches were forced onto indoor courts to keep the schedule on course for a weekend finish. In her 1st Round match, Vondrousova faced Yulia Putintseva. She fell behind 6-4/5-2 and staved off three MP. Putintseva served for the match at 5-2, 5-4 and 6-5. She didn't finish it off, Vondrousova won the 2nd set TB, and then weather delays prevented the two from resuming the match until two days later. Vondrousova immediately fell behind 3-0 lead in the 3rd, but rallied to win the final six games to claim victory. She was greeted by the Kazakh at the net with a handshake hardly worthy of a Fed Cup Heart Award recipient (but that's okay, since Putintseva really didn't deserve to win that recent honor for February's action, anyway).



A round later, the Czech fell to Elise Mertens in three sets, with the final games being played in a consistent rain after matches on other courts had been stopped.



In the end, Vondrousova ended up with twenty-eight combined DF in her two matches in Lugano. She'll drop twenty-one spots in the new rankings, outside the Top 70. After being 40-4 at this point a year ago, in 2018 the 18-year old is 9-8.
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ITF PLAYERS: Caroline Dolehide/USA, Tamara Zidansek/SLO and Varvara Flink/RUS
...after notching wins in March over the likes of Shelby Rogers and Dominika Cibulkova, and pushing #1 Simona Halep in a three-set loss in Indian Wells, 19-year old Dolehide brought her big game to the first battlefield in the USTA's Roland Garros Wild Card Challenge in Indian Harbour Beach, Florida. She picked up her fourth -- and biggest -- pro title at the $60K, not dropping a set all week while posting wins over Vicky Duval, Jana Cepelova and Irina Maria Bara in the final (she got a SF w/o from Madison Brengle, whose week began with the announcement of her lawsuit against the ITF and WTA over drug testing procedures). Last April, Dolehide had lost to Brengle in an ITF singles final.



In the $25K in Pula, Italy it was Slovenia's Zidansek, 20, who picked up her third ITF title of the season, winning her second title in the city in the last two weeks with a straight sets win in the final over Pastry Myrtille Georges. She didn't drop a set all week, and now has a ten match winning streak. Zidansek is 24-2 since mid-February.

21-year old Russian Flink also won her second straight challenger title this weekend, defeating Gozal Ainitdinova in front of a home crowd in Shymkent, Kazakhstan by a 6-0/2-6/6-0 score. She's now reached three straight ITF finals, going 14-1 in recent weeks, and has picked up three circuit titles (in four finals) in 2017-18 after going 0-4 in her first four career finals in 2016.
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JUNIOR STAR: Emiliana Arango/COL
...ranked #510 on the WTA computer, the 17-year old Colombian who was half of the two-teenager (along w/ Argentine Maria Lourdes Carle) South American infiltration of the U.S. Open girls singles semis last summer, took a wild card into this week's tour-level event in Bogota and ended up being one of the stories of the tournament. Even before backing up the notion at Flushing Meadows and the past week, the avowed fan of Maria Sharapova was already catching eyes a few years ago...


Showing guts galore and exhibiting a memorable image uncommon on the women's tour -- tall and slight, with a signature backwards cap -- Arango notched her first career WTA MD win with an upset of the second-ranked South American on tour, Paraguay's Veronica Cepede Royg, in three sets, then knocked off Italian Jasmine Paolini to reach her first quarterfinal before eventually having to make the disappointing decision to retire with an injury in her final eight match with Anna Karolina Schmiedlova. She'll jump a whopping 165 spots to #345 on Monday.


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DOUBLES: Dalila Jakupovic/SLO and Irina Khromacheva/RUS
...finally, here's Jakupovic (and partner Khromacheva), with Lugano champs Flipkens/Mertens already listed previously.



The 27-year old from Slovenia arrived in Bogota as the #141-ranked singles player in the world, fresh off her career-best $60K title in Canberra during the final week of March (where she also won the doubles), as well as a successful Q-run in Monterrey. She got MD wins this week over Alison Riske, Elitsa Kostova and #2 seed Magda Linette to reach her first tour semifinal, where she fell to Lara Arruabarrena. She's 11-2 in her last twelve matches. She ended her week by teaming with Hordette Khromacheva to claim her second career WTA doubles title ('17 Istanbul) with a win in the final over the all-South American duo of Duque/Podoroska (the latter was attempting to defend her Bogota win from last year). The 22-year old Russian gets her maiden tour-level title after having picked up 22 crowns on the ITF circuit during her career, including a $25K in Playford, Australia with Jakupovic in January.
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1. Lugano Final - Elise Mertens def. Aryna Sabalenka
...7-5/6-2.
Mertens and Sabalenka become the fourth and fifth players this season to reach the singles and doubles finals of the same event, and the second pair (Shenzhen: Halep vs. Siniakova) to face off against each other for both titles. Mertens joined Halep and herself (Hobart) as a double-title winner in the same week in 2018. As far as singles finals only, Mertens is the ninth player this year to reach two, and she's the third to pick up a second title on the season (Svitolina & Kvitova). So far, Sabalenka is the youngest singles finalist of '18.
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2. Lugano 1st Rd. - Marketa Vondrousova def. Yulia Putintseva
...4-6/7-6(2)/6-3.
Three days, three unconverted match points, a blown 3-0 3rd set lead = a sportswomanlike handshake brief moment at the net before the losing player begins the internal debate about whether to go "full rock star" on the tournament lockerroom.


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3. Bogota 1st Round - Renata Zarazua def. Ajla Tomljanovic
...1-6/6-4/7-6(6).
Tomljanovic led 5-4, 30/15 in the 3rd, with Zarazura serving, when rain stopped play. The match eventually was resumed. Somewhere. Sometime. With Zarazua staging a miraculous comeback to grab her second career WTA MD victory, though the sketchy reporting on the match left everyone wondering whether this was actually a "Believe it or Not?" test in the internet age.
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4. The opening of red clay season featured a collection of firsts...

Bogota 1st Round - Maria Fernanda Herazo Gonzalez def. Tereza Martincova
...6-4/1-6/6-3.
The 21-year old, #443-ranked wild card plays in front of a home crowd and records her first career WTA MD victory (in her third MD event, all in Bogota), defeating the Czech who qualified at last year's U.S. Open and reached last year's Gstaad semifinals.


Lugano Q2: Kathinka von Deichmann def. Magdalena Frech
...6-3/1-6/7-6(5).
The 23-year old Liechtensteiner saves a MP at 5-3 in the 3rd set, then two more at 6-5 late on a Tuesday night (yes, the qualifying was STILL going on due to all the rain) on her way to reaching her first tour-level MD in her sixth career qualifying attempt.


Lugano 1st Round - Kathinka von Deichmann def. Laura Siegemund
...7-6(5)/2-3 ret.
This one was forced indoors to the backed-up schedule. von Deichmann got her first career WTA win, while Siegemund's comeback hit a speed bump.

Bogota 1st Round - Daniela Seguel def. Nicole Gibbs 6-2/6-2
Bogota 2nd Round - Daniela Seguel def. Tatjana Maria 6-3/6-1
...
no Chilean player had won a tour-level MD match since 1980(!!). Seguel won two.

Bogota 1st Round - Anna Blinkova def. Maria Camila Osorio Serrano
...6-2/6-4.
MCOS, the junior star who earlier this season became the first Colombian girl ranked in the junior Top 5, makes her WTA MD debut. She didn't get a win, but another step has been taken. Next big moment in the sun (which was most AWOL in Bogota): Roland Garros?


Bogota 1st Round - Valentini Grammatikopoulou def. Miyu Kato
...5-7/6-4/6-4.
The 21-year old, #183-ranked Greek's... (altogether now) "first WTA MD win."

Bogota 1st Round - Emiliana Arango def. Veronica Cepede Royg
...6-0/2-6/6-4.
The 17-year old wild card's first (of many, one suspects) WTA wins.

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5. Lugano 1st Round - Tamara Korpatsch def. Kristina Mladenovic
...7-6(5)/3-2 ret.
Consider Kiki's body and energy "saved up" for what will surely be a labor-intensive Fed Cup semifinal tie vs. the Bannerettes next weekend.
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6. Lugano Q1 - Kathinka von Deichmann def. Roberta Vinci
...6-1/6-3.
Vinci was barely the ranking "favorite" -- #163 vs. #184 -- here, as the Italian's final stretch of events looks to be ending with a regrettable whimper.
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7. Lugano 2nd Round - Stefanie Voegele def. Alize Cornet
...2-6/7-5/6-3.
Cornet had a 6-2/5-3 lead and held two MP. And, no, she wasn't preparing for next weekend's Fed Cup tie. With her future still unknown after her March hearing on a possible suspension, she won't be joining her fellow Pastries in Aix-en-Provence.
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3rd 25k title in Osaka??

A post shared by DESTANEE AIAVA (@desaiava) on



8. $25K Osaka Final - Destanee Aiava def. Rebecca Marino
...6-3/7-6(2).
The 17-year old Aussie picks up her third career challenger title, but it's just as noteworthy that Marino has compiled a 30-4 record thus far in her comeback after a five-year sabbatical from the sport.


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Introducing... the 2035 U.S. Open champion?




1. Bogota Final - ANNA KAROLINA SCHMIEDLOVA def. Lara Arruabarrena
...6-2/6-4.
Hmmm, the reigning "Best Championship Trophy" on tour, now "new and improved" to appear slightly more lifelife? Here's last year's version.



Coming in 2019: feathers!!
===============================================
2. Bogota 1st Round - ANNA KAROLINA SCHMIEDLOVA def. Irina Falconi
...7-5/0-6/6-1.
If you're going to get your first title in three years you have to first get your first WTA MD win in a year and a half. Why not make it against a former champion?


===============================================
3. Bogota QF - ANNA KAROLINA SCHMIEDLOVA def. Emiliana Arango
...6-1/1-0 ret.
A little bit of good fortune -- even at the expense of an exciting teenager who'd been thrilling the home crowds all week -- doesn't hurt, either.


===============================================
HM- Bogota SF - ANNA KAROLINA SCHMIEDLOVA def. Ana Bogdan
...6-3/6-2.
Now, it wouldn't be a Schmiedy week without showing one of Anna Karolina's bulging-eyes-on-the-ball shots, would it?


===============================================


Elena Vesnina with her verly lifelike stuffed dog... just kidding, it's actually real. I think.



Jabeur is one of Kasatkina's offseason training partners, so...

































**2017-18 WTA SINGLES TITLES**
7 - Elina Svitolina, UKR (5/2)
3 - Petra Kvitova, CZE (1/2)
3 - Caroline Wozniacki, DEN (2/1)
3 - Julia Goerges, GER (2/1)
3 - ELISE MERTENS, BEL (1/2)
3 - Kiki Bertens, NED (2/1)
3 - Karolina Pliskova, CZE (3/0)
3 - Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, RUS (3/0)

**2018 LOW-RANKED WTA CHAMPION**
#132 - ANNA KAROLINA SCHMIEDLOVA, SVK (BOGOTA)
#80 - Alison Van Uytvanck, BEL (Budapest)
#45 - Timea Babos, HUN (Taipei City)
#44 - Naomi Osaka, JPN (Indian Wells)
#40 - Lesia Tsurenko, UKR (Acapulco)
[since 2012]
#233 - Marketa Vondrousova (2017 Biel)
#208 - Melanie Oudin (2012 Birmingham)
#182 - Peng Shuai (2016 Tianjin)
#174 - Lara Arruabarrena (2012 Bogota)
#168 - Francesca Schiavone (2017 Bogota)
#163 - Duan Yingying (2016 Nanchang)
#158 - Ash Barty (2017 Kuala Lumpur)
#149 - Kiki Bertens (2012 Fes)
#133 - Kateryna Bondarenko (2017 Tashkent)
#132 - ANNA KAROLINA SCHMIEDLOVA (2018 BOGOTA)
#132 - Francesca Schiavone (2016 Rio)
#132 - Oceane Dodin (2016 Quebec City)
#130 - Teliana Pereira (2015 Bogota)
#127 - Karolina Pliskova (2013 Kuala Lumpur)
#127 - Elise Mertens (2017 Hobart)

**2018 WTA TITLES ON MULTIPLE SURFACES**
ELISE MERTENS, BEL = Hard (Hobart), Red Clay (Lugano)
[finals]
2 - Julia Goerges, GER = Hard,Green Clay
2 - ELISE MERTENS, BEL = Hard,Red Clay

**2018 FINALS WITH TITLE-LESS PLAYERS**
Brisbane: Aliaksandra Sasnovich/BLR (0-1) + L
Hobart: Mihaela Buzarnescu/ROU (0-0) + L
Taipei City: Kateryna Kozlova/UKR (0-0) + L
Acapulco" Stefanie Voegele/SUI (0-0) + L
Ind.Wells: Naomi Osaka/JPN (0-1) + W
LUGANO: ARYNA SABALENKA/BLR (0-1) + L

**2018 YOUNGEST WTA FINALISTS**
19 - ARYNA SABALENKA, BLR (LUGO-L) - 19,11m,1w
20 - Naomi Osaka, JPN (I.W.-W) - 20,5m
20 - Dasha Kasatkina, RUS (Dubai-L) - 20,9m,2w
20 - Alona Ostapenko, LAT (Miami-L) - 20,9m,3w
20 - Dasha Kasatkina, RUS (I.W.-L) - 20,10m,1w
[doubles]
19 - Fanny Stollar, HUN (Budapest-W)
19 - VERA LAPKO, BLR (LUGANO-L)
19 - ARYNA SABALENKA, BLR (LUGANO-L)
20 - Alona Ostapenko, LAT (Doha-W)

**LOW-RANKED FINALISTS IN 2018**
#183 - Stefanie Voegele, SUI (Acapulco-L)
#132 - ANNA KAROLINA SCHMIEDLOVA, SVK (BOGOTA-W)
[WTA 125s]
#180 - Sofya Zhuk, RUS (Newport Beach-L)
#162 - Danielle Collins, USA (Newport Beach-W)
#125 - Sara Errani, ITA (Indian Wells-W)

**DEFEATED DEFENDING CHAMPION, WON TITLE**
Shenzhen: Simona Halep, ROU (F-Siniakova)
Brisbane: Elina Svitolina, UKR (SF-Ka.Pliskova)
Saint Petersburg: Petra Kvitova, CZE (F-Mladenovic)
LUGANO: ELISE MERTENS, BEL (2r-Vondrousova)

**LOW-RANKED SEMIFINALISTS IN 2018**
#246 Sabine Lisicki/GER (Taipei City)
#186 Victoria Azarenka/BLR (Miami)
#183 Stefanie Voegele/SUI (Acapulco)-RU
#152 Wang Yafan/CHN (Taipei City)
#141 DALILA JAKUPOVIC/SLO (BOGOTA)
#139 Rebecca Peterson/SWE (Acapuclo)
#132 ANNA KAROLINA SCHMIEDLOVA (BOGOTA)-W
#130 VERA LAPKO/BLR (LUGANO)
#122 Sachia Vickery/USA (Auckland)
#121 Viktoria Kuzmova/SVK (Budapest)

**SINGLES/DOUBLES FINAL IN SAME EVENT**
Shenzhen - Simona Halep/ROU (WW)
Shenzhen - Katerina Siniakova/CZE (LL)
Hobart - Elise Mertens/BEL (WW)
LUGANO - ELISE MERTENS/BEL (WW)
LUGANO - ARYNA SABALENKA/BLR (LL)

**2018 FIRST-TIME WTA WD CHAMPIONS**
Naomi Broady, GBR (Monterrey)
Georgina Garcia Perez, ESP (Budapest)
Simona Halep, ROU (Shenzhen)
IRINA KHROMACHEVA, RUS (BOGOTA)
Bibiane Schoofs, NED (Auckland)
Sara Sorribes Tormo, ESP (Monterrey)
Fanny Stollar, HUN (Budapest)

**MOST ITF CHALLENGER TITLES - 2018**
4...Andreea Amalia Rosca, ROU
3...Anhelina Kalinina, UKR
3...Nastja Kolar, SLO
3...Rebecca Marino, CAN
3...Gabriella Taylor, GBR
3...JULIA TERZIYSKA, BUL
3...TAMARA ZIDANSEK, SLO

**USTA ROLAND GARROS WC PLAYOFF (multi-event) WINNERS**
2013 Shelby Rogers
2014 Taylor Townsend
2015 Louisa Chirico
2016 Taylor Townsend
2017 Amanda Anisimova
2018 ??


Nobody puts Sania in the corner...




Cont'd...












ZHENGZHOU, CHINA (WTA 125/Hard Court)
=WS FINALS=
2014 Zhang Kailin/CHN def. Xu Yifan/CHN 7-5/6-4 (ITF)
2015 Wang Yafan/CHN def. Duan Yingying/CHN 6-4/6-4 (ITF)
2016 Anastasia Pivovarova/RUS def. Lu Jingjng/CHN 6-4/6-4 (ITF)
2017 Wang Qiang/CHN def. Peng Shuai/CHN 3-6/7-6(3)/1-1 ret. (WTA 125)
=2017=
QF: Peng Shuai d. Diyas
QF: Zheng Saisai d. Hibino
QF: Duan Yingying d. Jang Su-jeong
QF: Wang Qiang d. Liu Fangzhou
SF: Peng Shuai d. Zheng Saisai
SF: Wang Qiang d. Duan Yingying
F: Wang Qiang d. Peng Shuai
=WD FINALS=
2014 Chan Chin-wei/Liang Chen d. Han Xinyun/Zhang Kailin (ITF)
2015 Han Na-lae/Jang Su-jeong d. Liu Chang/Zhang Ling (ITF)
2016 Xun Fangying/You Xiaodi d. Amanmuradova/Honcova (ITF)
2017 Han Xinyun/Zhu Lin d. Cako/Glushko (WTA 125)
=2017=
SF: Han Xinyun/Zhu Lin d. Ar.Rodionova/Valeria Savinykh
SF: Cako/Glushko d. Adamczak/Chan Chin-wei
F: Han Xinyun/Zhu Lin d. Cako/Glushko
=======================================
'18 TOP SEEDS
WS: #1 Zhang Shuai, #2 Peng Shuai
WD: #1 Hozumi/Yang Zhaoxuan, #2 Hibino/Zheng Saisai

*SINGLES FINAL*
#1 Zhang Shuai d. #5 Duan Yingying
*DOUBLES FINAL*
#3 Broady/Wickmayer d. #4 Duan Yingying/Wang Yafan

NOTE: well, Zhang has now pulled out of the event. Another reason why I don't pick every week.

ALSO:



...I'll be back later in the week with the Fed Cup preview and picks post, which will surely include an opinion about whether or not "In Rinaldi We Trust" still applies.

Bethanie Mattek-Sands *could* have a say (and CoCo, too)...





All for now.

2 Comments:

Blogger colt13 said...

Tennis coverage in the US may get an unexpected boost from ESPN+ . Like WatchESPN, they will carry 3 of the 4 slams, not the French, but there is a chance they may pick up other events as time goes on.

The shock? They are carrying NHL playoff hockey!

In a mild surprise, although not by ranking, Switzerland's #6 got named as the 4th Fed Cup member. Who is it? Patty Schnyder.

A year ago at this time, Mertens had not won a WTA match on clay, then won 2 on clay in Fed Cup and hasn't looked back.

Arango has some swagger.

Re:Comment about Sabalenka/Lapko being the Fed Cup doubles team. Good thought, but i'm not opposed to Lapko playing singles. Stylistically, she is a righty version of Robson, complete with Jr title. She has a plan B, and like following up Tanner Roark with Stephen Strasburg, having Lapko throwing spins on day 1, followed up by that same player facing the Sabalenka hammer on day 2 is a good idea.

Stat of the Week-7- Total of WTA doubles titles for Casey Dellacqua.

Casey may have had one of the stranger career arcs, though that is mainly due to numerous injuries. So many that I could not use singles as a stat because she never won one, or even reached a final. Famously lost 7 doubles slam finals(0-7). Did win mixed in 2011.

But don't feel bad. Casey views herself as a simple Aussie girl, and that simple girl won 22 ITF singles titles, and 23 in doubles, 20 of those 22 in Australia.

Coming off another injury in 2011, Dellacqua had the best singles stretch of her career. Ranked 274, she won 6 consecutive 25k titles, a streak that was 30 matches. By the time the streak ended, she was 156.

But her partnership with Barty may have saved her career. Twice. Of her 20 career finals, 18 were between 2013-17, 12 with Barty, both before and after Barty's break, and Dellacqua's concussion. And all 7 titles came in this span.

Quiz Time!
1.Casey Dellacqua had multiple partners, but reached the finals with only a select few. Which one of these women did not with a title with Casey?

A.Ashleigh Barty
B.Yaroslava Shvedova
C.Kimiko Date-Krumm
D.Darija Jurak


Interlude-Obviously, the Schmiedlova story has been covered. But let me point out how nutty this is/was. At the start of 2015, AKS was ranked 73. She went 41-23, won 2 titles, had 4 Top 20 wins, and ended the year at 28.

2016 started at 26, because of 125K's and retirements, starting and ending numbers are different, then went 6-28, so pitiful that she ended the year at 226. The reason some people had hope? Even with those measly 6 wins, 2 of them were Top 20(Vinci, Bacsinszky), or one more than Kerber last year.

One of the more unlikely titles, but she projects well. Already in the French, she only has 132 pts to defend from now until Wimbledon. Without those points, she would be at 107. So as long as she wins a match in the next month, she should be safe for Wimbledon.

The silver lining? That 132 point total includes 2 25K titles(50 points each). So she was back on the winning trail this time last year.

Answer!
This was fun, because there is one obvious wrong answer, one that seems obvious that isn't, then the other two.

Barty obviously isn't the answer. She won 5 titles with Casey, as well as reaching 12 of the 20 finals, making her the most prolific partner.

Shvedova is the person who teamed with Casey after Barty's retirement. Surprisingly, she only won 1 title out of 4 finals.

The answer also isn't Date-Krumm, as they won once together in 2013. So that leaves Jurak, who you might wonder why I chose her. She is the only person in the 2013-17 block who Dellacqua reached a final with that she did not win with. The only other players she reached finals with were Schiavone and Dechy back in 2008-09.

Mon Apr 16, 09:40:00 AM EDT  
Blogger Todd.Spiker said...

With Lapko coming along like she is, if BLR ever gets Vika back, that team might be in the top 3 (or 4) as far as potential overall depth. 1)CZE, 2)U.S., and then a mix of a few teams after that.

Hmmm... shadow Nats reference, huh? Yeah, not going too well at the moment. But, hey, when it's happening at the same time as the Caps are out-Capping themselves, one can at least have hope that there are still 140 or so games left in the MLB season. ;)

Looking at Dellacqua's career stats are always a bit surprising. Because of recent seasons, you almost forget some of her singles runs, but then you also thought she'd won more tour-level doubles titles than she actually did.

With both their singles careers likely taking precedent, one never knows how much they'll even play. But Barty and Vandeweghe seemed a good pair the other week. It'll be interesting to see if they revisit that partnership down the line.

QUIZ: I picked Shvedova because it felt like she had some successful partnerships and didn't "freelance" as much as the others might have. Wrong. I'd forgotten about the post-Barty time. Jurak has always seemed like a player who is always around, but you can't quite put a finger on her specific career accomplishments w/o looking them up. So, really, I guess I probably should have considered her here. Interesting one.

So great to have Schmiedy back. Never lost hope, but wondered if she might at some point. Thankfully, she didn't.

Mon Apr 16, 12:31:00 PM EDT  

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