Tuesday, July 09, 2019

W.8- Do You Know This Woman?

Do you know this woman? You should... because she's starting to look very familiar



Serena Williams came to Wimbledon having barely played since the Australian Open, and having not been pain-free since then, either. The knee that contributed to her shocking loss to Karolina Pliskova in the AO quarterfinals (sure, she'd been stunned by less surprising players, but not after leading 5-1 in the 3rd and holding MP's) had been an issue ever since. Williams has said all tournament that she's felt better during Wimbledon than she has since February, and her play is starting to show it.

Faced with a true grass court opponent in Alison Riske, Williams was forced to lift the best aspects of her game in order to advance. Riske pressured Williams with her forward approach, and often came out on top when she was able to get the seven-time SW19 champ into extended rallies. As she usually does, though, Serena found a way to keep a step ahead of her countrywoman and broke Riske to win the 1st set 6-4.

But Riske kept close on the scoreboard, and seized upon the chances she had. After having converted both her BP in the 1st set, she did the same on the *only* one she'd see in the 2nd. At 4-4, she found her way to the net and put away a volley winner to give herself a chance to serve for the match. After Williams had her ankle re-taped, Riske quickly held to win the 2nd and set up her fifth straight three-set match at this Wimbledon.




Williams grabbed the early momentum in the 3rd, taking a 3-1 lead. But Riske got the break back, converting for the fifth time on the five BP (!!) she'd seen on Serena's serve on the day. But Williams held her ground, relying on the shot that has essentially carried her through her historic two-decade career. Already with half a dozen aces in the 3rd set, she held at love for 4-3. Smelling the finish line, Williams increased her pressure on Riske a game later, utilizing a drop shot and charges toward the net to move things along. Finally, Riske blinked. Having saved three BP moments earlier in game #8, she DF'd on the fourth.

Serving for her 12th Wimbledon semifinal, and 37th in her career (at age 37) in a major, Williams opened game #9 with ace, and ended it with one, as well. They were #18 and #19 on the day, as the most lethal shot in women's tennis history showed that it's still in fine and deadly form after all these years.



Williams' 6-4/4-6/6-3 victory moves her within one win (again) of playing for a 24th major title in her career, which would match Margaret Court's all-time mark. She's had two opportunities in the past year to record the victory, but has lost on both occasions, in London a year ago to Angelique Kerber and then in New York against Naomi Osaka.

Meanwhile, Riske's career-best run at this Wimbledon comes to an end, but her career (especially when it comes to the grass) will have a new feel about it after what's she done over the past month, the past week and a half, as well as in this match. She'll jump eighteen spots in the rankings after this Wimbledon, back into the Top 40 and within one spot of her career best standing. Riske knew what she was up against on this day, but she put on a performance that would have defeated most. Including Serena, who admitted she would have lost today if the match has been played a few weeks ago, before she began to round into the form she's currently sporting.



And that's really what it's about, isn't it? It has been for a while. About twenty years, in fact.

Yes, we most definitely know *this* woman.




=DAY 8 NOTES=


...the day's other three quarterfinals were a collection of hard won moments, claimed after long careers, trials, errors and even a triumph that has served to soothe the nerves of even one the highest-strung perfectionists in the game.



Barbora Strycova is 33. Today she became the oldest first-time slam semifinalist ever, topping a 32-year old Roberta Vinci's U.S. Open run from four years ago.

A round ago, the Czech vet overcame a set and 5-2 deficit against Elise Mertens, and today -- with a Centre Court crowd rooting for her opponent -- the former Fed Cup stalwart chipped away at Johanna Konta's 4-1 1st set lead, employing all her slicey-dicey spins and variety-filled game to force a tie-break. There, again, Konta grabbed the lead with a picture-perfect backhand pass to grab a 5-4 edge... and then didn't win another point in the set. The Czech put away a volley to knot the score, then the Brit's back-to-back forehand errors -- off a deep second serve, then a sinking Strycova slice -- to gave her opponent the final 7-5 advantage.

Playing perhaps the best match of her career, Strycova continued her roll in the 2nd. A 3-1 lead was bolstered by a little pinch of luck, as a backhand shot skipped off the net cord and hopped over the waiting Konta's racket before she could put away a volley. The point gave Strycova a 4-1 lead, and any hopes of a crowd-stoking Konta turnaround were soon lost. Failing to secure four game points (three from 40/love up), Konta was broken via a DF and a wild swing volley miss that put Strycova a game away from the semis. Rallying from 15/30 down, Strycova held to close out the 7-6(5)/6-1 win, going her '14 SW19 quarterfinal run one better by posting her best slam result in her 53rd MD appearance.

...Elina Svitolina is 24. Today she removed her name from its rather undesired place atop (well, as the day began, she was the actually the *only* player on it) the list of players in WTA history with at least thirteen tour-level singles titles but no slam semifinal appearances. The Ukrainian was always *supposed* to be the first from her nation to reach such a stage, but as she's totaled up titles, Top 10 wins and important trophies (including at last year's WTA Finals in the grittiest performance of her career) she'd remained a particular failed experiment at the four most important two-weeks stretches of the season. Last week, her teenage countrywoman Dayana Yastremska put her name into the conversation as a potential final four participant in a major in the near future, reaching her maiden slam Round of 16.



Finally, on Day 8 of the 2019 Wimbledon, in her 28th slam appearance, Svitolina became the first Ukrainian to reach a major semi. Four times she'd gotten to within a game of such a feat, but four times she'd lost. She'd been run out in blink-and-you-missed-it fashion -- by 3 & 2, 0 & 4 and 4 & 1 scores -- and squandered a big lead (up a set and 5-1, with a MP) in her previous attempts.

After rising to the occasion in Singapore last fall, Svitolina has struggled in recent months. With injury, and quite possibly with a decided lack of focus, as well, as social media (over) attention seemed to take up way too much of her brain space, and things such as taking the time to respond to meaningless comments (biting back at a media member's comment about her Nike dress having a rather plain design) hours after a match spoke to symptoms of a player paying close attention to details, only not the details she probably *should* be paying attention to.

Has Svitolina moved past all that? Hmmm. Maybe. Truthfully, it's been difficult to tell since she's been seemingly living under a (Rad-lined?) golden cloud this entire fortnight. She probably would have been ousted in the 2nd Round by Margarita Gasparyan, as the Russian (who'd already beaten her once this grass season) was within two points of a straight sets win, only for her to suddenly suffer severe cramping and be forced to retire (while still leading the match) around fifteen minutes later. In the Round of 16, Svitolina faced an exhausted Petra Martic after the Croat had survived multiple three-setters, and only had a finite amount left to give once the Ukrainian had shown up on the other side of the net. Today the opponent was Karolina Muchova, the she's-going-places 22-year old Czech who staged a comeback to defeat Karolina Pliskova yesterday... after nearly three and a half hours and a 24-game 3rd set. On an even playing field, Muchova may have won today. But it wasn't that.

Still, even a "lesser" Muchova was a competitive Muchova. But the sharp edge that allowed her to take down her countrywoman was a bit dulled today, as mistakes at key times helped to spell her doom. Svitolina eeked out a 7-5 1st set win, and was seemingly cruising to a straight sets victory in the 2nd. But then her past slam QF demons started whispering in her ear.

Serving up 5-2, she played a tight-as-a-drum, rush-through-it-in-order-to-not-think-about-the-past-or-the-future game while Muchova's final dash of adrenaline kicked in. The Czech got the break, and held to pull within 5-4. If Svitolina had dropped serve again, one could easily have seen another collapse, as long as Muchova was able to pull herself to the finish. But it never came to that. Even after Muchova pulled off a Navratilova-level backhand volley of an otherwise-brillaint Svitolina backhand crosscourt passing shot to close to within 30/15. At MP, Svitolina closed it out -- and flayed at least one demon -- with a big wide serve to win 7-5/6-4.



But there's still another Svitolina demon waiting around the corner. Her name is Simona. It was *she* who overcame the 5-1 and MP deficit in Paris two years ago to deny her what would have/should have been her maiden slam semifinal appearance.



Simona Halep is 27, and she's had to slay a few of her own demons over the seasons. The full year that has passed since she finally claimed her maiden slam crown has served to muffle many of the negative voices that used to ring in her head. While she hasn't won a singles title since her Roland Garros run, the Romanian has been solid at every turn. When she's lost she's been beaten rather than allowing herself to be beat.

Her string of performances at this Wimbledon, the first since her full year as the reigning RG champ, is potentially telling. Already at peace with her career legacy (though there is still that Olympic dream, and maybe the Fed Cup, should she give the new "fast-food style" format a go next year), maybe we're seeing the Halep that we'll gaze upon for the rest of her career. She's still a fighter, but with a quiet confidence that doesn't run hot-and-cold, and is always at the ready when the call goes out -- Bat Simo Signal-like -- for assistance.

Halep had already lost in the past to Zhang Shuai (twice, actually), her opponent today. When she fell behind 4-1 in the 1st set, and saw the Chinese vet a point away from a double-break lead at 5-1, a different Simona may have thrown up her hands, or berate herself for games for allowing the situation to happen, even if she'd escaped it. But the Simona we've seen at this Wimbledon isn't that Simona. She held on and did her work.

She held for 4-2, saw Zhang DF to get back on serve and went on to win a 7-4 tie-break, then ran away with the 2nd at 6-1 to reach her second SW19 semi (2014) and seventh at a major in her career. She's dropped just one set (the 2nd in her 2nd Rd. match-up with countrywoman Mihaela Buzarnescu), and for the first time in her career has reason to believe she may truly have a chance to win Wimbledon, the only major her idol, Justine Henin (a two-time finalist) never could.

But first she'll have to get through Svitolina, looking to right a wrong against the player who helped wrong her in the first place.

It could be quite the intriguing moment, maybe even career defining. For both of them.

...in the girls singles, the final sixteen are set. The remaining players hail from eleven different nations, with only the U.S. (w/ 5) and France (2) with more than one competitor. Winners today included #1 Emma Navarro, #3 Zheng Qinwen and #4 Diane Parry, as well as Roehampton champ Daria Snigur, Elli Mandlik (daughter of Hana Mandlikova), Polina Kudermetova (sister of Veronika) and, finally, another rising Czech, Linda Fruhvirtova, who knocked off #2 Maria Camila Osorio Serrano.

...the wheelchair draws have been released, and #1-ranked Diede de Groot will thus go about her attempt to sweep the titles at a fifth straight slam. She'll open up her singles title defense vs. countrywoman Marjolein Buis. #2 Yui Kamiji, seeking to join de Groot as the only player to win all eight major titles, has yet to reach the Wimbledon singles final. She'll start this year with Brit Jordanne Whiley in her first slam appearance since the 2017 Wimbledon, before becoming a mother. Whiley has gone 33-4 since returning this season, so don't be surprised if the upset happens. They haven't played against each other since June 2016.


(@jordanne_joyce)

Once again, it'll be de Groot & Aniek Van Koot topping the four-team doubles competition, with Kamiji & Whiley (a 9-time slam winning duo, including four in a row at SW19 from 2014-17) facing off with the pair in the opening match. The two good friends haven't partnered since before Whiley's maternity break two years ago. Last year, Kamiji won her fifth straight Wimbledon WD title while teaming with de Groot.

The star-studded duos participating in that opening doubles match have combined to win most of the slam titles since Esther Vergeer's retirement after 2012. As a group, they've had a hand in 40 of the 46 titles contested, including all 25 doubles crowns, and 15 of 21 singles (all but four won by Jiske Griffioen, and one each by Buis and Ellerbrock):


=SINGLES=
6 - de Groot
6 - Kamiji
2 - Van Koot
1 - Whiley

=DOUBLES=
13 - Kamiji
9 - Whiley
8 - Van Koot (+2 previously)
6 - de Groot




LIKE ON DAY 8: C-L-A-S-S-I-C.




LIKE ON DAY 8: Coming soon to a court near someone...



Sania, not the baby. Although...


POOR MEMORIES ON DAY 8: During the Svitolina match, ESPN's Rennae Stubbs recalled the Ukrainian's WTA Finals title run in which "she barely lost a set."

Umm, yeah... except that four of her five matches in the tournament went three sets. I mean, other than that, yeah, she barely lost a set.


SCENARIOS ON DAY 8:




LIKE ON DAY 8: Nice shot, partner.




LIKE ON DAY 8: Si-mo-na.








Long time coming, honestly. Now, to find the elusive "Garbi Whisperer."

Too bad Conchita Martinez (who helped her win Wimbledon in Sumyk' absence) is taken. Hmmm... maybe Spanish Fed Cup coach Anabel Medina-Garrigues? I don't think she's officially coaching anyone at the moment, is she?

It's really not about changing huge swaths of Muguruza's game, it's just about finding ways to keep her engaged and focused at all times. Sumyk is a good coach, but he seemed to serve to set her nerves on edge (and vice versa) most of the time.

A little interesting truth: when I'm online and go to check Wimbledon's Instagram page, I type in "Wi" in that little box and the list of choices of past pages I've visited comes up. The only one that comes close to the page I'm looking for isn't the main Wimbledon Instagram page, but is (for some reason) this one. I always just click on *it* because it's easier than finding exactly what I'm looking for, which is just one additional click away.

The "interesting" thing is that what I always see is an inadvertent, but constant, reminder of what Muguruza *should* be. Hopefully she can be that again. Her next decision can make it a reality, or send her hopes even farther out to sea.

But, hey, no pressure.




=WOMEN'S SINGLES SF=
#11 Serena Williams/USA vs. Barbora Strycova/CZE
#8 Elina Svitolina/UKR vs. #7 Simona Halep/ROU

=WOMEN'S DOUBLES QF=
#1 Babos/Mladenovic (HUN/FRA) def. #7 Melichar/Peschke (USA/CZE)
#3 Hsieh/Strycova (TPE/CZE) vs. #6 Mertens/Sabalenka (BEL/BLR)
(PR) Collins/Mattek-Sands (USA/USA) vs. #4 Dabrowski/Xu (CAN/CHN)
#8 Groenefeld/Schuurs (GER/NED) vs. #2 Krejcikova/Siniakova (CZE/CZE)

=MIXED DOUBLES ROUND OF 16=
#1 Melichar/Soares (USA/BRA) vs. S.Williams/A.Murray (USA/GBR)
Yang Zhaoxuan/Middlekoop (CHN/NED) vs. Brady/Daniell (USA/NZL)
#4 Sh.Zhang/Peers (CHN/AUS) vs. Ostapenko/Lindstedt (LAT/SWE)
#12 Olaru/Skugor (ROU/CRO) def. #6 Rosolska/Mektic (POL/CRO)
#5 Peschke/Koolhof (CZE/NED) vs. N.Kichenok/Qureshi (UKR/PAK)
Siegemund/Sitak (GER/NZL) vs. #3 Dabrowski/Pavic (CAN/CRO)
#9 L.Chan/Dodig (TPE/CRO) vs. #11 Klepac/Roger-Vasselin (SLO/FRA)
(WC) Silva/Hoyt (GBR/GBR) def. Sai.Zheng/Vliegen (CHN/BEL)

=GIRLS SINGLES ROUND OF 16=
#1 Emma Navarro/USA vs. (Q) Katrina Scott/USA
Elli Mandlik/USA vs. #6 Natsumi Kawaguchi/JPN
#3 Zheng Qinwen vs. (Q) Polina Kudermetova/RUS
Daria Snigur/UKR vs. Robin Montgomery/USA
Elsa Jacquemot/FRA vs. Mai Napatt Nirundorn/THA
Wong Hong Yi Cody/HKG vs. #4 Diane Parry/FRA (WC)
Matilda Mutavdzic/GBR vs. #10 Alexa Noel/USA
Priska Madelyn Nugroho/INA vs. Linda Fruhvirtova/CZE

=GIRLS DOUBLES QF=
x vs. x
x vs. x
x vs. x
x vs. x

=WHEELCHAIR SINGLES QF=
#1 Diede de Groot/NED vs. Marjolein Buis/NED
KG Montjane/RSA vs. Sabine Ellerbrock/GER
Aniek Van Koot/NED vs. Giulia Capocci/ITA
(WC) Jordanne Whiley/GBR vs. #2 Yui Kamiji/JPN

=WHEELCHAIR DOUBLES SF=
#1 de Groot/Van Koot (NED/NED) vs. Kamiji/Whiley (JPN/GBR)
Ellerbrock/Montjane (GER/RSA) vs. #2 Buis/Capocci (NED/ITA)

=WOMEN'S INVITATIONAL DOUBLES=
xx
















*ALL-TIME WIMBLEDON MATCH WINS*
120...Martina Navratilova
97...SERENA WILLIAMS
96...Chris Evert
89...Venus Williams
74...Steffi Graf

*ALL-TIME SLAM SF*
52...Chris Evert
44...Martina Navrtailova
37...Steffi Graf
37...SERENA WILLIAMS
36...Margaret Court

*FIRST-TIME SLAM SEMIFINALISTS AT WIMBLEDON SINCE 2010*
2010 Petra Kvitova, CZE
2010 Tsvetana Pironkova, BUL
2011 Victoria Azarenka, BLR
2011 Sabine Lisicki, GER (RU)
2012 Aga Radwanska, POL (RU)
2013 Kirsten Flipkens, BEL
2014 Lucie Safarova, CZE
2015 Garbine Muguruza, ESP (RU)
2016 Elena Vesnina, RUS
2017 Magdalena Rybarikova, SVK
2018 Julia Goerges, GER
2019 Barbora Strycova, CZE
2019 Elina Svitolina, UKR

*FIRST-TIME SLAM SEMIFINALISTS - last 3 years*
=2017=
AO: CoCo Vandeweghe/USA
RG: Alona Ostapenko/LAT (W)
WI: Magdalena Rybarikova/SVK
US: -
=2018=
AO: Elise Mertens/BEL
RG: -
WI: Julia Goerges/GER
US: Naomi Osaka/JPN (W), Anastasija Sevastova/LAT
=2019=
AO: Danielle Collins/USA
RG: Amanda Anisimova/USA, Ash Barty/AUS (W), Marketa Vondrousova/CZE (RU)
WI: Barbora Strycova/CZE, Elina Svitolina/UKR
--
=NOTES=
* - first-timer at 24 of last 26 slams (25/28)
* - first-timer at 10 consecutive Wimbledons (2010-19)

*WIMBLEDON SEMIFINALS - last 5 years*
2015 #1 S.Williams d. #4 Sharapova, #20 Muguruza d. #13 A.Radwanska
2016 #1 S.Williams d. Vesnina, #4 Kerber d. #8 V.Williams
2017 #10 V.Williams d. #6 Konta, #14 Muguruza d. Rybarikova
2018 #11 Angelique Kerber d. #12 Ostapenko, #25 S.Williams d. #13 Goerges
2019 #11 S.Williams vs. Strycova, #7 Halep vs. #8 Svitolina

*CAREER SLAM SF - active*
37 - SERENA WILLIAMS (31-5)
23 - Venus Williams (16-7)
20 - Maria Sharapova (10-10)
7 - SIMONA HALEP (4-2)
7 - Victoria Azarenka (4-3)
7 - Angelique Kerber (4-3)
7 - Caroline Wozniacki (3-4)
6 - Petra Kvitova (3-3)
6 - Jelena Jankovic (1-5)
5 - Svetlana Kuznetsova (4-1)
5 - Samantha Stosur (2-3)
4 - Garbine Muguruza (3-1)
4 - Vera Zvonareva (2-2)
4 - Madison Keys (1-3)

*SLAM SF - DECADE OF 2010's - 2010-19*
20 - SERENA WILLIAMS (17-2)
10 - Maria Sharapova (6-4)
7 - SIMONA HALEP (4-2)
7 - Victoria Azarenka (4-3)
7 - Angelique Kerber (4-3)
6 - Li Na (4-2)-ret.
6 - Petra Kvitova (3-3)
6 - Caroline Wozniacki (2-4)
5 - Venus Williams (2-3)
5 - Aga Radwanska (1-4)-ret.
4 - Garbine Muguruza (3-1)
4 - Samantha Stosur (2-2)
4 - Madison Keys (1-3)

*2019 WTA SF*
7 - Kiki Bertens, NED (3-4)
5 - Karolina Pliskova, CZE (4-1)
5 - Angelique Kerber, GER (1-3+W)
4 - Ash Barty, AUS (4-0)
4 - Petra Kvitova, CZE (4-0)
4 - SIMONA HALEP, ROU (2-1)
4 - Belinda Bencic, SUI (2-2)
4 - Donna Vekic, CRO (2-2)
4 - BARBORA STRYCOVA, CZE (0-3)
4 - ELINA SVITOLINA, UKR (0-3)

*2015-19 WTA SF*
34 - SIMONA HALEP = 9/6/7/8/4
33 - Karolina Pliskova = 8/6/8/6/5
32 - Angelique Kerber = 8/11/3/5/5
28 - ELINA SVITOLINA = 6/7/6/5/3
25 - Caroline Wozniacki = 7/4/8/5/1
23 - Petra Kvitova = 5/6/2/6/4
22 - Garbine Muguruza = 5/3/7/6/1
21 - Kiki Bertens = 1/5/3/5/7
20 - Julia Goerges = 0/4/7/7/2
20 - Aga Radwanska = 8/9/2/1 (ret)
19 - SERENA WILLIAMS - 9/6/1/2/1
18 - Caroline Garcia = 2/4/7/3/2

*2019 WTA SEMIFINALISTS BY COUNTRY*
19 - CZE*
13 - USA*
8 - GER
7 - AUS,CRO,NED,UKR*
6 - RUS,SUI
5 - BLR,FRA,ROU*
4 - ROU
3 - BEL,CAN,GBR,JPN,SLO,SVK
2 - CHN,ESP,EST,GRE,KAZ,POL,TPE
1 - BRA,DEN,LAT,PUR,TUN

*LOW-SEEDED WIMBLEDON SEMIFINALISTS - Open Era*
[unseeded]
1968 Ann Jones
1969 Rosie Casals
1970 Francoise Durr
1971 Judy Dalton
1983 Yvonne Vermaak
1989 Catarina Lindqvist
1994 Gigi Fernandez
1994 Lori McNeil
1996 Meredith McGrath
1997 Anna Kournikova
1998 Natasha Zvereva
1999 Alexandra Stevenson (Q)
1999 Mirjana Lucic
2000 Jelena Dokic
2008 Zheng Jie (WC)
2010 Petra Kvitova
2010 Tsvetana Pironkova
2011 Sabine Lisicki (WC)
2016 Elena Vesnina
2017 Magdalena Rybarikova
2019 Barbora Strycova
[seeds]
#25 - Serena Williams, 2018 (RU)
#23 - Lucie Safarova, 2014
#23 - Sabine Lisicki, 2013 (RU)
#23 - Venus Williams, 2007 (W)
#21 - Vera Zvonareva, 2010 (RU)
#20 - Garbine Muguruza, 2015 (RU)
#20 - Kirsten Flipkens, 2013
#18 - Marion Bartoli, 2007 (RU)
#16 - Nathalie Tauziat, 1998 (RU)
#16 - Kathy Rinaldi, 1985
#15 - Marion Bartoli, 2013 (W)
#14 - Garbine Muguruza, 2017 (W)
#14 - Venus Williams, 2005 (W)
#13 - Julia Goerges, 2018
#13 - Aga Radwanska, 2015
#13 - Genie Bouchard, 2014 (RU)
#13 - Maria Sharapova, 2004 (W)
#12 - Alona Ostapenko, 2018
#12 - Kimiko Date, 1996
#12 - Billie Jean King, 1982
#11 - Angelique Kerber, 2018 (W)
#11 - Bettina Bunge, 1982
#10 - Venus Williams, 2017 (RU)
#10 - Gabriela Sabatini, 1986
#10 - Billie Jean King, 1983

*RECENT BEST U.S. WOMEN'S SLAM RESULTS*
=2012=
AO: Serena Williams (4th)
RG: Sloane Stephens (4th) & Varvara Lepchenko (4th)
WI: Serena Williams (W)
US: Serena Williams (W)
=2013=
AO: Sloane Stephens (SF)
RG: Serena Williams (W)
WI: Sloane Stephens (QF)
US: Serena Williams (W)
=2014=
AO: Sloane Stephens & Serena Williams (4th)
RG: Sloane Stephens (4th)
WI: L.Davis, M.Keys, A.Riske, S.Williams, V.Williams (3rd)
US: Serena Williams (W)
=2015=
AO: Serena Williams (W)
RG: Serena Williams (W)
WI: Serena Williams (W)
US: Serena Williams (SF)
=2016=
AO: Serena Williams (RU)
RG: Serena Williams (RU)
WI: Serena Williams (W)
US: Serena Williams (SF)
=2017=
AO: Serena Williams (W)
RG: Venus Williams (4th)
WI: Venus Williams (RU)
US: Sloane Stephens (W)
=2018=
AO: Madison Keys (QF)
RG: Sloane Stephens (RU)
WI: Serena Williams (RU)
US: Serena Williams (RU)
=2019=
AO: Danielle Collins (SF)
RG: Amanda Anisimova (SF)
WI: Serena Williams

*WIMBLEDON "KIMIKO CUP FOR VETERAN ACHIEVEMENT" WINNERS*
2015 Martina Hingis, SUI
2016 Venus Williams, USA
2017 Venus Williams, USA
2018 Angelique Kerber, GER
2019 Barbora Strycova, CZE

*WIMBLEDON MIDDLE-ROUND (3r-QF) TOP PLAYER AWARDS*
2006 Justine Henin-Hardenne, BEL [RU]
2007 Justine Henin, BEL [SF]
2008 Zheng Jie, CHN [SF]
2009 Serena Williams, USA [W]
2010 Serena Williams, USA [W]
2011 Maria Sharapova, RUS [RU]
2012 Victoria Azarenka, BLR [SF]
2013 Sabine Lisicki, GER [RU]
2014 Petra Kvitova, CZE [W]
2015 Garbine Muguruza, ESP [RU] & Maria Sharapova, RUS [SF]
2016 Angelique Kerber, GER [RU]
2017 Garbine Muguruza, ESP [W]
2018 Alona Ostapenko, LAT [SF]
2009 Serena Williams, USA





TOP QUALIFIER: Coco Gauff/USA
TOP EARLY-ROUND (1r-2r): #1 Ash Barty/AUS
TOP MIDDLE-ROUND (3r-QF): #11 Serena Williams/USA
TOP LATE-ROUND (SF-F): xx
TOP QUALIFYING MATCH: Q2: #20 Kaja Juvan/SLO def. Basak Eraydin/TUR 4-6/7-6(3)/6-3 (trailed 6-4/4-1 40/15)
TOP EARLY-RD. MATCH (1r-2r): 1st Rd. - Alison Riske/USA def. #22 Donna Vekic/CRO 3-6/6-3/7-5 (Vekic led 4-1 in 3rd; first Ct.1 roof closure)
TOP MIDDLE-RD. MATCH (3r-QF): 3rd Rd. - (WC) Coco Gauff/USA def. Polona Hercog/SLO 3-6/7-6(7)/7-5 (down 6-3/5-2; Hercog 3 MP in 2nd)
TOP LATE-RD. MATCH (SF-F/Jr.): xx
=============================
FIRST VICTORY: Madison Keys/USA (1st Rd. def. Luksika Kumkhum/THA)
FIRST SEED OUT: #10 Aryna Sabalenka/BLR (lost 1st Rd. to Rybarikova/SVK)
UPSET QUEENS: Slovenia
REVELATION LADIES: Russia
NATION OF POOR SOULS: BLR (1-3 1st; 3/4 of "Dream Team" lose, including #10 Sabalenka)
LAST QUALIFIER STANDING: Coco Gauff/USA (4th Rd.) (LL: L.Davis/USA - 3rd Rd.)
LAST WILD CARD STANDING: Harriet Dart/GBR (3rd Rd.)
LAST BRITS STANDING: Johanna Konta (QF)
IT ("Kid"): Coco Gauff, USA
Ms.OPPORTUNITY: Nominees: Svitolina, Halep, Kamiji (for WC Career Slam)
COMEBACK PLAYER: Nominee: Svitolina, Mattek-Sands
CRASH & BURN: #2 Naomi Osaka/JPN (1st Rd. - lost to Putintseva/KAZ)
ZOMBIE QUEEN OF LONDON: Elina Svitolina/UKR (2nd Rd.: Gasparyan two points from win at 7-5/5-4, cramps, retires when leading match)
DOUBLES STAR: xx
VETERAN PLAYER (KIMIKO CUP): Barbora Strycova/CZE
SPIRIT OF JANA (NOVOTNA) HONOREE: (Bad Donna) Vekic/CRO + ??
JUNIOR BREAKOUT: xx
RAD REMEMBRANCE DAY malevolent activity notes...
June 26 official: In Eastbourne, a day after her first Top 10 victory in over a year (and first consecutive wins in back-to-back events since last grass season), '18 Wimbledon semifinalist (and former SW19 girls champ) Alona Ostapenko is forced to retire from her 3rd Round match with a hip injury.
Day 3 observed: Margarita Gasparyan, having overcome three knee surgeries and missing most of two years between 2016-18, comes within two points of defeating #8-seeded Elina Svitolina at 7-5/5-4. Five minutes later, she serves and lands awkwardly on her "bad" leg and immediately doubles over in pain. She is treated for cramping, and ultimately, in tears, retires while still leading 7-5/5-6, with an 82-81 points edge and 42-15 lead in winners.




All for Day 8. More tomorrow.

2 Comments:

Blogger colt13 said...

Glad the umpire didn't get in trouble for that. Nice to see the legends being entertaining.

Since Andrea Jaeger is playing, is her serve a Jaeger bomb?

Goerges is the only player on your 2015-19 SF list who hasn't been Top 5 in that stretch.

Also a Williams has been in the SF the last 5 years.

Did Strycova's team hypnotize her to think she is at Birmingham? 2 time finalist and 2 time SF there.

Not calling Strycova old, though she has mentioned that this might be her last Wimbledon, but her second and last junior title-2003 Australian Open, was 14 months before Coco Gauff was born.

Not sold on Serena winning the title, though she is a big favorite over Strycova. The reason why isn't her fault, but a quirky reminder of how special she has been. Williams is 3-0 vs Strycova. This means that Serena to reach the final, will have played 6 women that she had never lost on the way to the final. This happens for the Gauff/Anisimova types, who can count their slam draws on one hand. But to have been around decades and have that happen is something I have not seen.

What that also means, is that for the second year in a row, if she reaches the final it will have been without facing a Top 10 player. That will stop with either Halep or Svitolina, as will the no prior losses as she has lost to each player once. This is a problem, as she normally can't reach that level quickly enough. Like Venus, she is taking time to warm up, and normally plays better in the second set than the first. Against players in theory that should be able to play their A game from the get go, this is a problem.

Stat of the Day- 2- The amount of women left that can win multiple titles here.

One of the good signs for Serena's year is that she has stayed in the mixed draw. Don't know for how much longer, but the first match was for publicity, the second one was for fitness. She's held up well. And if she can play Cincinnati, she will be on the short list in New York for 24 or 25.

The other, being played as I write this is Strycova. Barty had a legit shot, but longshot Strycova could walk away with 2 slam titles and the #1 doubles ranking.

Now onto the Final Four stats.

Head 2 Head
9-1 Williams leads Halep
5-1 Halep leads Strycova
4-1 Williams leads Svitolina
4-3 Svitolina leads Halep
3-0 Williams leads Strycova
2-0 Svitolina leads Strycova

Only 2 grass meetings, Williams 1-0 vs both Halep and Strycova.

Grass-Last 3 years:
19-8 Strycova
15-4 Halep
11-1 Williams
11-6 Svitolina

Grass numbers are skewed by both small sample size, and the fact that Serena only plays Wimbledon-missed 2017. Another note, with all of the veterans, no ITF results used, though Riske would have had some.

Strycova would be the first Czech to win Wimbledon since Petra Kvitova in 2014. Would be first slam winner since same.

Williams would be the first American since herself in 2016. Would be first slam winner since Stephens-USO 2017.

Halep would be first Romanian to win or reach final here. Would be first Romanian since she won 2018 French.

Svitolina would be first Ukranian to win or reach any singles slam final. Bondarenko sisters won 2008 Australian doubles.

Svitolina will be first seed Halep has faced.

Svitolina looking for first Top 10 win of the season, as Barty was 12.

Top 10 wins last 3 years:
23-Svitolina
17-Halep
4-Williams
4-Strycova

Only person that has any on grass is Strycova, who beat Bertens this year, and previously beat Muguruza.

Konta is the only woman who lost to all 4, and yesterday's loss doesn't count.

Muguruza and Halep had the most losses-6, followed by Konta, Pliskova, Kerber-5

Wed Jul 10, 09:21:00 AM EDT  
Blogger Todd.Spiker said...

Disappointed by the Azarenka/Barty walkover. The reason given is the same arm injury (AB) that was an issue in Eastbourne. Thought Vika might have a legit shot at a title there. :\

Jaeger. :P

Today is almost a *second* Middle Sunday. :)

(I was hoping the wheelchair matches would start today, but no.)

Wed Jul 10, 11:40:00 AM EDT  

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