Wk.12- Astra Rules Sharmaston
????@astrasharma | #MUSCHealthWomensOpen pic.twitter.com/KaP7qOxuvZ
— wta (@WTA) April 18, 2021
Mood ??@astrasharma | #MUSCHealthWomensOpen pic.twitter.com/LOh8US828D
— wta (@WTA) April 18, 2021
On another note, *this* is surely the appropriate -- and telling on many levels -- response from the Aussie to that horrendous situation last week in Bogota in which Sharma had a key break of serve stolen from her because the umpire couldn't correctly keep score, then was scolded by the umpire and the WTA supervisor for not keeping track of the score herself *and* not being able to immediately recount how she won every point in the game (as if that's in her job description) in order to "prove" she was correct.
Before today, if you googled Alycia Parks, the first thing that would pop up was viral video of an on-court incident in 2019 when her opponent got aggressive with a handshake.
— TickTockTennis (@TickTockTennis) April 13, 2021
Today, Parks made news by scoring her first WTA win, 6-1, 6-4 over Grace Min.
Scores: @downloadtennis pic.twitter.com/1cOaQySt8y
By the way, here's the aforementioned incident from 2019 with Canadian Katherine Sebov:
Sebov also took "Part II" in that story, defeating Parks in a Rome (Ga.) challenger this past January.
How to entertain yourself during MTOs, with @DankaKovinic ?????#MUSCHealthWomensOpen pic.twitter.com/YrInzXUMts
— wta (@WTA) April 14, 2021
Positive vibes from Charleston! Keep digging ?????? pic.twitter.com/vu5Cpv20IY
— Kovinic Danka (@DankaKovinic) April 18, 2021
.@CamiOsorioTenis's breakthrough this month has taken her to her first title ?? and seven straight wins across two continents!
— wta (@WTA) April 16, 2021
The ???? Colombian teenager talks past and future inspiration and the importance of playing with heart ??
Meanwhile, the 18-year old Dane's trip to Charleston ended in tears, with her 2nd set retirement with a knee injury against fellow teen Osorio Serrano. But it was still a super-productive week, as Tauson (still in just her sixth career WTA MD, and third since winning the Lyon title) posted wins over Liudmila Samsonova and Ajla Tomljanovic (giving her another Top 100 win even as she continues to flirt with the ranking barrier herself) and reached her second tour-level QF of the season. Having arrived on a two-match losing streak after defeats at the hands of Dasha Kasatkina (Saint Petersburg) and Daniela Seguel (in her clay court season debut in Bogota), Tauson still managed to improve to 23-6 overall on the season and will climb back into the Top 100 this week, matching her previous career-high of #96.
Clara Tauson's remarkable season continues ??
— wta (@WTA) April 14, 2021
A second WTA quarterfinal awaits the Danish teenager! ????#MUSCHealthWomensOpen pic.twitter.com/O3XQs5OGSZ
Just asked Clara Tauson, who claims to be a total tennis geek and Kvitova fan, which of Petra's @Wimbledon finals she liked better. Not only did she know both finals, she also quoted the score of the one she preferred: Kvitova d. Bouchard 6-3, 6-0. Wow. She's for real.
— Chris Oddo (@TheFanChild) April 14, 2021
Polona Hercog vs. Lucia Bronzetti to start the day on central court. Double duty for all the winners today here at Oeiras Ladies Open. pic.twitter.com/9K0EDjMSaU
— Gaspar Ribeiro Lança (@gasparlanca) April 17, 2021
Meanwhile, Bannerette Aney picked up her second career title a week after she picked up #1, claiming another $15K crown in Shymkent, KAZ with a 5-7/7-6(6)/6-0 win in the final over Serbia's Tamara Curovic. Unseeded Aney knocked off the #7, #2 and #5 (Curovic) seeds on her way into the winner's circle. She's currently on a 23-3 run since the start of March, and is a combined 34-7 in Q/MD matches this season.
That ?????????? ??
— wta (@WTA) April 13, 2021
15-year-old wildcard ???? Linda Fruhvirtova lighting up the court on just her second WTA main draw appearance.#MUSCHealthWomensOpen pic.twitter.com/K9nI9FWSb3
At the Grade 1 Plovdiv Cup in Bulgaria, 16-year old Greek Laki grabbed the biggest title of her junior career (she'd previously won a pair of G3 crowns). The girls #42 dropped no sets on her way to the final, where she upset #2 seeded Belgian Sofia Costoulas (girls #20) 6-2/3-6/6-2.
At the Grade 1 Yeltsin Cup in Kazan, Russia, it was 17-year old Hordette Shcherbinina picking up the biggest crown of her junior career (her previous best was a G4 in '19). The #2 seed (girls #46), she defeated #5-seeded Dane Johanne Christine Svendzen, a previous '21 G1 champ, en route to taking the title without dropping a set, handling #8-seeded Russian Ekaterina Makarova 6-4/6-1 in the final. Shcherbinina is the third different Hordette to win a Grade 1 event this season.
Alina Shcherbinina (UTR 10.73) has verbally committed to @BaylorWTennis and will join the Bears in the fall of 2021. The 17-year-old Russian has an ITF juniors ranking of #40, winning three singles & six doubles titles. Also has WTA rankings of #959 in singles & #1184 in doubles. pic.twitter.com/vfih9Z0hs7
— Parsa Bombs ?? (@ParsaBombs) February 16, 2021
The ???? duo powers through the tiebreak!
— wta (@WTA) April 18, 2021
Hailey Baptiste and @CatyMcNally are your 2021 MUSC Health Women’s Open doubles champions after taking out the No.1 seeds Sanders/Perez, 6-7(4), 6-4, [10-6]. pic.twitter.com/MlcZZPWV3z
Later...
To no one’s surprise Hibino/Doi have withdrawn in doubles. #charlestonthesecond
— Reservoir Ducks (@DuckDaBlackSwan) April 13, 2021
Hibino posted an additional win over Francesca Di Lorenzo, but then was ousted 6-0/6-1 by Ons Jabeur in the QF.
First title feels ????@astrasharma takes out the No.1 seed Jabeur in three sets to claim the title ??#MUSCHealthWomensOpen pic.twitter.com/9djVizOEe8
— wta (@WTA) April 18, 2021
A splendid tweener from Tauson but @CamiOsorioTenis ends the rally with a winner and a smile ??#MUSCHealthWomensOpen pic.twitter.com/o9MevdS7kv
— wta (@WTA) April 16, 2021
Who’s 17 year-old Noma Noha Akugue’s big idol? Not Serena Williams or Angie Kerber… it’s Naomi Osaka. pic.twitter.com/CsnG3up7Jr
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) April 17, 2021
A first WTA main draw victory for the 15-year-old! ????
— wta (@WTA) April 14, 2021
Czech wildcard Linda Fruhvirtova is into Round 2 after a thrilling battle with No.4 seed Cornet, who was forced to retire at 4-4 in the deciding set.#MUSCHealthWomensOpen pic.twitter.com/D9niZFo5ms
Wimbledon chiefs publish renderings of proposed new 8,000-seat 'Parkland' show court as part of major redevelopment and expansion: https://t.co/hPQvZeQtnv #tennis #stadium #Wimbledon
— TheStadiumBusiness (@stadiumbusiness) April 15, 2021
HE DIDN’T KNOCK ME OUT,
— Irina Falconi (@IrinaFalconi) April 15, 2021
HE KNOCKED ME UP ????????????????
Baby Hartman coming in hot Nov 2021! ???????? pic.twitter.com/Er47qahXlg
Center of attention: All eyes on @Simona_Halep in Stuttgart on Sunday pic.twitter.com/BFWmNoLCVO
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) April 18, 2021
@daria_gavtennis Reply to @drsoheinakagawa ##targetpractice ##dariagavrilova ##tennis ##?? omg TikTok removed it ??
? Classical Music - Classical Music
@saba_a05 ##???????????????? ##????????????
? Waltz of the Flowers - The Manhattan Pops
In February 2020, the cofounders of Bala secured $900,000 from Shark Tank investors @MariaSharapova and #MarkCuban. The fitness accessories company has since pumped up sales to $20 million thanks to the home workout wave: https://t.co/8ijWBw1Ps4 pic.twitter.com/QNCma2Vu4p
— ForbesLife (@ForbesLife) April 15, 2021
*2021 FIRST-TIME WTA CHAMPIONS*
Lyon - Clara Tauson, DEN (18/#139) d. Golubic
Guadalajara - Sara Sorribes Tormo, ESP (24/#71) d. Bouchard
Monterrey - Leylah Fernandez, CAN (18/#88) d. Golubic
Charleston - Veronika Kudermetova, RUS (23/#38) d. Kovinic
Bogota - Maria Camila Osorio Serrano, COL (19/#180) d. Zidansek
Charleston 2 - ASTRA SHARMA, AUS (25/#165) d. Jabeur
*2021 LOW-RANKED FINALISTS*
#180 - Maria Camila Osorio Serrano, COL (Bogota)[W]
#165 - ASTRA SHARMA, AUS (CHARLESTON 2)[W]
#144 - Genie Bouchard, CAN (Guadalajara)
#139 - Clara Tauson, DEN (Lyon)[W]
#129 - Viktorija Golubic, SUI (Lyon)
#126 - Margarita Gasparyan, RUS (Saint Petersburg)
#102 - Viktorija Golubic, SUI (Monterrey)
*2021 FINALS/CHAMPIONS BY NATION*
[w/ titles]
5 (3) - RUS
4 (2) - ESP
3 (3) - AUS
3 (1) - CAN,CZE
3 (0) - SUI
2 (0) - EST,USA
1 (1) - BEL,BLR,COL,DEN,JPN,POL
1 (0) - MNE,SLO,TUN
--
NOTE: 1 DNP final (USA/EST)
*WTA TITLES - AUSTRALIANS (active)*
10 - Ash Barty, 2017-21
9 - Samantha Stosur, 2009-17
1 - Dasha Gavrilova, 2017
1 - ASTRA SHARMA, 2021
*RECENT EARLY-CAREER NON-SLAM BREAKOUTS*
2015: Nao Hibino wins Tashkent (2nd WTA MD, age 20)
2016: Rebeka Masarova to Gstaad SF (WTA MD debut, age 16)
2017: Jana Fett to Hobart SF (WTA MD debut, age 20)
2017: Marketa Vondrousova wins Biel (2nd WTA MD, age 17)
2017: Mihaela Buzarnescu to Linz SF (2nd WTA MD, age 29)
2018: Olga Danilovic wins Moscow River Cup (1st WTA MD, age 17)
2018: Anastasia Potapova to Moscow River Cup F (3rd WTA MD, age 17)
2018: Tamara Zidansek to Moscow River Cup SF (3rd WTA MD, age 18)
2019: Bianca Andreescu to Auckland F (4th WTA MD, age 18)
2019: Maria Camila Osorio Serrano to Bogota QF (2nd career WTA MD, age 17)
2019: Iga Swiatek to Lugano F (3rd WTA MD, age 17)
2019: Astra Sharma to Bogota F (3rd WTA MD, age 23)
2019: Martina Di Giuseppe to Bucharest SF (1st WTA MD, age 28)
2019: Katarzyna Kawa to Jurmala Final (1st WTA MD, age 26)
2019: Liudmila Samsonova to Palermo SF (4th WTA MD, age 20)
2019: Coco Gauff wins Linz (5th WTA MD, age 15)
2020: Leonie Kung to Hua Hin F (2nd WTA MD, age 19)
2021: Clara Tauson wins Lyon (3rd WTA MD, age 18)
2021: Linda Fruhvirtova to Charleston 2 QF (2nd WTA MD, age 15)
*2021 FIRST-TIME WTA DOUBLES CHAMPS*
HAILEY BAPTISTE, USA (Charleston 2)
Caroline Dolehide, USA (Monterrey)
Elixane Lechemia, FRA (Bogota)
Ingrid Neel, USA (Bogota)
Ankita Raina, IND (Phillip Island)
Kamilla Rakhimova, RUS (Phillip Island)
*2021 REACHED FINAL IN HOME NATION*
Melb.Yarra Valley - Ash Barty, AUS (W)
Saint Petersburg - Dasha Kasatkina, RUS (W)
Saint Petersburg - Margarita Gasparyan, RUS
Bogota - Maria Camila Osorio Serrano, COL (W)
[doubles]
AO Mixed - Samantha Stosur, AUS
Guadalajara - Giuliana Olmos, MEX
Miami - Hayley Carter, USA
Charleston - Nicole Melichar, USA (W)
Charleston 2 - HAILEY BAPTISTE/CATY McNALLY, USA (W)
*2021 WEEKLY BACKSPIN PLAYERS OF THE WEEK*
Week 1: Aryna Sabalenka, BLR
AO Q: Francesca Jones, GBR
Week 2: Ash Barty, AUS
AO: Naomi Osaka, JPN
Week 4: Dasha Kasatkina, RUS
Week 5: Iga Swiatek, POL
Week 6: Petra Kvitova, CZE
Week 7: Garbine Muguruza, ESP
Week 8: Dasha Kasatkina, RUS (2)
Week 9/10: Ash Barty, AUS (2)
Week 11: Veronika Kudermetova, RUS
BJK Playoffs: Magdalena Frech, POL
Week 12: Astra Sharma, AUS
*2021 TOP JUNIOR EVENT CHAMPIONS*
SVYATOPETRIVSKE VILLAGE UKR J1: Anastasiia Gureva/RUS
SALINAS ECU J1: Natalia Szabanin/HUN
ASUNCION BOWL PAR J1: Petra Marcinko/CRO
PORTO ALEGRE BRA J1: Natalia Szabanin/HUN
BANANA BOWL BRA GA: Oceane Babel/FRA
BARRANQUILLA COL J1: Johanne Christine Svendsen/DEN
SAN DIEGO USA J1: Alexandra Yepifanova/USA
VILLENA ESP J1: Diana Shnaider/RUS
PLOVDIV BUL J1: Michaela Laki/GRE
YELTSIN CUP RUS J1: Alina Shcherbinina/RUS
Mick Jagger tells us about his mental state during the pandemic, sounds off on anti-vaxxers and conspiracy theorists and explains how his new pandemic-themed song with Dave Grohl came together within weeks. https://t.co/vd8O6lijOi
— Rolling Stone (@RollingStone) April 13, 2021
The Queen sat alone, socially distanced, at her husband’s funeral is going to be an enduring image. When she said, aged 21 in April 1947 that she was going to serve her country, she meant every word of it. #PrincePhilipfuneral pic.twitter.com/2hYbxErl4P
— Omid Djalili (@omid9) April 17, 2021
Fall down seven times, get up eight... and keep rolling ??
— wta (@WTA) April 13, 2021
Dedication to the cause from the cameraperson ?? pic.twitter.com/QplLU7HNP6
Woman finds an abandoned little parakeet in New York City and he makes her his snuggling partner ?? pic.twitter.com/qdCiJKID7D
— The Dodo (@dodo) April 18, 2021
— Kids doing shit (@kidsdoingshit) April 15, 2021
8 Comments:
The MUSC Women's Health Open was a wonderful experience. So many great up-and-coming players, as well as players who have been working hard for so long, like Jabeur and Sharma. I was really impressed by the insight and candor of the players; it was a pleasure to talk with them. Jabeur's time will come soon; Astra seems to have finally turned a corner.
Kids as American Gladiators was interesting.
Ha! I actually did get the vaccine(1st dose)the day I picked Frech as MIP.
Holiday dinner just got less awkward for U.Radwanska and Celt.
Score one for Sharma!
Serbia was a missed opportunity. Didn't play bad, but lost at home without facing Andreescu, Bouchard or Dabrowski. Literally had the lights go out on them.
Schedule has been released for the next 9 weeks after Wimbledon, and there are some questions. Cleveland is official the week before USO. Prague is in July, and assume Brenda and Linda will both get WC.
Montreal is on, but is the problem. Might Cincinnati hold 2 events if they cant go? ITF Vancouver is cancelled.
For the early season stuff, Belgrade has a one year license, Den Bosch and Cologne are postponed till 2022, Nottingham is TBD, and Strasbourg moves back a week.
Olympic cutoff will be pushed back a week to match French Open.
Stat of the Week- 5- The number of French women in the Top 100 at the end of the 1986 season.
Twitter sent me down the rabbit hole. Last week, the put out a stat that there were no French women in the Top 50 for the first time since September 1986.
That season was the shortest season in history, until last year. You see, after ending the 1985 season in March 1986, they tried to set up 1987 as a calendar season only. It wasn't, as they started the 87 season in December 1986.
French Women-1986 Year End Ranking:
37-Catherine Tanvier
42-Nathalie Herreman
65-Isabelle Demengeot
66-Nathalie Tauziat
84-Catherine Suire
Having 5 of the Top 100 made them prolific, as there were only 3 countries with as many- Australia-5, West Germany-6, USA-46.
There were 24 countries reflected. Or was it 25?
A season that started with a doubles only event, the Bridgestone Doubles, that was actually held from 1975-1997, had one of the oddest stories in history.
It surrounds West German Bettina Bunge. or shall I say, Swiss born German? Living her formative years in Peru, you probably think that I will claim that she represented them in 1986. No, Peru had representation, but because of Laura Arraya.
After living 13 years in Peru, she moved to Florida. Oddly enough, her ranking in 1981-82 says USA, though she played Fed Cup for West Germany 7 times between 1980-89.
So what does this have to do with 1986? Well, in 1983, she moved to Monaco, and even though she never represented them, she was listed as MON for every year she was ranked between 1983-1990!
So has anybody really represented Monaco?
Yes, as Swiss born Emanuelle Gagliardi did so early in her career, reaching a ranking high of 87 while under Monaco's banner.
Monaco didn't have a Fed Cup team, so that may be one of the reasons she switched in 1997, playing for them a total of 8 times between 1997-2008. Reaching a career high rank of 42 for Switzerland, she represented them in the Olympics in 2000.
Quiz Time!
Only one French woman won a title during the 1986 season. Who was it?
A.Nathalie Tauziat
B.Catherine Suire
C.Catherine Tanvier
D.Nathalie Herreman
E.Isabelle Demengeot
Interlude- Not Linda, but Brenda.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Icy8FBc_g6k
Answer!
This is one of these that is a crapshoot, just have fun figuring it out.
(B)Suire is wrong, but is used just to show this mess of a season. She is the only one in this group to not reach a QF during the 1986 season, but did reach a final in March 1986 in Hershey, 2 weeks before the 1985 season YEC.
Both (A)Tauziat and (E)Demengeot are out, as their best result was a single QF.
It isn't (C)Tanvier, though she reached the Hilversum final and reached 2 SF.
(D)Herreman is correct, as she won Perugia. She also reached a QF in Barcelona, the same week Argentina BJK Cup captain Mercedes Paz did so.
One last note about 1986. Paz wasn't the biggest splash from Argentina. Then 17 year old Patricia Tarabini reached the SF in Austria. The future coach of Anna Kalinskaya stuck around long enough to win Olympic Bronze in 2004 with Paola Suarez at 36.
5 On the Up Side.
1.Svitolina- Stuttgart pick. Playing well enough to win, and I can't pick her in Madrid. Shockingly, she's never made it to the round of 16 there.
2.Krejcikova- Istanbul pick. Seems like she should be a first time winner this year, and we have had 6 in the last 7 weeks. Plus Vaidisova, Hradecka and Vondrousova have been finalists here.
3.Kontaveit- Seems odd to mention her here, but she reached the Stuttgart final in 2019. Without BJK Cup to tire her out, maybe she makes a run.
4.Kasatkina- You would think that she should be playing Stuttgart. Maybe she needs confidence. Hasn't reached a QF on clay since Roland Garros 2018. Russians reached the finals in 5 straight years(2006-10), maybe Dasha ends the drought.
5.Bartunkova- Lost in Istanbul Q to Gasanova, who should be favored in her next match. Another of the Czech youngsters that played the COVID exhibitions, we should see her at Prague.
5 On the Down Side.
1.Bertens- Said that she feels better on clay with her injury, but couldn't go on back to back days. How badly does she want to play the Olympics? She may need to play the Serena schedule-Madrid, French Open, Olympics. Did I forget Wimbledon? No, not convinced that she can switch surfaces that quickly. Good enough to win a match, but can she hold up for a long run?
2.Kerber- Went 9-0 winning back to back in 2015-16. Including Q, she is 7-9 the other years. Don't trust her in 3 set matches anymore.
3.Bencic- Just because we are on clay. Being .500 or better is the goal. Surprisingly, has a Top 10 win on clay. Less surprising once you realize that it is Osaka.
4.Niculescu- Got outcoached. Playing Buzarnescu once in singles? Risky. Playing her twice? Insane. Buzarnescu is Cornet(4-14)lite in BJK Cup. 5 match losing streak in singles, 6 overall, and hasn't had a win since 2012.
5.China- Argentina, Mexico, Brazil all fought hard with lesser rosters. China mismanaged their roster. Wang should have been pulled for Zhang for match #4.
D-
They really should think about holding back-to-back Charleston events *every* year.
If BJK has the mid-April weekend of play every year, the spot might be open (though I guess in a "normal" set up it might be the entire Finals event, not just the playoffs). It would be a good secondary event and a real convenience for the players who played in the first event.
C-
And I guess we have to factor in the renewed rumors about the Olympics maybe being cancelled altogether, too. They've left a tour-level hole in that spot in the schedule (w/ just two 125 events that week), but I wonder if something bigger could be put together in time if Tokyo ends up being a no-go?
Quiz: wanted to say Tauziat, but that seemed too easy so I went w/ Tanvier. As you were eliminating names I thought I might have won the lottery... but no. :/
Great (B)Fruhvirtova video. So, might this be a Williams-like situation where everyone was awed by the *first* sister, while those in the know were saying "wait'll you see the younger one?"
Well, at least I have China to thank for winning the BJK Cup picks competition (oh, you didn't know there was one? heehee).
So I went 6-2 (thanks, Arantxa), and you 5-3 since our only difference was NED/CHN. ;)
Haha. So the BJK "MVP voting" produced Carle as the weekend's MVP. :D
Yes, she had a great breakout tie, but her 2-0 singles mark included a win when one opponent said she had heat stroke, and the other retired in what was a tie match. And then she was on the court in a losing effort in the deciding doubles. Oh, yeah... and her team lost.
Call it "Player of the Weekend" (maybe) or "Breakout Star" (better) or something, and it's okay (I suppose). But that's not an "MVP" performance. And certainly not when one player had a hand in all three wins. Truthfully, I'm surprised they even nominated Frech.
This is a little like everyone touting how Swiatek won the WTA's Fan Favorite vote last season, and leaving out that the player who'd won it the three previous seasons wasn't even offered up as a nominee.
(Also: it's hard to believe a Polish player didn't win an online vote since the POL fans always come through in the WTA fan voting polls.)
I agree that it would be nice to keep the second Charleston event (only that would put me in a real bind because I'd be so tempted to go for two weeks, which is excessive in terms of expense, and I doubt if I'd have a photographer for two weeks). I don't think the regular BJK Cup schedule will allow it, though.
I can't believe I'm saying this out loud, but I really wish Fed Cup hadn't changed its name. I'm not one of those people who still says "stewardess" and "videotape"--I don't mind change at all; I just like the name "Fed Cup."
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