Monday, December 12, 2022

2022 Season in Review: Matches of the Year, Pt.2


Comebacks make the world (tennis, and otherwise) go 'round, right?













1. Wimbledon 4th Rd. - Tatjana Maria def. Alona Ostapenko
...5-7/7-5/7-5. This one started with a long stretch that resembled so many previous Ostapenko matches, as the Latvian rallied from a 1-3, 15/40 1st set deficit to then make Maria a simple passenger on the usual Tilt-a-Penko amusement park ride. In the blink of an eye, Ostapenko suddenly led 7-5/4-1. But it was somewhere around there that the passenger started to become the driver in the match, or at least the person who held onto the safety bar and made sure that *she* wasn't going to fly off the tracks.

As Maria began to pull back on her slice shots, putting a little more power behind and flattening out her groundstrokes, while serving better and better, errors began to creep into the Latvian's game. The shots that Ostapenko had previously been firing past Maria, or which she was barely able to touch, started to be gotten back with lunging defensive stretches that often floated deep into the court and forced the Latvian to make another shot. Then another. And sometimes another. Maria closed the gap on the scoreboard.

Ostapenko scraped together enough of her former momentum to grab back the lead, holding a pair of MP on Maria's serve at 5-4. But she didn't attack the points as she had in the 1st set, and the chances went away. Maria held for 5-5 with an ace, then carried over her surge to break Ostapenko a game later. Fully leaning into the proceedings, Maria held at love to swipe the 7-5 2nd set (and near straight-sets win) from Ostapenko's grasp.

Ostapenko opened the 3rd by reasserting herself again, breaking to lead 2-0. But the Latvian's own errors cost her game #3 as the set went back on serve, and immediately starting talking to herself and yelling in the direction of her team in the stands between points. As Maria remained steady, and quickly rallied from slow starts in games, the match settled more into the German's wheelhouse. In the ninth game, Ostapenko's UE on GP a game later set up a series of moments in which she'd take a lead on a big shot, then give it back with an error a point later. This trend continued as she squandered three GP before Maria got a BP. Maria then played remarkable defense until Ostapenko finally fired a ball just long to give the German a 5-4 lead. Maria closed her eyes around the most dangerous turn of the Tilt-a-Penko ride, though, DF'ing to open game #10 and dropping serve at love when Ostapenko fired a return winner as the 3rd set, just like the 1st and 2nd had been, was knotted at 5-5.

Serving to reclaim the lead, Ostapenko went up 30/love, but a nervous DF preceded an UE that brought Maria back. Floating back defensive slices until Ostapenko missed a shot, the German reached BP and reclaimed her own lead after Ostapenko missed on a shot she fired across the far side doubles alley after chasing down a Maria shot that had just caught the sideline (she gestured -- as she's wont to do -- that Maria's ball had missed, but had no challenges left in the set even if there had been a chance that she was right).

Serving for the match for a second time, Maria didn't make the same mistake she had moments earlier by giving points away to Ostapenko. The Latvian missed on a lob attempt on the opening point, then cracked her racket in anger. A long Ostapenko return put Maria up 30/love, and the German's overhead winner gave her triple MP. Ostapenko's final error, on another return, closed out the rollercoaster match, sending Maria into her first career slam quarterfinal and a frustred Ostapenko out, leaving a symbolically knocked-over chair in her wake.



While Maria found a way to nearly ride the Tilt-a-Penko on a straight line that gently sloped upward and allowed her to reach the end without incident, Ostapenko's track more resembled an EKG readout as she continually traveled off and on and ultimately off the tracks. Her 52 winners were slightly nixed by her 57 UE, just enough to make a difference in a match that she twice seemed to have a firm grip on and in which she held double MP. As she left the court, Ostapenko slammed down her water bottle, upsetting her chair and leaving behind a near-perfect lasting image of what it's like to end this particular sort of ride by dangling off those very same tracks that Maria, who won 78% of her first serve points and had 9 aces, steadfastly refused to jump.
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2. Wimbledon Girls' 3rd Rd. - Liv Hovde d. Kayla Cross
...4-6/7-5/6-4. Top-seeded and eventual girls' champ Hovde escapes after using up one of her Wimbledon nine lives against the #13 seeded London native (as in London, Ontario) Cross.

Cross led 6-4/4-2 and served for the match at 5-4. She held a MP at 40/30, and thought she'd won the match when a Hovde shot was called out at the baseline. But after Cross had started to celebrate, Hovde challenged the call and Hawkeye showed that her shot was *in*, so the point was replayed. On the *second* first MP, a Hovde drop shot denied the Canadian again, then Cross DF'd on the next point. A wide forehand from Cross gave Hovde the service break and she'd ultimately sweep the final four games of the 2nd and then take a 5-1 lead in the 3rd.

Hovde twice failed to serve it out before finally breaking Cross at love to end the match.
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3. Adelaide 1 2nd Rd. - Ash Barty def. Coco Gauff
...4-6/7-5/6-1. Before it ended, it began. In Adelaide.

Barty trailed Gauff 6-4/4-2, 40/AD before rallying to win in three and open her season with a victory. She finished it without ever losing, taking 11 straight matches and 22 consecutive sets, walking off into the Aussie sunset with a cherished Australian Open title.

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4. Wimbledon 2nd Rd. - Elise Mertens def. Panna Udvardy
...3-6/7-6/7-5. In this 2nd Round match, #24-seeded Mertens teetered on the edge of oblivion late on a Wednesday evening, as Udvardy served at 6-3/6-5 and held two MP at 40/15. Mertens won a pair of back-to-back baseline rallies, though, getting the break and then winning a TB to extend the match to a 3rd set which was to be finished on Thursday.

The next day, Mertens opened the set with a break of serve, but the Hungarian got things back to even and was serving at 4-4 a short time later. In game #9, Mertens had nine BP chances (one saved via a net cord) but Udvardy held for 5-4. Rather than turn the tables on the Belgian in the closing moments, through, Udvardy didn't win another game. Two games later, Mertens got the break she'd just missed out on and had the chance to serve for the match -- and her 18th straight slam 3rd Round -- at 6-5.

At 15/15 in game #12, Udvardy had Mertens at the net, but rather than lob over her and make the Waffle chase down the ball she *twice* tried to power through the world WD #1. Both times Mertens expertly volleyed the shots back and took a 30/15 lead. Udvardy won the next point, but rather than be at BP it was only 30/30. Mertens held her first MP a point later, some 13 hours after she'd faced down two. Udvardy saved it with an overhead put-away, but then sprayed a backhand on Mertens' second MP two points later as the Belgian got the win, kept her 3rd Round streak alive and ulimately reached the Round of 16.

Wimbledon wasn't all bad for the Udvardy clan, though, as Panna's little sister Luca reached the girls' singles final.
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5. Chennai QF - Linda Fruhvirtova def. Varbara Gracheva
...6-4/6-3. The Russian led 4-2 in the 1st, and 3-0 in the 2nd, but Fruhvirtova prevailed in straights.

Chennai SF - Linda Fruhvirtova def. Nadia Podoroska
...5-7/6-2/6-4. Battling back from a set down and 4-2 in the 3rd, Fruhvirtova is the first of the Crush of Czechs to reach a tour-level singles final. She won't be the last.



Chennai Final - Linda Fruhvirtova def. Magda Linette
...4-6/6-3/6-4. Battling back from a set down and 4-1 in the 3rd, Fruhvirtova is the first of her Crush generation to lift her first WTA singles title. She won't be the last to do *that*, either. Heck, she won't even be the only one named Fruhvirtova.


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6. WTAF Final - Veronika Kudermetova/Elise Mertens def. Barbora Krejcikova/Katerina Siniakova
...6-2/4-6 [11-9]. A year after losing to the Czechs in the WTAF final alongside Hsieh Su-wei, Mertens gets a measure of revenge by adding her first tour championships crown to her collection of three of the four majors (she's missing only RG).

Kudermetova/Mertens led by a set and a break at 4-3, only to then lose 12 of 13 points to end the 2nd and fall behind 4-1 and 7-2 in the MTB. With Krejcikova & Siniakova seemingly set to successfully defend their title, the Russian/Belgian pair roared back with six straight points to lead 8-7, finally putting away their biggest title as a pair on their second MP.
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7. Australian Open 3rd Rd. - Amanda Anisimova def. Naomi Osaka
...4-6/6-3/7-6(10-5). Anisimova prevails, saving two MP at 5-4 down in the 3rd, then winning a decisive TB to eliminate defending champ Osaka, who falls for the second time in Melbourne ('20 vs. another Bannerette, Coco Gauff) in the 3rd Round the year after winning the AO title. Osaka dropped to #85 in the rankings following the AO.


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8. U.S. Open 2nd Rd. - Aryna Sabalenka def. Kaia Kanepi
...2-6/7-6(8)/6-4. Sabalenka's successful defense of her '21 Open semi (and near takedown of eventual champ Iga Swiatek, as she led 4-2 in the 3rd set) almost didn't happen.

The Belarusian seemed fated to an early exit in New York after trailing Kanepi 6-2/5-1 with the Estonian twice serving for the match and holding two MP in the 2nd set TB. But Sabalenka survived, and the rest was (almost) history.


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9. Bad Homburg Final - Caroline Garcia def. Bianca Andreescu
...6-7(5)/6-4/6-4. The second of Garcia's back-to-back battles to secure the Bad Homburg title. Andreescu led 7-6/4-2, only to see Garcia run off four straight games to force a 3rd set. Up 2-0 in the decider, Andreescu again saw Garcia win four in a row and hold her advantage to take the crown.


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10. Rome QF - Ons Jabeur def. Maria Sakkari
...1-6/7-5/6-1. Sakkari led 6-1/5-2, but nothing this side of Iga would prove to be a legitimate obstacle for Jabeur during the Madrid/Rome 1000 swing this spring, as the Tunisian followed up her Madrid title run by reaching the Rome final.


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11. Charleston 1st Rd. - Belinda Bencic def. Wang Xiyu
...4-6/7-6(5)/6-3. Bencic's title run began with a furious comeback against young Chinese player Wang, who'd led 6-4/5-3 and served two points up 5-2 in the 2nd set TB. It seemed a fait accompli. And I guess it was... that Bencic would find a way to get the win. Five straight points claimed the set, and the seeming fates of both women were thereby reversed.

Charleston QF - Belinda Bencic def. Paula Badosa
...2-6/7-6(2)/6-4. What a difference a year can make. In the 2021 Charleston event, Badosa got her first career Top 20 win with an upset of Bencic in their first meeting. Flash forward twelve months and Badosa was the #3-ranked player in the world, holding a 3-0 head-to-head edge over the #21-ranked Swiss.

Badosa led 6-2/4-2 here, but Bencic's recent penchant for comebacks in Charleston saw the Spaniard become her next victim in 2:45.


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12. Guadalajara 250 Final - Sloane Stephens def. Marie Bouzkova
...7-5/1-6/6-2. Bouzkova led 4-1 in both the 1st and 2nd sets, but could only put away the 2nd. In the decider, the Czech saved BP in both of her first two service games, holding from love/40 down in game #2, but couldn't seize the lead as she failed to convert BP on Stephens' serve in game #5. Worse for the Czech, she then dropped serve a game later and saw Stephens carry the momentum to the end, winning the final four games of the match to take home her first tour title in nearly four years (and ending her three-final losing streak over that stretch).

Stephens also staged a comeback from 6-3/3-0 down vs. Dasha Saville in QF, and trailed Anna Kalinskaya by the same score in the SF before the Hordette's back injury eventually forced her retirement.


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13. Cincinnati 1st Rd. - Petra Kvitova def. Jil Teichmann
...6-7(2)/7-6(6)/6-3. A year after falling to Ash Barty in the Cincinnati final, Teichmann served for the match at 6-5 in the 2nd in her opening match in the tournament. She held a MP at 6-5 in the TB, only to then lose in three sets, proving to be the launching pad for one of Kvitova's best weeks in a sometimes-trying season.



In a Six Degrees of Cincinnati situation, this turned out to be a match-up of the tournament runners-up of the last two years, as Kvitova lost in the championship match to Caroline Garcia.
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14. San Jose 2nd Rd. - Paula Badosa def. Elli Mandlik
...6-2/5-7/7-6(5). #240 Mandlik's MD tour-level debut just about got *really* serious, as she led #4 Badosa 5-3 in the 3rd set. Badosa held in a deuce game for 5-4, then broke Mandlik in a two-deuce game on her third BP in game #10. After breaking the Spaniard, Mandlik served at 6-5, but a third straight break of serve in the set led to a deciding TB, won by Badosa as she pulled away from a 4-4 tie to win 7-5.


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15. Washington 1st Rd. - Rebecca Marino def. Venus Williams
...4-6/6-1/6-4. In her first solo match since Chicago in '21, Venus had a bead on her first singles win of '22, leading Marino 3-0 and 4-1 in the 3rd, and holding BP at 4-3 once the Canadian had tightened the score. As it was, Marino broke for 5-4 and served out the win at love, giving Venus another loss to a #100+ opponent (her eighth such loss since the summer of '19) as she lost for the ninth time in her last ten outings and fell to 4-21 since the 2019 U.S. Open.



Williams lost the other three matches she played this summer, as well, all against Top 50 players in Jil Teichmann, Karolina Pliskova and Alison Van Uytvanck, finishing 0-4 in '22. Her last singles win came in the 1st Round of Wimbledon in 2021.
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16. WTAF RR - Aryna Sabalenka def. Ons Jabeur
...3-6/7-6(5)/7-5. Sabalenka and Jabeur kicked off their weeks with a Day 1 thriller, as Sabalenka rallied from 6-3/4-1 to win a 7-5 TB and force a 3rd set. Jabeur again took an early lead at 3-1 before Sabalenka got the set back on serve. She broke the Tunisian to close out the match, providing the "game-changer" moment that made her week -- with wins over #1, #2 and #3, and her first WTAF final appearance -- possible.

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17. Roland Garros 1st Rd. - Sloane Stephens def. Jule Niemeier 5-7/6-4/6-2
...Stephens' run to an improbable-but-probably-logical QF run in Paris began with a pair of comebacks that easily could have continued her spring spiral had a few things gone differently.

For most of their match, Niemeier looked like the player who'd ultimately prove to be the winner. In her slam debut, the German served out the set (on her second try) at 7-5, raising her arms and calling on the crowd to cheer as she walked to the changeover area. Stephens led 2-0 in the 2nd, but Niemeier battled back to get the set back on serve and then held from love/40 down for 3-3. At 4-4, Stephens trailed love/15 when her forehand bounced high off the net, producing a sitter shot for Niemeier to get within two points of serving for the match. But Niemeier's forehand shot flew out of bounds. Stephens soon got the hold, then broke to knot the match.

Niemeier went off court for a medical time out between sets, and after returning with a wrap on her leg was never quite the same. Many more errors flowed off her racket, and Stephens quickly built a big lead on the scoreboard. Maybe it was the pressure of the moment, or the injury, or Stephens finally finding her renowned comfort zone and flowing like few on tour can (from the pool of individuals not named Iga, at least). Or maybe it was a perfect storm that featured a significant percentage of all three. Either way, Stephens soon led 5-0, and after back to back love games had won 21 of 22 points.

Naturally, Sloane being Sloane, Stephens was soon broken at love herself, then saw Niemeier take a 30/love lead on serve at 5-2, opening the door for all sorts of doomsday scenarios to drift through the mind of a seasoned Stephens Watcher. The German held a GP to force Stephens to attempt to serve out the win for a second time, but let the moment slip away. In the blink of an eye, Stephens found herself at match point. She got the break to put a wrap on the almost two and a half hour production.



Roland Garros 2nd Rd. - Sloane Stephens def. Sorana Cirstea 3-6/6-2/6-0
...the Romanian led 6-3/2-0, but once Cirstea, up 2-0 in the 2nd, failed to convert a GP for 3-0, then a BP to get back on serve in game #7 a short time later, a caped (and timetraveling) Future Sloane swooped in and flew off with any remaining dreams Cirstea had of reaching the second week in Paris. Stephens took the spoils of victory and made the notion her own.
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18. Doha 1st Rd. - Victoria Azarenka def. Yulia Putintseva
...5-7/6-2/7-5. In a nutshell: Putintseva led 4-0 in the 3rd, held serve for 5-4 and then had a MTO right before Vika was set to serve to stay in the match, a move for which Azarenka said the Kazakh "needs a psychiatrist." Vika soon saved a MP, swept the final three games and then likely avoided a potentially testy post-match tête-à-tête at the net through the sheer force of Belarusian tennis will.


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19. Rome 1st Rd. - Yulia Putintseva def. Kaja Juvan 7-5/4-6/7-5
Rome 2nd Rd. - Yulia Putintseva def. Garbine Muguruza 3-6/7-6(4)/6-1
...in a rare (for her) turnaround, it was Putintseva who wrestled victory from the jaws of defeat rather than then other way around. First, she saved two MP in a 3:06 comeback win over Juvan, then she followed up with a rally from 6-3/5-3 down against Muguruza, with the Spaniard serving a 5-4 and coming within two points of victory.


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20. Guadalajara 1000 2nd Rd. - Jessie Pegula def. Elena Rybakina
...2-6/6-3/7-6(8). Rybakina's WTAF dream ends, after having held 3 MP in the 3rd set TB. Pegula went on to claim *her* biggest career title.
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21. Australian Open 3rd Rd. - Alize Cornet def. Tamara Zidansek
...4-6/6-4/6-2. Cornet's unexpected 4th Round (her first since '09) run continued with a three-set win over #29 Tamara Zidansek. The Pastry, on her 32nd birthday, rallied from 6-4/4-1 down in a match that included a long argument with the chair umpire, Zidansek being charged with a rare serving time violation, and seven straight games won by Cornet after she'd been two games from a straight sets loss. In other words, pure Cornet drama.

Cornet, noting the thirteen-year gap, called it a "a magic win for me."



After the match, the Aussie crowd serenaded Cornet with a rendition of "Happy Birthday."
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22. Monterrey QF - Camila Osorio def. Elina Svitolina
...1-6/7-5/7-6(5). In Svitolina's first event after the outbreak of war in Ukraine, Osorio wore the "black hat" in Monterrey, ending the Ukrainian's run despite playing with an elbow that was tended to by trainers. Employing crafty strategy (i.e. spins and such) over the final two sets, Osorio knotted the match and erased a 4-1 3rd set deficit to improve to 2-0 vs. Svitolina ('21 Tenerife 1r).



Lyon 1st Rd. - Dayana Yastremska def. Ana Bogdan
...3-6/7-6(7)/7-6(7). Not long after arriving in France after being forced to flee Ukraine, Yastremska engages in a three-hour tussle in which she saved two MP (one each in the 2nd and 3rd set), setting up her run to the final.



Indian Wells 1st Rd. - Marta Kostyuk def. Maryna Zanevska
...6-7(5)/7-6(6)/7-5. Kostyuk finally makes her post-invasion return to the tour, and immediately shows that the resilience is strong within her, as well.

The Ukrainian teenager, playing against Ukrainian-born Belgian Zanevska, saved two MP at 6-4 in the 2nd set TB, then rallied from 5-3 down in the 3rd to get the win in 3:09 to get her first MD win since the Australian Open. Afterward, it was all about the post-match support at the net.


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23. Lyon Final - Zhang Shuai def. Dayana Yastremska
...3-6/6-3/6-4. Zhang overcomes break disadvantages in the final two sets, including a 4-2 deficit in the 3rd after Yastremska broke serve from 40/love down. The moment stirred Zhang, who immediately broke back a game later, nearly (but didn't) lose her cool while questioning the chair umpire about a pair of line calls, then reacted to catcalls from a "fan" in the stands in the best way imaginable: by becoming even more focused and fired up. She got the key hold of serve, pointed at the man in the crowd, then broke Yastremska and served out the match.




Even with the loss, Yastremska had the stats of a winner: 31 winners (to 22 UE) and 4-of-4 on BP in match in which she and Zhang were separated by just two points (81-79).
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24. Miami SF - Laura Siegemund/Vera Zvonareva def. Ekaterina Alexandrova/Yang Zhaoxuan
...3-6/6-2 [13-11]. The veteran duo trailed 9-4 in the MTB, saving five straight MP before finally going on to win on third own third in the superbreaker. Siegemund & Zvonareva went on to win the title.


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25. U.S. Open Q3 - Clara Burel def. Misaki Doi
...2-6/6-4/7-6(10). Doi led 5-0 in the 1st, winning nine of the first twelve games to lead 6-2/3-1. Burel took 5 of 6 games to knot the match, and led 4-2 in the 3rd.

The Pastry served at 5-4, but saw the Japanese veteran surge back and hold MP at 6-5 on Burel's serve when rain stopped the match, giving the French woman a timely reprieve. Burel came back to save four MP and take the match to a deciding MTB. Again, play was stopped six points in, but Burel returned to save a fifth MP at 10-9 before going on to win 12-10.
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HM- U.S. Open Jr. 2nd Rd. - Iva Jovic def. Solana Sierra
...5-7/6-2/6-7(9). Wild card Bannerette Jovic, 14, upsets #5-seeded Sierra -- a girls' semifinalist at last year's Open, RG junior finalist this year and a winner of back-to-back ITF titles this summer -- rallying from 5-0 down in the 3rd, with the Argentine up 15/40 on Jovic's serve. After failing to convert the two MP, Sierra served at 5-1 and 5-3 but couldn't get the hold.

The set went into a MTB, where Sierra led 9-8, but saw Jovic save a 3rd MP before Sierra DF'd on the U.S. girl's first (and only) MP, handing Jovic an 11-9 win.


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kosova-font


=THE LONG WAY BACK AROUND=


San Diego 1st Rd. - Louisa Chirico def. Alison Riske
...1-6/7-5/7-6(5). Riske led 6-1/4-0, and served at 5-4, only to see Chirico pull out a win in the 2nd. Riske served for the victory again at 6-5 in the 3rd, only to drop a deciding TB as Chirico won her first WTA MD match since 2017.




=RESILIENCE, THY NAME IS KIKI...and Aryna=

Warsaw 1st Rd. - Kristina Mladenovic def. Anna Bondar
...1-6/7-5/7-6(8). This win against Bondar highlighted so much of what ails Mladenovic, but also what likely still keeps her trying again and again (and again) to reclaim her former singles form. The Pastry trailed Bondar 6-1/3-3 when play was suspended, but a day later found a way to fight and win despite 21 DF (the most by a winner on tour in '22 until Sabalenka won w/ 23 in San Jose a week later) and having trailed 5-2 in the 3rd set, saving six MP while rallying to win the 2:55 contest.

Even with the win, Mladenovic was outpointed 110-100 by Bondar, who also won more games (17-15) and dominated in such a way in return points won (60-36) that it seems impossible to think that the Hungarian found a way to lose the match.




San Jose 2nd Rd. - Aryna Sabalenka def. Caroline Dolehide 5-7/6-1/7-5
...5-7/6-1/7-5. Sabalenka broke Mladenovic's tour season mark from a week earlier by winning over Dolehide despite *23* DF. Dolehide broke serve to lead 5-3 in the 3rd, but Sabalenka swept the final four games, winning 16 of the last 19 points.


=PERSEVERANCE, THY NAME IS AJLA=

U.S. Open 4th Rd. - Ajla Tomljanovic def. Liudmila Samsonova 7-6(8)/6-1
...two nights after ending the career of none other than Serena Williams, Aussie Ajla Tomljanovic was asked to return and try to win again. To her vast credit, that's just what she did, outplaying the previously-in-top-form Samsonova on a night (after two sets, both for very different reasons) the Hordette is going to want to forget. Well, except for maybe to learn something from the experience.

Samsonova put herself in the proverbial driver's seat in the 1st, but twice saw Tomljanovic recover from break disadvantages, then survive a monumental tenth game in which the Aussie served down 5-4. In what turned out to be an 18-minute game that lasted 12 deuces, Tomljanovic rallied from a love/40 start to save a total of seven SP before, after Samsonova's wayward forehand seemed to forbid her from taking the set by the neck, finally holding on her own eighth GP to knot the set at 5-5.

Samsonova recovered from love/30 to hold for 6-5, forcing Tomljanovic to again hold to stay alive in the set.

The set went to a tie-break, where Samsonova was the first to take a mini-break lead at 6-5, holding her eighth SP. She failed to secure the set again, and then on the very next point, in the middle of a rally, the Russian seemed to pull up and not even attempt a swing at a ball that bounced near the baseline, apparently thinking that it had landed out. It hadn't. It gave Tomljanovic a SP. The Aussie promptly DF'd, but a short time later, on her third SP, Tomljanovic took the set when a Samsonova (what else?) forehand sailed long (her 34th UE in the set) to end the 10-8 TB and (somehow) put Samsonova fall behind in the match.

In the 2nd, Samsonova, riding a 13-match winning streak, hit the physical/mental wall. She nearly lost the set at love, but a late hold prevented the ignominy in what still turned out to be a straight sets defeat. Tomljanovic committed just three UE in the 2nd, while Samsonova managed to add 22 more, giving her 56 in a 20-game, 157-point match.










All for now.

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