Wk.20- It Happened in Rome
add it to the shelf.??
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) May 20, 2023
a 5?th WTA title for Elena Rybakina who will break into the top 5? this week! #IBI23 pic.twitter.com/ddGxlKYExk
?????? ?????? ?????????? ???? ???????? ??
— Internazionali BNL d'Italia (@InteBNLdItalia) May 20, 2023
?? Elena Rybakina is the 2023 Ladies' Singles Champion! #IBI23 | @WTA | @lenarybakina pic.twitter.com/HuKzvY06Pz
Elena Rybakina 5th title in her career today.
— Sebastien G. (@sebsharfam) May 20, 2023
-Bucarest 2019 , Clay , International
-Hobart 2020, Hard, International.
-Wimbledon 2022,Grass, Grand Slam
-Indian Wells 2023, Hard, WTA 1000
-Rome 2023,Clay, WTA 1000.#IBI23
Big titles on each surface ???????? pic.twitter.com/fK5qPcj0Js
BACK TO BACK!
— WTARussians (@WTArussians) May 16, 2023
Veronika Kudermetova beats Zheng Qinwen 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 to reach the Internazionali BNL D’Italia semifinal, her second consecutive WTA1000 semifinal having reached the same stage in Madrid.
Some late nerves but she managed to cross the finishing line!
[??: @WTA TV] pic.twitter.com/3sx9sFZt9e
Winners are grinners ?? pic.twitter.com/mrQiBpWYEo
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) May 17, 2023
Ostapenko can be a lethal opponent to face off with, but she often has to deal with herself, too. On most occasions, the Latvian's own inconsistency and/or poor second serve eventually end her chances. She put on a good run in Rome, besting her previous high water marks there (2018/21 QF) with a semifinal result during which she took out Sorana Cirstea (on her 7th MP), Barbora Krejcikova (winning in two after losing 16 straight points from 1-1, 30/love and then being 0-2 down in the 1st set TB), Dasha Kasatkina (in three, closing out a second straight match with a love set to pick up her first Top 10 win on clay since RG 2020) and Paula Badosa (also in three). Against Elena Rybakina in a rain-interrupted, stop-and-start semi, Ostapenko lost the 1st set after leading 3-1, led 4-1 in the 2nd, and battled the linespeople (no shock), the chair umpire (ditto), the weather (both not wanting to *and* wanting to play through showers when it suited her, or didn't) and, shockingly, the Kazakh herself (who does that w/ *Elena*, of all people?) after Rybakina had swept the final four games after she'd argued against playing in the driving rain, leading to a suspension of play with Ostapenko leading 4-2 (ah, there's the rub). The stoppage of play thwarted her roll, and that was that. Of course, the high point of Ostapenkian momentum was her title run in Paris in 2017. She's gone just 3-5 in the event since, though she *did* open the '23 slam season with her best-ever AO result (QF) in January.
Dazzling Performance ??@JelenaOstapenk8 sends herself into the semifinals in Rome after outlasting Badosa in 3 sets!#IBI23 pic.twitter.com/c3r9P3Zbbr
— wta (@WTA) May 17, 2023
A 21-shot rally under the lights ??
— wta (@WTA) May 20, 2023
Outstanding stuff from @angie_kalinina ??#IBI23 pic.twitter.com/N9f4Pz3Msz
Giving EVERYTHING she's got ??@angie_kalinina | #IBI23 pic.twitter.com/cJAEhQIVQ2
— wta (@WTA) May 19, 2023
Kalinina, though the #30 seed in Rome, actually came into the event at #47 after slipping in the final pre-tournament rankings after losing her 2022 Madrid QF points. It didn't take her long to recoup, as she'll jump 22 spots and reclaim UKR #1 from Marta Kostyuk (#39). All Paolini needed was a second helping of "home cooking." Mired in a 3-8 slump after falling to Elena Rybakina in the 2nd Round in Rome, the Italian headed to Florence and claimed her second career WTA 125 crown (she won a tour-level title in Portoroz in '21 and reached the Transylvanian Open final last year). After surviving her opening match against Katie Swan in a contest that went three after Paolini had led 6-4/3-1 before twice having to recover from break deficits in the decider (and come back a second day after play was suspended at 2-2), the Italian strung together victories over Dayana Yastremska, Ylena In-Albon and Lucia Bronzetti before defeating Taylor Townsend in the final, 6-3/7-5. Paolini will climb 13 spots to nearly break back into the Top 50 (she'll be #52).
Jasmine #Paolini (n°65) ???? remporte le titre au #FirenzeLadiesOpen de Florence (Italie, WTA 125, terre battue) ! Tête de série n°4, elle a battu Taylor #Townsend (n°168) ???? en deux sets 6-3, 7-5. C'est là son deuxième trophée ?? en WTA 125.
— Jeu, Set Et Match (@jeu_set_etmatch) May 21, 2023
?? : @firenzeladiesopen pic.twitter.com/LrWwy46H6T
Diane Parry remporte le WTA 125 de Paris ! ??????
— Univers Tennis ?? (@UniversTennis) May 21, 2023
4 victoires cette semaine et un forfait en finale. Après des mois difficiles, la Française de 20 ans gagnera +30 places au classement et retrouvera le TOP 100 à la 78e place. ??
Important avant Roland-Garros. ?? pic.twitter.com/DY5bxdhSI0
Townsend, coming off a qualifier-to-3rd Round (and nearly more) run in Rome in Week 19 that included a win over Jessie Pegula, in Week 20 carried over her momentum all the way to the Florence 125 final after getting victories over Ana Konjuh (ret.), Ana Bogdan, Matilde Paoletti, and Sara Errani, saving a MP in the 2nd and recovering from double-break down in the 3rd against the former slam finalist. In the final against Jasmine Paolini, her third Italian opponent of the week, lost in straight sets but will climb 60 spots on Monday to #108. She last ranked in the Top 100 in 2021 before taking maternity leave.
Passed to perfection ??
— wta (@WTA) May 16, 2023
Zheng Qinwen | #IBI23 pic.twitter.com/8rH4QdarEJ
Zheng Qinwen is the 3rd Chinese player to make the quarterfinals at a WTA 1000 on clay, joining Zhang Shuai and Li Na.
— WTA Insider (@WTA_insider) May 15, 2023
Zheng Qinwen defeats Wang Xiyu in the 2nd all-Chinese match in Rome's tournament history. #IBI23 pic.twitter.com/Hz8ayF2ZEa
McNally has a recent history of *almost* putting up a superior result. She cleared one hurdle this week in the WTA 125 in Paris, only to fail to even get the chance at clearing another. After posting wins over Kristina Mladenovic, Tamara Zidansek and Nao Hibino, McNally found herself on the doorstep of a singles final. Last November, she'd reached and won another 125 final (Midland), but earlier this season at tour-level Merida had squandered a 4-0 3rd set semifinal lead over Rebecca Peterson. Last summer in her home event in Cincinnati, McNally failed to convert match points against Ons Jabeur for what would have been her maiden Top 10 win. In Paris, she managed to defeat fellow Bannerette Katie Volynets to reach the final, only to withdraw (leg injury) from that match before facing off with Diane Parry for the title. McNally will still climb to a new career high of #54.
Y os ofrecemos las mejores imágenes de la final entre Olga Danilovic y Sara Sorribes. ¡¡Os esperamos en el III @ITFTennis W100 Open Villa de Madrid en 2024!! pic.twitter.com/LHmcA2R3Ec
— Federación de Tenis de Madrid (@fedetenismadrid) May 21, 2023
Así ha jugado Olga Danilovic el punto de partido del @ITFTennis W100 II Open Villa de Madrid. 6-2 6-3 a Sara Sorribes pic.twitter.com/DDUBqLmCls
— Federación de Tenis de Madrid (@fedetenismadrid) May 21, 2023
In Bodrum, Turkey, Carle picked up her second straight challenger title, taking the $60K crown with a 6-4/6-4 win over Romanian Irina Bara. She'll climb back into the Top 150, just three spots off her career-high at #149.
??Carle Crushes It??
— Tick Tock Tennis (@TickTockTennis) May 21, 2023
Former University of Georgia star Maria Carle picks up back-to-back titles, following up her ITF 25 win in Bastad by hopping a flight to Turkey to lift the 2nd ITF 60 trophy of her career.
The Argentine defeats Irina Bara, 6-4, 6-4, and climbs back to #149. pic.twitter.com/QGp293lGpc
Celine Naef pic.twitter.com/wiLuWfslJj
— Ken mckinnon (@Kenmckinnon9) May 16, 2023
Naef will make her Top 200 breakthrough on Monday. Meanwhile, 15-year old Grant became the latest Bannerette to pick up a top-level junior crown in '23 -- the fourth different to win six J300+ titles this season -- as she claimed her biggest career crown at the J300 Santa Croce Sull'arno (ITA) event by defeating the top three seeded girls in the draw. #91-ranked Grant opened play with a win over #3-seeded Aussie Emerson Jones, then followed up with an upset of #1-seeded Czech Tereza Valentina in the semis and #2-seed Renata Jamrichova (SVK) in a 6-3/6-3 final. Earlier this season in U.S.-hosted tournaments, Grant reached a J300 QF (San Diego/March) and J100 final (Delray Beach/April).
Your 2023 Rome doubles champions: @stormsanders94 & @elise_mertens pic.twitter.com/ruFgD6olP6
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) May 20, 2023
Pure Relief ?????@angie_kalinina beats Haddad Maia 6-7(2), 7-6(6), 6-3 in the longest match of the season, reaching her first WTA 1000 semifinal in Rome!#IBI23 pic.twitter.com/0Wa42S6VJ6
— wta (@WTA) May 16, 2023
3 hours and 41 minutes ??
— wta (@WTA) May 16, 2023
An incredible match by both players but it's Anhelina Kalinina who prevails in the end.#IBI23 pic.twitter.com/vkGheYExjC
Beatriz Haddad Maia is in tears after her loss to Anhelina Kalinina.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) May 16, 2023
Longest match of the season.
Standing ovation for Bia.
Coming from a country without a lot of representation at the top of tennis, she’s making so many people proud in Brazil
Warrior ?????????? pic.twitter.com/mFEGwMIlFV
Haddad, surprisingly in her Rome debut, had posted wins over Ruse, Linette and Osorio after having rebounded from her poor Madrid singles experience by taking the doubles there. This was her second 3:29+ match loss this season, along with her Dubai 1st Round defeat at the hands of Cirstea. The Brazilian is still looking for her first significant slam run, having yet to reach the 3rd Round in eleven major MD appearances.
UNPLAYABLE ?@iga_swiatek firing on all cylinders ??#IBI23 pic.twitter.com/fr6TPWYCmj
— wta (@WTA) May 17, 2023
She led 6-2/4-2, but Rybakina found her groove and stormed back, erasing the break edge and forcing a TB. She led 5-3 when Swiatek stumbled in the back court on the point that gave the Kazakh a 6-3 lead and 3 SP, grabbing her thigh and immediately knowing something wasn't 100% right. Rybakina won the next point, while Swiatek went off court for a medical evaluation.
Iga Swiatek stumbles & limps in her match against Elena Rybakina
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) May 17, 2023
This does not look good.
The beauty of her game is her physicality, but it can be a double edged sword.
Hopefully she’s alright. ????? pic.twitter.com/70Nv5rmf6e
The Pole returned to play, but was clearly not willing/able to play full out, and did the smart thing at 2-2 and called it day, perhaps giving herself the best shot to preserve her chances in Paris starting a week from now. Rybakina moves up to #4.
Elena Rybakina advances to the semifinals in Rome after Swiatek retires due to injury.
— wta (@WTA) May 17, 2023
Final score: 2-6, 7-6(3), 2-2#IBI23 pic.twitter.com/MzaPSwvw96
As it is, Rybakina's comeback precipitated not only the lingering question that will hang over the would-be #1 seed at RG, but also threw yet another dart at Swiatek's tour dominance. She's now 3-0 vs. Swiatek this season, joins Sabalenka with a first win over her on her favorite surface, and drops the world #1 to 1-5 vs. the pair since winning the U.S. Open last summer. After her early Rome exit seemed to deal Sabalenka a minor setback in her seasonal chase for the #1 ranking, with Swiatek's QF loss the Belarusian actually *gains* about 345 more points to lower the deficit to 1399.
Not the ending we wanted to see ?????
— wta (@WTA) May 20, 2023
Kalinina has been forced to withdraw due to injury. Rybakina wins 6-4, 1-0 ret.#IBI23 pic.twitter.com/qxxDk54Yfq
Anhelina Kalinina is in tears as she explains to the physio that she simply cannot continue her match against Elena Rybakina
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) May 20, 2023
You can see the heartbreak on her face.
This was her moment. Her first WTA 1000 final.
But her fighting spirit this week was a true inspiration. pic.twitter.com/L6lbZ7o1YI
A breakthrough on her Rome debut ??
— wta (@WTA) May 15, 2023
Zheng Qinwen is through to her first Hologic WTA Tour quarterfinal on clay!#IBI23 pic.twitter.com/CSid6smWU5
The Pietrangeli crowd LOVES that!!
— wta (@WTA) May 15, 2023
Zheng Qinwen with some outstanding defense ??#IBI23 pic.twitter.com/XpRNDBO1YQ
Sliding into yet another Hologic WTA Tour 1000 final ??
— wta (@WTA) May 19, 2023
[7] Elena Rybakina defeats Ostapenko, 6-2, 6-4 to advance to the final two in Rome!#IBI23 pic.twitter.com/mmNKkzNN9n
A tournament official is trying to convince Jelena Ostapenko to continue playing in the rain against Elena Rybakina
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) May 19, 2023
The more he talks, the harder it rains.
Penko Powers ?? pic.twitter.com/iyy8rq6TMc
for those who needed the video:
— Ryan (@Some1NamedRyan) May 19, 2023
Elena "i don't want to break my leg here" Rybakina https://t.co/18IEcubqmi pic.twitter.com/xuxVCs6UJp
Rybakina swept the final four games when play resumed, and Ostapenko didn't exactly take it well.
Interesting handshake between Elena Rybakina & Jelena Ostapenko in Rome
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) May 19, 2023
It looks like Elena told the umpire to tell Jelena something.
I’d love to know what this is all about ?? pic.twitter.com/orr5tnH3kD
Tennis Twitter trying to find out what Ostapenko said to Rybakina at the net pic.twitter.com/98NB8pGSzF
— was MDNASPEARSS (@mediamdnaspears) May 19, 2023
Ostapenko calls Rybakina "f*cking b*tch" while she is not looking (Penko timely changed her mind and wanted to play in heavy rain and Elena considered it dangerous).Rybakina looks puzzled to her coach who tells her not to worry.She grins because I only support the correct people pic.twitter.com/3SxrOZwVcO
— Lidia Rebel (@lidia_rebel) May 20, 2023
First title of her comeback!
— WTARussians (@WTArussians) May 20, 2023
Vera Zvonareva partners Anna Danilina to win the WTA125 Trophée Clarins with a comeback 5-7, 7-6, [14-12] win over top seeds Nadiia Kichenok and Alycia Parks.
Survived a 1-5 deficit in the match tiebreak and bravely fended off 3 match points! pic.twitter.com/XcKjXjQDVW
?? Un grand bravo à Anna Danilina & Vera Zvonareva qui ont remporté, après une rude bataille et une performance éclatante la finale double du @tropheeclarins ??
— Trophée Clarins (@TropheeClarins) May 20, 2023
?? Michel Grasso #tropheeclarins #lagardereparisracing #wta #wtaparis #wta125 pic.twitter.com/BynvGA2SgH
One minute, one service hold ????@JelenaOstapenk8 #IBI23 pic.twitter.com/FzEcba4UaK
— wta (@WTA) May 15, 2023
A first WTA 250 victory since having baby Skaï ??
— wta (@WTA) May 21, 2023
2020 champ @ElinaSvitolina wins her @WTA_Strasbourg opener in straight sets!#IS23 pic.twitter.com/lyj7nCCIYZ
So Proud of both Sofia Costoulas and Lara Salden.
— BE-NE Tennis (@BStolck) May 20, 2023
Sofia her first W25 win and breaking the top 300 on monday.
Look at the price money for a 25000$ tournament, crazy imo pic.twitter.com/SPu1f06Ev2
The BIGGEST win of her career so far ??@angie_kalinina defeats Kudermetova in Rome to reach her first ever WTA 1000 final!#IBI23 pic.twitter.com/7Ux7m703lh
— wta (@WTA) May 19, 2023
Hmmm, so Simona Halep speaks publicly in late April about her frustration with the sport's corrupt (my word, but a true one) drug testing/punishment apparatus, stepping out of line and precipitating the need to attempt to put her in her place (see Sharapova, Errani, etc.). If you didn't think that she'd be made to pay for such disobedience then you haven't been paying attention. Less than a month later...
Simona Halep still will get her chance to appeal and profess her innocence, and we will find out more about this second charge, but it’s worth putting in context that these are the most severe doping charges any #1 tennis player has faced.
— Ben Rothenberg (@BenRothenberg) May 19, 2023
Leagues more serious than Sharapova. https://t.co/fd6n9vhsxW
— Simona Halep (@Simona_Halep) May 19, 2023
Of course, the "best" part of the ITIA (the ironically named "International Tennis Integrity Agency") poison pen letter is that it included the note that this allegation will generate much attention but that "it would be inappropriate for us to comment on specifics until the conclusion of the process." In other words...
Of course, this also means a whole new round of abuse and character assassination for Halep, once again without anything other than an allegation still not yet allowed to be countered by the accused herself. And once the *other* one is eventually dealt with, *this* one will likely linger even longer, further punishing Halep for the audacity of speaking up for herself. Players in these situations always get frustrated, anxious and sometimes depressed. I long for the one who'll come along -- and *one* will at some point -- who just gets stark-raving furious. At some point, that player -- or, more likely, one with nothing to lose -- needs to take it upon themselves to instigate the sort of action via lawsuits, etc. that will tear down this blatant and ongoing system of arrogant power plays, recrimination, and vindictive score-settling. Some day. Meanwhile, though, because of this you've now got the Serena chowderheads -- quieted about any it-wasn't-going-to-happen-anyway "comeback" since she's pregnant again -- believing they now have license to harp on a slam final she lost four years ago (Wimbledon, remember?) in one of her last shots at #24. You know, just like they did with the Wimbledon she lost to Sharapova way back when. Ah, it's that annual rite of tennis spring (and summer, fall and winter) that confirms that Williams never lost a match, since she was either injured, robbed or her opponent was cheating. It's a good thing it has its positive points, because tennis sure is a s**t-fest sometimes.
opa. 3/3????? :) pic.twitter.com/YbXQS5PZtX
— Emma Raducanu (@EmmaRaducanu) May 15, 2023
From phenom to icon ?
— ESPN (@espn) May 16, 2023
We’re telling Serena’s story in the multi-part ESPN series “In the Arena: Serena Williams.” pic.twitter.com/aqcLccSSYD
New Serena Williams docuseries coming to ESPN.
— Ben Rothenberg (@BenRothenberg) May 16, 2023
Many details, including release date, still TBD. pic.twitter.com/ofYfhqFt06
IT'S OURS ??? https://t.co/7lfSRz1Sgq
— Carolina Women's Tennis ???? (@UNC_wtennis) May 21, 2023
First NCAA Team Title for North Carolina; Ohio State and Virginia Meet in Sunday's Men's Championship; Grant Wins J300 in Italy; Kim, Hovde Reach $25K USTA Pro Circuit Finals:https://t.co/LU3a8qBtzt pic.twitter.com/coOI1FBz3y
— Colette Lewis (@zootennis) May 21, 2023
Nobody deserves this more ?? pic.twitter.com/71vJdnpKti
— Carolina Women's Tennis ???? (@UNC_wtennis) May 21, 2023
fans have no idea the true lack of consistency regarding line calls on clay. if they did, they’d cancel every single chair umpire and half the players ?? #ifyouonlyknew
— Jamie Hampton (@Jamie_Hampton) May 17, 2023
the ball will be out 100% but the edge is in the area left behind from sweeping the lines so it doesn’t entirely show up & chair will straight up look at you like “stop trying to cheat” then you try their argument in the next match & different chair is like “stop trying to cheat”
— Jamie Hampton (@Jamie_Hampton) May 17, 2023
then you try to explain how the entire mark will clearly round off before touching the line & they’ll straight up roll their eyes at you & shake their head as if to show the entire audience that you’re crazy which made me even crazier whoops did i say me? i meant other players ??
— Jamie Hampton (@Jamie_Hampton) May 17, 2023
— Wendy Temple Author ?????????????????????? (@Wendytemple66) May 16, 2023
Hmmm...
You listen to something like this and you can’t help but feel really sympathetic towards Ukrainian players. Their families and themselves have been going through some real adversity. Some things are just more important and bigger than no handshake at net. pic.twitter.com/6wxDyFsG5b
— Vansh (@vanshv2k) May 20, 2023
Yeah, I'm afraid that's not quite the slam-dunk finger-wag this guy thinks it is. All this is awful, and you feel for Kalinina and all the other Ukrainian players. But it doesn't invalidate the legitimate conversation about the misplaced disrespect of not shaking the hand of an opponent (w/ which you have no actual personal beef). (Especially when, as Tsurenko did earlier this season, one of those same players reacts badly when an opponent shows the same disrespect *to* them.) Just because there's something *more* horrible doesn't mean that everyone is disallowed from pointing out something that is wrong in its own right somewhere else, even if it involves -- personally or tangentially -- some of the same people.
What’s happening in Ukraine is horrible and everyone sympathizes.
— Chris Nolen (@LoveAsInZero) May 20, 2023
Not shaking hands at the net is just misplaced protest that’s actually disrespectful.
Both things are true.
Valiant effort, though.
If only there were more Petkos in the world to describe the world of women's tennis!! ?????????? https://t.co/9r8B7joP1a
— Rennae Stubbs ?????? (@rennaestubbs) May 15, 2023
Just out here doing the clay court boogie ?? pic.twitter.com/adBpl6ag09
— US Open Tennis (@usopen) May 20, 2023
“STAR WARS: EPISODE V - THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK” was released on this day 43 years ago. pic.twitter.com/XM6QphG67c
— Films to Films ???? (@filmstofilms_) May 21, 2023
The Empire Strikes Back is 43 years old today.
— The Sting (@TSting18) May 21, 2023
Han Solo's iconic 'I know' line almost never made it to the screen.
Here's Harrison Ford explaining to Jon Favreau why the line came about and how just one laugh saved it. #StarWars pic.twitter.com/HxnCXwi1fq
30."It's a Miracle" (Culture Club) - their 8th straight hit single
28."Jump (for my love)" (The Pointer Sisters)
25."Miss Me Blind" (Culture Club)
24."Self Control" (Laura Branigan) - I didn't rember the weird Phantom/Eyes Wide Shut vibe to the video
22."Borderline" (Madonna) - Top 10 hit #2, before "Like a Virgin" and "Material Girl"
21."Heart of Rock and Roll" (Huey Lewis & the News)
17."They Don't Know" (Tracey Ullman) - didn't even know about this; there's a Beatle cameo in the video
15."The Authority Song" (John Cougar Mellencamp)
14."The Longest Time" (Billy Joel)
12."The Reflex" (Duran Duran)
11."Head over Heels" (The Go-Go's) - off the #1 album, second all-female group ever
The Top 10 (alas, if only the Top 5 was as good as #6-20)... 10."Footloose" (Kenny Loggins) - movie soundtrack hit #353?
9."You Might Think" (The Cars) - and its memorable video
8."Oh Sherry" (Steve Perry) - his first solo hit
7."Love Somebody" (Rick Springfield)
6."Time After Time" (Cydni Lauper) - just her second Top 40 hit after "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun"
5."To All the Girls I've Loved Before" (Julio Iglesias/Willie Nelson)
Not the real duet (but still memorable)...
4."Hold Me Now" (Thompson Twins)
3."Against All Odds" (Phil Collins)
2."Let's Hear it for the Boy" (Deniece Williams)
1."Hello" (Lionel Richie)
The Jelena Ostapenko “Face of Disbelief” and head shake makes an appearance as the umpire tells her another one of her shots was out against Elena Rybakina
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) May 19, 2023
This face has stared down umpires, players, & angry fans alike.
This face will have a place in tennis history. pic.twitter.com/LEPnC2QOAn
🤞🏼Quick update.A couple of days off for sure. And booking my flight to Paris, so...fingers crossed, please! Hopefully, see you soon.
— Iga Świątek (@iga_swiatek) May 18, 2023
🤞🏼Update.Potrzebuję na pewno kilku dni odpoczynku. Bilety do Paryża rezerwujemy, więc... trzymajcie kciuki. Mam nadzieję - do zobaczenia niedługo pic.twitter.com/k8TO8cuROr
If I don’t get a cake of equal size if not slightly bigger than Alcaraz today im going to be absolutely f**king furious ??
— Andy Murray (@andy_murray) May 15, 2023
they’re literally willing to cancel the wta’s biggest atp ally over a cake. pic.twitter.com/HGDeu1qQmW
— Jamie Hampton (@Jamie_Hampton) May 15, 2023
no, they definitely do! they’re just dumb people that want to cancel anyone that disagree with them in the slightest because they think they control the narratives on this shitshow of an app. and they use tennis to push their own agendas.
— Jamie Hampton (@Jamie_Hampton) May 15, 2023
*2023 SLAM-WTAF/1000 CHAMPIONS*
Australian Open - Aryna Sabalenka, BLR
Dubai - Barbora Krejcikova, CZE
Indian Wells - Elena Rybakina, KAZ
Miami - Petra Kvitova, CZE
Madrid - Aryna Sabalenka, BLR (2)
Rome - Elena Rybakina, KAZ (2)
[doubles]
Australian Open - Barbora Krejcikova/Katerina Siniakova, CZE/CZE
Dubai - Veronika Kudermetova/Liudmila Samsonova, RUS/RUS
Indian Wells - Barbora Krejcikova/Katerina Siniakova, CZE/CZE (2)
Miami - Coco Gauff/Jessie Pegula, USA/USA
Madrid - Victoria Azarenka/Beatriz Haddad Maia, BLR/BRA
Rome - Storm Hunter/Elise Mertens, AUS/BEL
*MOST WTA FINALS in 2023*
5 - Aryna Sabalenka (3-2)
4 - ELENA RYBAKINA (2-2)
4 - Iga Swiatek (2-2)
3 - Belinda Bencic (2-1)
2 - Caroline Garcia, FRA (0-2)
[2020-23]
16 - 1/2/9/4 - Iga Swiatek (13-3)
14 - 3/3/3/5 - Aryna Sabalenka (8-6)
12 - 1/7/4/0 - Anett Kontaveit (5-6-1)
12 - 5/0/3/4 - ELENA RYBAKINA (4-8)
10 - 0/3/6/1 - Ons Jabeur (4-6)
*2023 FINALISTS BY COUNTRY*
5 (3 wins) - BLR,USA
4 (2 wins) - KAZ,POL
4 (1 wins) - RUS
3 (2 wins) - CZE,SUI
3 (1 wins) - UKR
2 (2 wins) - ITA
2 (1 wins) - CRO,UKR
2 (0 wins) - FRA
1 (1 wins) - CHN,GER,TUN
1 (0 wins) - ESP,SWE
*MOST WTA SF in 2023*
5 - Aryna Sabalenka (5-0)
5 - Iga Swiatek (4-1)
4 - ELENA RYBAKINA (4-0)
4 - Jessie Pegula (1-3)
4 - VERONIKA KUDERMETOVA (0-3+L)
4 - Maria Sakkari (0-4)
3 - Belinda Bencic (2-0+W)
3 - Ons Jabeur (1-2)
*2020-23 WTA DOUBLES TITLES*
15 - Katerina Siniakova (1/6/6/2)
11 - Barbora Krejcikova (1/5/3/2)
8 - ELISE MERTENS (1/4/2/1)
7 - Desirae Krawczyk (2/2/1/2)
7 - Jessie Pegula (0/0/5/2)
6 - Shuko Aoyama (1/5/0/0)
6 - Coco Gauff (0/1/3/2)
6 - Hsieh Su-wei (4/2/0/0)
6 - Nicole Melichar-Martinez (2/2/2/0)
6 - Kristina Mladenovic (2/0/4/0)
6 - Demi Schuurs (2/2/1/1)
6 - Ena Shibahara (1/5/0/0)
6 - Luisa Stefani (1/1/2/2)
5 - STORM HUNTER (1/0/3/1)
5 - Veronika Kudermetova (0/1/3/1)
5 - Caty McNally (0/2/2/1)
5 - Laura Siegemund (1/0/3/1)
*ROLAND GARROS WILD CARDS*
Clara Burel, FRA (22) - RG 3r 2020; 2 slam girls' finals (2018 AO/US); '22 US/'23 AO qualifier
Kimberly Birrell, AUS (25) - RG debut; 2 con. slam WC
Selena Janicijevic, FRA (20) - Backspin's RG wild card countdown ends... first RG MD since '19; '23 AO qualifier
Leolia Jeanjean, FRA (27) - 2 con. RG WC; '22 US qualifier, '23 AO LL
Kristina Mladenovic, FRA (30) - oldest slam WC so far in '23; RG QF in '17, 2-5 since
Emma Navarro, USA (21) - RG debut; first slam MD since US '21; 2019 girls' finalist
Diane Parry, FRA (20) - 2 con. slam WC; RG 3r last year
Jessika Ponchet, FRA (26) - first RG MD since '19 (lost in Q in last 7 majors, 11 con. attempts since RG '19 1r loss)
[MD - protected ranking]
Jennifer Brady, USA (28) - 2 yrs. since last major (RG '21), ending SF-F-3r run in majors; was world #16 in last tour action ('21 Cincinnati)
Kristina Kucova, SVK (32) - MD in 6/7 majors (ties best stretch of career, 2016 US-2018 RG)
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, RUS (31) - RG runner-up in last appearance in '21
Sara Sorribes Tormo, ESP (26) - has reached 3r once ('21 US) in 21 slam MD
Elina Svitolina, UKR (28) - has reached 3 RG QF (2015/17/20); last major MD was '22 AO
Patricia Maria Tig, ROU (28) - 2020 RG 3r is her best career slam result
*2023 TOP JUNIOR GIRLS' TITLES*
[Grand Slam]
Alina Korneeva, RUS
[J500]
Mayu Crossley, JPN
Charo Esquiva Banuls, ESP
Federica Urgesi, ITA
[J300]
3 - Lucciana Perez Alarcon, PER
2 - Iva Jovic, USA
2 - Teodora Kostovic, SRB
2 - Clervie Ngounoue, USA
2 - Sara Saito, JPN
1 - Melisa Ercan, TUN
1 - Mara Gae, ROU
1 - Valerie Glozman, USA
1 - Tyra Caterina Grant, USA
1 - Vlada Mincheva, RUS
1 - Rebecca Munk Mortenson, DEN
1 - Francesca Pace, ITA
1 - Federica Urgesi, ITA
*RECENT NCAA WOMEN'S D-I TEAM CHAMPIONS*
2010 Stanford
2011 Florida
2012 Florida
2013 Stanford
2014 UCLA
2015 Vanderbilt
2016 Stanford
2017 Florida
2018 Stanford
2019 Stanford
2021 Texas
2022 Texas
2023 North Carolina
[most team titles]
20...Stanford
7...Florida
4...Texas
2...Georgia
2...UCLA
2...USC
“Bothsidesism is not always objectivity. It does not get you to the truth. Drawing false moral or factual equivalence is neither objective or truthful" -@amanpour https://t.co/wGMzQQUZel
— Jon Passantino (@passantino) May 18, 2023
Jacksonville’s @wjxt4 asked 4th graders how the surge of book bans in #Florida had affected them. #BannedBooks pic.twitter.com/Zg4R0C5PYM
— PEN America (@PENamerica) May 15, 2023
Imagine how good she’s going to be when she gets her eyes fixed ?????? https://t.co/t9R4YnMWDk
— Andy Murray (@andy_murray) April 29, 2023
Here's a brief explainer on the concept of "the linear passage of time" and also "basic reporting techniques" for my friends over at Fox News.
— Ben Collins (@oneunderscore__) May 19, 2023
I can't believe this is necessary. pic.twitter.com/KocOQvvjyR
Dunkin Donuts gives Mr. Raccoon snacks 🥰 pic.twitter.com/F8P6DHMZoy
— aria (@catsmusicart) May 17, 2023
Once you run into a glass door, you develop trust issues. pic.twitter.com/kervPm9LcB
— WOW Animals (@wow__animals) May 7, 2023
2/ Water is denser than wine, the density of wine is affected by its concentration of alcohol, sugar, glycerol, and other dissolved solids.
— Science girl (@gunsnrosesgirl3) May 14, 2023
Water molecules are packed more closely together, more mass in same volume
Here is similar interesting demonstrations of this same…
Happy 54th Birthday To Former #Cowboys RB Emmitt Smith!
— The Sports E-cyclopedia (@The_Ecyclopedia) May 15, 2023
?? 8x Pro-Bowler
?? 4x All-Pro
?? 3x SB Champ
?? 1993 MVP
?? 1990 ROY
?? @EmmittSmith22 pic.twitter.com/Il43x61zyi
From a longtime (then-)Redskins fan, Emmitt Smith is my favorite former Cowboy. Toughest running back I ever watched play. Most dependable. Most clutch. Long career. A winner. Any of the "Smith or Barry Sanders?" questions always make me angry. One was a (admittedly, exciting) highlight-generator who came up small in the biggest games, and whose 1 or 2-yard gains and negative plays set his offense up for failure while his (oft-crazy) long runs made it appear as if *he* could do no wrong (and then he quit on his team and retired on the eve of training camp); while the other was the best RB of his generation. Full stop. Really, it's not even close. (And I always liked Sanders, just not the deification of career.) Smith's signature moment:
That time Emmitt Smith seperated his shoulder then came back for 249 yards and a touchdown. All-time football guy.
— uSTADIUM Fantasy (@uSTADIUMFantasy) May 22, 2019
pic.twitter.com/26N9N4QV8B
The look of you've took a bite of it already ?? https://t.co/aPlGOTIlmk
— Louie Kerr ???? (@LouieKerr8) May 15, 2023
The inner child within us is ageless.. ?? pic.twitter.com/gbShMQiFwj
— Buitengebieden (@buitengebieden) May 15, 2023
5 Comments:
And the trend continues. Rybakina winning means that every 1000 event this season has been won by a slam winner.
Rybakina bringing back 2006 AO vibes. That's the event in which Mauresmo dropped the 1st set to Sun Tiantian, then only dropped one the rest of the event, getting 3 RET, including SF and F.
RG Q has already started. P.Kudermetova is first seed out, though she had unfortunate matchup vs M.Andreeva.
Karatancheva is in 2nd rd.
Throwback match is Konjuh/Wickmayer; Marcinko/Tauson is potential 2nd rounder.
Volynets was Strasbourg favorite but withdrew, so Pavlyuchenkova might be.
Trevisan is Rabat favorite.
Swiatek losses in 2023:
Day- Pegula(United Cup), Rybakina(AO).
Night- Rybakina(Rome, IW), Sabalenka(Madrid), Krejcikova(Dubai).
Stat of the Week- 2- Number of WTA MD for Sara Nahimana.
Start with "first from.." this week. Nahimana, from Burundi, had played those 2 matches in doubles. They were in Morocco in 2018 and 2019. This week, she makes her main draw debut in singles, after losing in Q both in 2019 and 2022, which due to the pandemic, were the last 2 editions.
Nahimana could have been a college player, as she committed to NC State in 2020, but never played a match for them. Instead, she made her way on the ITF tour, mainly working her way up to 60K level.
Has never played a Top 100 player, but did beat a former one in Mona Barthel recently, followed up by her highest career win the next week in Reka Luca Jani-131.
She will start off with Fett, but if she gets her first career win, she likely will face Trevisan, whom she took 7 games off of when they played in Q back in 2019.
Quiz Time!
May Sutton Bundy won 3 slams in singles. Which slams did she win? Multiple answers accepted.
A.Australian Open
B.Roland Garros
C.Wimbledon
D.US Championships
Interlude- Brutal Indy 500 Ending.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KySJzJwP8fs
Answer!
In a story in which a family legacy lasts a century, this is a good one.
(D)US Championships is correct as she won it in 1904 as a 16 year old. Only playing 11 slams in her career, she spaced them out, reaching the 3rd rd there in her final slam, the 1929 version when she was 41.
(B)Roland Garros is wrong. Unlike Australia, she did play this event, reaching the 2nd rd in 1929. Her daughter, Dorothy Cheney, one upped her as she reached the SF in her one appearance, which did not happen until 1946.
Since I already mentioned that Sutton Bundy never played the (A)Australian Open, we know this is wrong. Dorothy made up for it by winning her one and only slam in 1938.
Dorothy's legacy stretches for an even longer period. She played 17 slams in her career, stretching from 1936-59. Her last US Open was at the age of 43, with a 1st rd loss to Christine Truman, who would reach the final.
The last time Dorothy won a slam match was at the same event in 1955, losing to eventual finalist Patricia Ward.
Dorothy spent the 60's mainly playing events in California. One of here more notable losses was the Newport Beach SF to eventual winner Cathy Lee Crosby.
Dorothy's daughter played college tennis at UC Irvine in 1969 and 1970. Christine Cheney) Putnam made her only pro event a memorable one. Playing in Seattle, she reached the Round of 16.
Dorothy reached the QF.
That leaves (C)Wimbledon, which Sutton Bundy won twice(1905 & 1907). After her 1907 win, she lived a family life, not playing another slam for 14 years. She would not return to Wimbledon until 1929.
Postscript: Christine's son, Danny Putnam, played 11 games for the Oakland A's in 2007. He was the 36th pick(1st rd) in the 2004 draft, one in which Dustin Pedroia went 65th.
If Iga does not show up to RG, Ostapenko and Krejcikova will be the only former winners in the field.
Same thing holds for Wimbledon, which likely will only have Rybakina and Kvitova.
Great Jukebox selections! I have "They Don't Know About Us' in my digital collection (weird, I know), though I haven't listened to it in ages. I consider T.U. one of the funniest (maybe the funniest) person on Earth. (And I still shake my head when I consider how Laura Branigan just kind of let herself die.)
C-
Speaking of N.C. State. Though the Wolfpack lost the NCAA team final to North Carolina, Diana Shnaider got the overall Most Outstanding Player honor as a member of the losing team.
Quiz: I was pretty sure she won the U.S. Added Wimbledon, too. ;)
I hate RG starting on Indy 500 day. It's the one auto race that I actually like to watch.
Horrible footnote to that Indy video. Less than five months after taking the title in Indianapolis w/ Hildebrand's crash Wheldon died in a huge 15-car accident during a race in October.
D-
Once I heard the Ullman song, I *did* remember it, but no longer remembered that it was hers.
When I looked up the Ullman info for the post, I saw that she was in the most recent season of Curb Your Enthusiasm. I have it but haven't watched it yet, so I'll be looking for that now.
Meanwhile... Halep's hearing was postponed (again...shocking, I know) and she's not happy about it. Of course, I expect she'll be denied in her attempt to get things overturned (because, you know), so things will advance to the next step at that point (whenever it is).
Twitter (including someone I know, like and respect) is now going after Simona for her "complaining."
I stopped watching CYE a long time ago--don't know why. Ullman would certainly fit in. Another song, a cover, that she did that I like a lot is "Breakaway," co-written by the great Jackie de Shannon, and first recorded by her, too. Of course, the Irma Thomas cover is my favorite, but they're all good.
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