Wk.24- Lawn Maintenance: Alexandrova Style
BACK TO BACK CHAMPION ??
— Libéma Open?? (@LibemaOpen) June 18, 2023
Ekaterina Alexandrova does it again and wins the women's final in three sets after 3(!) hours! What a match ??#LibemaOpen #LO2023 #Tennis #Grasscourt pic.twitter.com/QpA7eB9PUk
CAREER SINGLES TITLE #4 ????????
— wta (@WTA) June 18, 2023
Ekaterina Alexandrova | #LibemaOpen pic.twitter.com/2OMOqmFiBu
This was the first of Alexandrova's four tour titles that *hasn't* been claimed with the Russian closing out her run with a win over a player who either had or has since won a slam. In addition to the win over Sabalenka a year ago, she's beaten Rybakina ('20 Shenzhen) and Ostapenko ('22 Seoul) in finals.
Just 17 games dropped en route the final!
— WTARussians (@WTArussians) June 17, 2023
Top seed Veronika Kudermetova beats Viktoria Hruncakova 6-3, 6-2, saving all 6 break points faced to prevail after 1h 22m.
26 winners to 18 unforced errors, with her serve rescuing her from many tricky situations today. pic.twitter.com/TiocTwLAYt
In Valencia, Sherif continued her mastery of the 125 challenger circuit, extending her all-time title mark by picking up the sixth win of her career (second in two weeks), losing just 17 games over five matches (and dropping no sets) vs. the likes of Daniela Seguel, Maria Carle, Ann Li, Nadia Podoroska and Marina Bassols Ribera in a 3 & 3 final (the biggest final ever for the 23-year old Spaniard). Sherif, now 6-0 in 125 finals (and 1-1 at tour-level) will climb to yet another career high of #31, putting herself in position to possibly earn a seed at Wimbledon (if not there, perhaps at the U.S. Open).
?? @MayarSherif_1 | @WTA | #BBVAOpenVal pic.twitter.com/1U3z1GjCsW
— BBVA Open Internacional de Valencia (@BBVAopenVal) June 18, 2023
Stand and DELIVER ?@jodieburrage | #RothesayOpen pic.twitter.com/2iplgwkneK
— wta (@WTA) June 17, 2023
HER FIRST WTA TOUR-LEVEL FINAL ????@jodieburrage sends her home crowd into a frenzy by defeating Cornet, 7-5, 7-5 to set up an all-British final against Boulter! #RothesayOpen pic.twitter.com/gA1V8jHLxS
— wta (@WTA) June 17, 2023
A former Michigan Wolverine (2011-15), Bektas made headlines a few years ago for her marriage to fellow tour player Tara Moore, but it's been the improvement of her tennis results that have more recently produced mildly raised eyebrows. Last season, she qualified to reach her maiden slam MD at the Australian Open, played in her first tour-level WD final (Bogota, w/ Moore) and then followed up with another slam Q-run at Wimbledon. Already a two-time ITF champ this season, the 30-year old Bektas reached a new career high ranking (#182) last month. The Bannerette burst into the grass season this week with a qualifying run at Rosmalen (def. Miyu Kato and Ankita Raina), then posted MD wins over Dalma Galfi and Sachia Vickery to reach her maiden WTA QF. She lost to DC Ekaterina Alexandrova, but will crack the Top 150 in the new rankings.
First-ever main draw quarterfinal ???
— wta (@WTA) June 15, 2023
Qualifier @eminabektas takes out fellow compatriot Vickery 6-4, 6-4 to reach the last eight in Den Bosch! #LibemaOpen pic.twitter.com/lxPfFOmJz4
Bektas carried over her form to Birmingham qualifying this weekend, picking up wins over Caroline Dolehide and Marcela Zacarias to reach the MD. Also at Rosmalen, #348-ranked Papadakis (née Rüeffer) gave off signs that she could be one of those kind of players -- you know the kind -- who might require "extra attention" at this time of year. The 24-year old German came into the week having not played in a WTA MD since 2017 (Nurnberg), while failing in 15 other qualifying attempts at tour-level events in her career, including in her last 12 tries. Papadakis ended that streak, getting Q-round wins over CoCo Vandeweghe and Taylah Preston, then battling Liudmila Samsonova for 3:40 in the 1st Round, leading 5-3 in the 3rd, and even serving for the match vs. the '21 Berlin champ. Papadakis was broken at love with the match on her racket, though, and ultimately fell in a deciding tie-break in a 7-5/6-7(5)/7-6(3) contest.
Her IQ is wonderful… look at this shot from PAPADAKIS ?? pic.twitter.com/8e0wnuUzmb
— UnderratedBetting (@UnderratedBett1) June 12, 2023
What was she doing??!!?????????????? #WTA #Tennis
— UnderratedBetting (@UnderratedBett1) June 12, 2023
Papadakis is playing well… pic.twitter.com/PvcUtrkGPF
Traveling to Berlin for weekend qualifying, Papadakis lost in the opening round to Polina Kudermetova.
Sensational! ??
— LTA (@the_LTA) June 16, 2023
What. A. Rally. @HeatherWatson92 ??#BackTheBrits ???? | @WTA | #RothesayOpen pic.twitter.com/9micuO7iOm
Watson also reached the doubles final, her first in more than two years, with countrywoman Harriet Dart, but lost to Ulrikke Eikeri & Ingrid Neel. It took six months, but Cornet finally cracked the QF/SF barrier on the '23 season. After opening with a win over Katie Swan, one of the few Brits in Nottingham to *not* reach the final eight, the Pastry followed up with an upset of Maria Sakkari, her first Top 10 win in nearly a year, since ending Iga Swiatek's run at last year's Wimbledon. After taking out Elli Mandlik to post her first tour SF result since reaching the Monastir final in October, Cornet fell in a 7-5/7-5 contest vs. Jodie Burrage, one of *two* first-time tour singles finalists from the U.K. in the event. Cornet is just a few weeks away from extending her WTA record slam MD appearance streak to 66.
Positive first week on grass ?? with my first semi final of the season.
— Alize Cornet (@alizecornet) June 17, 2023
Thank you #RothesayOpen for a great week ??
Let's keep building ??
Next ?? Berlin pic.twitter.com/NtEtK3dP9N
This little girls dream came true today ?? Maiden WTA in my home tournament ???? It takes a team. Grateful for these people in my life. Thanks for all the support ???? pic.twitter.com/PQTzO9SsEN
— Katie Boulter (@katiecboulter) June 18, 2023
We're not crying, you're crying ??
— wta (@WTA) June 18, 2023
You deserve this moment, @katiecboulter ??#RothesayOpen pic.twitter.com/J4VuoSgHCy
At Rosmalen, Hruncakova (née Kuzmova; she married her coach last September, and started playing under the new name in April) took a trip back a few years when she was a promising up-and-coming singles player on tour. Having ranked as high as #43 (2019), the Slovak's best results the last few years have mostly come in doubles. Ranked #144, Hruncakova, 25, strung together wins over Susan Bandecchi, Bianca Andreescu (saving 9 SP in the 1st en route to a straight sets win) and Ashlyn Krueger to reach her first tour-level SF since Auckland in 2019. She went out to Veronika Kudermetova. Over the past year, Hruncakova has had singles success on the challenger circuit, reaching three finals ($60K, $40K and $25K), and just qualified in Paris to make her first RG MD apparance since 2020. Hruncakova added doubles success to her singles resurgence this week, too, reaching the final with Tereza Mihalikova.
She is going to take some stopping ??
— wta (@WTA) June 16, 2023
Viktoria Hruncakova advances to the semifinals in Den Bosch for the second time! #LibemaOpen pic.twitter.com/847iANav2g
This point had EVERYTHING ??
— wta (@WTA) June 15, 2023
Daria Snigur | #RothesayOpen pic.twitter.com/fxwHXWWhyA
Meanwhile, Mandlik played all the way into the QF in Nottingham, the best result of her pro career to date. After her qualifying run, the Bannerette staged a comeback from 4-2 down in the 3rd vs. Viktoriya Tomova, then put up another three-set win over Camila Giorgi. A third three-setter finally proved a bridge too far for Mandlik, though, as she rallied from a set down vs. Alize Cornet but couldn't best the veteran Pastry in the decider. With the result, Mandlik will crack the Top 100 for the first time.
Her dream week in Nottingham continues ??@ellimandlik reaches her first-ever Tour-level quarterfinal, taking out No.7 seed Giorgi 7-5, 5-7. 6-3 and will now face Cornet for a place in the last four!#RothesayOpen pic.twitter.com/ybNO6dTWdi
— wta (@WTA) June 15, 2023
Krueger, 19, reached her maiden tour-level QF in Rosmalen, getting wins over Rebecca Peterson and Victoria Azarenka, the latter her first Top 20 win, before falling to Viktoria Hruncakova. She'll climb from a #152 to a new career high of #143.
A special victory ??
— wta (@WTA) June 14, 2023
Ashlyn Krueger is through to the quarterfinals in s-Hertogenbosch, easing past No.3 seed Azarenka! #LibemaOpen pic.twitter.com/VkiJdZN9An
The German dropped a 6-4/6-3 1st Round decision to Heather Watson, marking her second five-match losing streak of this season (she's had an additional four-match slide) to drop to 5-17 on the season.
Perhaps a corner *has* been turned on grass, though, as Niemeier rebounded in Berlin, qualifying with back-to-back wins (her first since Madrid, and only her second winning streak all season) over Noma Noha Akugue and Greet Minnen to reach the MD.Celine Naef on beating Venus Williams in her debut:
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) June 13, 2023
“It’s amazing. I cannot believe I had the chance to play against Venus. She’s an amazing player & really a role model for everyone.” ??
She looks so grateful to have shared the court with Venus. pic.twitter.com/A6OYaKkCko
15-year old German Zhenikhova, the junior #521, claimed her first career J300 crown -- her maiden ITF level junior crown ever -- in Bamberg, Germany. A wild card entrant, she defeated the #6 and #3 seeds and reached the final without dropping a set, then outlasted Czech Eliska Forejtkova 6-2/3-6/7-6(6) for the title. Forejtkova, who also reached the doubles final, had reached J200 and J100 singles finals earlier this season. In the $15K in Norges-la-Ville, France, 17-year old Turk Ercan picked up her maiden pro title, defeating Belgian Amelie Van Impe in a 6-7(8)/6-0/7-6(6) final. Ercan was the champion at the pre-AO Traralgon J300 junior event this January, where she knocked off both eventual AO girls' finalists -- Alina Korneeva (SF) and Mirra Andreeva (F) -- en route to the crown. In this year's RG junior event, Ercan upset #1-seeded Sara Saito in the 2nd Round.
?? CHAMPIONS IN DEN BOSCH ??
— wta (@WTA) June 17, 2023
The moment No.3 seeds Shuko Aoyama & @EnaShibs captured the #LibemaOpen doubles title! ?? pic.twitter.com/FokzPFC6GT
The PERFECT week ????
— wta (@WTA) June 17, 2023
Shuko Aoyama & @EnaShibs are your 2023 #LibemaOpen doubles champions! pic.twitter.com/flOvnm3HRl
In Nottingham, first-time tour level partners (though they joined for two challengers back in 2018), Eikeri & Neel took home the title while opening and closing with 1st Round (vs. Freya Christie/Ali Collins) and Final (vs. Harriet Dart/Heather Watson) match tie-break wins over all-British pairs, and threw in a straight sets win over the #1 seeds (Anna Danilina/Xu Yifan) in the semis. It's the second career title for both, but Florida-born Neel's first at tour level since switching her representation from the U.S. to Estonia (her grandmother's birth country) in April. The former Florida Gator, her win clinched the school's 2018 championship, won a $60K title in February, and then added a pair of 125 wins after the switch.
?? A MAGICAL WEEK ??
— wta (@WTA) June 18, 2023
Ulrikke Eikeri & @ingridNeel_ bag their first doubles title together with a 7-6(6), 5-7, 10-8 victory over Dart/Watson at the #RothesayOpen! pic.twitter.com/E2Q9H0oUBd
So, I guess the little incident/accident from earlier in the week will go down as a good luck charm/good omen...
wait... what? (via IG/ulrikkeeikeri) pic.twitter.com/yDiU87FwjW
— wta (@WTA) June 16, 2023
?? WINNER OF THE WOMEN SINGLE : @DiedetheGreat. ????
— French Riviera Open (@FrenchRivieraOp) June 18, 2023
Congratulations! ???? #FRO2023 pic.twitter.com/pH74vW55ys
An historic moment for British tennis ??@jodieburrage takes on @katiecboulter in the first all-British Hologic WTA Tour final for 46 years! ??#RothesayOpen pic.twitter.com/ztlPhJ29wI
— wta (@WTA) June 18, 2023
A special nod to the WTA tour social media member who typed "an historic" rather than "a historic." It's greatly appreciated.
FIRST CAREER TITLE ??????
— wta (@WTA) June 18, 2023
A moment that @katiecboulter will never forget as she claims the title on home soil in Nottingham!#RothesayOpen pic.twitter.com/LXOqw6nzbB
Sealed with a kiss ????@katiecboulter becomes the first British woman to win a singles title since Emma Raducanu won the US Open two years ago! #RothesayOpen pic.twitter.com/JWUaCY9hOQ
— wta (@WTA) June 18, 2023
The 1??st @WTA title of @katiecboulter's career...
— LTA (@the_LTA) June 18, 2023
And it's on home soil ??????#RothesayOpen pic.twitter.com/qs8f1flUhe
BIG ESCAPE!
— WTARussians (@WTArussians) June 12, 2023
Liudmila Samsonova wins a 3h40m battle against an inspired Lena Papadakis, surviving 7-5, 6-7, 7-6 in the first round of the Libema Open.
Miles away from her best tennis but Lyuda stepped up when needed, erasing a 3-5 deficit in the deciding set to prevail. pic.twitter.com/JXdZfJFUGc
A second chance turns magical ?
— wta (@WTA) June 13, 2023
Lucky loser Daria Snigur takes out the defending champion Haddad Maia!#RothesayOpen pic.twitter.com/IlyUoGorGt
?????? ???????? ???? ??????????! ??
— Libéma Open?? (@LibemaOpen) June 15, 2023
After her WTA-debut win against Venus Williams, Celine Naef makes an amazing comeback to beat Caty McNally in three sets ??#LibemaOpen #LO2023 #Tennis #Grasscourt pic.twitter.com/S7XZOfz39Y
"Rolling back the years" ??
— Alize Cornet (@alizecornet) June 14, 2023
On my way to the quarter final at #RothesayOpen ??????
Qui aurait cru que le gazon deviendrait ma surface préférée ???? ? pic.twitter.com/0kV8FiRps1
What a day in Nottingham ??
— LTA (@the_LTA) June 16, 2023
3? British women have reached the semi-finals of the same event for the 1st time since 1975#BackTheBrits ???? pic.twitter.com/xWBMroYPOQ
Katie's MOMENT ?????@katiecboulter defeats Watson, 6-4, 7-5 to reach her first Hologic WTA Tour-level final! #RothesayOpen pic.twitter.com/DfRkiKALH2
— wta (@WTA) June 17, 2023
HER FIRST WTA TOUR-LEVEL FINAL ????@jodieburrage sends her home crowd into a frenzy by defeating Cornet, 7-5, 7-5 to set up an all-British final against Boulter! #RothesayOpen pic.twitter.com/gA1V8jHLxS
— wta (@WTA) June 17, 2023
?? Diede De Groot a tremblé au French Riviera Open !
— French Riviera Open (@FrenchRivieraOp) June 15, 2023
Invaincue depuis 105 matchs, la joueuse néerlandaise a failli s'incliner face à une Kgothatso Montjane en grande forme. ????
Au bout du suspense, c'est tout de même la n°1 mondiale qui s'impose 4-6, 7-6, 6-2. ?????? #FRO2023 pic.twitter.com/Cf1BB7pckc
Her dream week in Nottingham continues ??@ellimandlik reaches her first-ever Tour-level quarterfinal, taking out No.7 seed Giorgi 7-5, 5-7. 6-3 and will now face Cornet for a place in the last four!#RothesayOpen pic.twitter.com/ybNO6dTWdi
— wta (@WTA) June 15, 2023
?? Dasha pic.twitter.com/BNUD6hcMr6
— #AusOpen (@AustralianOpen) June 15, 2023
Just my thoughts hehehe!! Also can I just say a HUGE thank you to @TennisAustralia for supporting me through this process!!! Thanks to Gabes, Pratty, Ryan, Vic and Fish! I am very grateful to have another crack at this tennis thing!! ? pic.twitter.com/3m9QXeZYt9
— Daria Saville (@Daria_gav) June 18, 2023
The biggest title of her career!
— WTARussians (@WTArussians) June 18, 2023
World No.286 Tatiana Prozorova lifts the ITFW60 Ix Open Arcadis Brezo Osuna title with a 6-3, 6-1 win over home favourite Marta Soriano Santiago.
In a good position to make her US Open debut as she is set to jump around 50 ranking spots! pic.twitter.com/sLJq8eRAEB
Vera Zvonareva on her way into the Berlin main draw, she beat Eugenie Bouchard in three-sets to wrap up the day in Berlin. pic.twitter.com/YUeWbSjEUT
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) June 18, 2023
A little headache: Worth it!
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) June 18, 2023
Jule Niemeier was so excited to qualify for the Berlin main draw, she threw her racket up to celebrate, it came back down and hit her on the head. ?? pic.twitter.com/pNMGsVgtze
One to remember ??
— wta (@WTA) June 13, 2023
Celine Naef secures her first-ever win on the Hologic WTA Tour with her win over Williams, 3-6, 7-6(3), 6-2!#LibemaOpen pic.twitter.com/yKLF3wWMey
She has done it again!
— WTARussians (@WTArussians) June 18, 2023
Defending champion Ekaterina Alexandrova prevails in 's-Hertogenbosch again, defeating top seed Veronika Kudermetova in a high-quality 4-6, 6-4, 7-6 affair.
Her 4th career WTA250 title! pic.twitter.com/7HB5rdaMu7
A good win for Polina Kudermetova to reach the main draw of the Bett1 Open!
— WTARussians (@WTArussians) June 18, 2023
She saves 3 break points at 0-1 of both the second and final sets, beating Susan Bandecchi 5-7, 6-2, 6-4.
Another solid performance and she took the chance to showcase her forehand slices today! pic.twitter.com/DSOmE6al58
Perfect ??#Wimbledon pic.twitter.com/ygomBNeXqS
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) June 14, 2023
We are pleased to announce record prize money for this year's Championships ??
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) June 14, 2023
Find out more below ??#Wimbledonhttps://t.co/VJq6sfJxil
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova will skip the grass season because she won’t receive the wildcards she needs to enter the events pic.twitter.com/VbygZG64QV
— Mario Boccardi (@marioboc17) June 16, 2023
Miyu Kato says she lost her appeal to regain the money and points she lost when defaulted at Roland Garros. https://t.co/dJyfAn2WnL
— Ben Rothenberg (@BenRothenberg) June 15, 2023
"We lived in a cage, and you had the strength and courage to break that cage and fly out of it." ???
— TENNIS (@Tennis) June 17, 2023
More from @Martina's homecoming to Prague, where she was honored with a silver medal from the Czech parliament @SenatCZ:https://t.co/nhNnDWcLwz
Augusta 70.3 (loading…) ????????????????????? pic.twitter.com/H5fA02qnUK
— Monica Puig (@MonicaAce93) June 12, 2023
After injuries forced her to retire from tennis aged 28, Olympic gold medalist @MonicaAce93 turned her focus to marathon running and triathlons.https://t.co/MEZNcSubFy
— CNN Sports (@cnnsport) June 13, 2023
Ukraine's No 1 tennis player Anhelina Kalinina grew up in Nova Kakhova. Earlier this month, a dam was destroyed, creating widespread destruction, flooding and environmental damage.
— James Gray (@jamesgraysport) June 16, 2023
This is what she has lost.https://t.co/X8Be6ywqIK
RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK was released 42 years ago today. The first Indiana Jones movie and one of Steven Spielberg’s most beloved films, the behind the scenes story is an adventure all of its own…
— All The Right Movies (@ATRightMovies) June 12, 2023
A THREAD
1/36 pic.twitter.com/RvzcB3toJe
Well this is just totally wonderful - the mighty JOHN WILLIAMS and a full orchestra play a surprise performance of the famous theme from the Indiana Jones movies at the ‘Dial Of Destiny’ premiere in L.A. yesterday. pic.twitter.com/FkxfZFxDjv
— Michael Warburton (@MichaelWarbur17) June 15, 2023
Another Casey Kasem American Top 40 weekly special:
Belinda Carlisle's "Mad About You" (#31 the week of June 21, 1986). It was her first solo hit apart from the Go-Go's, and eventually got to #3...
"Live to Tell" (Madonna)... #4. It had been #1 two weeks earlier, making it her third #1 hit after "Like a Virgin" and "Crazy for You." Her next single ("Papa Don't Preach") also topped the U.S. charts.
And Janet Jackson's "Nasty" (#14). It ultimately rose as high as #3.
Grass season has just begun ??@Venuseswilliams | #LibemaOpen pic.twitter.com/RHcxxT5Zyz
— wta (@WTA) June 13, 2023
Over two decades of sisterly support on the grass ??#Wimbledon | @serenawilliams | @Venuseswilliams pic.twitter.com/6FoihiMoyi
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) June 14, 2023
*2023 FIRST-TIME WTA...*
[singles champions]
Zhu Lin, CHN - Hua Hin (29/#54)
Alycia Parks, USA - Lyon (22/#79)
Marta Kostyuk, UKR - Austin (20/#52)
Lucia Bronzetti, ITA - Rabat (24/#102)
KATIE BOULTER, GBR (#126/26 - Nottingham)
[finalists]
Linda Noskova, CZE (#102/18 = Adelaide 1)
Rebeka Masarova, ESP (#130/23 = Auckland)
Elisabetta Cocciaretto, ITA (#67/21 = Hobart)
Alycia Parks, USA (#79/22 = Lyon)-W
Zhu Lin, CHN (#54/29 - Hua Hin)-W
Varvara Gracheva, RUS (#88/22 - Austin)
Marta Kostyuk, UKR (#52/20 - Austin)-W
Peyton Stearns, USA (#116/21 - Bogota)
Lucia Bronzetti, ITA (#102/24 - Rabat)-W
Julia Grabher, AUT (#74/26 - Rabat)
KATIE BOULTER, GBR (#126/26 - Nottingham)-W
JODIE BURRAGE, GBR (#131/24 - Nottingham)
[semifinalists]
Auckland: Ysaline Bonaventure, BEL (28/#95)
Lyon: Alycia Parks, USA (22/#79)-W
Austin: Katie Volynets, USA (21/#92)
Bogota: Peyton Stearns, USA (21/#116)-RU
Bogota: Francesca Jones, GBR (22/#817)
Rabat: Julia Grabher, AUT (26/#74)-RU
Rabat: Julia Riera, ARG (20/#195)
Nottingham: KATIE BOULTER, GBR (26/#126)-W
Nottingham: JODIE BURRAGE, GBR (24/#131)-RU
*2023 REPEAT CHAMPIONS*
[singles]
Doha - Iga Swiatek
Bogota - Tatjana Maria
Stuttgart - Iga Swiatek
Roland Garros - Iga Swiatek
Rosmlaen - Ekaterina Alexandrova
[doubles]
Australian - Krejcikova/Siniakova
Doha - Gauff/Pegula
Dubai - Veronika Kudermetova
Stuttgart - Krawczyk/Schuurs
*2023 WTA TITLES w/o LOSING A SET*
Adelaide 1 - Aryna Sabalenka
Auckland - Coco Gauff
Hobart - Lauren Davis
Doha - Iga Swiatek
Charleston - Ons Jabeur
Nottingham - Katie Boulter
*2023 LOW-RANKED WTA FINALISTS IN 2023 (#100+)*
#508 - Elina Svitolina, UKR (Starsbourg, def. Blinkova)
#140 - Rebecca Peterson, SWE (Merida, L to Giorgi)
#136 - Lesia Tsurenko, UKR (Hua Hin, L to Zhu)
#131 - JODIE BURRAGE, GBR (Nottingham, L to Boulter)
#130 - Rebeka Masarova, ESP (Auckland, L to Gauff)
#126 - KATIE BOULTER, GBR (Nottingham, def. Burrage)
#116 - Peyton Stearns, USA (Bogota, L to Maria)
#102 - Linda Noskova, CZE (Adelaide 1, L to Sabalenka)
#102 - Lucia Bronzetti, ITA (Rabat, def. Grabher)
*ALL-RUSSIAN WTA FINALS (32)*
[most recent]
2017 Indian Wells - Vesnina d. Kuznetsova
2018 Tashkent - Gasparyan d. Potapova
2021 Saint Petersburg - Kasatkina d. Gasparyan
2022 Istanbul - Potapova d. V.Kudermetova
2023 Rosmalen - Alexandrova d. V.Kudermetova
[individual W/L - multiple finals]
12 - Elena Dementieva (6-6)
10 - Svetlana Kuznetsova (5-5)
7 - Dinara Safina (3-4)
5 - Maria Sharapova (3-2)
4 - Anastasia Myskina (4-0)
4 - Elena Vesnina (1-3)
2 - Anna Chakvetadze (2-0)
2 - Margarita Gasparyan (1-1)
2 - Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (1-1)
2 - Anastasia Potapova (1-1)
2 - Vera Zvonareva (1-1)
2 - VERONIKA KUDERMETOVA (0-2)
2 - Nadia Petrova (0-2)
*WTA ALL-GBR FINALS (both finalists)*
1975: Paris Indoors - Virginia Wade d. Sue Barker
1977: San Francisco - Sue Barker d. Virginia Wade
2023: Nottingham - Katie Boulter d. Jodie Burrage
*RECENT WTA ALL-NATION FINALS (both finalists)*
2017: (USA) Australian Open - S.Williams d. V.Williams
2017: (RUS) Indian Wells - Vesnina d. Kuznetsova
2017: (AUS) Strasbourg - Stosur d. Gavrilova
2017: (USA) Stanford - Keys d. Vandeweghe *
2017: (USA) US Open - Stephens d. Keys *
2018: (CHN) Nanchang - Q.Wang d. Sai.Zheng *
2018: (RUS) Tashkent - Gasparyan d. Potapova
2019: (FRA) Lausanne - Ferro d. Cornet
2019: (JPN) Hiroshima - Hibino d. Doi *
2020: (USA) Auckland - S.Williams d. Pegula
2020: (BLR) Ostrava - Sabalenka d. Azarenka
2021: (RUS) Saint Petersburg - Kasatkina d. Gasparyan *
2021: (CZE) Prague - Krejcikova d. Martincova *
2022: (RUS) Istanbul - Potapova d. V.Kudermetova
2023: (RUS) Rosmalen - Alexandrova d. V.Kudermetova
2023: (GBR) Nottingham - Boulter d. Burrage *
-
* - in home nation
*2023 REACHED FINAL IN HOME NATION*
Lyon - Caroline Garcia, FRA (L)
Nottingham - JODIE BURRAGE, GBR (L)
Nottingham - KATIE BOULTER, GBR (W)
*CAREER WTA GRASS TITLES - active*
6 - Venus Williams
5 - Petra Kvitova
3 - Caroline Garcia
3 - Angelique Kerber
3 - Karolina Pliskova
2 - EKATERINA ALEXANDROVA
2 - Beatriz Haddad Maia
2 - Simona Halep
2 - Ons Jabeur
2 - Madison Keys
2 - CoCo Vandeweghe
*TITLES ON HARD/CLAY/GRASS (active)*
[w/ diff. clay wins]
Belinda Bencic, SUI (gc)
Caroline Garcia, FRA (rc)
Simona Halep, ROU (rc)
Angelique Kerber, GER (rc/gc)
Madison Keys, USA (gc)
Svetlana Kuznetsova, RUS (gc)
Petra Kvitova, CZE (rc)
Sabine Lisicki, GER (gc)
Garbine Muguruza, ESP (rc)
Alona Ostapenko, LAT (rc)
Karolina Pliskova, CZE (rc)
Elena Rybakina, KAZ (rc)
Venus Williams, USA (rc/gc)
Vera Zvonareva, RUS (rc)
*VENUS WILLIAMS LOWEST-RANKED LOSSES*
NR - Kim Clijsters (2009 U.S. Open 4th)
#674 - Bethanie Mattek-Sands (2019 San Jose 1st)
#313 - Coco Gauff (2019 Wimbledon 1st)
#223 - Peng Shuai (2016 Beijing 1st)
#202 - Celine Naef (2023 Rosmalen 1st)
#161 - Anna Karolina Schmiedlova (2020 Roland Garros 1st)
#199 - Anna Karolina Schmiedlova (2020 Monterrey 1st)
#152 - Bianca Andreeescu (2019 Auckland QF)
*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 - SHUKO AOYAMA (1/5/0/1)
7 - Hsieh Su-wei (4/2/0/1)
7 - Desirae Krawczyk (2/2/1/2)
7 - Jessie Pegula (0/0/5/2)
7 - ENA SHIBAHARA (1/5/0/1)
[duos]
11...Krejcikova/Siniakova (1/5/3/2)
7...AOYAMA/SHIBAHARA (1/5/0/1)
5...Gauff/Pegula (0/0/3/2)
4...Hsieh/Strycova (4/0/-/0)
Dear @SteveScalise,
— Joe Walsh (@WalshFreedom) June 14, 2023
If his name was “Donald Smith,” and he worked at any level in our government, and he did what Donald Trump did, he’d already be convicted & in jail.
Sincerely,
Your Former Congressional Colleague https://t.co/ZZB68VR7dG
Bill Cosby went to prison for making bad drinks.
— ???????????? ???????????? (@DonutHolschtein) June 15, 2023
Ted Kaczynski went to prison because he sent a couple letters.
John Wayne Gacy went to prison for having some kids stay at his house.
It's easy to defend crime if you phrase it in the most dishonest way possible. pic.twitter.com/nyDuoxLHWr
Follow the files #TrumpIndictment https://t.co/PEm9Z82EfQ pic.twitter.com/A76gfwQIRC
— Ann Telnaes (@AnnTelnaes) June 13, 2023
Say you're dumb enough to believe that Hillary Clinton accidentally having classified documents on her PC is the same as Trump stealing boxes of documents, hoarding them, lying about them to the feds, & sharing them w randos. Why did you want to "lock her up!" but not him? ??
— Max Weiss (@maxthegirl) June 12, 2023
The Arizona Supreme Court, made up entirely of Republican-appointed justices, has ruled that the Mormon Church has the “privilege” to refuse to report or answer questions about child sexual abuse if they learn of the crime during a confessional setting. https://t.co/UnwSGiMxot
— No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen (@NoLieWithBTC) June 12, 2023
Glenda Jackson made acting seem effortless. She was nominated for 4 Oscars throughout the 70s, she won 2 of them before embracing a career in politics.
— The Sting (@TSting18) June 15, 2023
This short scene from Hopscotch (1980) with Walter Matthau is just fabulous. She was brilliant.#RIPGlendaJackson pic.twitter.com/WbDpYlxH11
Burning books don't need fire these days.
— Steven Cardwell (@addict2213) June 12, 2023
They're afraid that the current climate will hurt sales after being spooked by online moralists/trolls -- or, you know, they just don't think it's very good -- so they're delaying the release. Which is fine. But, please, spare us the "I don't want to cause Ukrainians further grief" BS. They wouldn't/shouldn't even know that the book exists (they've got other things to worry about). Plus, it's a story about fictional humans from 100 years ago. Stop it. Are we going to ban "Russian dressing" next? Vodka? Anton Chekhov plays? Feels a little reminiscent of "French fries" becoming "Freedom fries" during the Iraqi war, only more serious.
Oceania has always been at war with Eurasia
— a senior aide (@SClaus1984) June 12, 2023
A tragic end for an Olympian champion as she dies in childbirth. RIP Torie.
— ScubaSuzyQ ????????????BeKind #BeGentle #Love?? (@susanmcgraw88) June 14, 2023
Agent: Tori Bowie, who died in childbirth, was not actively performing home birth when baby started to arrive https://t.co/o7xLWiFSP1 via @CBSMornings #DemVoice1 #DemValues
It’s absolutely heartbreaking. We continue to face a black maternal mortality crisis in this country. My heart aches. We have to do more. https://t.co/GNI2zMr1zJ
— Allyson Felix (@allysonfelix) June 13, 2023
Um. Drop it pic.twitter.com/fmNUPizsPm
— Slater Jonathan (@SlaterJonathan4) June 15, 2023
1991 is INSANE pic.twitter.com/GHayXQkzLk
— Barstool DMV (@Barstooldmv) June 12, 2023
— this is rare, but it happens (@RareHappens) June 12, 2023
Stanislav Petrov, the man who saved the world from nuclear disaster, on this day in 1983, 39 years ago today, saw the word "LAUNCH" flash across the Soviet Union's attack early warning system. His screen stated with high reliability that a total of five American intercontinental… pic.twitter.com/IfUTSecNCA
— Historic Vids (@historyinmemes) June 12, 2023
4 Comments:
Having an ITF event on grass between Surbiton and Ilkley makes sense.
Boulter missed 7 months with her spine fracture, how long will Badosa be out?
Hsieh/Strycova in doubles at Birmingham.
Last week for Wimbledon seeding. Last 4 in: Begu, Martic, Sherif, Bouzkova. Last 4 out: Badosa, Kostyuk, Zhang, Stephens.
Stat of the Week- 3- Unofficial finals for Glynis Coles.
With Boulter/Burrage being the third all-British final, it should be noted that the other two were between slam winners Virginia Wade and Sue Barker.
Coles comes in as the third British member of the final 4 in Paris-1975, with the 4th being Betty Stove. The other unique thing besides having an all-British final, is that there was a consolation match between Stove and Coles. Stove won.
Coles reached a career high of 39 in the first year of computer rankings in 1975. She may have ranked higher had the rankings started earlier, as her official finals were 1972 Brisbane, 1974 Barcelona and 1974 Cardiff.
She did have 2 unofficial titles: 1973 Bastad and 1975 Gstaad.
Ironically, just one year later,her 1974 Bastad doubles title with Barker is official.
The only SF after Paris in 1975 was Bastad 1977.
The back half of her career was strange. On WTA level, counting Q, she went almost 2 years without a win, having a 22 match losing streak from Oct 81 to Jun 83.
She also lost her last 16 MD matches to end her career.
One near the end of that streak, was almost a huge upset. 4 years after her last Wimbledon MD(1982), she got a WC, then took a set off #11 seed Carling Bassett. The loss would be her last MD match anywhere.
*Note: In 1972, Kerry Melville beat Virginia Wade in Newport, Wales. British players Winnie Shaw and Joyce Williams both reached SF.
Quiz Time!
Between Virginia Wade and Sue Barker, which player led the head to head?
Interlude- Need a lottery ticket?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7OnB_jalI4U
Answer!
Let's see: Wade beat Barker in Paris, while Barker beat Wade in San Francisco.
Wade is correct, because she started 5-0. She needed that cushion, as Barker's peak meant that she won 6 of the next 10, leaving Wade the victor, 9-6.
Due to Barker's injuries, their last match was in 1980, with Wade playing for another half decade.
5 On the Up Side- If Cows Can Graze on it Edition.
1.Sabalenka- Germany pick has won here before, 2021 doubles with Azarenka. Trying to tune up before her first Wimbledon since 2021.
2.Giorgi- Birmingham pick won her first title on grass: Rosmalen 2015. Also is 2018 Wimbledon QF. Has it been that long?
3.Neel- Singles results are putrid. In fact, she doesn't even have a singles ranking. But Estonia's next doubles hope has gone from 109 to 54 in the last 52 weeks, going 30-26.
4.Rybakina- #2 seed in Germany. Hopefully it goes better than the last time she was, 2021 San Jose. She lost to Collins in QF. Has never been #1 seed.
5.Bouzkova- Trying to lock down Wimbledon seed. With her defense on grass, being 32 as opposed to 33 could make a huge difference. In Birmingham, where Czech women reached the final every year between 2014-18.
5 On the Down Side.
1.Swiatek- Will she play a warmup event on grass? Her red flag is that the only MD win on grass outside of Wimbledon is Eastbourne 2021.
2.Andreescu- Her game should be better on grass than it is. I could say the same about Parks. Last week did not build confidence, with her saving 8/10 BP vs Sonmez, only to go 2/16 on BP vs Hruncakova.
3.Sakkari- Has reached 4 SF this year, but has some bad draw luck. No shock that she is getting Cornet again, as she has already played Sabalenka(0-2), Martic(1-1) and Pliskova(1-2) multiple times this year. Add Muchova and Vondrousova recently, and it seems she gets every unseeded former Top 20 player early.
4.Haddad Maia- No shame in trying to defend Nottingham. Would have wanted to see her defend Birmingham, but I get it. Skipping Brimingham means she will drop from 10 to 13-14, though bad luck could put her in 17-24 bracket.
5.Zhu- What has she done since Australia? Actually, she had another good month after that, winning Hua Hin and reaching Monterrey SF. She has gone 1-5 since then, not beating anyone ranked higher than her since #6 Sakkari in Australia.
It's like, they added that third week between RG and SW19, but no one had a brainstorm. It was the same set-up last year.
Quiz: hmm, was tempted to say they were tied. ;) (But I went w/ Wade.)
Ric Flair makes me think of George Michael. Not the singer. the sportscaster. He was local on the D.C. NBC station, but national w/ his "Sports Machine" show (it was a local show first). He always covered wrestling *almost* like a real sport during its big 1980s stretch.
Hey, maybe Niemeier *has* turned a corner (def. Berlin DC Jabeur today).
Zhu got a win over Boulter today. She heard her name. ;)
The Tennis Gods have a thing. No Russians were in the Nottingham MD last week. This week, only Potapova was there in Birmingham. Naturally, she drew Kostyuk... and beat her in three (while the organizers tried to hide the match on a way outside court).
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