Wk.10- Are Desert Destinies Made of Sand?
Mothers on a mission 💜
— wta (@WTA) March 10, 2024
Four moms are into the third round of Indian Wells and continue to inspire on and off the court ✨#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/EJ3QIP018L
Another BIG win for Blinkova this season ??
— wta (@WTA) March 9, 2024
After upsetting Rybakina at the Australian Open in January, Anna Blinkova takes out World No.5 Pegula 6-2, 3-6, 6-3 in Indian Wells!#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/21z69Si9h2
Blinkova d. Pegula 6-2 3-6 6-3 at Indian Wells
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) March 9, 2024
Anna is having a special year
She won the longest tiebreak in Slam history to get her 1st top 5 win
Today, she gets another
Everyone who knows her says she’s an absolute sweetheart
Finally, she’s having her moment
Deserved. ?? pic.twitter.com/CMKnn89JPu
She has a shot to climb back into the Top 40 at the end of this tournament, and maybe even catch her career high (#34) from last August.
¡ESPECTACULAR VICTORIA DE PODOROSKA! ??????
— ESPN Tenis (@ESPNtenis) March 9, 2024
La argentina mostró su mejor tenis y venció a la local Day por 7-6 (3) y 6-4 en la segunda ronda de #IndianWells. ??
??? Boleto a R3, donde se medirá con Potapova. pic.twitter.com/GbGtfPAr1X
Third top-50 win for @CaroWozniacki since her comeback!
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) March 9, 2024
7-6(5), 6-3 win over Donna Vekic to reach the Third Round. #TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/hQge2tFqqi
Caroline Wozniacki
— Bastien Fachan (@BastienFachan) March 10, 2024
Angelique Kerber
Naomi Osaka
Party like it's 2018 babyyyy 🎉 pic.twitter.com/v8nbA7zVFN
Angie Kerber after getting 1st top 10 win as a mom against Ostapenko at Indian Wells:
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) March 8, 2024
“You know guys, being here playing in front of you is just great. This is why I’m back. Because I have the emotions. I see you guys. Thank you guys for the best support.” ?? pic.twitter.com/Omwh2jhEwS
.@naomiosaka on her way into the third round in Indian Wells pic.twitter.com/bUP8VJsXsH
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) March 10, 2024
Osaka's first big breakout result came when she won Indian Wells in 2018. By the time she returned a year later, she'd won a pair of slam titles and risen to #1. What will happen to Osaka over the next 12 months? Osaka has shown good form throughout '24, even if the wins have been slow to come, in her return from maternity leave. While her history says what happens this spring/summer on clay and grass won't mean much, the same can't be said for the four-time slam winner's hard court results. Two tight losses to Karolina Pliskova (Brisbane 2r, Doha QF) have tied a rope around her ankle and kept Osaka from soaring thus far, but it wasn't hard to see that she might be a few wins away from such a thing. So far in Indian Wells she's put up wins over Sara Errani and Liudmila Samsonova, the latter the first Top 20 win in her comeback. She'll enter the second week above .500 on the season (5-4) and a match with Elise Mertens away from a possible 4th Round meeting with Coco Gauff. In 2018 in the desert, Osaka clocked her first multiple Top 10 win tournament, getting her maiden career #1 win over Simona Halep in the semis en route to the title. She hasn't had a Top 10 win since 2020, but if she gets one by the end of next week... well, who knows what might be possible. Next weekend in Indian Wells, a few weeks from now in Miami and, in truth, New York come the summertime, too.
Don't sleep on @naomiosaka ??
— BNP Paribas Open (@BNPPARIBASOPEN) March 10, 2024
The 2018 champion picks up a 7-5 6-3 win over No. 14 seed Samsonova in R2!#IndianWells | #TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/T7QorHqJFt
The BIGGEST win of her career by ranking ??
— wta (@WTA) March 9, 2024
Katie Volynets downs World No.6 Jabeur in Indian Wells!#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/ZACrTeMMcl
Though she has seven slam MD victories to her name (including at this year's AO, her third 3rd Rd. run at a major), Parry came into the week having never appeared in a 1000 singles MD, losing in qualifying nine times over the years. Ranked high enough (#61) to be an automatic MD entrant in Indian Wells, the Pastry has run off victories over Martina Trevisan and Leylah Fernandez, taking down the Canadian in three sets in nearly three hours (rallying from 0-2 in the 3rd). Parry has a pair of QF to her credit in '24, in Auckland and Austin, and will now face Anna Blinkova for a berth in the I.W. Round of 16.
Parry fait chuter Fernandez
— We Are Tennis France (@WeAreTennisFR) March 9, 2024
Belle victoire de Diane qui s'offre la 34ème mondiale après 3 heures de jeu 7-5 5-7 6-2 pour se qualifier pour la 1ère fois au 3ème tour d'un WTA 1000 au @BNPPARIBASOPEN ! pic.twitter.com/qTOO4DEQc3
Elena Rybakina has withdrawn due to illness.
— BNP Paribas Open (@BNPPARIBASOPEN) March 9, 2024
We wish our 2023 champion a speedy recovery ?? #IndianWells pic.twitter.com/6kmvhNU00P
This remains crazy to me.
— Juan Ignacio (@juanignacio_ac) March 9, 2024
With Rybakina withdrawing, no one has ever yet defended the Indian Wells title as a WTA 1000 - 27 consecutive unsuccessful attempts.
Indian Wells, Beijing, and the Olympics are the only 3 big tournament titles that have never been defended ???? pic.twitter.com/ZfQDd5cOKT
Hmmm, could it be that maybe the reason that I.W. has never been successfully defended is that the previous year's champion (like Rybakina?) got immediately sick to her stomach after seeing the unveiling of the "rendering" (and I use that term tremendously loosely) of her likeness as the reigning champion in those annually hideous murals? Seriously, how does the tournament allow this travesty to continue *every* *single* *year*? It's embarrassing.
The Rybakina Indian Wells mural looks as if someone tried to draw her from memory pic.twitter.com/NPJJGQ4j9y
— Bastien Fachan (@BastienFachan) March 8, 2024
Some have said that it more resembles Camila Osorio. Maybe, but I also see Danka Kovinic. After seeing *his* mural, Alcaraz might have had to down a whole bottle of Pepto...
Still better than what Alcaraz got 😂 pic.twitter.com/px3VPiQeSJ
— Dušan (@N69E28) March 8, 2024
O Banana Bowl tem dois campeões inéditos. Neste domingo (10) foram realizadas as finais feminina e masculina da 54ª edição do torneio, nas quadras de saibro do Tabajara Tênis Clube, em Blumenau, com a vitória da norte-americana Kaitlyn Rolls e do britânico Oliver Bonding. pic.twitter.com/bjj8qqRWvX
— CBT (@cbtenis) March 10, 2024
There haven't been a great deal of achieving Swedish juniors of late, but 15-year old Nilsson (jr. #96) has been making a move in '24. In the AO juniors, she qualified and defeated Czech Alena Kovackova. She lost to Brit Mimi Xu in the 3rd Round, but had a MP. This week in Nonthaburi (THA), Nilsson picked up her biggest career title, taking the J300 prize with a victory over Aussie Alana Subasic in the final.
Aryna Sabalenka won this match. pic.twitter.com/n3q6WlnaHF
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) March 10, 2024
what just happened ??@peyton_stearns | #TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/DokFbBAv2m
— wta (@WTA) March 10, 2024
Aryna Sabalenka’s reaction to Peyton Stearns hitting an unreal forehand on the line ??
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) March 10, 2024
This match is delivering. pic.twitter.com/qM562BilIk
Stearns then quickly went up love/30 on Sabalenka in the next game. A Sabalenka DF handed Stearns a BP and she converted with a Sabalenka error. Serving for the match at 5-4, the former NCAA champ took a 40/love lead, but failed to put away four MP in the game as Sabalenka broke to get back on serve. Stearns again grabbed the lead at 15/40 in game 11, but game Sabalenka didn't give up easily in a game in which she slid and nearly turned her ankle, and reached GP twice (on the first going big on both 1st and 2nd serves, but missing both) before Stearns broke on her fifth BP to lead 6-5. But again Stearns couldn't put the match away. In the deciding TB, Sabalenka (now playing w/ a bloody knee wound) finally edged ahead with a crosscourt second serve return winner to lead 4-2. She went up 6-3, but Stearns again surged back, saving two MP on her own serve and another on Sabalenka's. Finally, on MP #4, Sabalenka put away the nearly three-hour thriller to get her first win since claiming her second AO crown. It's Stearns' sixth three-set loss in her nine matches this season (she's 2-7 overall).
Converting on her 4th match point & saving 4 herself, Aryna Sabalenka beats Stearns 6-7(2), 6-2, 7-6(6)!
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) March 10, 2024
Faces Raducanu next for a spot in the Fourth Round. #TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/ibyrcf9gWT
Meanwhile, if having Kerber, Wozniacki, Osaka and (soon) Halep back in the spotlight isn't enough of a time warp for you, I give you... Redfoo (not w/ Vika, and not in 2013) in the Stearns courtside box.
Redfoo cheers on Peyton Stearns in Indian Wells. pic.twitter.com/n9fpJ4hQAr
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) March 10, 2024
?? ???? Daria Saville (PR) exits Indian Wells 5-7, 6-4, 6-7(5) to ???? Bernarda Pera (Q) in a marathon opening round match ? 3hrs8min in tough conditions in the final set - Stadium 6 as the desert winds played havoc.#TheFirstServe pic.twitter.com/nebkLiLVpZ
— The First Serve (@TheFirstServeAU) March 7, 2024
The day is March 8, 2024, and Angelique Kerber and Caroline Wozniacki just defeated two top 25 seeds at a WTA 1000 event pic.twitter.com/8isGsox9Gi
— Bastien Fachan (@BastienFachan) March 9, 2024
WELCOME BACK, ANGIE ??@AngeliqueKerber stuns world No.10 Ostapenko 5-7, 6-3, 6-3 for her biggest win in three years!#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/9W4ZkiVsJI
— wta (@WTA) March 8, 2024
Kerber's comeback from 7-5/2-0 down vs. Ostapenko was just the third victory in her '24 return after becoming a mom, but it's also her first Top 10 win since November 2021. The win over Vekic was Wozniacki's third Top 50 win since her un-retirement last summer.
Third top-50 win for @CaroWozniacki since her comeback!
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) March 9, 2024
7-6(5), 6-3 win over Donna Vekic to reach the Third Round. #TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/hQge2tFqqi
The last time both Kerber and Wozniacki were in the 3rd Round in Indian Wells was six years ago in 2018.
Surviving a second round scare in the desert ?? @CocoGauff puts up an impressive comeback to defeat Clara Burel 2-6, 6-3, 7-6(4) and advance into the third round at Indian Wells. #TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/ydiXHwPBIG
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) March 9, 2024
Angie marches on ?
— wta (@WTA) March 6, 2024
2019 Indian Wells runner-up @AngeliqueKerber defeats Martic 6-3, 6-4 in the pair’s first meeting in 12 years!#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/dE9BYzqK8w
Kerber upped the stakes considerably a round later with a win over Ostapenko.
Caroline Wozniacki earns her first win at #TennisParadise since 2018!
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) March 7, 2024
The 2011 champ beats Zhu Lin 7-6(6), 6-1 and faces Donna Vekic next. pic.twitter.com/Goc2ILAZ92
From 4-6 *3-5 down, Emma Navarro beats Tsurenko 4-6, 7-5, 7-5!
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) March 10, 2024
Moves to 16-5 on the season and faces Svitolina next. #TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/6q9KeuEm2l
Big win for Yue Yuan to close out Saturday in Indian Wells, she upset Chinese No.1 Qinwen Zheng in straight sets. pic.twitter.com/hRJ73LMYfi
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) March 10, 2024
Strong start for Venus Williams, however the legend falls 6-2, 3-6, 0-6 to qualifier Nao Hibino.
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) March 7, 2024
Great to have Queen Vee back in #TennisParadise for the first time since 2019. pic.twitter.com/G2Lp9KU6Jg
16 y/o Mirra Andreeva @ Court 2 ??
— wta (@WTA) March 6, 2024
19 y/o Erika Andreeva @ Court 3 ??
A rare occurrence as both Andreeva teenage sisters were on court at the same time in Indian Wells!#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/zmoDKtocsp
In certain corners of the tennis world, every day is Groundhog Day...
BREAKING NEWS: @Simona_Halep's doping ban was reduced from four years to nine months by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS).
— TENNIS (@Tennis) March 5, 2024
The former world No. 1 may resume her tennis career with immediate effect.https://t.co/eWgDmXkKzR
Good morning!!! ????#simo
— Darren Cahill (@darren_cahill) March 5, 2024
So, from four *years* to nine *months*. Talk about an indictment of the system. Is there no "judicial oversight" regarding the Alphabets that would put on official public display the overzealous and often blatantly predjudicial sentences handed down by the collective testing apparatus? There should be. Halep's original positive test came in August 2022 (at the U.S. Open), and was reported that October. That was *seventeen* months ago. She didn't even get a hearing before her accusers until the following June 2022, ten months after the test. It took until September 2023, eleven months after her provisional suspension began, for her appeal to be (as expected) denied and a "final" four-year ban issued (they actually doubled-down and added a totally separate second charge... but only after she'd publicly spoken out about the multiple postponements and long delay before she was even able to present her case). It took five more months -- in February 2024 -- for her long-awaited hearing before an independent tribunal to occur. That result was rendered fairly quickly (for once), and now history will say her suspension ended in *July 2023*. What a (corrupt) mess.
Meanwhile, in words spoken by someone (Tara Moore) who has had the displeasure of being taken through the ringer by the Alphabets without any acknowledgement of any sort of "gray area" or the realities of player/coach/team/world-at-large relationships:
ITIA just don’t really think about the human side of things. Things happen that are out of an athletes control. They just think we are all out to intentionally dope, when the true dopers most likely never get caught.. incredibly destructive process, ruins peoples lives ??
— Tara Moore (@TaraMoore92) March 5, 2024
Also, I love (i.e. roll eyes at) this Alphabet response, which makes a point to say that CAS "partially upheld" Halep's appeal (rather than decimated the original sentence)... and then turned off the replies on the post, too. (Hmmm, it'd be nice if the accused athletes could do the same over the year-and-a-half that they have to wait for a judgement, huh?) Bastards until the end.
The International Tennis Integrity Agency acknowledges today’s decision from the Court of Arbitration for Sport in the case of Romanian tennis player Simona Halep.
— International Tennis Integrity Agency (@itia_tennis) March 5, 2024
And as for those who impulsively, selfishly, haughtily and/or vindictively (see a certain pickleballer) pile atop any player who ever gets caught up in these situations, with no heeding to their incomplete knowledge in the moment nor later acknowledging how the process ultimately resolves itself, those of us who *see* you know the truth. One highlighted example...
8 is a better number.
— Serena Williams (@serenawilliams) September 12, 2023
For the record, Serena won seven Wimbledon titles, and that tweet suddenly appeared when Halep's four-year suspension was announced last September... though some tried to act as if it was in reference to something else. Sure, Jan. To truly "read the footnotes" of that tweet, one has to remember that it's become popular over the years with the Serena cultists to try seize upon any stumble of anyone who ever defeated Williams in a slam final, in some sort of absurd way to "unofficially" award her slam #24 after the fact, never mind that Halep defeated her in the Wimbledon title match more than three years before the '22 test (just as Sharapova had 12 years before her suspension... not that that stopped the same sort of retroactive ridiculousness then or in the years since). BTW, this was what Halep had posted at the time of Williams' final match (during that same '22 U.S. Open, incidentally)...
You can read the respect and the admiration for this exceptional champion in my eyes.
— Simona Halep (@Simona_Halep) September 3, 2022
Good luck for the rest of your life @serenawilliams pic.twitter.com/TBfeWeN6j9
The funny thing is that even those individuals would likely note that Halep (who breezed through her years w/ Darren Cahill) never experienced such a moment of doubt/accusation until just a few months into her coaching relationship with Patrick Mouratoglou, whose team many have blamed for the whole incident. Mouratoglou, incidentally, was the coach of *Williams* at the time of that '19 Wimbledon final and when (after having turned 30) she won 10 of her 23 major titles. In the entire Open era, only 14 other major titles were won by women 30+ (w/ no other individual winning more than three). It was a glorious stretch that gilded Williams' HoF career, taking her from "great" to likely "greatest." But we know what the cultists would say if someone else had done it, don't we? Of course, Mouratoglou was also the coach who, failing to back up Williams' assertion that he was giving her "a thumbs-up," admitted that he was (then illegally) coaching her from the stands during the 2018 U.S. Open, setting off a running incident with the chair umpire. Don't think that Serena has ever forgotten that, either. Anyway, back in the real world...
Simona Halep breaks her silence with this post to her Instagram. pic.twitter.com/vSZP1mk30C
— Romanian Tennis (@WTARomania) March 5, 2024
I'm sure Halep is happy and relieved, and just wants to embrace this hard-earned chance at on-court "redemption," put this all behind her and try to make something of whatever remains of her career after legitimately wondering over the past year whether her career was essentially over. She's already received a wild card to play in Miami. It would be hard to condemn (but not lament) her actions if she does that, as she's surely emotionally exhausted. But I hope she doesn't let this go so easily. I hope Halep follows through, as she has with the company that produced the supplement (roxadustat) that produced the positive test, and sues some portion of the Alphabet apparatus, if only to put the whole thing under an appropriately revealing microscope. Someone *has* to -- needs to -- go at this monster head-first at some point if any sort of fairness and/or efficiency is going to be part of the system. Why not her? It would benefit every player thereafter, even those whose actions/words would lead one to believe they don't deserve such consideration since they never showed an ounce of it for anyone else. ("You're welcome, you ingrates.") Simona surely has a few "people" of the lawyerly persuasion after this, and she could do worse than to put them on this case.
Lots of thoughts on this: https://t.co/UVjmdMKUWe
— Ahmad Nassar (@ahmad4athletes) March 5, 2024
First and foremost, we are glad Simona finally cleared her name. But’s refrain from calling it a “win.” Nobody really won here.
She doesn’t get the last 1.5 years back. She doesn’t get rankings points and prize money back. And,…
PTPA statement on @Simona_Halep’s successful appeal. pic.twitter.com/gXe8h7zLpx
— Professional Tennis Players Association (@ptpaplayers) March 5, 2024
Fact is, nothing is going to change in this equation until and unless the Alphabets are publically shamed (i.e. by essentially employing the same sort of tactics against the testing system that the Alphabets attempt to use against the players) and *forced* to (ironically) clean up their own system.
So @netflix getting into tennis is awesome. I really hope the @WTA can do a better job over the next 12 months of promoting their players more & getting some fun exos or team events or something on the calendar! Especially here in the states! Also where is the wta finals this yr?
— Rennae Stubbs ???????? (@rennaestubbs) March 4, 2024
Yeah, it probably *would* figure that they'd eventually do *those* sort of things which, for me, would just irritate me more. I will *never* pay for something additional (i.e. subscribe to Netflix solely for that purpose) to watch a "promotional" production, I positively *abhor* exos (and will *never* watch one), and I think team competitions that masquerade as "events" are the most worthless thing that the sport offers (IMHO: BJK/Davis Cup are *actual* events and worthy of attention, while anything else is not... the old Hopman Cup was the rare perfect blend of the two to kick off the season, but then they ruined that, too).
The tongue at the end ????
— wta (@WTA) March 6, 2024
Emma Navarro's dog Marti joins her on set at the WTA Photoshoot ahead of Indian Wells! pic.twitter.com/fZ56NixUHD
Welcome back, Simo! ????@Simona_Halep pic.twitter.com/Wz97qvEjuK
— Transylvania Open (@TransylvaniaOpn) March 5, 2024
Imagine a timeline in which Darren Cahill and Simona Halep never split up pic.twitter.com/4TmEfazFHj
— ??nebby?? (@1gamesetmatch) January 28, 2024
Welcome back, @Simona_Halep ??
— BNP Paribas Open (@BNPPARIBASOPEN) March 5, 2024
We can't wait to see you next year in #TennisParadise ?? pic.twitter.com/7r6P3YKFJA
Simona #Halep right back to work after the reduction of her doping suspension. Will take a wild card into the Miami Open, giving #tennis another comeback.
— Christopher Clarey ???? ???? ???? (@christophclarey) March 7, 2024
She's a two-time SF there pic.twitter.com/0P5VurJgnk
The euphoria @CocoGauff felt winning championship point at last year’s US Open—a moment that brought all of Arthur Ashe to its feet—is still indescribable. “For the rest of my life, the rest of my career,” she says, “I’m going to be chasing that high.” https://t.co/dkc6uTfnC2 pic.twitter.com/OBxCmIcrKB
— Vogue Magazine (@voguemagazine) March 6, 2024
thank you @voguemagazine for this amazing cover. it’s truly an honor and i am forever grateful for this opportunity ??? pic.twitter.com/D2jMiKJqXy
— Coco Gauff (@CocoGauff) March 6, 2024
I’m prob forgetting others. But yeah Serena also had a British Vogue cover (2018) & US Vogue covers (2015 & 2018), Naomi was on the US cover in 2020 & Vogue Hong Kong in 2021 pic.twitter.com/ApeDCrQRxu
— Melanie Lautrup (@melanie_lautrup) March 6, 2024
*DE GROOT vs. KAMIJI IN 2024*
Melbourne WC Open Final - DE GROOT 6-1/3-6/7-6(0) - Kamiji led 5-1 in 3rd (1 MP)
Australian Open Final - DE GROOT 7-5/6-4
Cajun Classic Final - DE GROOT 7-5/7-6(4)
--
de Groot: leads 45-15 (+1 walkover W) overall
43-4 in last 47 (+W)
27 consecutive wins (+W)
40-8 (+W) in singles finals
40-3 (+W) in last 43 singles finals
25 consecutive wins (+W) in finals (2 in team finals)
*DIEDE DE GROOT vs. IN STREAK*
[142-0, + 1 w/o W]
27 - Yui Kamiji, JPN (+1 w/o)
17 - Kgothatso Montjane, RSA
15 - Aniek Van Koot, NED
10 - Jiske Griffioen, NED
10 - Momoko Ohtani, JPN
7 - Angelica Bernal, COL
7 - Dana Mathewson, USA
7 - Lucy Shuker, GBR
4 - Macarena Cabrillana, CHI
4 - Katharina Kruger, GER
4 - Jordanne Whiley, GBR
3 - Pauline Deroulede, FRA
3 - Emmanuelle Morch, FRA
3 - Zhu Zhenzhen, CHN
2 - Li Xiaohui, CHN
2 - Viktoriia Lvova, RUS
2 - Cornelia Oosthuizan, GBR
2 - Saki Takamuro, JPN
2 - Manami Tanaka, JPN
2 - Maayan Zikri, ISR
1 - Shelby Baron, USA
1 - Nalani Buob, SUI
1 - Charlotte Fairbank, FRA
1 - Guo Luoyao, CHN
1 - Huang Jinlian, CHN
1 - Busra Un, TUR
1 - Britta Wend, GER
1 - Louie Charlotte Willerslev-Olsen, DEN
1 - Wang Ziying, CHN
*2024 TOP JUNIOR EVENT CHAMPIONS*
TRARALGON AUS J300: Emerson Jones/AUS
AUSTRALIAN OPEN: Renata Jamrichova/SVK
SAN JOSE CRC (COFFEE BOWL) J300: Shannon Lam/USA
BARRANQUILLA COL J300: Jeline Vandromme/BEL
CAIRO, EGY J300: Monika Stankiewicz/POL
LIMA, PER J300 (INKA BOWL): Antonia Vergara Rivera/CHI
CAIRO, EGY J500: Rositsa Dencheva/BUL
ASUNCION PAR J300 (ASUNCION BOWL): Antonia Vergara Rivera/CHI
PORTO ALEGRE BRA J300: Mayu Crossley/JPN
NONTHABURI THA J300: Lea Nilsson/SWE
BLUMENAU BRA J500 (BANANA BOWL): Kaitlyn Rolls/USA
*2024 TOP JUNIOR GIRLS' TITLES*
[Grand Slam]
Renara Jamrichova, SVK - AO
[Junior Finals]
--
[J500]
1 - Rositsa Dencheva, BUL
1 - Kaitlyn Rolls, USA
[J300]
2 - Antonia Vergara Rivera, CHI
1 - Mayu Crossley, JPN
1 - Emerson Jones, AUS
1 - Shannon Lam, USA
1 - Lea Nilsson, SWE
1 - Monika Stankiewicz, POL
1 - Jeline Vandromme, BEL
Mitch McConnell’s legacy https://t.co/MOyTRnauJc pic.twitter.com/vLzumIcG3o
— Ann Telnaes (@AnnTelnaes) March 8, 2024
— Jesus Chrysler (@JesusChryslerII) March 2, 2024
Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr reunited for Stella McCartney’s runway show in Paris (March 4 2024) pic.twitter.com/KLwuHJ4eR9
— The Beatles Earth (@BeatlesEarth) March 4, 2024
having seen just a season or two of "Homicide: Life on the Streets" years ago, I've gone back to watch early episodes & must say, this is likely the very best TV police series ever. astonishing two- & three-actor scenes, virtuoso performances, unpredictable storylines, atmosphere
— Joyce Carol Oates (@JoyceCarolOates) March 5, 2024
Yep. Other candidates (such as "The Wire," made by the same group, BTW) are of the same level, but in the 1990s there was nothing better.
Poor cat.. I think I would have had the same reaction ?? pic.twitter.com/9yfZPhKh5C
— Woman of Wonder (@WonderW97800751) March 6, 2024
I cannot handle this level of cuteness in one sitting ??
— norah~ small but mighty ?? (@_Norah__D_) March 9, 2024
And the end is, omg ?? pic.twitter.com/vZZsLZzLEn
Orangutan wanted to look inside the bag
— Science girl (@gunsnrosesgirl3) March 4, 2024
pic.twitter.com/THvZriPoqJ
In 1986, Robert Stack read Desi Arnaz's last message in public to Lucille Ball at the Kennedy Honors. pic.twitter.com/dANBNi1fmg
— Danny Deraney (@DannyDeraney) March 7, 2024
Charge..?????????? pic.twitter.com/Oju0r49N1s
— ??o?g? (@Yoda4ever) March 8, 2024
Can’t stop watching.. ?? pic.twitter.com/FztfNXUnxU
— Buitengebieden (@buitengebieden) March 5, 2024
"Can't stop watching" might be a good new WTA fake marketing campaign slogan. Hmmm.
The beauty of sharing lies in its simplicity.pic.twitter.com/lQxz9eiCnh
— Tips & Tricks (@awkwardgoogle) March 4, 2024
2 Comments:
I didn't even realize that the Cajun Classic was going on. It's probably just as well, because I would have wanted to go to at least part of it, and I just don't jump into my car and drive to Baton Rouge anymore. Maybe next year.
I still have memories of the few players who publicly condemned Maria back when she was dealing with her ban; a couple of them surprised me, and not in a good way.
It looked like it took place at a nice looking little court complex (though they played simultaneous matches on the adjoining court w/o a fence in between... something which I could *never* do without being too distracted by it to really play). ;)
For the most part, I think, players were supportive of Halep this time around. I can't off the top of my head think of an *active player* who spoke against her and clearly threw shade (not counting a certain self-serving future HoFamer). I know Cornet was supportive throughout (naturally, because she's had to deal with "the process" herself and knew how ludicrous it can be).
At the very least, most players -- and others such as Cahill (of course) and, I think, Stubbs and others -- either said nothing, or expressed a belief that they found it hard to believe (or didn't want to think that) she was knowingly guilty of something. So there's that, I guess.
Of course, with those of the sort such as Bouchard, just to name one, that doesn't mean they won't at some point try to smear her with it at a date to be named later, anyway.
17 months of free range, unchecked discussion is never something that a player can *fully* outrun, no matter the final outcome. Any future success will cause certain trolls to point fingers and accuse again, just as a lack of success will cause the same people to point fingers and make cracks about not winning while "clean," too.
It really is a system where a player is akin to a driver who has never had a ticket in their entire life, then accidentally parks in a confusingly-marked "no parking zone" and TPTB seek to suspend their license for two to four years. On, and the driver has to wait a year to go to traffic court to state their case, too. :/
"Regular" people would fight against that sort of system. The players needs to do the same with this one...but most don't seem to care until *they* get caught in the snare.
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