Wk.31- The Golden Queen of Paris
Qinwen Zheng. Historic. ??#Olympics | #Paris2024 | #Tennis pic.twitter.com/xYJoeVHuEq
— wta (@WTA) August 3, 2024
Zheng Qinwen is the Olympics champion ?????????? pic.twitter.com/CIhcdAvHrQ
— qinwon?? (@IdemoAna) August 3, 2024
Qinwen Zheng after winning China’s first ever gold medal in in singles:
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) August 3, 2024
“The last point I was really nervous. My hand was shaking actually. Every match when I go to the bathroom, my body is shaking. I never felt so hungry like this to win a match. I could give everything I can,… pic.twitter.com/RCiI6Atj3i
Same stadium. Same celebration. ?#Paris2024 | #Olympics | #tennis pic.twitter.com/SO6TSxLxrg
— ITF (@ITFTennis) August 3, 2024
While Li and Zheng are linked via their historic accomplishments on the courts of Roland Garros, one wonders if we might want to keep an eye on any signs of linkage between the new Olympic Gold medalist's summer and that of Coco Gauff from a year ago. Gauff, like Zheng this year, lost in the 1st Round of Wimbledon, then collected herself and went on a run that didn't end until she'd won the U.S. Open. So far, Zheng has refused to lose since SW19. And while *her* streak has (so far) been limited to clay, as opposed to Gauff catching fire (after a coaching change) on North American hard courts, we can't rule out that Zheng's momentum *might* allow her to recapture the hard court form she had earlier in the year when she reached the final in Melbourne, allowing her to put together something of a "slam bookend" for her '24 campaign.
Donna takes the silver ??
— ITF (@ITFTennis) August 3, 2024
Donna Vekic becomes the first Croatian woman to win a medal at the Olympic Tennis Event ????#Paris2024 | #Olympics | #tennis pic.twitter.com/NzV5AnI62f
SO PROUD!!!!!!!!!!!!!
— LorenaPopa ???????? (@popalorena) August 3, 2024
Donna Vekic is a Silver medalist!!!!!!! ?????? pic.twitter.com/T8nUtJpoan
Congratulations @DonnaVekic ??#Vekic ???? #Paris2024 #OlympicGames pic.twitter.com/G9ICfzn5CV
— Rodney ?? (@RottenKnee23) August 3, 2024
In Washington, Bouzkova reached her second tour final of the season, but didn't have any more success this time than she has in the vast majority of the other singles finals in which she's played during her WTA career. The Czech notched wins over a trio of Bannerettes -- McCartney Kessler, Taylor Townsend and Robin Montgomery -- and then took out Aryna Sabalenka in three sets in the semis. The win over the world #3 tied Bouzkova's career best (Svitolina in '19, Pegula '23). It's her 11th career Top 10 win, first since last summer's hard court stretch, and first in two meetings with the Belarusian.
A touch of Bouzkova magic ??#MubadalaCitiDCOpen pic.twitter.com/9hwBJkqemv
— wta (@WTA) August 3, 2024
Against Paula Badosa in the final, Bouzkova pushed things into a 3rd set after dropping the 1st, but an ill-timed (for the Czech) rain delay at the start of the final set may have helped the Spaniard overcome and clear her head of her inability to put away the match in straights. After exchanging breaks in the first two games after the delay, Bouzkova never saw another BP chance as Badosa rode a mid-set break edge all the way to the title.
? Krejcikova
— wta (@WTA) July 31, 2024
? Paolini
Anna Karolina Schmiedlova has beaten both Wimbledon 2024 finalists in Paris ??#Paris2024 | #Tennis pic.twitter.com/JBb0ShoNpA
In Washington, Dolehide posted her best tour-level result since her surprise Guadalajara 1000 final last fall. Ranked #49, the 25-year old got wins over Lesia Tsurenko and Dasha Kasatkina to reach her second QF of the season, then took out Amanda Anisimova in straight sets to reach the semis. She fell to Paula Badosa, but will move close to her career high ranking (#41 last October) on Monday, coming in at #44.
first on, first into the semis ??
— wta (@WTA) August 2, 2024
Caroline Dolehide moves past fellow American Anisimova in straight sets.#MubadalaCitiDCOpen pic.twitter.com/ztQEJppjrg
Making history in her last professional tournament ??
— ITF (@ITFTennis) July 30, 2024
Angelique Kerber is the oldest women's singles quarter-finalist since tennis returned to the #Olympics in Seoul 1988#Paris2024 | #tennis pic.twitter.com/5bS2GSjicb
ANGELIQUE KERBER IS INTO THE QUARTERS OF THE FINAL EVENT OF HER CAREER! ????
— Bastien Fachan (@BastienFachan) July 30, 2024
London 2012 - QF
Rio 2016 - ??
Paris 2024 - QF*
Quarters or better at each of her three Olympic appearances, on three different surfaces! pic.twitter.com/UCWyWLOz1p
Kerber's third Olympic QF comes on a third different surface, after getting at least that far on both grass ('12 London) and hard court ('16 Rio) in her other appearances in the event. Steffi Graf remains the only German woman to win singles tennis Gold in the modern games (Sasha Zverev claimed the men's Gold in '21).
The moment @paulabadosa went from wildcard to Washington warrior ??#MubadalaCitiDCOpen pic.twitter.com/4Jig4oaSq0
— wta (@WTA) August 4, 2024
Silver for Mirra Andreeva & Diana Shnaider in the women's doubles! ??#Paris2024 | #Olympics | #tennis pic.twitter.com/gvtFmF6por
— ITF (@ITFTennis) August 4, 2024
Coco Gauff & LeBron James during the Olympics Opening Ceremony:
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) July 26, 2024
“Mama, we made it” ??
?????? pic.twitter.com/kAwPH8RMmX
Going on a progressive spiral, we'll start with Jessie Pegula, as the #5 seed didn't get to see if she could win an *Olympic* QF since she fell in the 2nd Round to Elina Svitolina. Pegula won the 1st set, then got just four combined games off the Ukrainian in the final two sets. *That* was only a minor wobble, though. The exit of Pegula & Gauff, the #1 seeds in doubles (and w/ Coco winning the recent RG WD crown w/ Katerina Siniakova, and the U.S. pair posting RU/SF results on the same Paris courts in 2022-23), was a notch worse. They lost in a MTB to Muchova/Noskova -- not exactly a doubles duo with a history of success together, and w/ Noskova only in the field because Marketa Vondrousova was injured -- in the 2nd Round. Gauff lost in straight sets to eventual finalist Donna Vekic in the 3rd Round. She was outplayed by the Croatian, but the only thing that will be remembered from the match was Gauff's tete-a-tete with the chair umpire (and an official) while arguing a call that resulted in her being broken 3/4 of the way through the 2nd. As detailed a bit more below in the Matches section, Gauff was wrong and the umpire was correct. Coco brought up the many other times she's been seemingly "robbed" of calls in Paris (during 90% of which her side of the issue was the correct one), and made it seem as if she was accusing they/them/the system of having a personal bias (or worse) against her.
Coco Gauff was left in tears after getting into an argument with the chair umpire over a ruling during her loss to Donna Vekic of Croatia
— moyoafrika (@moyoafrika) July 30, 2024
“It always happens to me on this court. I have to advocate for myself every time." pic.twitter.com/Q9bWE2F33N
It wasn't a great look, though an undertandable one for those who've paid attention the last season or so. Not that that won't let the moment be used against her by the factions who will forever insist that whatever she accomplishes is never "enough" to convince them to release the pressure valve they've needlessly -- and, most importantly, erroneously -- held up to her career for far too long. The real reason Gauff is included in this category over the next two (far more deserving) dishonorees is the stark contrast between *this* past week and her week one year ago. Remember, it was at the same time in 2023 that she emerged from her early Wimbledon exit an entirely "new" Coco and went on a summer run that saw her sweep titles in Washington (which included a victory vs. then-reigning Olympic champ Belinda Bencic), Cincinnati and the U.S. Open. What a difference a year can make, though Gauff still has a shortened North American hard court stretch ahead of her to make things right again. Now, Danielle Collins. Playing in her first and last Olympics, the soon-to-retire veteran was having another heartwarming run, reaching the QF. Then Iga Swiatek happened. Now, Collins doesn't have "gentle" competition with anyone, but losing for the seventh time in eight meetings (and for a sixth straight time) vs. the Pole clearly didn't sit well with her. During the match, she nearly cut a net-sitting Swiatek in half with a shot. But Iga was fair game there. She also got irritated by Swiatek employing her usual tactic of holding up her racket to stop the server from serving, though play *is* supposed to proceed at the server's pace (and the chair umpire hadn't stopped play due to a distraction in the crowd).
Danielle Collins to Iga Swiatek during their match at the Olympics:
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) July 31, 2024
“There’s like no one behind me. Play at the servers pace.”
Definitely a lot of tension in this match.
pic.twitter.com/ryZX7MwlXR
Now *that* would be a legitimate gripe, and one (amongst others... see the barely-waiting-patiently Putintseva vs. Swiatek at SW19) delaying tactic that Iga uses quite a bit while rarely being "called out" for it as so many other players almost *immediately* are. If Collins had stepped on a soapbox about that, okay. Here are some examples (whether an intentional act of gameswomanship or not, such things *have* developed into a consistent stylistic pattern w/ Swiatek)...
Swiatek dirty gamesmanship compilation
— ATP WTA DRAMA ALERT ?? (@tennisooc) July 31, 2024
In light of the Iga and Collins olympic drama, it only feels right to share this again pic.twitter.com/aTHZbXKNXD
But after retiring down 4-1 in the 3rd, Collins chose to cross over to Swiatek's side of the court and "surprise" her with a clutching handshake and some clearly shocking (to Iga) words. Turns out, she told the world #1 to not be insincere and "fake" and -- I guess -- show concern for Collins' injury. Ummm, okaaaaay?
Danielle Collins was asked about what she told Iga Swiatek after their match at the Olympics, ‘I told her she didn’t have to be insincere about my injury… I don’t need the fakeness’
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) July 31, 2024
"I told Iga she didn't have to be insincere about, you know, my injury. There's a lot that… pic.twitter.com/BAQJOjsKmC
Seems an odd jab at Swiatek when more legitimate ones were available, and while it wouldn't normally be a big deal, under the circumstances, Collins retiring from the match and *then* playing doubles soon after is at the very least "eyebrow-raising." But Collins is going to be Collins until the bitter *and* sweet end, and that comes with a mixture that is sometimes exhilirating but also sometimes, well, not. But, again, the U.S. women *could* sink lower than calling one of the seemingly most sincere players on tour "fake," and Emma Navarro (earlier in the tournament) had made a point to stake out that ground as her own. There have been quite a few stupid things said/tweeted by WTA players in recent years. From "LOL" to "Ban her," and including "I'll f***ing take the ball and shove it down your f***ing throat" to "There's something about playing dopers in Madrid." But Navarro may have topped them, just for the sheer audacity of it all. After losing to Zheng Qinwen in the 3rd Round, Navarro chose the handshake moment at the net to scold Zheng for, apparently, not being nice enough to her in the lockerroom. But rather than say that the Chinese star isn't a "nice person" she said (and repeated afteward) that she doesn't understand why she has so many fans because she (Navarro) has "no respect for (Zheng) as a competitor." Setting aside how Navarro managed to turn supposed lockerroom snubs into an attack on her opponent as a "competitor," the even bigger sin was that she had the gall to verbally smack down Zheng -- to her face -- *after* the eventual Gold medalist had defeated her despite Navarro serving for the match *and* holding a MP. Zheng then whopped her 6-1 in the 3rd set. Seems as if that would be a competitive streak to admire, but maybe that's just me. No, it's not just me -- that's just some real dumb-dumb stuff there. I called Navarro the Rock of Charleston earlier this summer, but I didn't realize that the rocks apparently were also in her head. So maybe it's the Rocks of Charleston (aka Rocky, or maybe Rocks), then? Zheng had the appropriate verbal response after the match, as well as with her actions-speak-louder results by the end of the week.
Response of the year imo.
— Johatsu ?? (@Big_Abdvl) July 30, 2024
"I'll not consider it as an attack cos she lost."
It was an interesting situation, not just because of Zheng winning the Gold medal, but due to a pair of Nike-related ads airing both before and during the games.
Qinwen Zheng in a new Nike commercial.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) July 28, 2024
“Should I look happy when I’m not? Should I smile when I lose? If I don’t hate being second, how will I ever be first?”
Star quality. ??
pic.twitter.com/rmcjfcMGLS
I guess we'll have to wait and see what Navarro's "Nike ad" says, huh? Hmmm. Of course, Zheng *could* just bring her medal along to wear around her neck during the pre-match coin toss the next time she plays Navarro, too. But one suspects Zheng has a bit more class and tact than that. Could Navarro say the same? In the end, the U.S women left Paris without anything to paper over their misdeeds, despite the whole as a group leading the tour in '24 with the most combined singles titles *and* the most different individuals to claim those titles. After the Tokyo Olympics three years ago proved to be the first since the 1988 return of tennis to the games that the U.S. failed to pick up any medals (from men or women) in the sport's various competitions (it was the second time the women went medal-free, along with 2004), the women went 0-for-9 on the medal stand in Paris, as well. The loss by Collins & Desirae Krawczyk in the WD 2nd Round officially sealed the collective fate of the women's squad. The men's team of Austin Krajicek/Rajeev Ram won doubles Silver, and Taylor Fritz/Tommy Paul took Bronze, avoiding the total U.S. oh-fer for as second straight Olympics. Of note: the next Summer Olympics are scheduled to be held in Los Angeles four summers from now.
THAT. WINNING. FEELING ??#Paris2024 | #Olympics | #Tennis pic.twitter.com/wkFcDzZtLb
— ITF (@ITFTennis) August 4, 2024
Paolini gets her moment ??
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) August 4, 2024
After runner-up finishes at @rolandgarros and #Wimbledon, she has now won Italy's first tennis gold medal alongside Sara Errani ????#Paris2024 pic.twitter.com/v7TAlEBMaL
Jasmine Paolini & Sara Errani with their gold medals at the 2024 Paris Olympics.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) August 4, 2024
The first gold medal for tennis in Italian history.
These two smiles were simply made for a gold medal moment. ??????
?????? pic.twitter.com/Aq4EcFiMuu
Errani's win, after she'd previously won a Career Doubles Slam with Roberta Vinci, makes her accomplishment a Golden one. She's the seventh woman to pull off the feat. The other six are either in the Hall of Fame, or will likely be setting a date for as much in the future.
Sara Errani becomes the 7th woman in history to win the Career Golden Slam in Women’s Doubles.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) August 4, 2024
Pam Shriver - 1988
Gigi Fernandez - 1993
Serena Williams - 2001
Venus Williams - 2001
Barbora Krejcikova - 2022
Katerina Siniakova - 2022
Sara Errani - 2024
37 years old.… pic.twitter.com/n90C81YhJY
And as for whether Paolini's season could still get better? Well, the U.S. Open *is* still to come, I guess. At this point, who's to say she doesn't have something more left? Meanwhile...
KATERINA SINIAKOVA IS NOW A TWO TIME OLYMPIC CHAMPION ?????? AND NATIONAL TREASURE (but she was one already) pic.twitter.com/g5t7XZxCj5
— Magda (@doublefauIts) August 2, 2024
Siniakova's 2024 experience has been all about breaking up relationships, reuniting and, oh yeah, winning tournaments. The Czech's trip to Paris included a bit of *all* of that in her latest Olympic experience. Three years ago in Tokyo, Siniakova & Barbora Krecjikova became the first Czech women to win Olympic Gold in tennis. Since then, the duo completed their Career Doubles Slam (they're the only WD duo to win all four majors, the Olympics and WTAF) before announcing an end to their partnership following the '23 season. The break-up didn't keep Siniakova from winning titles, as she took home three with three *other* partners -- including Roland Garros (w/ Coco Gauff) and Wimbledon (w/ Taylor Townsend) -- this season before reteaming with Krejcikova in Prague ahead of the Olympics. By the end of the week, a fourth crown had been won alongside a fourth different partner this year. The Czechs' quest to repeat as the doubles Gold winners ended in the QF, but Siniakova still had the mixed doubles. She'd signed up to play in Paris with significant other Tomas Machac before the couple announced that they'd broken up (off-court, that is) last month. They remained a team at the Olympics, though, and their latest journey ended with them winning a deciding 10-8 MTB over Wang Xinyu & Zhang Zhizhen to claim the Gold.
Gold medal hug ??#Paris2024 | #Olympics | #tennis pic.twitter.com/SHL8wASulH
— ITF (@ITFTennis) August 2, 2024
And, thus, Siniakova became the first *two*-time Gold medalist in Czech tennis history. Afterward, it was hard to tell whether the high of teaming to win for their country may have rekindled Siniakova and Machac's off-court realationship, as well. Either that, or maybe they'll just become "Adventure Exes" and pick things back up again on the court in New York.
Normalize winning Olympic gold to rekindle your relationship's spark ? pic.twitter.com/JsIOMzS3lH
— Bastien Fachan (@BastienFachan) August 2, 2024
The Czech Republic national anthem for Katerina Siniakova/Tomas Machac's gold medal (awwww) ??????
— stateofsport21 // raz (she/her) (@eretzsport022) August 2, 2024
?? Eurosport LVpic.twitter.com/S2cGcki0dk
Qinwen Zheng is the first player to beat Iga Swiatek at the Roland Garros venue since 2021.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) August 1, 2024
1149 days. pic.twitter.com/bbqPc7L2bC
Unforgettable victory!
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) August 1, 2024
What a way for Qinwen Zheng to claim her first win against Iga Swiatek ??#Tennis pic.twitter.com/taECvot90p
In a recent "Ms.Backspin" update, I wondered what might happen next if Iga *didn't* win Gold. Well, I guess now we find out.
DONNA VEKIC 0-4 TO 10-8!!! ???????? #Paris2024 pic.twitter.com/0GneCc51t2
— Tibbe (@TibbeLaMaestro) July 31, 2024
Donna Vekic’s reaction after beating Marta Kostyuk to reach the Olympics Semifinal.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) July 31, 2024
She falls to the floor.
Tears in her eyes.
Match point saved & down 2-5 in the tiebreak, she never gave up.
Suffering. Fighting. Rejoicing.
This match showed the beauty of this sport. ?? pic.twitter.com/omwD5fBP34
Qinwen Zheng won this match pic.twitter.com/MCs9KUB7Nc
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) July 30, 2024
Queen Wen ??
— ITF (@ITFTennis) July 30, 2024
Qinwen Zheng defeats Emma Navarro 6-7 7-6 6-1 in 3 hours and 12 minutes after saving match point in the second set.#Paris2024 | #Olympics | #tennis pic.twitter.com/iw8lMgT6LE
ZHENG QINWEN IS THE OLYMPIC CHAMPION!
— Gaspar Ribeiro Lança (@gasparlanca) August 3, 2024
The 21-year-old Chinese superstar dominates the final against Donna Vekic 6-2, 6-3 to become China's first-ever player to win a singles gold medal at the #Olympics. pic.twitter.com/SxxrnGJWKT
?????? Zheng Qinwen just secured China’s first-ever gold medal at Olympics tennis singles! ??
— Li Zexin (@XH_Lee23) August 3, 2024
Look at this! What a nice move! pic.twitter.com/fmFlyAfYf8
ZHENG QINWEN IS THE PARIS 2024 OLYMPIC SINGLES GOLD MEDALIST!!! ?????? pic.twitter.com/IPjP3Rfmc7
— Bastien Fachan (@BastienFachan) August 3, 2024
Italian selfie!
— Jasmine Paolini (@JasminePaolini) August 1, 2024
???????? pic.twitter.com/D1LwRI1wT6
Le racchette che volano, la loro gioia infinita: Regine di Parigi. Errani e Paolini sono nella storia del tennis. Le loro emozioni sono diventate le nostre, giorno dopo giorno. Un secolo di attesa per la gioia più grande che ci potesse essere. #giochiolimpici #Paris2024 pic.twitter.com/W4RgBLao9G
— isabella insolia (@isainsolia) August 4, 2024
This is the second straight games in which Russians won tennis medals without actually representing *Russia*.
È qui la festa? ????
— Che Tempo Che Fa (@chetempochefa) August 4, 2024
Jasmine Paolini e Sara Errani festeggiano con il tricolore la storica medaglia d’oro per l’Italia ???? #GiochiOlimpici pic.twitter.com/9UyDdPqvJ3
CHINESE TENNIS HISTORY ??
— wta (@WTA) July 31, 2024
Zheng Qinwen beats Kerber 6-7(4), 6-4, 7-6(6) to become only the 2nd Chinese player to reach the #Olympics semifinals after Li Na ??#Paris2024 | #Tennis pic.twitter.com/Cl2IaSbx46
A legacy to be remembered ??@AngeliqueKerber | #Paris2024 | #Tennis pic.twitter.com/7UAC9DJn1u
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) July 31, 2024
"She is a beloved figure because she has always given us lessons in how to fight, how to improve, and how to be gracious and good-humored in all situations." Angie Kerber can retire, but she can never be forgotten https://t.co/wI3qvSlbp1 #WTA @AngeliqueKerber
— Diane Elayne Dees (@WomenWhoServe) August 1, 2024
Hmmm. There was a bit of drama in the end. pic.twitter.com/ul9iNDeJzB
— José Morgado (@josemorgado) July 31, 2024
I like Iga, but she wants absolutely perfect conditions when her opponent is serving. If she doesn’t get what she wants, she raises her racket and interrupts the sever more than any other player in the tour. Which at some point is bullshit that should be penalized by the umpire.
— M. Chapman (@mcvadc) July 31, 2024
Danielle Collins nearly killed Iga Swiatek ????????????pic.twitter.com/XQLuO5GfSu
— Raghav (@raghavv_01) July 31, 2024
It's a weird choice to die on the hill of Swiatek's "insincerity" when it comes to an opponent's injury, but who's going to convince Collins of *anything* that she doesn't initially believe to be true, right?
WOW.
— José Morgado (@josemorgado) July 30, 2024
Donna Vekic plays a FANTASTIC match to beat the world #2 Coco 7-6(7), 6-2 and reach the QFs at the #Olympics!
One of the best wins of her career, coming right after the heartbreaking loss at the Wimbledon semifinals. Incredible run for her in #Paris2024. pic.twitter.com/aIZ2x4LhHd
This is what it means ?????
— Delia (@TennisByDelia) July 30, 2024
Giving everything for the country ????@DonnaVekic #OlympicGames
??: Clive Brunskill pic.twitter.com/cyqRN53Atq
Coco Gauff clearly hits the ball before the call is made, and the ball is clearly in as you can see here. https://t.co/vruyXfHMkr
— Charbax (@Charbax) July 31, 2024
Considering her past series of calls that *have* incorrectly gone against her, Gauff's argument would have been intriguing... only the replay showed that the ball *was* in, and the call *had* come after she'd struck the ball. So the umpire was right, and the point correctly went to Vekic. Gauff *did* seem to pull up on her shot, but it was likely due to some combination of falling back on her swing and the fact that she felt that the ball was heading long, and once the linesperson shouted out the (incorrect) ruling she convinced herself that the ball *had* been out. It wasn't, though. Gauff, who'd lost the 1st set after leading 4-1, had BP chances in the following game to "overturn" the call, but couldn't break Vekic, who then went on to win and later take the Silver medal.
To clarify - this is not about if the ball was in or not. It's about if the OUT call came before or after her shot.
— Owen (@kostekcanu) July 30, 2024
The umpire ruled the out call did not affect her forehand and gave the point to Vekic. Coco argued that she hit it that badly because the call impacted.
How do you feel about your DC debut?@paulabadosa: “see below” ?? pic.twitter.com/0PyxFLn692
— Mubadala Citi DC Open (@mubadalacitidc) August 4, 2024
After Zheng Qinwen withdrew from the mixed doubles after marathon matches in singles, ZZZ checked with Wang Xinyu. Xinyu still stayed in Paris because she found "the flight ticket is too expensive." She came to play, with a pair of hard court shoes.
— Bendou Zhang?? (@BendouZhang) August 2, 2024
Now they get silver medals. pic.twitter.com/NgdwRlYS1J
Hoy Sara Sorribes y Cristina Bucsa han cumplido “el sueño de toda una vida” ?????
— Anaïs López (@anaislopez23) August 4, 2024
Mucho trabajo, poquísima atención mediática.
?? @ITFTennis | #Paris2024 pic.twitter.com/NsPHQxpZST
CLARO QUE SIIIIIII ??????????
— Santi (@ArmadaFemenina) August 4, 2024
MEDALLA DE BRONCE ??
? Cristina Bucsa ???? y Sara Sorribes ????vencen a Noskova y Muchova en dos sets y se alzan con el tercer puesto en los JJOO de #Paris2024
Enhorabuena, campeonas ???? pic.twitter.com/ITgPbKDOI5
¡Somos bronce en el dobles femenino ??!
— Gonzalo Rodríguez (@_gonrod_) August 4, 2024
No es fácil hacer lo que ha hecho Sara Sorribes, de las lágrimas por caer en primera ronda a el orgullo por conseguir ese bronce con Bucsa, jugando un grandísimo tenis. Otra para la buchaca. pic.twitter.com/7Ahzr4ddWR
AA charged ??@AnisimovaAmanda powers into the quarterfinals after taking out the No.7 seed Pavlyuchenkova.#MubadalaCitiDCOpen pic.twitter.com/omzc4vjKM4
— wta (@WTA) July 31, 2024
In her first QF since 2022, Anisimova lost in straights to Caroline Dolehide. Before Washington, Anisimova had gone 4-6 since her AO 4th Round result.
Yes, you read that right ??, Gaby is our 1st Canadian woman to do it ?? She joins the list of 3 other Canadian olympic tennis medalists:
— Tennis Canada (@TennisCanada) August 2, 2024
Daniel Nestor ??Men's Doubles - Sydney 2000
Stébastien Lareau ??- Men's Doubles Sydney 2000
Félix ??- Mixed Doubles - Paris 2024 pic.twitter.com/jYpsMWcRgH
With so many past medal winners absent from Paris, this was an expected occurrence. But it's still worth noting that Canada was one of four nations to pick up maiden women's tennis medals at the Olympics, including Poland (Iga), Croatia (Vekic) and Italy (Errani/Paolini).
Taylor Townsend and Asia Muhammad pic.twitter.com/kmph54s2pq
— ken mckinnon (@kenmckinnon13) August 3, 2024
After upsetting Anastasia Potapova in the 1st Round of singles, Townsend had lost in the 2nd Round (7-5/7-6 to Bouzkova), missing out on what (a bit surprisingly) would have been her *first* career WTA singles QF.
Robin roars ??
— wta (@WTA) July 29, 2024
DC native Robin Montgomery gets her first win in the main draw at the @mubadalacitidc and moves into Round 2! pic.twitter.com/TJEXdDuEL2
Cristian d. Caroline Garcia 5-7 6-3 6-4
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) July 27, 2024
One of France’s greatest hopes for a tennis medal is out.
In her first ever Olympics. Jaqueline makes a big statement.
Playing a Frenchwoman in Paris is not easy.
But she fought hard & made a lot of Romanians proud today.
?????? pic.twitter.com/ht6E527CsM
Si se puede, Camila Osorio! ????
— ITF (@ITFTennis) July 28, 2024
Camila Osorio wins her first match at the #Olympics and moves into the second round after beating Jelena Ostapenko 6-4, 6-3! ????#Paris2024 | #tennis pic.twitter.com/1csmmVZm4x
La colombiana Camila Osorio ???? ve pasar a Rafa Nadal ???? y pasa esto... ??pic.twitter.com/1xIXLVvL84
— VarskySports (@VarskySports) July 29, 2024
When her experience finally ended, a point was made to let her know that her efforts were appreciated.
Beautiful scenes for Camila Osorio after her loss to Danielle Collins at the Olympics.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) July 30, 2024
She’s in tears.
But the crowd lifts her up by chanting her name.
She fought til the end this week & represented every Colombian with so much pride.
Standing ovation. ??
?????????? pic.twitter.com/BJN205Udec
Not the result you expected but you can still be proud of this bronze medal ??#Tennis pic.twitter.com/Fbt4NPdaVE
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) August 2, 2024
Iga Swiatek in tears after winning the bronze medal at the Olympics.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) August 2, 2024
I hope these are happy tears. ??
She has made every single Polish person incredibly proud this week.
The leader of women’s tennis and an all-time great already.
?????? pic.twitter.com/AN7tFJDzOa
A N G I E ????@AngeliqueKerber keeps it moving in Paris after defeating Osaka 7-5, 6-3! @Olympics | #Paris2024 | #Tennis pic.twitter.com/dBrXrb6O7s
— wta (@WTA) July 27, 2024
In 2021 in Tokyo, Osaka lit the flame during the Opening Ceremonies, and her Olympic experience has delivered little of note since then.
The story goes on ??@AngeliqueKerber defeats No.16 seed Fernandez 6-4, 6-3 to advance to the #Paris2024 quarterfinals!@Olympics | #Tennis pic.twitter.com/d0G6jdSBmt
— wta (@WTA) July 30, 2024
Another upset in Paris ?
— wta (@WTA) July 30, 2024
Slovakia's Anna Karolina Schmiedlova takes out No.4 seed Paolini 7-5, 3-6, 7-5 to progress to the last eight!#Paris2024?? | #Olympics?? | #tennis?? pic.twitter.com/PDMj8pu6J7
4. Olympics 3rd Rd. - Anna Karolina Schmiedlova (SVK) def. Jasmine Paolini (ITA) 7-5/3-6/7-5
From 6-2 5-4 30-0 down...
— Bastien Fachan (@BastienFachan) July 28, 2024
Caroline Wozniacki moves into the Olympics R2!! pic.twitter.com/APsqsE3rsT
Your 2024 Olympics Women’s Singles Medalists.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) August 3, 2024
?? Qinwen Zheng
?? Donna Vekic
?? Iga Swiatek
All three women made history for their countries.
What a group. ?? pic.twitter.com/zrbXTnYl3J
Your #Paris2024 Women's Doubles Medalists ??
— ITF (@ITFTennis) August 4, 2024
?? Sara Errani and Jasmine Paolini
?? Mirra Andreeva and Diana Shnaider
?? Cristina Bucsa and Sara Sorribes Tormo#Olympics | #tennis pic.twitter.com/wa9gJF93c3
The #Paris2024 Mixed Doubles podium ?
— ITF (@ITFTennis) August 2, 2024
Gold: Katerina Siniakova & Tomas Machac ????
Silver: Wang Xynyu & Zhang Zhizhen ????
Bronze: Gabriela Dabrowski & Felix Auger-Aliassime ????#Olympics | #tennis pic.twitter.com/SCjvvQ18lU
Djokovic has won it all ??#Tennis pic.twitter.com/q6P6i9tdgd
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) August 4, 2024
Tiene 37 años. No era el favorito para ganar los JJOO. Todos los medios en su contra. Aun así, contra pronóstico, ha ganado a un grandísimo Alcaraz.
— † Andrés † (@jandcalderon985) August 4, 2024
Lo primero que ha hecho tras conseguir la victoria ha sido arrodillarse, santiguarse y dar gracias a Dios.
¡LEYENDA DJOKOVIC! ?? pic.twitter.com/Fy6RIySa1L
Wow - have never seen Djokovic this emotional … incredible
— Tommy Beer (@TommyBeer) August 4, 2024
Sports. pic.twitter.com/rJjdDnsITP
The Numbers Guy sent a single message to Backspin HQ today. It read, "I resign. The statistical collection is now complete, and I am no longer needed."
There is no debate.
— Danny ?? (@DjokovicFan_) August 4, 2024
Novak Djokovic is the undisputed greatest of all time. pic.twitter.com/CACtIHb9yj
Novak Djokovic has completed tennis:
— Eurosport (@eurosport) August 4, 2024
?? 10 x Australian Open
?? 7 x Wimbledon
?? 4 x US Open
?? 3 x French Open
???? 1 x Davis Cup
?? Olympic Gold
?? status secured pic.twitter.com/YTBCsrBupU
Ten minutes later, he sent another. It read, "Well, unless someone tries again to dispense some statistical nonsense without context, I suppose."
Our 2024 Olympics Singles Medalists.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) August 4, 2024
Novak Djokovic - ??
Qinwen Zheng - ??
Carlos Alcaraz - ??
Donna Vekic - ??
Lorenzo Musetti - ??
Iga Swiatek - ?? pic.twitter.com/mnj7GtP4Yk
Aerosmith is officially retiring from touring, canceling the rest of what would’ve been their farewell tour as Steven Tyler struggles to recover from a vocal injury he suffered last year
— Rolling Stone (@RollingStone) August 2, 2024
More: https://t.co/Wifpoc650thttps://t.co/Wifpoc650t
"I Don't Want to Miss a Thing," one of Aerosmith's most beloved ballads, was penned by renowned songwriter Diane Warren and released in 1998. The song was initially written for the soundtrack of the blockbuster film Armageddon, which starred Liv Tyler, the daughter of Aerosmith's… pic.twitter.com/nJORgljpGW
— Rock'n Roll of All (@rocknrollofall) August 2, 2024
With all that’s happening in the City of Lights, don’t be fine with missing Mac & Vika’s spotlight-stealing showdown…??@vika7#Pepperstone #DontBeFineWithIt #Ad pic.twitter.com/NHf8sbr3OU
— Pepperstone (@PepperstoneFX) July 30, 2024
Another year around the sun and I’m grateful for every moment! Happy birthday to me ?? pic.twitter.com/OJbqxvoQuA
— victoria azarenka (@vika7) July 31, 2024
Thank you Paris for an unforgettable week! The Danish fans came out in full force, truly the best support I have ever heard! Staying in the Olympic Village with the Danish team was so cool, and I got to spend time with new and old friends! #paris2024 #allfordenmark pic.twitter.com/TNp4KZSuWg
— Caroline Wozniacki (@CaroWozniacki) July 31, 2024
From your iconic double-fistpumps and KOMM JETZTs, to your unwavering will to win... ????
— wta (@WTA) July 31, 2024
We'll miss you out there, @AngeliqueKerber.#DankeAngie pic.twitter.com/qDFjWk8NuI
Always striving for greatness ?
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) July 31, 2024
We celebrate Angie Kerber’s iconic career and inspiring legacy ??#Paris2024 pic.twitter.com/1tf6cQDJrW
A legendary career comes to an end.
— wta (@WTA) July 31, 2024
Thank you for 21 years of memories on the Hologic WTA Tour, @AngeliqueKerber ??#DankeAngie pic.twitter.com/1H5xuqpRce
???? Angie on IG: pic.twitter.com/8FDlwhC1Rh
— Angelique Kerber FC (@AngieKerberFC) August 3, 2024
Hmmm, maybe Siniakova goes into the Hall of Fame *solo*, and not just as part of the Krejcikova/Siniakova team.
Katerina Siniakova
— Mario Boccardi (@marioboc17) August 2, 2024
Australian Open ????
French Open ??????
Wimbledon ??????
US Open ??
WTA Finals ??
Billie Jean King Cup ??
Olympic Games ???? pic.twitter.com/cabkLZhBzW
— Owen (@kostekcanu) August 2, 2024
A first career medal, Jazda 🧡🥉#Tennis pic.twitter.com/y2fH9wO6Kh
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) August 3, 2024
JAKIE SŁODKIE pic.twitter.com/NEfWBTrsvB
— Weronika 🥉 (@awejniakk) August 3, 2024
?? January 2024: First Grand Slam final ??
— wta (@WTA) August 3, 2024
?? August 2024: First #Olympics gold medal
Life coming fast at China's Qinwen Zheng ??#Paris2024 | #Tennis pic.twitter.com/3V03mDHbQL
How Qinwen Zheng showed up to the Olympics.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) August 3, 2024
?? pic.twitter.com/6L6chMH2b8
The funniest Zheng Qinwen moments ?? pic.twitter.com/siVhfhTYgp
— #AusOpen (@AustralianOpen) August 2, 2024
Qinwen Zheng getting an ass slap from Li Na earlier this year really was the blessing she needed ?? pic.twitter.com/xQUCGeZhHl
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) August 1, 2024
Marta Kostyuk dancing to Bruno Mars during the break before the third set 😂
— Bastien Fachan (@BastienFachan) July 31, 2024
Crowd was really into it too! pic.twitter.com/MQhrNhJYMi
*CHINESE WOMEN'S OYLMPIC MEDALS*
2004 Athlens Doubles Gold- Li Ting / Sun Tiantian
2008 Beijing Doubles Bronze - Yan Zi / Zheng Jie
2024 Paris Mixed Silver - Wang Xinyu
2024 Paris Singles Gold - Zheng Qinwen
*CZECH WOMEN'S OYLMPIC MEDALS*
1988 Seoul Doubles Silver - Jana Novotna / Helena Sukova
1996 Atlanta Singles Bronze - Jana Novotna
1996 Atlanta Doubles Silver - Jana Novotna / Helena Sukova
2012 London Doubles Silver - Andrea Hlavackova / Lucie Hradecka
2016 Rio Singles Bronze - Petra Kvitova
2016 Rio Doubles Bronze - Lucie Safarova / Barbora Strycova
2016 Rio Mixed Bronze - Lucie Hradecka
2021 Tokyo Singles Silver - Marketa Vondrousova
2021 Tokyo Doubles Gold - Barbora Krejcikova / Katerina Siniakova
2024 Paris Mixed Gold - Katerina Siniakova
*SPANISH WOMEN'S OYLMPIC MEDALS*
1992 Barcelona Singles Bronze - Arantxa Sanchez Vicario
1992 Barcelona Doubles Silver - Conchita Martinez/Arantxa Sanchez Vicario
1996 Atlanta Singles Silver - Arantxa Sanchez Vicario
1996 Atlanta Doubles Bronze - Conchita Martinez/Arantxa Sanchez Vicario
2004 Athens Doubles Silver - Conchita Martinez/Virginia Ruano Pascual
2008 Beijing Doubles Silver - Anabel Medina Garrigues/Virginia Ruano Pascual
2024 Paris Doubles Bronze - Cristina Bucsa/Sara Sorribes Tormo
*RUSSIAN WOMEN'S OYLMPIC MEDALS*
2000 Sydney Singles Silver - Elena Dementieva
2008 Beijing Singles Gold - Elena Dementieva
2008 Beijing Singles Silver - Dinara Safina
2008 Beijing Singles Bronze - Vera Zvonareva
2012 London Singles Silver - Maria Sharapova
2012 London Doubles Bronze - Maria Kirilenko / Nadia Petrova
2016 Rio Doubles Gold - Ekaterina Makarova / Elena Vesnina
2021 Tokyo Mixed Gold - Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova#
2021 Tokyo Mixed Silver - Elena Vesnina#
2024 Paris Doubles Silver - Mirra Andreeva/Diana Shnaider*
--
# - as Russian Olympic Committee
* - as Individual Neutral Athletes
*OLYMPIC TENNIS #1 SEEDS, w/ result*
1984 (demonstration) Kathy Horvath, USA (QF)
1988 Steffi Graf, FRG (Gold)
1992 Steffi Graf, GER (Silver)
1996 Monica Seles, USA (QF)
2000 Lindsay Davenport, USA (2nd Rd - w/d)
2004 Justine Henin-Hardenne, BEL (Gold)
2008 Ana Ivanovic, SRB (w/d)
2012 Victoria Azarenka, BLR (Bronze)
2016 Serena Williams, USA (3rd Rd.)
2021 Ash Barty, AUS (1st Rd.)
2024 Iga Swiatek, POL (Bronze)
*WOMEN'S SINGLES MEDALISTS, since 1988*
[GOLD]
1988 Steffi Graf, West Germany
1992 Jennifer Capriati, USA
1996 Lindsay Davenport, USA
2000 Venus Williams, USA
2004 Justine Henin-Hardenne, Belgium
2008 Elena Dementieva, Russia
2012 Serena Williams, USA
2016 Monica Puig, Puerto Rico
2021 Belinda Bencic, Switzerland
2024 Zheng Qinwen, China
[SILVER]
1988 Gabriela Sabatini, Argentina
1992 Steffi Graf, Germany
1996 Arantxa Sanchez Vicario, Spain
2000 Elena Dementieva, Russia
2004 Amelie Mauresmo, France
2008 Dinara Safina, Russia
2012 Maria Sharapova, Russia
2016 Angelique Kerber, Germany
2021 Marketa Vondrousova, Czech Republic
2024 Donna Vekic, Croatia
[BRONZE]
1988 Manuela Maleeva, Bulgaria & Zina Garrison, USA
1992 Arantxa Sanchez Vicario, Spain & Mary Joe Fernandez, USA
1996 Jana Novotna, Czech Republic
2000 Monica Seles, USA
2004 Alicia Molik, Australia
2008 Vera Zvonareva, Russia
2012 Victoria Azarenka, Belarus
2016 Petra Kvitova, Czech Republic
2021 Elina Svitolina, Ukraine
2024 Iga Swiatek, Poland
*WOMEN'S DOUBLES MEDALISTS, since 1988*
[GOLD]
1988 Pam Shriver / Zina Garrison, USA
1992 Mary Joe Fernandez / Gigi Fernandez, USA
1996 Mary Joe Fernandez / Gigi Fernandez, USA
2000 Serena Williams / Venus Williams, USA
2004 Li Ting / Sun Tiantian, China
2008 Serena Williams / Venus Williams, USA
2012 Serena Williams / Venus Williams, USA
2016 Ekaterina Makarova / Elena Vesnina, Russia
2021 Barbora Krejcikova /Katerina Siniakova, Czech Republic
2024 Sara Errani / Jasmine Paolini, Italy
[SILVER]
1988 Jana Novotna / Helena Sukova, Czechoslovakia
1992 Conchita Martinez / Arantxa Sanchez Vicario, Spain
1996 Jana Novotna / Helena Sukova, Czech Republic
2000 Kristie Boogert / Miriam Oremans, The Netherlands
2004 Conchita Martinez / Virginia Ruano-Pascual, Spain
2008 Anabel Medina-Garrigues / Virginia Ruano-Pascual, Spain
2012 Andrea Hlavackova / Lucie Hradecka, Czech Republic
2016 Timea Bacsinszky / Martina Hingis, Switzerland
2021 Belinda Bencic / Viktorija Golubic, Switzerland
2024 Mirra Andreeva / Diana Shnaider, Individual Neutral Athletes
[BRONZE]
1988 Steffi Graf / Claudia Kohde-Kilsch, West Germany
1988 Liz Smylie / Wendy Turnbull, Australia
1992 Natalia Zvereva / Leila Meskhi, Unified Team
1992 Rachel McQuillan / Nicole Provis, Australia
1996 Conchita Martinez / Arantxa Sanchez Vicario, Spain
2000 Els Callens / Dominique van Roost, Belgium
2004 Paola Suarez / Patricia Tarabini, Argentina
2008 Yan Zi / Zheng Jie, China
2012 Maria Kirilenko / Nadia Petrova, Russia
2016 Lucie Safarova / Barbora Strycova, Czech Republic
2021 Laura Pigossi / Luisa Stefani, Brazil
2024 Cristina Bucsa / Sara Sorribes Tormo, Spain
*MIXED DOUBLES MEDALISTS, since 2012*
[GOLD]
2012 Victoria Azarenka / Max Mirnyi, Belarus
2016 Bethanie Mattek-Sands / Jack Sock, USA
2021 Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova / Andrey Rublev, Russian Olympic Committee
2024 Katerina Siniakova / Tomas Machac, Czech Republic
[SILVER]
2012 Laura Robson / Andy Murray, Great Britain
2016 Venus Williams / Rajeev Ram, USA
2021 Elena Vesnina / Aslan Karatsev, Russian Olympic Committee
2024 Wang Xinyu / Zhang Zhizhen, China
[BRONZE]
2012 Lisa Raymond / Mike Bryan, USA
2016 Lucie Hradecka / Radek Stepanek, Czech Republic
2021 Ash Barty / John Peers, Australia
2024 Gaby Dabrowski / Felix Auger-Aliassime, Canada
*GOLD MEDAL MATCHES - women's singles*
1988 Steffi Graf/FRG d. Gabriela Sabatini/ARG
1992 Jennifer Capriati/USA d. Steffi Graf/GER
1996 Lindsay Davenport/USA d. Arantxa Sanchez Vicario/ESP
2000 Venus Williams/USA d. Elena Dementieva/RUS
2004 Justine Henin-H./BEL d. Amelie Mauresmo/FRA
2008 Elena Dementieva/RUS d. Dinara Safina/RUS
2012 Serena Williams/USA d. Maria Sharapova/RUS
2016 Monica Puig/PUR d. Angelique Kerber/GER
2021 Belinda Bencic/SUI d. Marketa Vondrousova/CZE
2024 Zheng Qinwen/CHN d. Donna Vekic/CRO
[BRONZE MEDAL MATCH]
1996 Jana Novotna/CZE d. Mary Joe Fernandez/USA
2000 Monica Seles/USA d. Jelena Dokic/AUS
2004 Alicia Molik/AUS d. Anastasia Myskina/RUS
2008 Vera Zvonareva/RUS d. Li Na/CHN
2012 Victoria Azarenka/BLR d. Maria Kirilenko/RUS
2016 Petra Kvitova/CZE d. Madison Keys/USA
2021 Elina Svitolina/UKR d. Elena Rybakina/KAZ
2024 Iga Swiatek/POL d. Anna Karolina Schmiedlova/SVK
Harris stands up to Trump https://t.co/3Takt3sG0B pic.twitter.com/bSzgk0EFPc
— Ann Telnaes (@AnnTelnaes) August 2, 2024
No, Goddamnit, WashPost, it's not on her. It's on him and you. She faces nothing but racism and misogyny. You, as editors, face the test of how you will deal with that. You fail. pic.twitter.com/fV7mLwmdje
— Jeff (Gutenberg Parenthesis) Jarvis (@jeffjarvis) August 1, 2024
Straightforward and accurate lead headline in ?@GuardianUS? pic.twitter.com/Vx1JNXoVhj
— Margaret Sullivan (@Sulliview) August 1, 2024
Yall do know the GOP candidate actually running for president has 3 baby mamas 5 kids and had affairs during all of his marriages right? https://t.co/LgumwgklEx
— colorfullstory (@colorfullstory) August 4, 2024
Wait… so term limits and ethics… eliminating corruption, would eliminate the whole thing? Is he admitting the whole thing is corrupt, then?
— Metalmark ???? ?? (@MarkMantis) July 29, 2024
It’s weird to worship a fascist game show host while pretending to be a Christian. It’s weird to complain that childless cat ladies are the real problem facing America; it’s weird to believe in “menstrual surveillance.” It’s weird to attack people who don’t have kids just because…
— Mary L Trump (@MaryLTrump) July 30, 2024
"Stop calling us weird!" pic.twitter.com/YSagruuvkX
— ??serenity now ????? (@MissesDread) July 29, 2024
Republicans: "Democrats are satanic pedophiles, groomers and traffickers"
— Covie (@covie_93) July 30, 2024
DEMS: Republicans are weird.
Republicans: 'Stop being mean to us'
— Parker Molloy (@ParkerMolloy) July 30, 2024
If Kamala was trying to deny her Indian heritage she would have changed her name to Nikki.
— Nick Jack Pappas (@Pappiness) August 1, 2024
"I didn't know [Kamala Harris] was Black until a number of years ago when she happened to turn Black." - Donald Trump, who turned Christian to run for president
— Middle Age Riot (@middleageriot) July 31, 2024
To all those losing their minds about the opening ceremony and thinking it was blasphemy. pic.twitter.com/3tkx63nEet
— Rennae Stubbs ?? (@rennaestubbs) July 29, 2024
Number of posts @jk_rowling has amplified or sent about an Algerian boxer since the Olympics began: 17.
— Brandon Wolf (@bjoewolf) August 4, 2024
Number of posts she has amplified or sent celebrating Olympic champion women in the same timeframe: 0.
Odd way of showing your support.
I’m gonna tell my kids these were the Avengers pic.twitter.com/LtxdFUxbpS
— greg (@greg16676935420) July 31, 2024
— Why you should have a cat (@ShouldHaveCat) July 31, 2024
Having a smart friend
— Science girl (@gunsnrosesgirl3) July 31, 2024
pic.twitter.com/AYN7Xmq1kd
obsessed with the finish line in the men’s triathlon, it’s like a renaissance piece pic.twitter.com/8cgxc4jhrB
— Emma ????????? (@EmmaTurnerBA) July 31, 2024
QINWEN ZHENG IS AN OLYMPIC GOLD MEDALIST pic.twitter.com/RocRm91d1i
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) August 3, 2024
6 Comments:
BTW, I finally realized I'd never looked at last week's comments section, so I went back and responded (if the clock hasn't run out on those at this point, of course) on the previous post. Sorry about that. :/
Bravo! Qinwen Played like a Queen throughout the Olympics. Now I want a 2025 RG final between Swiatek and Qinwen. Tennis Gods, please make it happen.
Vekic seems to be in the form of her life. If she continues like this, soon she would make her appearance in the top 10 in the rankings.
I was stunned by Navarro's comment to Zheng. But--as unfortunate as it was--I'm also very upset by all the "of course she said that--she's an entitled, spoiled rich girl" comments. Navarro is generally a thoughtful, mild-mannered young woman worth listening to. I've always liked her. She's the last person I would have expected to do this. It's a mystery. (And "entitlement" of women is very relative.)
As for Danielle--she's on her way out and, I imagine, doesn't really give a damn. And, to be fair, there have been several players who have retired in singles and gone on to play doubles.
The whole racket thing makes me think about the 2013 Charleston final when Serena would not let JJ serve. Finally, Jelena asked her, "Exactly when *should* I serve?" and Serena's reply: "When I say you can." Kadir Nouni just sat there. Unfortunately, it undid JJ and she would go on to lose (this was back when she had a pretty good record against Serena, and her chances of winning were pretty good.)
K-
At the very least she should get her career-high really soon. It's only #19, and she's #21 now. She went 3-8 from this point last year until the end of the season, so there are a *whole* lot of points she could pick up (only really a Cincinnati 3r to defend).
D-
Oh, I know. I hate the whole notion that (and you see it w/ Pegula and a few others, too) that just because a player might come from a family with money that they somehow can't be a *true* competitor, don't really care, etc. and it's just used as another tool used to bash them on social media.
Honestly, Navarro's comment made me mad in a weird way (aside from the obvious), because I'd really started to like her this year and now I have to "reset the board" in a way that puts her "in the negative" until/unless she climbs her way out of it (it'd be really easy to do, and would just take a moment of self-reflection and -- hopefully -- regret).
Bouchard *never* did anything of the kind, remains unapologetic and just as liable to say something just a ridiculous now (which is why I abhor that TC starting using her again on occasion). Mladenovic did *a little.* But Cornet did so in a fantastic way after her somewhat-incidental attachment to the whole "LOL" thing. I didn't like what, say, people such as Sakkari and Kasatkina said during the Toth incident last year, but those were clearly (mostly) spur-of-the-moment responses that generally were in opposition to how they normally comment about others players (so it was something of just a "provisional suspension" in this space, haha).
Navarro comments were just plain uncalled for, and felt far, far worse, especially in the setting and under the circumstances under which they occurred. It was on a Bouchard-plus level... and that is NOT a good thing in any respect.
Yeah, Collins playing WD after retiring in singles was really only an issue (if it was even that) because she used her retirement as a way to knock (oddly) Swiatek's sincerity over the head on the way out.
Last year in Charleston, I went to an interview that Petko did with Kiki. It was really good, and Kiki's answers were intelligent and thoughtful. But she just couldn't help herself. Toward the end of the interview, she found an opportunity to trash another player (I forget who it was).
I've spent a fair amount of time with and around Emma, and I still can't believe that those comments came out of her mouth. I also hope that she publicly apologizes for them.
I still haven't seen any comments from Navarro about Paris (maybe I missed it). I can't believe she's going to continue to get a pass without saying *something* more. Right?
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