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Showing posts with label Andrea Petkovic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrea Petkovic. Show all posts

August 8, 2021

Summer Standouts

Tennis has taken a pretty unusual front seat in the sports world over recent months, with headlines around historic runs -- and surprising disappointments -- featuring front and center, not to mention the platform it's given issues surrounding mental health and elite sport.

But while so many have focused on the high profile names, a couple players have been quietly plugging away on court and have put together some headlines of their own worth watching. They might not have ultimately walked away with the titles, but they sure have been showing us exactly what they've got week after week.


High on that list is 20-year-old Jenson Brooksby, who wasn't on many people's radar before Newport last month, but maybe should have been. A qualifier at the U.S. Open in 2019, he ended the career of former world #4 Tomas Berdych with a first round upset before injury kept him out of play last year. He picked up right where he left off this season though, claiming a trio of Challenger titles before rocketing to the final in Rhode Island.

And he proved that run was no fluke this week in Washington. In a rematch of the Newport final against veteran Kevin Anderson, this time Brooksby came out the victor, and he followed up the win by taking out Wimbledon Cinderella Frances Tiafoe, second seed Felix Auger-Aliassime, and John Millman to boot. He may have lost the semis to teen phenom Jannik Sinner, but something tells me he's going to feature prominently the rest of this year.

So, too, could 19-year-old Brandon Nakashima, one of my players to watch at the start of the year. The former UVA standout may not have made a big splash at any of the Slams yet, but he's picked up a couple Challenger titles himself and in recent weeks seems ready to graduate into the big leagues.

Still ranked in the triple digits at the time, he beat both Sam Querrey and John Isner on his way to the final in Los Cabos and a week later took out Milos Raonic before losing to Isner in the Atlanta championship match. Finally in the top hundred now, Nakashima continued his run in DC as a wildcard, opening with a win over a very talented Alexei Popyrin and then ousting sixth seed Dan Evans in the second round. He ultimately lost to Denis Kudla a match later, but not without putting up a two-plus hour fight. And if he stays this consistent, there's no telling what he'll be able to do in the coming months.

Of couse, it's not just the newbies causing a stir in Washington. Former world #8 Jack Sock has been toiling for years to get back on top of the singles game and might finally be starting to get some traction -- he won a Challenger title in Little Rock in May, made the quarters in Newport, and this week put up a hell of a fight against Rafael Nadal in the third round. And former Citi Open champ Kei Nishikori, straight off a stunning upset of Andrey Rublev at the Olympics, got right back to work in DC and made the semis.

It's not all about the men, either. Veteran Andrea Petkovic may have fallen a bit down the rankings, but she's far from giving up the goat. Through Wimbledon this year she'd been 4-10 in main draw matches and failed to qualify for three events, pushing her down to #130 in the world. But since Wimbledon, she's turned on the gas, beating second seed Yulia Putintseva on her way to the Hamburg final and reaching the semis in Belgrade. This week at the inaugural Winners Open in Cluj-Napoca, Romania, she powered through a relatively wide open draw and earlier today took out Egypt's Mayar Sherif to win her first title in over six years.

And if Petko's return to glory wasn't inspiring enough, there's the continued run of Danielle Collins, who's performance the last few weeks begs the question -- where would she be now if she hadn't been dealing with health issues all this time. The 27-year-old American, who picked up her (inexplicably) first title last month in Palermo, is now riding a nine-match win streak with her run to a second straight final in San Jose.

Seeded seventh at the Silicon Valley Classic, she's already beaten former U.S. Open champion Sloane Stephens, surpise French Open quarterfinalist -- and Olympic semifinalist -- Elena Rybakina, and comeback queen Ana Konjuh. For the title, she'll face off against Daria Kasatkina, who's having a strong comeback year herself, having won two titles already. And while the Russian has won the pair's previous two meetings, I wouldn't be surprised to see Collins ride her momentum to a win -- and maybe even farther than that.

April 7, 2015

Where to Begin...?!

Wow, I am really far behind, huh?

But things sure got interesting in the last few days of the Miami Open, that I can't help but react, even a few days after the champions were crowned. Sure, maybe we should have expected that Serena and Nole would come out on top, but there were nevertheless a couple surprising faces hanging around late in the tournament. And their showings could bode very well for them the rest of the year.

I've been talking for a while about how impressive John Isner's been over the last few weeks, but he really exceeded expectations in Miami. After stunning Milos Raonic in the fourth round, he pulled off a solid upset over Kei Nishikori in the quarters, his second top-ten defeat of the tournament. He had a shot at Novak Djokovic in Friday's semis, but after dropping the first in a tight tiebreak, he was fairly demolished in the second. Tomas Berdych had a shot against Andy Murray too -- in a rematch of their Australian Open semi, a match to which he'd brought a 6-4 record -- but fell short for a second straight time, succumbing to superb serving from the Brit and falling short of another run to the final here.

But ultimately we were treated to a repeat of the Melbourne final, with Murray trying to end a streak of six straight losses to the world #1. And having scored his milestone five-hundredth career win in the fourth round, he looked ready to keep his momentum going. He pushed the defending champ to a first set tiebreak, and then got the decisive break in the second to force a third. But Nole, as he so often does, found his motivation when he needed it most -- in the deciding set he blanked the third seed, finally finishing off the match in just under three hours and picking up the elusive Indian Wells/Miami combo for the third time in his career. It marks title #3 for the season, too, and guarantees him the top ranking at least through Wimbledon. But with some inspired performances from so many others in the field this week, there may be a couple out there ready to give him a run for his money.


The women's draw wasn't without its surprises either. With players like world #2 Maria Sharapova, former champ Aga Radwanska and even in-form Caroline Wozniacki all getting upset, the bottom half of the bracket was decimated pretty early during the event. That opened the door for two unlikely semifinalists to make a play for the title. Andrea Petkovic, a little spotty this year despite a title in Antwerp, notched wins over Ekaterina Makarova and red hot Karolina Pliskova during her run. But she was ultimately stopped short by a resurgent Carla Suarez Navarro, who'd pulled out of the Antwerp final but scored two wins over Petra Kvitova already this season and took a set off eventual champion Simona Halep in Indian Wells. In Miami she scored her third win over veteran Venus Williams in the quarters, precluding a much anticipated match-up between the two sisters.

She was thoroughly outmatched in the final though -- Serena, who'd survived quite a squeaker against Halep on Thursday, was coming off a tight two-hour long semi before reaching the weekend's championship. But the seven-time champion didn't seem too fatigued after the fight -- she lost just two games in the fifty-six minute match, handing the Spaniard the fifth bagel set in their five meetings. With a record eighth title in Miami, she's certainly shown she's not ready to cede her spot at the top any time soon -- but performances from the rest of the semifinal field may give us some clue as to who's ready to take over when she does.

February 16, 2015

On Their Games Again

It sure seems like it's been a while since this weekend's champions have held a trophy over their heads -- for some it's been just a month or so, for others several years, but if any of them can keep their momentum going, it could mean big things for the rest of their years.

Stan Wawrinka began the 2015 season almost the way he did the last one, picking up another crown in Chennai and rolling through his first couple matches at the Australian Open. But when he fell short of repeating his title run, he took a few steps back down the rankings. He was the fourth seed last week in Rotterdam and had trouble getting his footing, losing sets to wildcard Jesse Huta Galung and Guillermo Garcia Lopez, ultimately reaching the final by the skin of his teeth. Against defending champion Tomas Berdych on Sunday he was tested again, dropping the opening set, but he was able to rally from the deficit and clinched the win in just under two hours. It may not be as high profile a trophy as the one he gave up, but with two top ten wins this week, both over higher seeds, he might have put himself back on track to go after the big ones again.

After a similarly stunning 2014, Andrea Petkovic has had a little big more trouble getting her footing this year. A semifinalist at Roland Garros she finished off the season with a title at the Tournament of Champions, but went oh-and-three to start 2015, losing each time to players outside the top fifty. She started to get things back together during Fed Cup play, though, avenging a loss to Jarmila Gajdosova in Sydney and knocking out Sam Stosur in a 12-10 third set marathon. She continued her win streak in Antwerp last week, drubbing one-time Aussie runner-up Dominika Cibulkova and following it up with a win over always tricky Barbora Zahlavova Strycova to make the final. She was spared a contest on Sunday, though, when fifth seeded Carla Suarez Navarro pulled out of the match with a neck injury, but Petko's run was nonetheless impressive. She'll get right back to work this week in Dubai, and hopefully she'll keep her run going -- just a hair away from her career high ranking from three years ago, it's starting to feel like she can make a big push even higher this time around.

Kei Nishikori is certainly making a case for himself to keep climbing as well. Currently at his peak #5 in the world, the man from Japan is coming off a year that brought him four trophies, ten top-ten victories and his first Grand Slam final. He hasn't had bad results in 2015 by any means, but the semis in Brisbane and the quarterfinals in Melbourne don't seem quite as impressive now that we've seen what he can do. So this past week in Memphis, the two-time defending champion was under a little pressure. Qualifiers Ryan Harrison and Austin Krajicek both took sets off the top seed and even a reinvigorated Sam Querrey, who'd scored an impressive win over John Isner in the quarters, was able to push him to a decider. But Kei got his groove back in the final against big-serving Kevin Anderson, withstanding twelve aces from the South African to nab his third consecutive title in Tennessee in straight sets. And hopefully he'll be able to raise his game again when he faces even tougher opponents down the road.

Uruguay's Pablo Cuevas has already proven he can turn up the heat when the pressure's on. The twenty-nine year old veteran had never cracked the top forty before last year, but then went on a solid run over the summer picking up titles in Umag and Bastad, the first two finals he'd ever contested. He finished off the season with a couple of Challengers wins and ended the year at a career high #32 in the world. After a slow start to the year though -- his only win in January came over a still-recovering Nicolas Almagro -- he pulled things together this past week in Sao Paulo. Seeded fifth at the Brazil Open, he took out the Spaniard again and added wins over upstart Jiri Vesely and world #31 Santiago Giraldo to his resum&eactue;. Yesterday against unknown qualifier Luca Vanni -- who incidentally jumped forty-one spots up the rankings thanks to his Cinderella run -- he held tough in three tight sets, notching the win in a tiebreak and keeping his record in finals a spotless 3-0. He's headed straight to Rio this week and face Almagro yet again in his opener, but having backed up his most recent win with an ultimate title, he may just have established himself as a real favorite this time.

Veteran Slovakian Daniela Hantuchova is trying to work her way back to that favored status, too. The one-time world #4 has had a rough couple of years, and in 2014 fell well out of seeding territory at the Majors. She showed some signs of progress to start this season, scoring a win over Sara Errani in Auckland and pushing Garbiñe Muguruza to a third set in Melbourne. Still almost two years removed from her last title, she was nevertheless a long shot in her return to Pattaya City. But after upsetting third seed Zarina Diyas in her opener, the 2012 champion in Thailand didn't look back again. After dropping the first set in Sunday's final to Croatian Ajla Tomljanovic, Dani's experience came through and she was able to power through for her seventh career title and first since 2013. She seems to have recovered well enough -- earlier today she won her first match in Dubai with a win over Mona Barthel in three long sets -- but she'll face an even bigger challenge from Simona Halep in the next round. But a strong performance could work wonders for her confidence -- back in the top fifty now there's no reason she can't make another move higher.

We may have a few weeks left before then next big events of the season get underway, but all of this weekend's champions have put themselves back on the radar as we head to the American hard court season. And now that they've shown they've still got some spunk left in them, there's no telling what they'll be able to do.

February 8, 2015

The Clinchers: Fed Cup First Round

It's not just the men who had something to atone for in the days after the Australian Open. This weekend a couple ladies who may have fallen a little short of expectations in Melbourne -- either their own or others' -- stormed back onto the courts for the first round of Fed Cup action. And a few of their wins may have gone a long way to make up for their recent losses.

Germany vs. Australia

There was plenty of talent on display at the tie between Germany and Australia, but most these players got off to a slow start in 2015 -- together the four singles entrants had combined for just two wins Down Under. But they were all hungry for redemption this weekend -- Jarmila Gajdosova, who scored her first ever win at her homeland's Major last month, opened by stunning heavy favorite Angelique Kerber in three sets, but Andrea Petkovic, winless since taking the trophy in Sofia late last year, endured a marathon third set against former U.S. Open champion Sam Stosur, closing out the win after more than three hours of play. She proved the more resilient on Sunday, too -- after Kerber gave the Germans a slight lead in the first reverse singles match, beating Stosur in straight sets, Petkovic went the distance again, edging Jarkka 8-6 in the third, and securing her country a return to the semis. Last year's runners-up haven't won a Fed Cup trophy since 1992, and while there's a lot more play left before a champion is decided, this group of ladies has certainly shown they have the will to put up some big numbers for their team.

Czech Republic vs. Canada

The Czechs, on the other hand, have had a little more success of late, winning the title three of the last four years. But without some of their biggest stars -- both defending Wimbledon champ Petra Kvitova and underappreciated Lucie Safarova sat out this contest -- there was no certainty in this rubber. But the Canadians were missing their biggest star too, and without Genie Bouchard, their top player was world #185 Gabriela Dabrowski. But the twenty year old proved no match for Karolina Pliskova on Sunday -- the rising star, one of my dark horses for Melbourne, fell surprisingly quickly to eventual Aussie semifinalist Ekaterina Makarova in the third round. But she made up for it this weekend, first trumping eighteen-year-old Francoise Abanda on Saturday and then clinching the win for her country with a straight set win over Dabrowski. The Czechs may not have brought their A-team to this rubber, but with a field as deep as theirs it doesn't seem to matter.

Italy vs. France

Things were a little closer between the 2013 champion Italians and the upstart French team, who made the World Group this year after a playoff win over the U.S. last spring. The favorites got off to a good start on Day One with former Roland Garros finalist Sara Errani bouncing back from a third round upset at the Open to Yanina Wickmayer for a win in the first tie and Camila Giorgi, who fell just short of a monstrous win over Venus Williams, pulled off her own victory over world #19 Alizé Cornet. But the 2-0 lead did not prove insurmountable -- on Sunday, doubles specialist Kristina Mladenovic, who's had some huge wins at the Majors herself, kept the Frenchwomen alive with a win over Errani and young gun Caroline Garcia drew her country even with a three-set win over Giorgi. The two then paired up against the top-ranked doubles team of Errani and long-time partner Roberta Vinci, stunning the Italians for the come-from-behind win. Neither had been able to follow up defeats of low seeds in Melbourne, but their wins this weekend may have shown they still have a lot more to give.

Russia vs. Poland

But perhaps the one player who was most anxious to get back on the court was the one who fell just short of taking the title Down Under. Maria Sharapova made it all the way back to the final at the Australian Open, but despite her best efforts just couldn't get the upper hand against Serena Williams during their nearly two-hour match. But she got right back out there this weekend, playing on the Fed Cup team for only the third time in her decorated career. She kicked off win a quick and easy win over Urszula Radwanska, but even with a 2-0 lead over the Poles, the pressure was on Sunday. Maria faced off against long-time rival Aga Radwanska, a woman who had notched her first ever victory over Serena already this year, and should have been eager to add another high-profile win to her resumé. But Sharapova was undaunted, rolling through the first set and staying the more focused in a tight second. The victory clinched a return to the World Group semis, where the Russians will face off against Germany in April. But more importantly, it erases the bad taste of Maria's loss just a week ago and may have replaced it with a hunger for even bigger wins down the road.

November 9, 2014

Czech Mate: Fed Cup Final Round-Up

There was plenty of room for drama at this weekend's Fed Cup final, with two recent powerhouse teams going head-to-head for the trophy. But, even with a solid slate of top-twenty players and recent titleists on the German team, the Czechs barreled through their opponents, picking up their third championship in four years, and asserting themselves as a real force in tennis.

Wimbledon winner Petra Kvitova opened the final tie against Sofia champion Andrea Petkovic on Saturday, but even with her higher ranking, this promised to be a close match. Petko had climbed back to her highest ranking in three years, picked up a trio of trophies on the season, and, with a 4-3 career record against the Czech, certainly knew how to get the better of her. But Kvitova came out swinging, keeping the German on the baseline while she rushed the net -- she broke serve five times and fired off twenty-five winners during the match, pushing her team to an early lead. Germany had a good shot at evening the score, though, as they pitted their top player Angelique Kerber, an alternate for the year-end final in Singapore, against Lucie Safarova, whose biggest accomplishment to date was a semifinal showing at the All England Club. But the world #16 was able to surprise again -- she took advantage of some weak serving by the four-time runner-up this season to notch her third top-ten win of the year.

With the Czechs taking a dominant 2-0 lead into Day Two, it was up to Kerber again to keep her team -- playing in their first Fed Cup final since 1992 -- alive, and she very nearly did it. Her first set against Kvitova lasted well over an hour and eventually went to a tiebreak, and though she did ultimately succumb, Kerber roared back in the second to give the Germans their first set win of the tie. It was too little, too late, though, as Kvitova stayed tougher in the dramatic decider, but with just four points separating the two women, this rubber really could have gone either way. The Germans did finally get on the board, with Sabine Lisicki and Julia Goerges teaming up to score a surprising win over long-time doubles champs Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka, but the 3-1 score was just enough to give the Czechs the win and rise back to the winners' circle they occupied just two years ago.


With so many of the tennis headlines this year dominated by the likes of Serena Williams, Simona Halep and Maria Sharapova, it's easy to have lost sight of the lower-profile Czechs. But with three of the five Fed Cup titles this decade going to the same country, it's hard to ignore their consistency and strength of their team. And I wouldn't be surprised if they make an even bigger name for themselves in the months to come.

October 31, 2014

The Consolation Prize?

It's not quite over for the ladies -- this week eight(-ish) of the year's International-event titleists who didn't quite qualify for the WTA Championships in Singapore got a chance to pick up one more trophy before the season ended. And while all these ladies have shown their capable of big things this season, some of the results we've seen so far in Sofia aren't what you'd expect.

In the "Serdika" Group, top seed and Singapore alternate Ekaterina Makarova suffered two straight-set losses before pulling out with a back injury, allowing Karolina Pliskova entry into the Bronze-Medal event. Meanwhile it's the lowest-ranked player in the section, 2014 standout Garbiñe Muguruza who's really shining. She dropped just three games to Makarova in their opener, and then came back from a bagel set against Indian Wells champ Flavia Pennetta to take the next two, 6-1, 6-1. She'll face off against Katowice titleist Alizé Cornet today, but with a win in the pair's only meeting two years ago, the Spaniard could put up a perfect record in the round robins.

No one's been as spotless in the "Sredets" Group, though Australian Open runner-up Dominika Cibulkova came pretty close. After a string of surprising losses since the spring -- Vitalkia Diatchenko in Moscow, Cici Bellis in New York -- I wasn't expecting too much from her at the Tournament of Champions, but she took out both Tsvetana Pironkova and Carla Suarez Navarro in straight sets. But after last night's loss to Andrea Petkovic, herself trying to end a slump since her French Open semifinal, she stands now just in second place in the section, making today's final round robin between Pironkova and CSN so much more important. The Spaniard, who won her first career crown in Oeiras way back in May and then went largely silent, had a pretty easy win over Petkovic on Tuesday and could leapfrog over other players in her group if she gets the better of the Russian.

The stakes in Sofia may not be as high as they were last week, but for the ladies looking for redemption the pressure is certainly on. After all, players like Ana Ivanovic and Simona Halep have won the Tournament of Champions in the past, and their careers have been on steady upward trajectories since. And while the 2014 season may be close to wrapping up, any of these ladies could use a win her to get next year off to a great start.

June 9, 2014

Not Just About the Trophies

I was out of town most of last week and got home just in time really to catch the men's final at the French Open. But though I may have missed some of the particulars, I'm fully aware of how exciting things got as we got down to the wire at Roland Garros. And as impressive as the champions' campaigns were, there were plenty other stand-outs in the second half of the Paris fortnight -- even among those that fell just a little short of taking home the trophies.

On the ladies side, so many of the uber-favorites were knocked out early so we were given early warning that we should expect some new faces hanging out in the later rounds. Croatia's Alja Tomljanovic, who defeated third seed Aga Radwanska, made a fourth round appearance at her first French Open, and Garbine Muguruza rode her defeat of Serena Williams all the way to the quarterfinals. And three of the ladies who reached the semifinals had combined for only one previous Grand Slam Final Four -- Genie Bouchard won her first career title in Nice just days before making the trip to Paris, and backed up her performance in Melbourne by taking out a toughened-up Julia Goerges, world #9 Angelique Kerber and my dark horse pick for the title, Carla Suarez Navarro. And Andrea Petkovic, who'd made the quarters here on her last visit -- three long years ago -- cemented her comeback with a decisive win over 2012 finalist Sara Errani, marking her longest Major run to date.

Simona Halep did them both one better though -- the 2008 Juniors champion at Roland Garros had put together one of the most impressive twelve-month runs on Tour. Since June of last year, the petite Romanian has picked up a field-leading seven titles, the biggest coming in Doha this past February, and this season she'd already notched five wins over top-ten players. She'd climbed all the way up to #4 in the world, and was actually ranked higher than everyone she faced in Paris. Unfortunately, though, she ran into a much more experienced Maria Sharapova, seeded just seventh, but after trophies in Stuttgart and Madrid combined with the exits of Serena and 2011 champ Na Li, a likely favorite for this title.

And Sharapova did not disappoint. Pushed to three sets in every one of her second-week matches, she went the distance again on Saturday's final -- Halep kept things interesting, grabbing the second set in a tiebreak and trading service games in the decider. But after more than three hours on court, the Russian emerged the winner, adding the second Roland Garros trophy to her mantle, and maybe more importantly doubling up the Slam she might never have thought she'd win. Despite injuries and coaching changes over the last several months -- and years, to be sure -- her Grand Slam career now spans a full decade and she's proven her consistency on all surfaces. Adding that fifth Major title to her resum´ is certainly nice, but her ability to endure so long in this sport puts her in a league many cannot achieve.


The performances on the men's side were no less impressive -- while they were blessed, too, with their fair share of early upsets, perhaps the biggest came in Sunday's fourth round when 2009 champion Roger Federer, the only man other than Rafael Nadal to win this title in the past ten years, fell at the hands of often-volatile Ernests Gulbis. The eighteenth seed had made the quarters in Paris way back in 2008, and while he too was a long-shot pick of mine, he hadn't gotten past the third round of any Major since. He followed up his defeat of Federer by taking out Tomas Berdych, becoming the third first-time Slam semifinalist in both brackets.

But while the ladies' draw certainly featured more greenness in the final few days, ultimately it was the more battle-tested men who won out. World #1 and #2 Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic made Sunday's final as was widely expected -- their twenty-second match where a title was on the line. Rafa was going, of course, for his ninth Roland Garros crown and had won their last meeting at a Major, but Nole had momentum on his side, taking their last four meetings, most recently on the clay of Rome. And with a return to the top ranking and his own career Grand Slam on the line, he had plenty of motivation to dethrone the King of Clay.

And at the start it sure looked like we were about to see a changing of the guard at the French Open -- Djokovic more than doubled the number of winners Nadal hit in the opening set and never allowed his opponent much of a look on his own serve. But Rafa was able to turn the tables in the second -- though he gave back an early break he held tough to close out the set and dominated the third to gain the lead. Things went back and forth in the fourth, again, but after building a 30-0 lead in the tenth game, the Serb lost four straight points, the last on a double fault, to lose the match and what's been his best shot at making history. Instead, Nadal surpasses his own record -- his nine singles titles here are two more than any other man has won at the same Major -- and matches Pete Sampras for fourteen Slam trophies overall, second to and just three behind Federer's seventeen. Whether he can eventually surpass that number remains a question of course -- like Sharapova he's missed months at a time with injury, and the toll his game takes on his body certainly can't be ignored -- but by rebounding from a less-than-stellar season to dominate an event as big as Roland Garros shows he's not ready to slink off into the sunset any time soon.


While the physical prize at a Grand Slam is ultimately the trophies and checks awarded to the champions, this weekend's winners at Roland Garros -- and even those who fell a little short of the that -- accomplished so much more than their on-paper results suggest. Big upsets, big breakthroughs, big comebacks, big efforts -- these are just some of the stories told by the performances during the latter half of this year's French Open. Win or lose, all these athletes did something great in Paris. And hopefully it's just a sign of so much more to come.

May 24, 2014

Blogcast: 2014 French Open Preview


After a spring full of surprises on clay, this year's French Open has the potential to be more exciting than ever.

For more of Tennis Spin's video content, please click the "Blogcasts" tab above.

April 17, 2014

Fed Cup Semifinal Preview: Stealing the Spotlight

The two teams that will ultimately contest this year's Fed Cup championship will be decided this weekend, and though the four countries in the semis have some long and storied histories, there sure seems to be some new blood in the mix. And the way this year's gone so far, the stand-out performances may not come from the players you'd expect.

Germany vs. Australia

There'll be a lot of high-ranking power on the court in Brisbane, with world #7 Angelique Kerber leading the charge for the Germans and former U.S. Open champion Sam Stosur talking the helm for the Aussies. But neither has had a particularly good year -- Stosur, now barely in the top twenty, hasn't won more than two matches at an event since Melbourne, while Kerber, a quarterfinalist in Miami, has nevertheless lost to then-#107 Tsvetana Pironkova and little-known Maria-Teresa Torro Flor. It doesn't mean, of course, that they won't be favorites this weekend, or that they won't come through when buoyed by their country's support -- still, a couple others might put a new spin on things.

Doubles stars Casey Dellacqua and Ashleigh Barty have had their share of success when paired up -- together they reached the final of three Slams last year -- but they're even starting to thrive on their own. Young Barty -- she's only seventeen -- still has to qualify for most singles events, but she did beat Kiki Bertens and Daniela Hantuchova in Brisbane. Meanwhile veteran Dellacqua reached the fourth round of her hometown Major in January and followed it up by taking out Kirsten Flipkens and Roberta Vinci on her way to the Indian Wells quarters. For the Germans look for Andrea Petkovic to solidify her comeback -- the one-time top ten player is back at #28 in the world, and is fresh off a title in Charleston, where she knocked off three higher seeds. And Julia Goerges, who had briefly fallen into triple digits at the start of the year, has managed wins over Elena Vesnina and Sara Errani this year. If either one plays to her potential, there are few on the Australians' side that could stop them.

Italy vs. Czech Republic

We could potentially see more fireworks in the tie being contested in the Czech Republic, where the top-ranked teams face off. Here again the higher ranked players have some of the less impressive records on the year. The Czech's Petra Kvitova did make the quarters in Miami, but with six three-set matches already this year, her wins haven't come easy. And the Italians, missing their most successful player this season, are instead lead by Sara Errani, who's lost mostly to players outside the top ten this year, and Roberta Vinci, who's somehow only won two singles matches this year.

Instead it may be time for others to shine. Lucie Safarova, who won her first title in over five years last fall in Quebec City, was the only woman to take a set off Na Li on her way to the Australian Open title and came through for her compatriots in a big way during the first round of Fed Cup. She also reached the quarters in Charleston with her ninth career win over on-paper favorite Sam Stosur. And Klara Koukalova has reached three finals this year, even winning a title in Florianopolis. Both seem to be having career-making years and this weekend might just be the next big step for either. But no one should ignore Italy's Camila Giorgi, a surprise finalist in Katowice this past weekend. Now a stone's throw from the top fifty, she's pulled off six upsets this year, the biggest over Maria Sharapova in Indian Wells. She might not get top billing this weekend, but she could be a clincher if things get tough.



It always gets interesting when we come down to the wire at Fed Cup -- the team spirit so often brings out another level of play that a simple trophy just can't always elicit. Perhaps that's why this weekend's dark horses have so much potential to deliver big wins for their homelands. And whoever comes out on top will know they've earned it.

April 4, 2014

A Door Creaks Open

It's been a good couple weeks for some of the stars of the WTA. Flavia Pennetta cemented her comeback with a win in Indian Wells, her biggest title to date, and Serena Williams closed out trophy #7 in Miami last weekend in dominating form. But the efforts got to both of them this week, and each lady bowed out of the first real clay court tournaments of the season earlier than expected. And that might have opened the door for other players looking to turn around a spate of bad luck in their own corners.

Uber-veteran Kimiko Date-Krumm took out Pennetta in their Monterrey Open first round, and followed the victory with a three-set win over Timea Babos. A couple other largely unknown names have also thrived south of the border -- qualifier Julia Boserup, ranked #302 in the world, took out Kirsten Flipkens on her way to the quarters and Jovana Jaksic, a winner of fourteen ITF titles and only one match win in a WTA main draw before this week, will face off today for an unlikely spot in the semis. But the bigger opportunity in Mexico lies with Caroline Wozniacki, seeded third and just off her lowest ranking in almost six years. She did reach the semis in Dubai and the quarters in Miami, so maybe she's been pulling her game together a bit over the last few months. She's handled challenges from American upstart Coco Vandeweghe and doubles champion Kristina Mladenovic already this week and should be the favorite today against Karolina Pliskova, though the Czech has put in some inspiring performances herself. If Caro can stay strong, she might just get back the confidence she needs to relaunch herself back in the elite

Up in Charleston, an exhausted and injured Serena lost her opening round to little-known Jana Cepelova who, to her credit, backed up the win by taking out another seed in Elena Vesnina. And as strong as the world #78 has been, the glaring hole in the draw has created opportunities for a slew of players who haven't tasted big victory in quite some time. Sara Errani, just hanging onto a spot in the top ten, has barely won more matches than she's lost this year, while former #1 Jelena Jankovic has only won one title since 2010. They're both still alive, but it's the lower seeds who could most surprise us. Quickly recovering Andrea Petkovic drubbed Sabine Lisicki in the third round and Daniela Hantuchova may not face a seed through the semis. But I'll keep an eye on Lucie Safarova, runner-up at the Family Circle Cup in 2012 -- she was the only player to take a set off eventual champion Na Li in Melbourne, even holding match point, and last night pulled off a stunning victory over Sam Stosur, bringing her record against the one-time Grand Slam champion to an impressive 9-2. She has a less impressive record against Petkovic, who she'll face in today's quarter, but could just have the momentum to push her a few matches more.

Of course the early exits of the very favorites at this week's tournaments should signal that nothing is certain -- and we've already seen several surprises in both draws, so there could very well be more in store. Whether these players take advantage of these opportunities remains to be seen, but the way they're playing there may never be a better chance to do so. And for some of them, a win could put them on a much brighter path for the rest of the year.

August 6, 2013

Put Up, or Shut Up

The first few weeks of the summer hard court season can be tricky to navigate -- while some of the sport's top players skip the smaller tournaments, plenty others slug it out week after week at events where relatively few points are on the line. But with bigger bounties at stake this week in Canada, this past weekend's champions will want to prove they can deliver when it really counts.

The heat took a bit of a toll on the ladies in Washington, with the favorites at the Citi Open falling earlier than expected. But that opened the door for a couple others to strut their stuff, hopefully putting themselves back on the map as they head to New York. Andrea Petkovic, a year removed from her career-high in the top ten, has been working her way back up the rankings since injuries cut her 2012 season short. She wasn't seeded in Washington, but nevertheless caused upsets of both Mona Barthel and Alize Cornet on the way to her second final of the year. But she was ultimately stopped by defending champion Magdalena Rybarikova, who's currently playing some of the best tennis of her career. The petite Slovak, who beat both Ekaterina Makarova and top-seeded Angelique Kerber in DC, kept her momentum going early this week in Toronto with a straight-set win earlier today. It's a better result than some other champions have seen of late -- Dominika Cibulkova lost her very next match after winning a title in Stanford -- so hopefully Rybarikova can keep it up. She's never made much of a splash at any Premier event, so this could be her chance.


The stakes were a little higher for the men in DC, with the first nine seeds all ranked in the top twenty-five. There was some follow-through here, with Atlanta runner-up Kevin Anderson getting back to the quarters and John Isner, the champion down South, making his way all the way back to the final, albeit being the favorite in each of his first four matches. He even seemed to have the upper hand in Sunday's final, opening by taking his only set off 2009 U.S. Open champion Juan Martin Del Potro in their previous meetings. But the top seed, coming off a late-night semifinal win over Tommy Haas, was able to regroup, dominating his fellow big man and winning his third straight title in the U.S. capital. DelPo gets a first round bye at the Rogers Cup this week, but he's certainly parlayed success here into bigger things in the past. Isner, meanwhile, may need to do some serious soul-searching -- though he certainly has a big weapon, he continues to struggle closing out matches -- he was forced to three sets and two tiebreaks in his Montreal opener, eventually losing to wildcard Vasek Pospisil in over two and a half hours. If he can't capitalize better on what he's got, it's hard to see him making any kind of dent when it counts.


The ladies who battled it out in Carlsbad last week have been a little more battle-tested. Finalists Victoria Azarenka and Sam Stosur have won three Grand Slam titles between them, though neither has been at the top of her game recently -- Vika, injured during her first round at Wimbledon, has been recovering in the weeks since while the Australian was a disappointing 19-15 on the year before heading to California. But both ladies pulled themselves together at the Southern Cali Open and, though both were tested -- Azarenka by Ana Ivanovic in the semifinal and Stosur by Aga Radwanska in the quarters -- proved they were back. And Stosur kept her run going, ending an eight-match losing streak to the former world-#1 and winning her first title in almost two years. Azarenka subsequently pulled out of this week's Rogers Cup in Toronto, while Stosur will open against qualifier Julia Glushko later today. The win should come easy for the newly anointed world-#11, but a good performance could mean big results for her in New York again. And having lost a bit of her luster over the past eighteen months, there may never be a better time for just that.


This is the time of summer where things get serious, and last week's champions will have to get right back to work. If they're going to make a real statement on their way to the Open, they don't get a chance to let their performance drop even a little. But if they can show us what they're really capable of, the payoff is sure to be worth it.

June 14, 2013

Getting Warmer

This is always a tricky time in the tennis schedule -- just a few days after the clay court season officially ends and with little over a week before the big grass event of the year, players may not choose to get in their practice matches where you'd expect. But a couple ladies, whether they spent recent days on the dirt or made the transition to turf, have not only been warming up this week, but may have been turning red hot.

The inaugural Nürnberg Cup attracted a couple top-snotch stars back to the red clay, with recently resurgent Jelena Jankovic leading the pack. But second seed Klara Zakopalova didn't make it out of the first round, and a couple other favorites couldn't last much longer. Jankovic herself, fresh off an impressive run to the quarters at the French Open, squandered an early lead today and fell in the semis to Andrea Petkovic. The German, who failed to qualify in Paris, snuck in a Futures title in Marseille before heading back to her homeland and took no prisoners from the moment she took to the court. She opened with a win over always tricky Sofia Arvidsson and dismissed two seeds in a row before ousting JJ. The win today grants Petko entry to her first Tour final since taking the title in Beijing almost two years ago and may have sealed in her return to elite play. If she can keep it up, she might be able to cause quite a stir in the London draws.

But perhaps young Romanian Simona Halep will have something to say about that. One of the breakout stars of 2011, she had a rough ride in the second half of last year, winning just a handful of matches after reaching the Brussels final in May. She's rebounded a bit recently, beating five higher-ranked players in a row in Rome -- she notched a one-and-one drubbing of Svetlana Kuznetsova and avenged her loss in Belgium to fourth seed Agnieszka Radwanska to make the semis. And this week in Germany she's made up for an opening round exit in Paris -- Halep didn't drop a set in her first three matches, and despite dropping a middle bagel to fifth-seeded Lucie Safarova earlier today, she rebounded to take the match in just under two hours. It'll be the twenty-one year old's fourth career final -- she's still looking for that first trophy -- and her second meeting with Petkovic. She lost the first time they met, but might be able to take advantage if the one-time top-tenner loses any of her momentum.

Over in Birmingham, the contestants made the switch to the surface of early summer and are getting in their first rallies on grass in preparation for Wimbledon. Not everyone's had the start they wanted -- Ekaterina Makarova, who won her only title on Eastbourne's lawns in 2010, lost her opener, and defending champion Melanie Oudin didn't come close to repeating her run -- but a couple ladies have looked a little more than solid. Magdalena Rybarikova, champion here in 2009, topped top seeded Kirsten Flipkens on her way back to the semis and former world #5 Daniela Hantuchova took out three seeded players, including 2010 French Open champ Francesca Schiavone, during her run here.

But the brighter stars in England might be those of far less-decorated athletes. Alison Riske, yet to crack the top hundred, has made the semis here before, and has already ousted grass-court specialist Tamira Paszek. So far today she's taken a set off a struggling Sabine Lisicki, but will have to come back in a decider if she's going to pull off the win. And not-yet-legal Donna Vekic -- she turns seventeen later this month -- had a breakout last September in Tashkent, where she reached the final as a qualifier. She's had no such high-profile runs in 2013, but did win an ITF title in Istanbul this past April. So far in Birmingham the Croatian reversed a loss in Monterrey to Urszula Radwanska and trounced third seed Sorana Cirstea earlier today in just over an hour. Both ladies will have a tough time from here on out, but their performances on these lawns to date prove they may have what it takes to keep going strong.

Whether this week's results provided the necessary prep for the challenges to be faced at Wimbledon is yet to be seen, but these ladies have certainly performed under pressure so far this week. There's not a lot of time, of course, to get ready for the Major and every win they're toting up now will lay the groundwork for miles.

December 9, 2012

The 2012 Tennis Spin Awards: The Ladies



It's been a strange and exciting year in the WTA. As we wrap up the 2012 season, the rankings look a little different from just twelve months ago -- we have a new #1, some brand new faces in the top ten, and a couple recent mainstays missing. We saw success come from the most unlikely of places, a couple players storm back onto the scene, and sadly some leave the game entirely, either through retirement of because of some less-than-stellar on court results.

And all that action has given us a lot of fodder for this year's Tennis Spin Awards, so hold on to your hats!

Hottest NewcomerMost Improved
One to WatchBest Comeback
Least Follow-ThroughGreatest Letdown
Biggest SurpriseGutsiest Win
Best Non-Slam FinalBest Slam Final
Doubles Team of the YearPlayer of the Year


Hottest Newcomer

Last year I gave this award to American Christina McHale, thanks to her jump from #115 to #42 in the world. She didn't fail to follow through, either -- though illness kept her quiet in the back half of 2012, she did rise to a high of #24 in August on the heels of wins over Petra Kvitova in Indian Wells and Caroline Wozniacki in Eastbourne. So hopefully this year's newcomer -- and there were several to choose from -- will live up to the legacy McHale has set.

The Nominees

The Netherlands' Kiki Bertens began her year with a couple of ITF titles, but made her first dent on Tour in April when, as a qualifier, she worked her way to the Fes title with wins over two seeded players. She played her first Major main draw in Paris, and got her first win a month later by upsetting Lucie Safarova at Wimbledon. She made the second round in New York, too, defeating McHale, and scored an upset of Nadia Petrova in Montreal. She ends the year at #63 in the world, a shade off her career high ranking, but still a full hundred-plus spots higher than where she started it. If she follows through, I wouldn't be surprised to see her rise farther in the new year.

Heather Watson didn't make as big a jump, but the young Brit also laid claim to her first Tour title this year when she took the title in Osaka. She didn't have to face the most formidable opponents at that event, but with wins over Sloane Stephens in Stanford, Lucie Safarova in Miami and struggling Sabine Lisicki in Tokyo, she certainly has proven she can hit with the big girls. She ends the year just inside the top fifty, her highest career ranking, but seems to be in a place to climb higher in the months that come.

Compatriot Laura Robson may not have won a title in 2012, but she pulled off some of the most high-profile wins on the season. She started out a little slow, didn't win a Tour-level match until June in Birmingham, but once she lit the fuse it refused to go out. She took out two seeds to make the Palermo semis and paired with Andy Murray to win Olympic Silver. But her biggest successes came the next month -- the eighteen year old was responsible for ending Kim Clijsters' singles career in New York and proved she was no one-trick pony by beating red-hot Na Li a round later. She made her way to the Guangzhou final, too, helping her rise to #53 in the world, but if she kicks off 2013 the same way she ended 2012, she's probably got further to go.

The Winner

This might be a slightly controversial call, partly because twenty-two year old Urszula Radwanska has been a pro since 2005, and so maybe isn't a newcomer, and partly because she hasn't grabbed quite as many headlines as her British contemporaries, and so maybe isn't the "hottest". But while her sister finally made it clear why she belonged in the sport's elite, the younger URad very quietly snuck her way into Slam-seeding territory. Urszula had a couple notable wins this year -- she beat Francesca Schiavone in Moscow and Ana Ivanovic in Tokyo -- made the final in 's-Hertogenbosch and, maybe most interestingly, notched the only break of Serena Williams' serve at the Olympics. She hasn't won a title yet, but she's shown she's not living in her sister's shadow and I don't think it will be long before she gets that crown.


Most Improved

While all these ladies really burst on the scene this year, a couple veterans used the season to really make a mark on Tour. Whether they won their first title, rose up the rankings, or established themselves as a part of the elite, each had their biggest successes to date in 2012. And hopefully, like Roberta Vinci who took the award last year, they'll only use this as a jumping board for more wins in the future.

The Nominees

Agnieszka Radwanska has been a staple in the top ten for years, so it would be hard for her to make a big jump in the standings. Still with three titles early in the season, a huge performance in the Wimbledon final, and a run to the year-end semis, she ends the year at #4 in the world, even getting within one title of taking over #1. She may still struggle against the power players -- Victoria Azarenka was the only woman she lost to in the first four months of the year, and Serena Williams made up for a close one at the All England Club with a total domination in Istanbul -- but she does have eight wins over top ten players this year. And as long as she stays healthy she might still get another chance to bring home the big titles.

Angelique Kerber ascendance actually started about eighteen months ago -- but after surprising everyone and making the semis at last year's U.S. Open as a qualifier, she really found her game in 2012. She beat Marion Bartoli and Maria Sharapova to take the title in Paris, and stunned hometown hero Caroline Wozniacki to get the Copenhagen crown. She was winless in three round robin matches at her debut year-end championships, but nevertheless made some real headway at the Slams, even handing Serena Williams her only defeat since the French Open. She ends the year #5 in the world -- impressive considering the German was in triple digits back in August 2011. As long as she can improve her consistency, Kerber looks well on her way to stay in the big leagues.

Sara Errani very easily could have become a one-hit wonder this year. She's one of those veteran also-rans, who'd been hanging around just in the top fifty for years -- she'd finished each of the last four seasons ranked in the forties -- and was never really able to take her game into the elite. But something changed in 2012 -- she crushed her way to the quarterfinals in Australia, surpassing her previous best efforts at seventeen Slams by two rounds. Then she practically swept the clay court season, taking titles in Acapulco, Barcelona and Budapest before stunning the world at Roland Garros. The twenty-first seed in Paris, she took out 2008 champ Ana Ivanovic, breakout star Angelique Kerber and defending U.S. Open winner Sam Stosur to reach her first Major final. She was decimated in the championship match and might have slithered off into the sunset, but she went on to pick up another trophy in Palermo and prove she could also hit off clay with a semi showing in New York. Now solidly in the top ten, she even was a stone's throw from making it past the round robins in her premier year-end event. Her surprise rise into the elite may have been a long-time coming, but it was more unexpected, and by keeping it up through every part of the season, she might have shown she's got even further left to go.

All these ladies may have made their first big strides into the sport's top levels, grabbing headlines throughout the season, but there were some others who also made some big jumps while flying way more under the radar. Kirsten Flipkens has been on Tour for almost a decade but spent most of that time out of the top hundred. Still, with her more famous compatriots now out of the game entirely, she was quick to take the reins. She beat Roberta Vinci and Sam Stosur to make the semis in 's-Hertogenbosch and stunned three seeds in Quebec City to capture her first career title. She finishes the year at her highest-ever ranking, just outside the top fifty, and with additional wins over Sabine Lisicki, Dominika Cibulkova and Ana Ivanovic, it sure seems like she has some more to show us in the new year.

The Winner

Su-Wei Hsieh was just as off the grid when the 2012 season started, but she set off to change that right at the start. Pro since 2001 she had finished only one year in the last eleven in triple digits, but had made quite a dent on the ITF Tour, bringing home twenty-three titles in the junior league. But the qualifier made the semis in Pattaya City just a week before finally capturing that maiden crown in Kuala Lumpur and, despite a middling middle part of the season, ended the fall with another in Guangzhou. The two International crowns were enough to extend her season, and she took a trip to the Tournament of Champions in Sofia, the only participant there with more than one title on the year. Now ranked #25 in the world, she's easily the most successful player to come out of Chinese Taipei, and while she may not be a household name quite yet, she just might be heading there soon.


One to Watch

It wasn't all about the on-paper improvements in 2012 -- not everybody made huge jumps up the rankings, captured that maiden trophy, or even were able to end a long title-less run. Some players made some big strides in their game without earning any real acknowledgement of their accomplishments. But very quietly these ladies put up some of the biggest fights on court this year, caused some of the most surprising upsets, and clinched some huge wins -- and the winner did her best to remind us that she has no intention of sneaking away. So here's to the women who established a platform that could make themselves huge forces in the new season.

The Nominees

Sofia Arvidsson is another one of those veterans who've picked up a big win or two over the years, but never really made a dent in the big leagues. But in 2012 she returned to Memphis where she won her first and only title six years before and came away a winner again. It wasn't the most impressive feat of her year, though -- no one in the top fifty was in her path -- but come fall she was able to turn on another gear. She beat Lucie Safarova in Linz, Maria Kirilenko and Marion Bartoli -- definitively so -- in Moscow. She earned a alternate slot to the Tournament of Champions, and though she only got half a match in during round robins, really ended the year with some of her best stuff. If she can pull that momentum into 2013, she might be able to make another run to get back into the sport's elite.

I've had my eye on Ekaterina Makarova for a few years now. Two years back she beat -- wait for it -- Flavia Pennetta, Nadia Petrova, Svetlana Kuznetsova, Sam Stosur, and Victoria Azareanka as a qualifier to take the Eastbourne title. A year later she made the fourth round at both the Australian and French Opens and reached a then-high ranking just in the top thirty. But she failed to get any real traction in the months that followed and ended 2011 with four wins in her last thirteen tournaments. She began this season ranked #54 in the world and had to qualify for Sydney, but when she hit the hard courts in Melbourne she really took off. After beating red-hot Kaia Kanepi and struggling Vera Zvonareva, the tiny Russian stunned heavy favorite Serena Williams to make her first Grand Slam quarterfinal. She scored a couple more upsets throughout the year, and while none can quite compare to that particular victory, she was able to end the season just in the top twenty. Having established herself a more consistent force in 2012, she might just be primed for a breakthrough in the new year.

Lucie Safarova's year was a little more up and down. She won just three matches at Majors in 2012 and lost in eleven first rounds in total. On the other hand, she did beat Svetlana Kuznetsova and Caroline Wozniacki in Doha, Vera Zvonareva on her way to the Charleston final, and shocked Sam Stosur in Montreal. She was also the most unlikely of heroes in all of the Czech Republic's Fed Cup matches -- when the championship tie came down to her final rubber, she raised her level of play against former world #1 Jelena Jankovic, a woman she'd only beaten once in their previous six meetings, and secured a second straight trophy for her compatriots. Somehow, quietly, she rose to a career-high ranking to end the year, and though she may not have put up any big numbers on the year, she seems to have set herself up to make some big strides when she gets back on the courts.

Also sneaking up the rankings this year was top-thirty staple Maria Kirilenko. The pretty Russian has finished all but one of the last seven years among those elite, but strangely hasn't won a singles title since 2008. Still, this year she came pretty darn close -- she worked her way to the final in Pattaya City, even taking a set off Daniela Hantuchova in the championship match. But her success wasn't just at the smaller tournaments -- she took Maria Sharapova to three sets in the Indian Wells, made Aggie Radwanska fight in the Wimbledon quarters, and came within spitting distance of an Olympic medal -- she did eventually win Bronze in doubles. Now a shade of her #12 ranking, she enters 2013 knowing she can hit with the big girls and may finally be ready to get the payoff she's been waiting so long for.

The Winner

Andrea Petkovic, sadly, wasn't able to put up many numbers at all this year. One of the nominees for most improved player last year, the fun-loving and well-liked German was sidelined most of this season with various injuries. She notched a couple wins in January before a lower back injury took her out of the game until April, then an ankle problem forced her to miss the summer stretch. It took a while for her to get her groove back once she returned in August -- she won just two matches from New Haven to Linz -- but things improved at the tail end of the year. Having seen her ranking tank from #9 last October to nearly #200 twelve months later, she made good on a wildcard in Luxembourg, beating Jelena Jankovic to make the semis and even beat top seed Nina Bratchikova to reach the final four in Pune. Still ranked deep in triple digits, she at last seems to remember what it takes to win, and if she stays healthy in the new year, I'd expect her to make a big push back into the top tier pretty quickly.


Best Comeback

While a bunch of players seemed to come out of nowhere this year, there were plenty who seemed to rise from the ashes. Out of the picture for months and years for various reasons, these women stormed back onto the courts in 2012, causing (technical) upsets, jumping up the rankings and reminding us all they're not going anywhere.

The Nominees

Aleksandra Wozniak had been one of those players who hung out in the middle tiers of the sport for years. Her only title came four years ago, but it was a big one -- Stanford! -- and in the year that followed she notched wins over the likes of Nadia Petrova, Marion Bartoli, Svetlana Kuznetsova and Sam Stosur. But a wrist injury in 2010 severely hampered her season last year, and she dropped well into the triple digits. The young Canadian played a lot of qualifying rounds early in the year and won an ITF title in the spring, but really upped her game once she was squarely back on Tour. She very nearly beat Venus Williams in Miami, ousted Christina McHale in Charleston and took out three higher-ranked players to make the quarters in Montreal. She ends the year at #43, still more than double her all-time high ranking, and did miss the last few months with another injury, but if she can recoup in the off-season we might just see her make another comeback in 2013.

Venus Williams pulled off what seems to be her fiftieth career comeback in 2012, and at thirty-two years old did her part to prove that age is really no object in this sport. The five-time Wimbledon champion had announced late last year her battle with Sjogren's Syndrome and took a leave of absence after the U.S. Open. She came back in Miami unseeded and ranked in the triple digits, but survived three straight three-setters to make the quarterfinals, notching wins over then-#3 Petra Kvitova and former #1 Ana Ivanovic. She put up some strong results later in the season too, beating clay-court specialist Sam Stosur in Rome and making the semis in Cincinnati. Her coup came at the end of the season, however, when she dropped just one set in Luxembourg, capturing her first title in over two years. As the clear elder-stateswoman of the sport, there's no telling how much longer we'll have her around, so the fact that she's still got the drive to fight her way back to #24 in the world speaks volumes for her character.

The Winner

But perhaps the greatest comeback came from a woman you might never have noticed was around in the first place. Yaroslava Shvedova had previously peaked just outside the top thirty two years ago, buoyed by a quarterfinal run at the 2010 French Open. She also made quite a name for herself on the doubles circuit, winning both Wimbledon and the U.S. Open that year. She struggled with knee problems in 2011 though, and with just four singles wins in the first seven months of the year, saw her ranking fall out of the top two hundred. But she clearly turned the tables in 2012 -- after some qualifying losses, she eventually put together a couple ITF title runs and started causing stress to the sport's elite. She beat defending French Open champ Na Li in the Roland Garros third round, dealt soaring Sara Errani a Golden Set at Wimbledon, and even took a set of Serena Williams at the All England Club. With some big and unexpected wins against the very best the sport has to offer -- just when we'd come to expect so little from her -- Shvedova's put herself in just the right place to really strike next year.


Least Follow-Through

For all that was good in the world of tennis this year, there was inevitably some bad. Some players who started off the season with a bang fell off the radar by fall, and a couple were such non-entities you might easily have missed them if you blinked.

The Runner-Up

Tamira Paszek was one of those Juniors players that made everyone stand up and take notice. A contemporary of Caroline Wozniacki some six or seven years ago, she was the Girls' champion at both Wimbledon and the U.S. Open and picked up her first ITF title in 2005. In 2007, her first full year on the big girls' Tour, she made the fourth round in both the back-half Slams. She went radio silent for a few years after that, but managed to make the quarters at the All England Club in 2011 before going back into hibernation. Things had seemed to turn the corner in 2012, though -- after going 2-13 to start the year, she beat five higher-ranked players in a row to take the Eastbourne title and followed up with a first round come-from-behind victory against Wozniacki at Wimbledon. She rode that success to another quarterfinal and even made a nice run in Montreal a month later. But she's gone 4-8 since then, beating no player ranked in the top forty. CLearly the girl knows how to play, but if she's only going to score wins during the shortest part of the season it might not bode well for her overall prospects.

The Winner

Mona Barthel's success came a little earlier in the year and from an even less expected place. The twenty-two year old German was entirely off the radar when she came to Hobart, battled through three qualifying rounds, and then defeated four top-thirty five players in a row to win her first Tour title. She made the third round in Melbourne and the quarters in Paris, nearly handed world #1 Victoria Azarenka her first loss of the year in Indian Wells and even put up some one-sided wins in Miami. But her strong results were few and far between in the latter part of 2012. She lost six straight matches from May through July and her only significant win the rest of the year came over injury-plagued Daniela Hantuchova in New Haven -- she pulled out of the event right after that match. She's been able to hold onto a top-forty ranking to finish off the year, but if she doesn't deliver quickly in 2013, it could be a sharp fall back down the ladder.


Greatest Letdown

While each of these ladies seemed to lose the momentum they'd gained at various parts of the year, a few others wholly seemed to dissolve in 2012. Having made huge strides throughout their careers, they'd given us such high hopes, but for a variety of reasons -- not always their fault -- they failed to deliver in 2012.

The Nominees

It may not be fair to stick Vera Zvonareva in this category, since the one-time world #2 missed all post-Olympic events due to illness, but given the epic meltdowns she's had in the past, it's easy to be disappointed. Of course Bepa's been around for years and has some huge titles under her belt. But people really started to take notice of her two years ago, when she rocked her way to the Wimbledon final with upsets of Yanina Wickmayer, Jelena Jankovic, and -- most shockingly -- Kim Clijsters. She was clearly heartbroken by her performance in the championship match, but seemed to have regrouped when she made another run to the final in New York. She remained Major-less, though, and dropped a few ranking points over the next twelve months when she was unable to defend too many of those points. I was hoping for a resurgence in 2012, and a run to the doubles title in Australia seemed to bode well for her -- but a slew of injuries kept her from doing too much damage on Tour, and after her season was cut short, she saw her ranking drop to nearly triple digits. And given her history of volatile reactions to previous setbacks, I'm not sure what her chances of recovery from this one are.

Admittedly Caroline Wozniacki kept herself from becoming the clear winner in this category with her performance over the last three months. Having started the year at #1 in the world, she continued to satisfy her detractors by not living up to her seeding at the biggest events, against the best opponents. She lost in the quarters of the Australian Open to Kim Clijsters and in the third round of Paris to Kaia Kanepi. She had moments of brilliance, though, out-playing Serena Williams every step of the way in the Miami quarters, but also fell in five first rounds, including the last to Slams of the year. Through the U.S. Open last year she had won six titles -- in the same period of 2012, she'd won zero. By the time she took to the courts in Seoul, she'd dropped out of the top ten for the first time in three and a half years. With such middling results all season, it seemed the Dane had proven everyone right -- she couldn't perform when the pressure was on. Lucky for her, though, she got things back on tract in September. She took the title in Korea and picked up another in Moscow for good measure, pulling off a stunning defeat of Sam Stosur in the final. She came in second at the Tournament of Champions, but did manage to climb back to #10. If she keeps up the momentum, hopefully she'll get her name in a totally different category next year.

The Winner

Momentum doesn't necessarily last, though, and that was abundantly clear in Sabine Lisicki's case. Last year's winner for Comeback of the Year took a severe turn for the worse in 2011. The injuries that had largely taken her out of the game in 2010, just after she was putting the pieces together to become one of the greats in this sport, came back with a vengeance this season. It wasn't all bad, of course -- she made the fourth round in Melbourne, got revenge over Maria Sharapova in the Wimbledon quarters, and climbed to #12 in the rankings -- but with just one win in six events after the grass court season ended, she took a bit of a tumble in the back half of the year. Her results may have been hampered by health issues, but after the surge we saw from Lisicki in 2012, it's more than a little disappointing to know her body may not hold up long enough to show us how much she can really do.


Biggest Surprise

There were upsets all year, of course, breakthroughs and flame-outs. But some of the biggest surprises in 2012 came from players we'd either written off or never considered threats.

The Runner-Up

Nadia Petrova has been at or near the top of the sport for the better part of a decade and finished the last nine years in the top thirty. She peaked at #3 in the world a little over six years ago after making at least the quarterfinals of four straight Grand Slams. But she can also be pretty darn volatile -- she lost twice this year to sub-hundred Italian Camila Giorgi, beat Sam Stosur in Indian Wells then immediately lost to Maria Kirilenko, beat Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in Charleston and lost the next round to Polona Hercog. She put up a fight against Serena Williams in Rome, but lost a week later in straight sets to Tsvetana Pironkova in Brussels. But just when we'd begun to write her off as a flake, she really upped her game -- she had won a title in 's-Hertogenbosch just before Wimbledon, but faced a much tougher field when she took the court in Tokyo -- just barely seeded she took out three top-ten players for the title. True to form she lost her next two matches after that, but went on to first win the year-end championship in doubles and regroup quickly enough to storm through the draw in Sofia. Petrova finishes the season with her highest year-end ranking since 2008, but more importantly showed she might bring a little more to the table than we thought she could. And if the thirty year old keeps up her game, she could easily continue to surprise us next season.

The Winner

Some of the most interesting wins this year though came, not from just one player, but from a group that fit an often ignored category. Many women who usually see their greatest successes on the doubles court really broke out this year when out on their own. Of course the year-end doubles champions have each made strides on the singles circuit for ages, and the most successful team in 2012 were also breakthrough acts themselves. But it didn't stop there -- long-time doubles champ Elena Vesnina pulled off three straight-set upsets in a row to make the Budapest final, but couldn't quite clinch a win. A few weeks later Lucie Hradecka, twice a Slam finalist this year, served her way to the semis in Madrid as a qualifier, beating Petra Kvitova and Sam Stosur in the process. Her partner Andrea Hlavackova even broke into double digit rankings on her own -- after upsetting Klara Zakopalova in her U.S. Open first round, she took out Maria Kirilenko in the third, battling injury and exhaustion to do so. She's dropped a few spots down the rankings since then, but with solid records on the singles court this year she and her contemporaries proved they're no one trick ponies.


Gutsiest Win

Tennis is one of those special sports in which a player's true mettle is tested. On the court wholly by yourself, without teammates or coaches, battling the elements and the fans along with your opponents, it often takes more than just talent to pull off a win. And this year that extra juice came from some surprising places.

The Runner-Up

Virginie Razzano has been around the Tour for well over a decade and has had modest success over the years, but injury and illness pushed her out of the top hundred in 2010, finishing the year at her lowest ranking since the turn of the century. She was dealt an even bigger blow the following spring, when her coach and fiancé passed away just days before the start of her hometown Slam. The Frenchwoman played Roland Garros without much luck and came to Paris this year with just two main draw wins on her record for the season. Ranked #111 at the time, her odds against Serena Williams -- riding a seventeen match, two-title win streak at the time -- in her French Open opener were dismal at best. But Razzano found a way to steel up her nerves -- down a set and 1-5 in the second, she somehow rallied to force a third. She took a stunning five-game lead in the decider too, and though she hiccuped a bit trying to close it out, the veteran wildcard ultimately held on for the unbelievable win, handing the great Serena her earliest ever exit at a Slam. Razzano's grit didn't hold out too much longer, though -- she lost in the next round to Arantxa Rus and only won two more Tour-level matches the rest of the year. But this win, her first in Paris since 2009, may have meant more than any other in her long career.

The Winner

There's not much that can beat Razzano's toughness in that match, but Alisa Kleybanova's return to the court in 2012 might just do it. The young Russian cracked the top twenty early last year after winning a pair of titles the previous season and making the quarters in Dubai. But then she shocked the world when, on her twenty-second birthday, she revealed she was suffering from Hodgkin's lymphoma and took a leave from the sport. She made a stunning return this past March, facing off against Johanna Larsson in Miami. It took three sets and a couple hours, but the Sony Ericsson wildcard notched a win that meant so much more than its simple scoreline. She, too, lost a round later to Maria Kirilenko and didn't play again the rest of the season, but storming back after nearly a year of treatment for a serious disease shows a type of courage above and beyond what we've come to expect on the court.


Best Non-Slam Final

Individual matches are one thing, but to string a couple together, day after day, and to walk away with a title is quite another. A couple ladies got the honor of claiming their first Tour trophies this year -- for some it may be the only one they ever get, for others it'll be the kick-off for what will surely be many more to come. Not everyone title set a milestone this year, though, but that doesn't mean one was any less important than another -- and some wins came in such strong style that they deserve special recognition.

The Runner-Up

The Citi Open in Washington, didn't attract the biggest names this year -- with most of the sport's elite distracted by the London Olympics, no one in the top twenty-five made it to the mid-Atlantic. That's not to say there was no talent in the field -- several rising American stars and a couple newcomers took the opportunity to get in a few match wins that week. Ultimately top-seeded Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, once a stone's throw from the top ten, made good on her position and reached her first final in over a year, albeit after a long fight with Vania King in the semis. In the other half of the draw, little-known Magdalena Rybarikova, winner of a couple small titles here and there, took out the next two seeds and made the championship match without dropping a set. The teeny Slovak had only won five Tour-level matches all year before D.C., but when you'd never have guessed that to see her play in that final. She smacked stunning returns, hit every line and dismantled the heavy favorite in their hot night match. And with her third career trophy, gave us a glimpse of what she can do -- now she'll just have to keep it up from one event to the next.

The Winner

The year started off with some fireworks too as the players tried to get in their opening salvos before the Australian Open. This field was stacked with half of the eight seeds having at least one Grand Slam crown to their name and all of them ranked in the top twenty. There were some casualties, though, with retirements from both Kim Clijsters and Serena Williams helping Daniela Hantuchova through to the finals, but the bottom half of this draw showed nothing but top-notch ball. Kaia Kanepi's biggest challenge came surprisingly in her first round against qualifier Alexandra Panova, but she one-sidedly defeated three top players in a row after that, handing a bagel to Pavlyuchenkova a round later and dropping just three games to Francesca Schiavone in the semis. Her similarly dominant victory over Hantuchova in the final put her on a path towards the top tiers of the sport -- she won another title in Estoril and climbed to #15 in the world back in August -- but unfortunately all sorts of injuries disrupted her play throughout the year. If she gets healthy and plays like she did to start the year, though, I wouldn't be surprised to see her make another play for the top ten.


Best Slam Final

But while every tournament win is important, let's face it -- what everyone is really going after is a Grand Slam title. And this year was full of championships so exciting you can't help but feel good about the future of women's tennis.

The Runner-Up

This year's U.S. Open was full of surprises, breakthroughs and goodbyes, but ultimately the two most successful players of the year made it to the final and, boy, did they put up a show. Serena Williams had won this title three times before, and had brought some big-time to Center Court over the years. Meanwhile Victoria Azarenka, the first new #1 to have captured a Major title in almost four years, was looking to back up that trophy in Melbourne and seal in her banner year. The two battled for more than two hours, the lead shifting back and forth and the outcome in question throughout. Though experience finally won out, handing Serena her fourth trophy in the Big Apple, the fact that we saw these ladies go at it so well for so long bodes well for the next generation.

The Winner

Serena was the winner in my pick for the best Major final of the year too, but her road to get there was not nearly as easy as we might have expected. Four times a winner at the All England Club before this year, she was the huge favorite despite her relatively mediocre sixth seed. Aggie Radwanska, on the other hand, may have been at a career-high ranking, but the then-#3 had never made it out of a quarterfinal at a Slam. This fortnight, though, she'd raised her game and managed to pull off some top-rate wins to make the final. She very easily could have buckled like those before her, and after dropping a 1-6 first set, it looked as if she would do just that. But the young Pole rebounded in a way her predecessors could not -- after trading breaks in the second, she was ultimately, unexpectedly able to force a decider. Of course, her surge only lasted so long, but watching even the most reserved players bringing their power game, could be a sign of a great, intellectual development in the sport.


Doubles Team of the Year

It's easy to be swept up by all the action on the singles circuit, but this year brought us some impressive action in doubles as well. With veteran teams taking a bit of a backseat in 2012, new blood took the opportunity to rise up and captured some of the biggest titles of the year.

The Runner-Up

Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka had their coming out party in 2011, but really turned up their game this season. After winning Roland Garros in 2011, the Czechs combined for four doubles titles this year and made the final at five other events -- two Grand Slams, the Olympics and the year-end championships among them. With big serves and slick movements they notched wins over some of the biggest stars in the sport and finished the year ranked #3 and #4 respectively in the discipline. They're not showing any signs of slowdown either -- they didn't need to play the final rubber during the Fed Cup championship, but the momentum driving their country's spirits should stay with them in the new season. And with some of the most infectiously happy reactions on Tour, I can't wait to see their next win.

The Winner

But while the Czechs parlayed their success into glory for their homeland, a pair of Italians broke through from seemingly out of nowhere to end the year at #1. Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci had more than their fair share of success on their own this year, but the two best friends really thrived when they came together. They were seeded eleventh in Australia and made their way to the final and, after sweeping the clay court season, combined for a title at Roland Garros -- not insignificantly after Sara had also made the singles final. They exited "early" at Wimbledon -- in the quarters to the Czech powerhouses -- but rebounded to claim the crown in New York, just two days after Errani had been decimated in the singles semis. In total, the dancing duo won eight trophies and played in two more finals this year -- all while rising to their highest singles rankings. If they continue to play this well together, I expect they'll be adding to those totals by the boatload.


Player of the Year

All of these ladies put up some big results in 2012, but at the end of the day the WTA was dominated by just a handful of players this season. And a couple ladies in particular showed themselves to be the true forces in tennis -- putting together amazing win streaks, setting all kinds of records and proving they're never going to give up fighting. Some players rise to the top and flitter out, but something tells me these two are going to be fighting it out for some more time to come.

The Runner-Up

Victoria Azarenka had a coming out party in 2012. After years of thriving on Tour, she had yet to make a breakthrough at a Slam -- she had been handed some tough draws in the past, meeting Serena Williams in the third round at last year's U.S. Open and suffering heat exhaustion at a couple Majors before that. But she started this year with a bang, winning in Sydney and handing out four bagel sets on her way to the title in Melbourne. In total, she won twenty-six straight games to kick off the season, took the #1 ranking, captured six titles, brought home Olympic Bronze, and earned a record $7.9 million in prize money during the year. She notched wins over every top-ten player she faced this year except one -- so it shouldn't be a surprise who just narrowly beat her out for the last award of year.

The Winner

She may not have ended 2012 at the top of the rankings, but it's hard to argue anyone had more success this season than Serena Williams. After some strange results early in the season, she ultimately hit her stride. She brought a seventeen-match win streak into the French Open, and despite an even more shocking loss there, regrouped to put together a second half record of 31-1 which included two Major titles and Olympic Gold. Now back at #3 in the world, she looks healthy, motivated and focused on the sport in a way we haven't seen in a while, and when she's in this kind of state we know she's practically unstoppable. Still, with a couple of next-generation stars starting to give Serena a run for the money, winning might not come as easily for her in the future -- but as long as she's around to force others to play their best, it sure looks like there's a lot of good tennis left to be had.




Well there you have it, the best and worst of women's tennis in 2012. It might not all have been pretty, but it sure got pretty darn exciting this season. Hopefully those who succeeded will keep momentum on their side and those that stumbled a bit will regain their footing. But whatever happens next year, if the action comes even close to this, we'll be in for even more fun.

Check back soon for the men's Tennis Spin Awards -- if you thought the ladies made it exciting in 2012, you ain't seen nothing yet.