Friday, March 15, 2019

Andreescu scores massive win to make BNP Paribas Open Final



Bianca Andreescu proved that she belongs in the BNP Paribas Open Final. Despite an immense amount of fatigue, the young Canadian came through to win a tight three-setter against Elina Svitolina 6-3, 2-6, 6-4 on Stadium One at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden Friday night. The victory gave the 18-year-old a humungous advance to her first WTA premier mandatory final and second of the season.

This was their first meeting and in a huge semifinal that both worked hard to get to, the match would be heavily serious for the Ukrainian to control. The last two matches extended into three sets where they combined for five hours on court. With her game at a higher level than the young Canadian, the 24-year-old eyed to quickly be in form and take over the match. While being underestimated, Andreescu hasn’t yet faced anyone who played at their best. With Svitolina in her crosshairs, the 18-year-old looked to pull off a full court press and continue her odyssey.  

Nerves got the best of her opening serve as she committed errors to give Svitolina the break. The 24-year-old contained a hold of serve before breaking the Canadian to gain a comfortable 3-0 stance. Andreescu saw the trouble that she was in and blasted out a triple break opportunity in the fourth. The Ukrainian saved one but couldn’t force deuce as her grip of the match lessened.

The Canadian started showing comfort on serve that allowed her to secure a service hold in the fifth. With two consecutive wins under her belt, Andreescu went for a third to earn a double break and level the score. She clearly had the momentum taking a fourth straight which led the world number six to take a chat with her coach Andrew Bettles. The need to gain back control was the main subject of his conversation and how to attack Andreescu’s forehand to gain back control while the opportunity was there.

The chances to counter didn’t come as Andreescu got creative on her ball placement which put her ahead in the eighth. Svitolina rallied to deuce where a drawn error from the teen opened the door but was slammed shut by a double fault. A second straight gave Andreescu the AD point which she won on a crosscourt winner.

With five straight and Svitolina running out of time, Andreescu served for the set with a full shutout to sweep through the set in 32 minutes. Despite not having a strong serve, the ten winners that she had did a number on the sixth seed who only had two and suffered on the first winning just 33 percent from it.

When it looked as if Svitolina would be able to turn things around, Andreescu came in to ruin it with a serious break that made it seven straight games. The teen’s winning streak finally came to a halt as the world number six found a way to break back and get on track. Doing so was not an easy task as she had a two-point buffer but made bad shots to get Andreescu to deuce. A missed opportunity for the 18-year-old allowed the Ukrainian to hold serve and be ahead for the first time since the third game of the previous set.

Andreescu wanted to get even in more ways than one but her efforts were a challenge on serve in the fourth where Svitolina was determined to win. After two long breaks of deuce, it was the 24-year-old with another break to lead 3-1. The Canadian tried to go for a break back but was unsuccessful as the sixth seed found her mark and slammed a crosscourt winner to widen the gap further. They both held serve through two games until Svitolina went for the set in the seventh that was challenged by Andreescu to hold. They went to deuce briefly before an error from the Canadian secured a deciding set for the Ukrainian to play after 41 minutes.

Svitolina had improved on the serve scoring nearly 70 percent which beat down Andreescu’s down to 33 as she racked up 18 unforced errors which took a toll on her second serve at 42 percent success. With that part of the match going her way, the Ukrainian wanted more but Andreescu was there to make it tough. She forced Svitolina to play deuce where drawn errors gave the 18-year-old the early break.

A consolidation of the hold made it 2-0 for the Canadian but gaining a third was out of the question as Svitolina played hard for the hold and had help from Andreescu’s errors. The 18-year-old had trouble again on serve but despite the pain she was feeling came out with the hold to recapitalize the two-game buffer. A serve to love was Svitolina’s first of the match which is what Bettles told her to keep up the energy and rip the forehand.

Andreescu’s coach Sylvain Bruneau tried to keep the 18-year-old confident by telling her that she was the better one out there. During the sixth, it was clear that Svitolina was the better of the two as she racked up seven straight points before Andreescu got a point. She picked up a second but fatigue played a role in the teen losing strength against the Ukrainian who showed little in being tired.

Andreescu somehow broke the sixth seed to gain back the lead but it wasn’t safe as she had to hold to become a major threat. She erred too many times in the eighth but rallied every break point to force deuce and land another crosscourt winner to take a pivotal 5-3 stand. Svitolina faced elimination and served the ninth gaining a 40-0 run before erring twice.

 A critical error got Andreescu to deuce opening the door for match point attempts. She got it on a line drive but lost it on a shot just long of the baseline. It was the only one she’d see in the game as Andreescu erred three times to give Svitolina the win. It was up to the 18-year-old to get it done on her own and went to deuce with the 24-year-old after coming back from 15-40. Despite losing two more match points, a fourth one came that ended a tense rally with a victory as Svitolina hit one more into the net ending the match in 2 hours and 12 minutes.  

“This is so incredible,” Andreescu said to Andrew Krasny after the match. “This past week has been a dream come true.” She thanked the fans and a number of people close to her as she had the stage to show her gratitude. She had 36 winners and 57 unforced errors that were truly brought out by Svitolina who pulled out all the stops in her defeat.

With a massive victory in her career, she will no await her opponent on Sunday as Belinda Bencic and Angelique Kerber fight for the right to go for the title.






Tuesday, March 12, 2019

Svitolina wins a marathon match to beat Barty at BNP Paribas Open


Elina Svitolina had the longest match of her career come at a point where making the quarterfinal was possible at the BNP Paribas Open Tuesday evening. The 24 year old went to hell and back against Ashleigh Barty who gave it her all only to run out of gas in a stunning three setter 7-6(8), 5-7, 6-4 on Stadium Four at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden. It was the first time in the Ukrainian’s career that she made the last eight in the tournament and one she will never forget.

The series had been running one way for the Ukrainian and with her never getting beyond the fourth round, the history gives her a major advantage. She defeated Barty twice on hard courts the last two seasons with the one in Miami occurring in the round of 16. With her third try to get beyond the fourth round at Indian Wells, Svitolina’s strength had more than a shot at succeeding. Barty had yet to drop a set in the desert in her wins over Tatijana Maria and Jennifer Brady making her first top ten match an important one to be the stronger player.

She contained service to start the match before going on the prowl to break Svitolina. Despite not doing so, she continued to stand ahead on the score forcing the Ukrainian to level with her efforts. They stayed on serve with Svitolina playing slightly stronger while Barty had two double faults but stayed on serve through seven. The sixth seed called down coach Andrew Bettles who told her how to get Barty out of her comfort zone and stay with her own offense that was running well.

She took the positivity and secured another holds to be in a four-all tie with Barty. Svitolina’s consistency on both sides of the ball saw a break chance come together in the ninth but two saved break points helped Barty to deuce. She opened up the court forcing the sixth seed to run all over but errors ruined her chance to easily put it away. On a fourth break point chance, Svitolina got the win on a final error from the Australian to take the lead in the late stages.

On serve for the set, the Ukrainian committed her first double fault and got behind with the serve rattled. She handed Barty a triple break with another error before another fell wide to push into extra frames. With Svitolina down, Barty cruised to a service to love and attacked right from the first point of the 12th.

Down 30-15, the world number six got aggressive to try and secure a tiebreak but went for a low shot that gave Barty set point. The Australian missed the line that saved Svitolina who gained an AD point on the Aussie’s error into the net. On a second AD point, a return from Barty landed long to go to a pivotal tiebreak. Barty went for the open court strategy that worked for two points but lost the lead with an error and good point winner from Svitolina.

It stayed tight until Barty delivered a crosscourt and line drive hit that forced the error for 5-3. She reached 6-3 for a chance at the set but lost all of them due to Svitolina’s determination to recover lost ground. Barty showed that she could still cover the court but errors ruined another chance that brought the two to seven-all. It was Svitolina’s turn to have set point at 8-7 but a huge serve from Barty erased it.

She thought she had Svitolina beat with another open court attack but watched the ball return land wide. Another chance for the Ukrainian to be successful finally came with the 9-8 lead that brought the set to an end on Barty’s forehand error finishing a dramatic one hour and six minute ordeal.

After Svitolina returned from a break off court, she got back into the mix with Barty going for the break but failed to get ahead. She kept Svitolina from forcing deuce to make a statement that she was nowhere near done. She went after the break in the third but the Ukrainian had the answers with big points. Her second double fault put her back for a moment but two big points kept her ahead on the score.

Three missed chances for Barty in the fourth were a huge moment for the world number six but one long ball and an ace from the Australian got her back on track. The 12th seed got in front of the net to answer Svitolina and go to deuce. A costly error gave the 24 year old the break needed but a break back for Barty to cut the gap in half. Svitolina called Bettles down who told her to keep hitting, stay focused on every point and gave her ideas on how to counter the tactics of the 22 year old.

Gaining an advantage on the break was a tough task as Barty refused to go down on serve. She fought back Svitolina through a few breaks before securing the sixth that leveled the score. They both remained consistent on struggling with the serve but held through seven. A huge opportunity came for the 24 year old as she successfully broke Barty in the eighth to serve for the match. Barty’s defense answered Svitolina to gain a footing for break point which was given to her on a long ball from the Ukrainian.

The tenth was huge for Barty who needed the win to keep the match going. She had the lead but went to deuce on an error into the net. Svitolina scored a huge winner for match point but a thrilling rally ended with Barty’s return catching the line. She forced an error from the sixth seed but hit the ball too hard to return to deuce. She committed a bad return to give Svitolina a second chance but caught the line to deny a second match point.

A huge ace with the AD point clinched Barty to a five-all tie that got very tense for both players. Barty somehow pulled off a massive break to love which threatened a third set to be played if Svitolina couldn’t stop her. The 12th spelled trouble for her as Barty reached set point four times but failed to put it away. She somehow got a fifth that Svitolina hit back wide enough to end the longest game of the match and move into a pivotal third set after 2 hour and 16 minutes elapsed.

There was nothing left but to play and see who could last the time and effort put on court and right from the start, it was the Australian who answered. Barty overcome a 40-15 stance from Svitolina to force deuce and went three breaks where her only AD point was enough for the break. A hold to love that hadn’t occurred since the fifth game of the first set gave the 22 year old an early lead. Svitolina denied her a third game win before calling for the physio who came on court to tape her right leg.

When the medical timeout was concluded, Barty served to open the fourth, got behind and forced deuce to save two break points. She secured the hold with a forceful forehand against Svitolina who was trailing this much for the first time. Giving up a third was not in her cards as she closed the break gap and won on a huge point to bring the margin to a game. After the win, Svitolina called for Bettles who told her to get underneath the ball and rip it while keeping her confidence level high.

A lot of effort from her part resulted in a break to make it 3-3 to completely erase Barty’s lead. A fight for the seventh was practically a tug of war but after two long breaks, Svitolina held to put the Australian under pressure. Barty fell apart at the wrong time giving the 24 year old triple break to clinch a 5-3 stand to serve for the match. Just when it looked as if Barty was done and dusted, she gained a break point but was quickly denied by a forced error. She proved that she was not willing to give in by gaining another break which was secured on a challenge that stunned Svitolina.

She brushed it aside in the tenth as Barty hand her two match points in the game but an ace brought her to deuce making it the fourth match point saved. A fifth would not come as she hit the ball back into the net that ended a thrilling 3 hour and 11 minute match which was the longest of the 2019 WTA season. “It was a very very tough match,” Svitolina said after the match. “When I woke up this morning I didn’t really expect that I would play three hours and so I was fighting until the last point.”

The effort gave her a fifth consecutive victory over the Australian that saw them tally 282 combined points with her outscoring Barty 143-139. “This was one of the toughest matches against her and she improves massively for the past year and has a great game. I’m sure well have many more matches in the future.” As for her, she will go into Wednesday needing all the rest possible to take on Marketa Vondroussova who was also experiencing her first quarterfinal in a premier mandatory.