Friday, October 8, 2021

Jelena Ostapenko scores big win to start BNP Paribas Open

Su Wei Hsieh didn’t have a strong output to produce at the BNP Paribas Open Friday. Jelena Ostapenko dominated on Stadium 6 at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden to come through in straight sets 6-3, 6-0 ended the series losing streak in the process. 

This marked their third meeting and the first in two years with the Chinese player leading the series. Their last hard-court match went three sets, but the opposition of Ostapenko improved over the years. Though she hasn’t made any significant impact recently, the Latvian had her aggression to rely on if all the elements of her game end the winning streak of Hsieh. 


Ostapenko came out with a forceful service game that allowed Hsieh a couple of points. The Latvian went on to break her in the second and consolidated in the third. Her 3-game streak saw Hsieh score only four points in total, hoping to keep her down and out. Hsieh’s first serve was not in a position of strength and more of an easy ready for Ostapenko, who let her return game speak volumes on the court. It was a 4-0 run for the 24th seed, who inched closer to the set win. 


Just when the fifth game in a row was looking good for the Latvian, Hsieh gained momentum and forced deuce. Ostapenko thought she had a shot to go back to deuce for the AD point, but a close call went the way of the 35-year-old. She added another to cut the lead in half after six. Ostapenko held an important seventh game that put her in place to go for the set, but Hsieh’s service continued to improve and kept the set going. The Latvian had her chance to close out the first and worked her mental fortitude to clinch it in 33 minutes. 


Ostapenko dominated the set scoring 14 of 20 from the first serve and 8 of 13 on the return. Hsieh’s second serve was working harder than her first which ultimately caused her to fumble and lose bigger on her returns which saw her win just 6 of 20. The next set didn’t go well for the player from Chinese Taipei, who tried to force deuce on serve but was broken instead. 


Ostapenko stayed in control despite some difficulty from Hsieh, who came up short of forcing deuce. The 35-year-old was down three games once more on a shutout from the Latvian, but couldn’t let it diminish her overall. It was the fourth that she pulled out all the stops to give Ostapenko a challenge on serve. 


Her defense achieved a prospect of chances on deuce but after blowing her third breakpoint, the 24-year-old made it fourth game straight. The effort on serve awarded her a break in the fifth that all but put the match in her hands. With the chance to serve it out on serve, the 24th seed earned match on a net-front crosscourt smash to end the second round in 59 minutes. 



Elina Svitolina opens her BNP Paribas match with a win over Tereza Martincova

Elina Svitolina in competition at the BNP Paribas Open. 




Elina Svitolina had a comfortable start to her run at the BNP Paribas Open Friday. The fourth seed handled a late surge from Tereza Martincova but defended her side of the game to win 6-2, 7-5 on Stadium Four at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden. 

The two met for the first time and in a location that is normally played during the early part of the tennis season. With the fatigue of 10 months of action being in position, the world number seven hoped all was well in her return to the desert. Svitolina tried to overcome her defeat at the US Open but came up short in her trip back to Chicago. Martincova got the jump on action at Indian Wells and went on to finish a long second set against Ashlyn Krueger to make the second round. As her first appearance had her moving right along, it would be imperative for her to play tough and achieve an upset if Svitolina gave her any leverage. 


The Ukrainian played on Martincova’s struggling opening service that produced the break. She comfortably held serve in the second and was back in position to wreak havoc on the Czech. A push from the fourth seed put Martincova under pressure that resulted in a double fault putting her two breaks down. Svitolina used her power and precision to comfortably finish another game on serve and lead 4-0 on a line drive return. 


After being blitzed through the set, the 26-year-old held serve to get on the board but watched Svitolina lead 5-2 after her second hold of serve. The Ukrainian took her shot to serve for the set in the eighth and rushed to victory in 24 minutes, shutting Martincova out. Svitolina won 92 percent of points from the first serve and won more points from the second serve return. Martincova’s return game was dismal along with the second serve that caused her to run late. 


She came into the second set with a heavy improvement that was answered by a serve to love from Svitolina. She went on to break the Czech but suffered a double fault in the fourth that handed her opponent a break to love. Martincova leveled the score and went into the fifth, fighting for a chance at consolidating the break. They went to deuce where after four breaks, Martincova read a moment where Svitolina’s vulnerability was her window to lead for the first time in the match. 


Svitolina made sure to level the score in the sixth and fought Martincova’s service game. She denied the 26-year-old game point, forced deuce, and set up a lined winning return to lead 4-3. Martincova broke back in the eighth, determined to stay tight with the fourth seed and make it a battle to the end. The Czech built together a serve to love in the ninth that set up a chance to force a deciding set. Svitolina delivered a blistering service game that made it five-all and Martincova back on serve. 


Svitolina kept the heat on her opponent and fired four beautiful return shots that won her the 11th game and an opportunity to hang on to a straight-set result. She allowed the Czech one point on her service that completed the match with Svitolina scoring her only ace of the day.  It was a 68-minute effort from the fourth seed, who scored 80 percent of points from the first serve and had a steady return game than that of her opponent.