Friday, April 28, 2017

Svitolina through to the semis at Istanbul Cup


Elina Svitolina ended a late night with a spot in the semifinals of the BNP TEB Istanbul Open. Just finishing an hour before midnight Friday. The number one seed held on in straight sets to beat Sorana Cirstea 6-4, 6-4 at Garanti Koza Arena to advance into the semifinals in the singles draw.

The two met for the first time nearly a year ago where the Ukrainian had no trouble starting her French Open tournament with a straight sets win over Cirstea. So far in Istanbul, the number one seed hasn’t run into too much trouble and got the round of 16 defeating Cadantu Thursday. With the tournament at its midway point, the world number 13 has every chance of keeping her strong pace to move on if all factors play her way.

She took and early 2-0 lead in the opening set prior to the Romanian earning her win on serve. It remained that way going forward with the Ukrainian up a game after five. She remained that way with a solid first serve and strong returns during the rallies. It allowed her to stay on point when possessing the ball. Svitolina led 5-3 hoping to break Cirstea but the efforts were difficult as mistakes continued to give the Romanian leverage. After three breaks, she held serve in the ninth but knew that stopping the number one seed on serve for the set would be a heavy task.

She brought her best when she needed it most earning break point opportunities against Svitolina. It put the Ukrainian on notice recovering from the deficit to capture the set in 50 minutes.

The number one seed started with another push out front consolidating a break followed by a service hold. It all turned around with Cirstea winning in the third followed by a break that erased Svitolina’s lead with powerful hitting on her offense. The Ukrainian earned another break that gave her back control but knew that going further with the march to the match was her sole mission.

It was an uphill battle for her as Cirstea got back into a tie with her opponent through the net set of games that nearly had the Romanian in reach of forcing the set deep. Svitolina did her best to jump out in the critical ninth game where the ball was hers to dictate for the match. She put the pressure on her 27-year-old adversary to reach match point scoring it on a shot landing inside ending the 1 hour and 31 minutes.


Despite having five double faults and 30 unforced errors, the opportunity to keep play allowed her to focus on the next match that would pit her against Jana Cepelova on Saturday where delays wouldn’t hinder her performance on court with just a match between her and a possible third WTA title this season.

Sharapova makes semifinals with third straight sets win in Stuttgart


Maria Sharapova was once again in fine form at the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix Friday night. The former number one had her best on court against a strong up and coming Anett Kontaveit who she was able to beat 6-3, 6-4 at Porsche Arena in Stuttgart.

Two games sit between the Russian picking up plenty of points to restart her career but a new force stands in her way that was nothing short of dangerous. Kontaveit proved her worth for a fifth time having taken down Garbine Muguruza in three sets Wednesday resulting in a sizable upset. Skills play a role once more between herself and the former number one who has shown a firm pace of strength on offense. Sharapova has left quite an impression on her opponents maintaining a high number of winners and aces in the last two matches that going against the world number 73 would prove devastating for the 21-year-old.

Kontaveit served up a perfect game against Sharapova to notching a love service to start. The Russian answered with a strong opening game of her own which the young Estonian captured a point in the process. She responded once more with a hold of serve that kept Sharapova at bay in hopes to keep the set tight between one another. Sharapova saw that in the fourth as Kontaveit pressured the serve of her opponent who created errors on the ball resulting in the first deuce so far. The stalemate didn’t last long but the former number one came out with her use of winners that secured the hold of serve through four.

After another pair of service holds went into the books, a change from Sharapova helped turned the tide in the set to her benefit. The Russian fired some big returns that Kontaveit struggled on giving up the first break of the set and leverage that Sharapova would build on. Her best point of the match so far came on serve in the eighth firing away at the Estonian before redirecting the shot far away for the easy point.

The control she carried from the first point to the last came in the shape of her second love service hold that put her two games out and the set within reach. She dominated the serve of the Estonian in the ninth reaching two set points to lock down a 1-0 lead in the match after 35 minutes.

Sharapova had four aces through nine games while recording a dozen winners and just four unforced errors. Not much was wrong on Kontaveit end but the youngster knew how heavy the adversity reached. During the break, Kontaveit’s coach Glen Schaap tried to keep his athlete positive despite the whole she found herself in late in the set. Words of keeping in against Sharapova’s serves and returns were all she could do to stay competitive.

It was very difficult for Kontaveit to hang in as the Russian superstar notched her fourth game before it could be stopped. The 21 year old held serve once again in hopes to return to how the match began with an even keel. It didn’t stay that way for long as Sharapova forced her way to another break four games in. The control she had on the returns got the best of Kontaveit who was left with no alternative of counteracting the rallies.

The 21 year old nearly found her chance to win on a double break but Sharapova struck back to force deuce with such strength. Despite losing her chance, the young Estonian captured the first advantage on the break.  She struck a blow with a line drive winner landing in the far corner just inside the baseline. She was still down a game on Sharapova but the fight in her game left the threat alive.

It was soon buried by the up and coming Russian who battled against Kontaveit’s serve once more to grow out a two-game margin she didn’t plan to let go. Every point in the fifth saw Sharapova increasing the level of intensity screaming out during big points she won. Another win handed Sharapova a commanding 5-2 lead with Kontaveit on the hot seat to stay alive on her own serve. She had a 40-0 run on Sharapova but it was quickly erased by the level of skill on the other end. A must win on the advantage resulted in a hard-earned victory but the ball went back to the unranked superstar for a second chance at closing the match.

In a small surprise, Sharapova handed some points on serve that gave Kontaveit a chance for the break. The Russian did everything to stop that coming back to force deuce where after four breaks and five break points attempts, she left the door open to give the Estonian her second straight win. It was the longest game of the match so far leaving Sharapova with a difficult task so far in the tournament. It led Sven Groenveld to come out and ask her to regroup and close it out while the opportunity presented itself.

It was the final chance she had before the task became harder to secure for Sharapova as Kontaveit served the tenth wanting to push her opponent far. A mistake allowed the Russian into deuce who fought hard to steal the advantage away from Kontaveit. It arrived in her first advantage of the game that resulted in a long ball to end the match and hand Sharapova her third consecutive straight sets win.

“I thought I had a really good rhythm,” Sharapova said immediately after her match. “When you don’t know your opponent too well, the first six games were trying to figure out one another and get used to it but I held serve quite comfortably and when I got my opportunity I felt like I really rolled with it and gained confidence from that as well.”

She’ll use that to move into the semifinals where she’ll await the winner between France’s Kristina Mladenovic and Spanish star Carla Suarez Navarro on Saturday.







Thursday, April 27, 2017

Svitolina eases her way to Istanbul quarterfinals with straight sets win


Elina Svitolina had more control to get another win at the BNP TEB Istanbul Cup Thursday night. The number one seed dominated Alexandra Cadantu with 30 winners from start to finish that led to her 6-3, 6-3 win at Garanti Koza Arena.

The two played each other twice four years ago when they were just starting out in professional tennis. Svitolina got the win over her in the semis before capturing what would be her first career WTA title. Cadantu holds a win over the Ukrainian as well and would try to make her remember that in the second round in Turkey. The Romanian had a thriller against Nao Hibino winning in a three setter that saw her run away to victory. With Svitolina as the number one it clearly has her a target but hopes that she won’t deal with another tough opponent and minimize the time on court.

She dealt with the fight from Cadantu early but read her opponents moves on court to counteract them. It was in the third that she blasted out a break before consolidating it with a 3-1 lead in the set. The 26 year old caught on fast and began moving on Svitolina’s rally to redirect the returns. She ended the short streak of the Ukrainian for a break with the chance to even the score. Cadantu brought heat in the sixth putting together a series of ground strokes that got the best of Svitolina to erase her margin halfway.

Svitolina knew that she could let herself get out of hand and rallied back to take care of business. The number one seed held firm for a love service in the second before breaking the Romanian thereafter. The 22 year old completed the dominance with another service hold that ended with a drive landing just inside the baseline to give her the set lead after 41 minutes. During the break, Svitolina took a chat with coach Andrew Bettles who came out to listen to his athlete and give her some points to go along with the good that she already had performed on court. He also had input on her opponent and some ways she could counteract them in the second set.

Cadantu had the ball in hand to start the set but didn’t expect such adversity to take place in the opening game. For the next eight and a half minutes, the Romanian and Svitolina got into a lockdown on deuce that almost saw no end. Cadantu made a final move that gave her the win but couldn’t help her consolidate another. The world number 13 made that her mission to do such work and gained two straight against the 26 year old.

The score was tied through four after Cadantu made a strike on the break which gave her momentum to move things her way. She held serve in the fifth with the hopes that she could earn another break from Svitolina and dictate the remainder of the set. Before she could get that to occur, Cadantu got herself into a nice service hold that challenged Svitolina to do the same as the set inched closer to an ending. In response to the tie, Svitolina broke the Romanian in the seventh and followed it up with a very strong service hold staying well in control of her ball placement.

It had Cadantu on the ropes at 3-5 hoping to find ways to counter Svitolina. She couldn’t ask the Ukrainian scored with her consistency of winner that led her to three match points. A final winner on the night brought an end to the match with the number one safely through to the quarterfinals.

She’ll have little time to rest as she’ll face another Romanian in the form of Sorana Cirstea who has won her last two matches in straight sets.