Tag Archives: Svetlana Kuznetsova

the heart of the matter

Maybe it’s because so much tennis is being played, maybe it’s because the stakes aren’t yet that high, but in the beginning of a major tournament the focus of attention isn’t always on the role that heart plays.  But if you want to see heart on the court, heart that makes the difference, that is the critical component,  stick around for the quarterfinals, the gateway to what matters most to players, a Grand Slam title.

It was well on display today on both Chatrier and Suzanne Lenglen.  Francesca Schiavone, the defending champion, found herself in a deep hole the same size as the one Maria Sharapova was in a few days ago in her match against newcomer Caroline Garcia.  Nineteen year old Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, the last teenager in the draw, was having her way with the nearly thirty one year old veteran.  The score?  6-1, 4-1.  In the words of the late Yogi Berra, it’s getting late early.

How was Schiavone going to get herself out of this one?  Well, Maria did it with steely determination, unwaivering self-belief and that worked for her, it usually does.  Francesca is Italian, though.  She’s all heart.

She came back to win the second set 7-5.  The third set was a topsy turvy affair.  Francesca took the lead 5-1 and served for it at 5-2, but couldn’t convert.  She served for it again at 5-4, and couldn’t convert.  Yikes.  The wind was swirling, the temperatures were cool.  Conditions were difficult.

Finally she broke her opponent to go up 6-5 and then she served for the match for the third time.  She had two match points that went begging.  Finally, Francesca created a third match point for herself with a drop shot executed from the baseline, to perfection.  Gutsy.  You could see her look up at her box, on their feet, and say “Forza!”

And so, finally again, on that match point, a microcosm of the whole match, Anastasia made a volley reply and Schiavone drove it past her for a winner down the line, taking the deciding set 7-5 as well.

Walking off the court, Francesca scooped a handful of the red clay and smeared it on her face.

Who wants it more?  Who doesn’t get tight?  Who doesn’t choke?  Who has the most heart?

All of these questions were to be answered on Lenglen in the fifth set between Murray and Troicki, the resumption of their match from the day before that was suspended as darkness fell, two sets each.   Murray came from two sets down to take sets three and four, and when they took the court this afternoon for the deciding set, he was working from behind all the way again.

Troicki went out to a 5-2 lead.  He served for the match at 5-3 and was up 30-0, two points from the victory,  and then the wheels fell off.  He choked, he got tight, you could see it.  He kept looking around and up to his box with a self-defeating smile, shoulder shrugs that seemed to say it was out of his control, it was someone else’s fault.  That is not going to get it done.  That is the opposite of heart, of digging deep.

Nineteen minutes later Murray had charged back all the way and was at 6-5, serving for the match himself.  He went up 40-0, Troicki fought back and saved those three match points.  But it was too little too late.  Murray had a fourth match point on the Ad and as in the women’s match, he ended the last point, requiring some incredible gets from him that he made, with a glorious shot, in this case a backhand crosscourt passing shot for the winner.  This is the fifth time in his career that Murray has come back from two sets to love to win a five setter.

Murray is into the quarterfinals (the match against Troicki was still round of 16) and he’ll play Juan Ignacio Chela, a match he is much the favorite to win.

While Djokovic was having another day off, due to Fognini’s withdrawal, Roger Federer and Gael Monfils took the court for their quarterfinal match.  Roger won the first two sets and you had to wonder if it was already over or if Gael was going to put up more of a fight.  To his credit he played a very competitive third set, 6-6,  but Roger went out in front in the tiebreak and never looked back.

At 6-1 in the tiebreak, I found myself saying out loud “A handful of match points”, only to be echoed in exactly those words by Patrick McEnroe who was calling the match on ESPN.  Hey, Patrick, wanna spend more time at home with the wife and kids?  I’m available.

Federer has not dropped a set in the tournament.  And this is his 28th consecutive appearance in a Grand Slam quarterfinal or better.  Think about that.  Seven years, all four tournaments, round and round we go from Paris to London to New York to Melbourne and start all over again, not to mention all the other stops on the tour.  He has never retired from a match; he has been nearly totally injury free.  It makes a case for staying relaxed in your body.  He’s fluid, light on his feet.  Even Rafa Nadal has said that he would play like Federer if he could, that it takes much more effort for him to play his game.

Roger will play Novak in the semifinals on Friday.  It should be a fantastic, exciting match.

On both the men’s and women’s sides, history is being made in this year’s French.  Never before in the Open era have the top three women’s seeds been gone before the second week.  And never before have all five of the top men’s seeds advanced.

In a day of play that was marked by heart, the match between Svetlana Kuznetsova and Marion Bartoli on Lenglen was no exception.  Sveta won the French in 2009, I saw her win it against Dinara Safina (who?), someone you had to feel sorry for she went into such a meltdown.  Kuzy, as she is known, is the first to admit she often gets nervous at the end of big matches, but that day Safina’s nerves took up all the air and space.

Today, Marion Bartoli was on her game.  She’s such a quirky player, with the weird serve motion, and the constant jumping around and shadow cuts at the ball to get ready.  She’s a little chunky too.  But she hits the ball well off of both sides, two hands for forehand and backhand, and if you get it in her strike zone, she’s lethal.  Today she was relentless and Sveta played well, but not quite well enough.  Was it heart?  Lord knows Marion wanted it.  She’s French, the crowd was really behind her and she used it and worked it.

She served for it at 5-2 in the second, having won the first in a tiebreak.  Unable to close the door, she got another chance at 5-4 and she took it.

At this level of tennis, you can’t fade, you can’t blame, you can’t hold back.  Famously, Guga Kuerten, drew a heart on the clay on Chatrier, and then lay down inside it.  That says it all.

gustavo kuerten at roland garros, laying in the heart he drew in the clay

guga laying in the heart he drew

(Via Kamakshi Tandon)

One last comment on today’s action.  There was a unique moment in the Murray Troicki match early in their deciding set.  A ball kid thought the point was over when Troicki, up at the net, hit an overhead, but Murray got it back and Troicki angled another overhead for a winner.  But just as he was going for that shot, the ball kid was running out on the court at the net, just barely not colliding with him.  It was disruption of play, unintended, and the umpire ruled that the point be replayed.  Troicki was upset, understandably.  The kid felt terrible, a young boy, maybe ten or twelve. Being a ball kid in France is a huge honor, thousands of kids apply from all over the country for the coveted positions.  A point or two later when the same boy hesitated to retrieve the ball, Troicki messed with him in a way that was testy and unkind and to my mind, showed his true character, not a pretty picture.  I just hope the head of the ball kids wasn’t too hard on him.

That’s it for today.  This is really a fun, special French Open.  Stay tuned for the remaining matches, there are bound to be some great moments.

See you tomorrow at Cupcakes and Tennis, the tennis blog with a sweet spot.

happy memorial day

Here it’s Memorial Day Monday, in Paris it’s Day 9 of the French Open.  If you were judging from the packed stands on Chatrier and Suzanne Lenglen this afternoon, though, you’d swear it was a holiday.

One of the most exciting matches of the tournament so far was the two parter between David Ferrer and Gael Monfils.  With Monfils up two sets to one and Ferrer  up 2-0 in the fourth set, play was suspended last night due to darkness.  The two opponents had to wait out a five setter between Chela and Falla, the former taking the victory, before they could get on court today to finish.  There was a great shot of them in the players’ lounge hanging around until they were called with Ferrer sitting up right next to a reclining, possibly sleeping, Monfils.

Finally on court, Ferrer continued to press in the set he already had a lead in and took it rather quickly 6-1.  But then Gael actually did wake up from his nap and the fifth set was completely riveting.  Gael broke early to take a 3-1 lead.  At 5-3 Monfils served for the match. The crowd was just wildly excited.   He had two match points and relatively easy shots for the win on both of them and he dinked them into the net.  Ferrer ended up breaking for 5-4.  That quieted the crowd down.

They go into fifth set no tiebreak battle.  In the next game, Monfils had another match point, his third, and couldn’t convert.  Ferrer got out of that game, 6-6.   At 7-6, Monfils in the lead, Ferrer quickly dug himself in a deep hole, 0-40,  and all of a sudden, Monfils is looking at three more match points.  After squandering three, who knew he would get all these chances again, and so soon?  He was not to be denied this time, winning the match on the fourth match point with a no guts no glory passing shot down the line, 8-6 in the fifth.  The French crowd, not a seat empty, were rewarded and could go have dinner.

In the 6-5 game, there were a couple of dicey line calls on Monfils’ serve.  On the first, Ferrer walked up to the line and immediately rubbed out the mark, indicating it had been good.  But shotspot showed it had been out.  It happened again, Monfils now with two serves instead of a second serve only, and the chair umpire came out to have a look and called it good, giving Monfils another first serve, but shotspot again showed it to be out.  Now the technology isn’t one hundred percent, but it’s pretty close.  At moments like these in matches, this kind of thing gone wrong can be terribly expensive, can cost someone the match.  Ferrer ended up winning that point, but still.

Monfils will face Federer in the quarterfinals and I imagine it will be a lot of fun to watch, but I don’t think Roger is going to walk off the loser.  I’m a big fan of Ferrer, but I doubt he would have given Roger trouble in the end.  Against both these players, Federer has been dominant.

What is great is to see Monfils doing more with his talent than he has previously.  His coach, Roger Rashid, has been with him for three years, a record in itself apparently as Monfils has gone through coaches like they were paper napkins.  Rashid coached Lleyton Hewitt, a player who is more like Ferrer, no work too hard or too much, fighter spirit, utterly maxing out on what they’ve got to work with on small frames.  For Roger Rashid to make an impact on Monfils has been exceedingly difficult it seems.  He’s tried hard to get Gael in better physical condition so he won’t suffer all the injuries he’s had, and you can actually see him shouting at Gael on court to play harder, want it more.  I’d bet there have been more than a few times that he thought of throwing in the towel, I don’t need this shit, and getting on a plane back to his family in Australia.

That’s the thing about coaching, it takes you on the road for weeks and weeks every year.  If you’re going to do it, you damn well better have a player who makes it worth your while.

Nadal won his match against 32 year old Ivan Ljubicic, in straights, but in his press conference afterwards, he spoke candidly about how he still isn’t feeling quite right out there.  Not as consistent, more nervous at times.  If Rafa thinks he’s a different Rafa, at least so far, on court at his beloved French, I guess we ought to believe him.

Meanwhile, fierce contender and Superman tennis player Novak Djokovic is into the semifinals.  He won’t be playing a quarterfinal match because Fabio Fognini had to withdraw with what indeed wasn’t just cramping yesterday.  He’s got a muscle tear and it won’t get better in time for him to play the match tomorrow.  You had to feel bad for the guy.  His best result in a major, about to have the opportunity to maybe be the one who breaks the Novak streak, or at least have the challenge of playing him on Chatrier, a huge pleasure and privilege, and he can’t do it.

Andy Murray and Victor Troicki played the last match of the day on Lenglen and they’ll have to finish it tomorrow.  At first it looked like Murray was having real difficulty moving, the result of a bad ankle tweak two days ago.  But he fought back and the players walked off at darkness with one deciding set yet to be played.  Don’t miss that tomorrow.

On the women’s side, Li Na defeated Petra Kvitova, both surprising and not.  Either one of them could have won that match, but Kvitova beat herself.

Maria Sharapova faced off against Agnes Radwanska and piled up huge numbers of winners and unforced errors in a game of total aggression on her part and steady play by her opponent.  But Maria is playing well and when you combine that with her dogged determination, she’s going to come out on top.  Aggie had five set points to win the second set and take it to a third and she couldn’t close the door.  Maria did it instead winning the match 7-6, 7-5.

And on Court One, Andrea Petkovic, the German player who has come into the spotlight this year, won her match in three tough sets against Maria Kirilenko.  Last year she lost on the same court to Kuznetsova, so it must have felt good to her to take the victory this year.

Finally, Azarenka dispensed with Makarova in two easy sets.

So it’s down to eight women and you still don’t know who’s going to win.  Sharapova, Li Na, Schiavone, Petkovic, Azarenka, Pavlyuchenkova, Kuznetsova and Bartoli.  Do you know?  I don’t.  The quarterfinal matches should all be interesting.

And it’s down to seven men.  Nadal, Soderling, Chela, Monfils, Federer, Djokovic and either Murray or Troicki.  Besides Novak, already there, who else will be in the semis?

Still some great tennis to come as we now head into the true business end of the tournament.  Thanks for reading Cupcakes and Tennis, the tennis blog with a sweet spot.

men from the boys

It’s Day 6 and starting to be that time, the men from the boys time.  The goal of every player in a Grand Slam is to get to the second week.  Lucie Safarova is about to take the court against Vera Zvonareva, the second seed.  Lucie is Thomas Berdych’s girlfriend.  This one will probably go to Vera, but you never know.

Sharapova got through against Julia Georges of Germany.  I have not missed Maria’s shrieking, don’t know about you.  And Venus indeed did suffer a miserable injury the other day on court and was only able to play into the second game of the match against Petkovic last night.  It was the first time in her long career Venus retired from a Grand Slam match; as I said, she does not bow out because she has a cough.  The crowd was disappointed and unfortunately took that to the next stage, hostility.  They booed Venus as she left the court.  Unfortunate.

There was a wonderful moment between Chris McKendry and Brad Gilbert talking at the ESPN desk after the match between Justine Henin and Svetlana Kuznetsova.  Sveta won the match in two tough sets.  Brad Gilbert was talking about how much more fit she has gotten herself and exclaimed “she’s a full dress size smaller!”   To which Chris McKendry, she of the lovely figure and face and some great looking clothes, spontaneously combusted into a wide, genuine smile directed right into the camera.  As if to say to all the women out there, yes, you heard it first here, BG declaring Kuzzy is a full dress size smaller.  It was a great difference of the sexes moment.

Gilbert is like that, of course.  He has this kind of very specific awareness of measurements whether it’s dress size, wind speed or on court temperature.  He’ll say things like “I’d say the wind is 14 mph and the temperature is 87 degrees.”  Fowler is always chortling about this exactitude, ready to make fun of the guy.  Brad can convert serve speed from kph to mph faster than Andy Roddick can get the ball from here to there.

As for the win over Justine Henin, good on Sveta.  She’s a strong strong player, thighs like a linebacker, and she’s lost more matches that she played well but choked at the end than anyone cares to remember.  So no surprise that she served for the match not once but twice last night and failed both times, sending the second set to a tiebreaker.  It was 6-4 in the tiebreak, Sveta had two more chances to close it and succeeded on the second of the two.  What a relief.  She has a 2-16 record against Justine and 0-5 in Grand Slams, well, no longer, now it’s 1-5.  As Justine’s ball flew barely long and Kuzzy got the win, she pounded her chest a couple of times.  Pam Shriver commented that she usually doesn’t like it when players do that, and neither do I.  Djokovic almost always does it and puffs up like he’s going to burst.  To me, if you’ve got heart, you don’t need to point to it and probably shouldn’t, wouldn’t.  But Pam and I both got onboard with Sveta doing it last night, after all the losses to Justine, after serving for the match twice.  You knew if she lost that second set, it was going to be Justine in the third, so it really was a now or never situation.   Props to Sveta.

The match between Mikhail Youzhny and Milos Raonic, the twenty year old qualifier from Canada via Serbia has just finished and Raonic won it in four sets.  Of all the up and coming players on the men’s side, this guy is being talked about as the top of the heap.   Probably he will meet David Ferrer in the round of 16 though the outcome of the Ferrer/Bernakis match is not yet determined.

Yesterday featured a history making match between Francesca Schiavone, the reigning French Open Champion, and Svetlana Kuznetsova.  They took Hisense Arena court at about four in the afternoon and left, exhausted a la Isner and Mahut, four hours and forty minutes later.  The lucky fans saw the longest women’s match ever played in the Open era.  It went 16-14 in the third set, a set that took three hours to play.  Schiavone saved six match points in the early goings of the set.  As things progressed both players brought out their best tennis.  When you get that tired, I think your body goes some other place, you’re hitting on instinct and guts and heart.  It’s just all out, and that brings out the best.  Which is a thrill to watch.  So, my earlier assertion that you could have left on after Day 1 and not seen anything better is probably erroneous.  This was a fantastic match.

Schiavone meets Caroline Wozniacki next and it’s unlikely she’ll have much left in the tank.  As at Wimbledon with Isner and Mahut, it’s a case of winning the battle but losing the war.  Wozniacki is playing well, has not been sorely tested, and has energy for goofing on the press that a cut on her leg she got because she fell trying to go from one treadmill to another was caused by a kangaroo!  Oh to be twenty and gorgeous and have the whole Yale football team in love with you; it gives you confidence in all sorts of situations.  This week, after hearing the press was tired of her boring answers, she came in and told them she was tired of their boring questions.   She was smiling and did this in the nicest of ways.

Back to the tennis.  Roger got past Tommy Robredo in four sets.  Rafa, Murray, Soderling and Djokovic are all advancing.   Jurgen Melzer defeated Marco Baghdatis, an upset, and Alexnadr Dolgopolov of the Ukraine, who looks a little like a girl with his ponytail, took out Tsonga.   Cilic and Isner had a five set battle that Cilic won 9-7.   Ferrer is through and will meet Raonic next, an interesting match up.

Nadal told the press yesterday that he has had a virus since the beginning of the year and there was much talk about whether making this statement was advisable with general agreement it was not.  Everybody has something, most just don’t say it.  It does set down a track you don’t want or really need to set down.  Why let your opponents think you’re weak?  Why have this being talked about?  But Rafa is a straightforward guy, not a politician.  He’ll win or he won’t and it will happen on the court, not off.  There’s something to be said for it.

As for Andy Roddick, the last American man standing until last night.  The talk all week has been about his game not being sufficiently offensive to really threaten the big boys these days and the show on court last night against Stan Wawrinka was all the proof you needed.  Andy had absolutely nothing for Stan and the result was a straight set win, 3,4 and 4.  Roddick was completely frustrated, Stan was completely comfortable, laying in aces and winners like there was no tomorrow.  Divorce, which is apparently what is happening in Stan’s personal life, does not seem to be affecting him on the court.  He won the tournament in Chennai and is into the quarters of a Grand Slam.  Next he plays Roger and he could give him some trouble, but ultimately the Swiss Number 1 will beat the Swiss Number 2.  But do have a look at Stan’s one-handed backhand, one of the best in the game.

Meanwhile, if Andy Roddick wants to have any chance at all to compete in the second week of a major, he will need to change his game, become more aggressive.  Andre Agassi had to reinvent himself in the latter stages of his career.  It’s doable.  But the way Andy plays now, he can’t beat Roger or Rafa, or Murray or Soderling, or Novak or a growing list of other tennis players.

Oh, it was painful to watch Sam Stosur get knocked out.  She didn’t choke, as I  feared.  She just got outplayed by Petra Kvitova who has a big game and was on fire.  And Sam had a double break lead in the first set tiebreak and lost it.  A straight set win for Kvitova who shifts now from dark horse selection in the draw to real contender.

Petkovic won in straight sets over Maria Sharapova, Na Li advanced over Azarenka.  The joke going around about all the women players with last names ending in “ova” is ova and ova again.  Not counting qualifiers in the draw, there were 22 players out of 128 total whose last name ends in “ova”.

The tournament kicked off a week ago, it’s Monday morning in Melbourne, play begins in an hour. No Aussies or Americans left in the draw.   And the Packers are beating the Bears.  I’m about to win a dinner off a Chicago friend.