Ladies Semifinals Preview: Serena And Venus Williams Targets A Wimbledon Double - UBITENNIS
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Ladies Semifinals Preview: Serena And Venus Williams Targets A Wimbledon Double

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Once again a duo of American sisters is dominating headlines at the Wimbledon Championships. Serena and Venus Williams are both just one win away from playing each other in the final of the tournament for the fifth time in their careers. Standing in the way of the Williams sisters is Russian underdog Elena Vesnina and Australian Open champion Angelique Kerber.

(1) Serena Williams Vs Elena Vesnina

The first match that will get underway on centre court will feature world No.1 Serena against Vesnina. Closing in on Steffi Graf’s record of 22 grand slam titles, the defending champion will play Vesnina in a major tournament for the first time since the 2008 US Open.

Serena’s route to her 10th Wimbledon semifinal saw the top seed at both her best and worst. Dropping only one set in the tournament during the second round against Christina McHale, Serena has developed a trend of a sluggish start followed by a superb finish. Besides her tough test against McHale, the top seed has produced straight-sets wins over Amra Sadikovic, Annika Beck, Svetlana Kuznetsova and Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova.

Vesnina’s surprise run to her maiden major semifinal has also followed a similar route to her nemesis. In the fourth round she required almost three hours to get past Ekaterina Makarova 5-7, 6-1, 9-7. Then in the last eight, she crushed a tired Dominika Cibulkova, who was suffering from the after-effects of her last-16 clash with Agnieszka Radwanska. Earlier in the tournament, the world No.50 cruised past Tamira Paszek, Andrea Petkovic and Julia Boserup.

Serena’s record against Vesnina is a dominating one. She has won all four of their previous matches without dropping a set. The world No.1 is confident that she knows the game of her upcoming rival, despite not playing her for almost three years.

“I think she has a really good grass court game.  She has a really good serve.  I notice that she always works on things and she is always improving her game.” Williams said of Vesnina.
“She’s also very aggressive.  She comes to the net.  I know her game really, really well.  It’s good to play someone’s game that you know.”

The power and the odds are firmly on Serena’s side. She has suffered shocks at this stage before, most noticeably against Roberta Vinci at the 2015 US Open, but a loss to Vesnina remains unlikely. Vesnina is a tough player, but her Wimbledon fairy-tale is destined to be ended by Williams if the world No.1 is at the top of her game.

(4) Angelique Kerber Vs (8) Venus Williams

Angelique Kerber’s clash against tour veteran Venus promises to be a mouth-watering encounter. On one end of the spectrum, there is current Australian Open champion Kerber, a player that is yet to drop a set in the tournament. Then on the other is seven-time grand slam champion Venus, who at the age of 36 has become the oldest player to reach the last four in the tournament since Martina Navratilova in 1994.

Kerber’s route to her second Wimbledon semifinal has only one consisted of one match against a seeded player (fourth seed Simona Halep in the previous round). Cruising into the second week of the tournament, the world No.4 has dashed the hopes of Laura Robson, Varvara Lepchenko, Carina Witthoeft and Misaki Doi. Facing Halep in her biggest test of the tournament, the German dropped her serve six times, but still managed to close the match out 7-5, 7-6(2).

Venus’ Wimbledon run almost ended almost a week ago when she faced a match point against Russia’s Daria Kasatkina in the third round. During a two-hour-and-47-minute epic that was troubled by the British weather, the former world No.1 edged past the Russian 10-8 in the decider. Kasatkina wasn’t the only troublesome player in Venus’ 2016 Wimbledon journey. She was also taken to three sets in her second round match by Greece’s Maria Sakkari. It hasn’t always been marathon matches for the 36-year-old. In her two most recent matches, Venus defeated Carla Suarez Navarro and Yaroslava Shvedova in straight sets. The roller coaster Wimbledon experience  has certainly been a test of Venus’ mental and physical fitness.

The two women have played each other on five previous occasions with Kerber leading the head-to-head 3-2. The German finds herself in the rare position of having a winning head-to-head record against Venus and a grand slam final win over Serena. Facing a Williams sister is a daunting prospect for many players, but it is one that Kerber is relishing.

“She’s always dangerous on grass, especially here in Wimbledon. She has a lot of confidence right now. She played great matches.” Kerber said about Venus.
“I’m looking forward to play against her.  It’s the next challenge here.  It’s the semis.  I will just try to play like my last matches by being aggressive in my game.”

Kerber is the biggest threat to both William sisters’ journey to the title. She has already ruined Serena’s dream in Melbourne at the start of the year and she has the ability to cause more heartbreak against what must be a very tired Venus.

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Grand Slam

Australian Open Considering Switching Women’s Final To Sunday In Future

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The Australian Open could become the first Grand Slam to break away from the tradition of women playing their singles final first. 

According to a report from the Australian Associated Press, tournament chief Craig Tiley is open to making such a move which wouldn’t require any approval from either the WTA or ATP. However, they would likely need to consult with players first and no changes are set to be made in 2025. 

The reasoning for making such a change is due to the women’s final usually being shorter than the men’s best with it being a best-of-three set match. Compared to the men who play the best-of-five. Their thinking is that due to the length of men’s matches increasing in recent years, staging it on a Saturday would enable more people to watch the entire match compred to a Sunday when many are consious about staying up late due to the working week starting on Monday. 

This year’s Australian Open saw Jannik Sinner bounce back from two sets down to beat Daniil Medvedev in a epic encounter that lasted three hours and 46 minuites. Meanwhile, Aryna Sabalenka required an hour and 17 mnuites to beat China’s Qinwen Zheng and capture the title. 

Should such a switch take place, it is estimated that the Sunday finale would end at around 10:30pm local time instead of after midnight, which would make it more appealing to fans. Furthermore, it could throw the women’s final more into the spotlight. 

However, there will be obstacles that need to be addressed. The most significant for the Australian Open will be trying to ensure that their 48-hour recovery period between best-of-five-set men’s matches will still be followed. 

This year was the first time in history that the Melbourne major took place over 15 days with play starting on a Sunday. Organisers claimed that the move was done in order to prevent the number of late-night finishes. However, it has little effect on any matches that took place after the first round. 

It is throught that now the event is held over 15 days, it gives more room for organisers to schedule the men’s final for a Saturday. The proposal was discussed during this year’s Australian Open’s official debrief. 

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Grand Slam

It Wasn’t The Same Old Story On Sunday Down Under

Jannik Sinner won his first Grand Slam title on Sunday.

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(@janniksin - Twitter)

It’s been the same old story at the Australian Open for a long time in the men’s game.

One of the greats almost always would take the top prize Down Under. Either Novak Djokovic, Rafa Nadal, Roger Federer or even Stan Wawrinka always prevailed since 2006 at Melbourne.

And then came Jannik Sinner in 2024.

None of the other superstars were still around for Sunday’s final.

A DIFFERENT AUSTRALIAN OPEN

Yes, this time it was a different Australian Open.

But actually Sinner may have written his own story when he upended Djokovic in the semifinals. Without that experience, the slender Italian may not have been able to handle the pressure that Daniil Medvedev sent his way in the final.

Sinner was ready for the finish line after shocking Djokovic in the semifinals. It just took time to get there.

Sinner played within himself most of the last three sets of the final. A first-time Grand Slam finalist, Sinner played as if he belonged there in those three sets.

But, oh, those first two sets when Medvedev dominated play with his backhand from the middle of the court. Backhands usually are reserved for the backhand side of the court, but not with the tall Russian on the court.

SINNER DIDN’T PLAY HIS GAME AT FIRST

In a similar manner as women’s champion Aryna Sabalenka, Sinner followed up a big semifinal win with his own Australian Open title. Only, Sinner had to fight for five sets to accomplish his dream Down Under with a 3-6, 3-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-3 victory over Medvedev.

Sinner appeared to play far differently from his victory over Djokovic when he controlled the court with his aggressive play and power.

This time, Sinner started things conservatively with few aggressive winners, repeatedly leaving the corners wide open for Medvedev’s crafty, but hard hit strokes. Medvedev made Sinner  pay a price with a style of play that was just the opposite.

Medvedev played close to the baseline and aggressively hopped on balls with his backhand in whip-lash fashion. He hardly had to move as he conserved energy.

THE STRATEGY ALMOST WORKED TO PERFECTION

Medvedev’s strategy worked like a charm until Sinner served the ninth game of the third set as Medvedev once needed only six points for a possible Grand Slam title. Sinner managed to overcome a deuce score to win that game.

Medvedev fell behind 30-0 serving the 10th game of the set and then Sinner got his first set point. Sinner made it stand up and it was a new game after that.

Sinner didn’t appear to be ready for Medvedev’s game the first two sets, but the Italian then came alive. He became prepared for Medvedev, even after losing the first two sets.

Of course, Sabalenka got her boost from a surprising, but solid win over talented Coco Graff in the women’s semifinals. Sabalenka then was never really challenged by Qinwen Zheng in the final.

Sinner’s final was much different.  He was somewhat lucky to escape with  a win.

Medvedev almost wrapped up the title in the ninth game, but it didn’t happen. As a result, Sinner may have started his own success story in Grand Slam finals.

James Beck was the 2003 winner of the USTA National Media Award  for print media. A 1995 MBA graduate of The Citadel, he can be reached at Jamesbecktennis@gmail.com.

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Australian Open Daily Preview: Daniil Medvedev Plays Jannik Sinner for the Men’s Singles Championship

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Daniil Medvedev during Friday’s semifinals (twitter.com/AustralianOpen)

The men’s singles and women’s doubles championship matches are on Sunday in Melbourne.

Across the last 10 hard court Majors, Daniil Medvedev has now advanced to six championship matches, half of which have come in Melbourne.  In those finals, Medvedev is a meek 1-4.  However, this is the first time Medvedev is looking across the net at a man not named Rafael Nadal or Novak Djokovic, the two winningest male singles players of all-time at Grand Slam events.

And Medvedev can thank Jannik Sinner for that, who for the third time in their last four meetings, defeated Djokovic in Friday’s semifinals to reach his first Major final.  Since adding Darren Cahill to his team 18 months ago, one of tennis’s best coaches of all-time, Sinner’s game has continually and significantly improved, most evident in his three victories over Djokovic since November.  On Sunday, the most dominant male player of this fortnight looks to break more new ground in his young career.

Earlier on Sunday, in the women’s doubles championship match, it’s Lyudmyla Kichenok and Jelena Ostapenko (11) vs. Su-Wei Hsieh and Elise Mertens (2).  This is a first Major final for Kichenok, and a first in doubles for Ostapenko.  Su-Wei has won seven Majors in doubles, including her first mixed title earlier this week, and is 7-1 at this stage of Majors.  Mertens has won three Majors in women’s doubles, including Wimbledon in 2021 alongside Su-Wei.


Jannik Sinner (4) vs. Daniil Medvedev (3) – Not Before 7:30pm on Rod Laver Arena

Through six rounds, Sinner has dropped just one of 19 sets, which came against Djokovic in the semis.  But even that match was a rather comfortable win for the Italian, who lost only six games in the three sets he claimed.  Jannik has not just been the best ATP player this fortnight: he’s been the best ATP player since the last Major, with a record of 26-2.  The 22-year-old is 10-4 in ATP finals, with this of course being by far the biggest of his career to date.

Medvedev endured a much more complicated path to this final, completing 25 out of a possible 30 sets, which included three five-setters.  Two of those came in the last two rounds, against Hubert Hurkacz and Sascha Zverev.  Daniil has spent six more hours on court than Jannik, and has played for over 11 hours during the second week alone.  He is 20-16 in ATP Finals, with all 20 titles coming at different events.  But Medvedev can be rather streaky in finals: after losing five in a row, he won seven of eight, yet has now lost his last three.

And those last two losses came at the hands of Sinner, who beat him in both Beijing and Vienna.  Jannik also defeated Daniil in the semifinals of the ATP Finals in November, though all three of those recent matches were tight.  Prior to that, Medvedev had dominated their head-to-head 6-0, which includes two finals earlier in 2023.  All ten of their meetings have taken place on hard courts, and this is their first at a Major.

Based on their recent history, as well as their individual form this fortnight, I favor Sinner to win his first Major on Sunday.  While he’ll surely be nervous in the biggest match of his life, and could experience an emotional letdown coming off ending Novak’s undefeated record of 20-0 in Australian Open semis and finals, Jannik will be the much fresher player on this day.  Plus, he will feel confident after those three recent wins over Daniil, who has a lot of scar tissue to overcome in Major finals.  And after facing Medvedev so much within the past year, Sinner is well-versed on how to take advantage of Daniil’s deep return position.


Sunday’s full Order of Play is here.

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