Madrid Open Daily Preview: The Women’s Semifinals - UBITENNIS
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Madrid Open Daily Preview: The Women’s Semifinals

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Maria Sakkari on Tuesday in Madrid (twitter.com/MutuaMadridOpen)

The women’s singles semifinals will be staged on Thursday, featuring four of the top 12 seeds.

The top two players in the world, Iga Swiatek and Aryna Sabalenka, are just one round away from a rematch of the Stuttgart final of two weeks ago.  But first, they must respectively get past Veronika Kudermetova and Maria Sakkari.

Also on Thursday, the second two men’s singles quarterfinals will be decided.  One features the fourth seed taking on a lucky loser, while the other includes two players ranked 99th and 121st in the world.

And the men’s doubles semifinals on Thursday feature four of the top eight seeds, as well as top singles players Andrey Rublev and Karen Khachanov.

Each day, this preview will analyze the two most intriguing matchups, while highlighting other notable matches on the schedule.  Thursday’s play gets underway at 1:00pm local time.


Maria Sakkari (9) vs. Aryna Sabalenka (2) – Not Before 4:00pm on Manolo Santana Stadium

Sabalenka is a superb 27-4 on the year, and has reached the quarterfinals or better at every tournament she’s played.  Aryna won this event two years ago, and has dropped only one set heading into this semifinal.

Sakkari is 19-8 this season, and into her fourth WTA semifinal of the year.  This is Maria’s eighth 1000-level semifinal, and she is 2-5 in her previous seven.

Semifinals remain a considerable stumbling block in Sakkari’s career.  She’s also 0-2 in Major semis, and 0-2 in the semis of the WTA Finals.  Sabalenka had similar issues earlier in her career, going 0-3 in Major semis, though that ended this year in Melbourne when she broke through and claimed her first Slam.

This is a rematch from the same round of the last joint-1000 tournament in Miami, when Aryna defeated Maria 6-2, 6-3.  Overall Sabalenka leads their head-to-head 5-3, with all eight matches taking place on hard courts.

Based on 2023 form, as well as Sakkari’s history in semifinals, Sabalenka is the favorite on Thursday.  But the Greek has been playing some of her best tennis of the season this fortnight, and should provide plenty of resistance to Aryna on this day.


Iga Swiatek (1) vs. Veronika Kudermetova (12) – Not Before 9:00pm on Manolo Santana Stadium

Swiatek is 24-4 in 2023, and 8-0 on clay.  And in almost Nadal-esque numbers, is now 52-7 lifetime on this surface at tour level.  Iga is 6-1 in WTA 1000 semifinals, but her only loss came in her most recent appearance, two months ago at Indian Wells, in a loss to Elena Rybakina.

Kudermetova was just 10-9 this season before arriving in Madrid, having lost six of her last seven matches.  But she’s competed excellently throughout this event.  Veronika has won all four of her matches in three sets, and even saved a match point against Daria Kasatkina.  This is her first WTA 1000 semifinal.

Swiatek is 3-0 against Kudermetova, and has frankly dominated all three meetings, with set scores of 6-3, 6-3, 6-1, 6-0, 6-0, 6-1.  And those sets were all contested on hard courts.  On clay, Iga’s best surface, the World No.1 is a huge favorite to advance to Saturday’s final.


Other Notable Matches on Thursday:

Zhizhen Zhang vs. Aslan Karatsev (Q) – Zhizhen has become the breakout story of this fortnight, with consecutive victories over Denis Shapovalov, Cam Norrie, and Taylor Fritz.  And most notably, all three of those wins were in a third-set tiebreak, saving three match points against Fritz.  This is the farthest a Chinese man has ever advanced as a Masters event.  Karatsev also defeated three seeded players to reach this stage: Botic van de Zandschulp, Alex de Minaur, and Daniil Medvedev.  Last October in Astana, Zhang beat Aslan in three sets.

Jan-Lennard Struff (LL) vs. Stefanos Tsitsipas (4) – Tsitsipas is 21-6 this season, and 9-2 on clay.  He is playing for his 14th Masters semifinal, and his third in Madrid.  Struff has now accumulated 32 match wins this year at all levels, and has won three consecutive three-setters.  Stefanos is 3-2 against Jan-Lennard at tour level, but Struff took their only meeting on clay, four years ago in Barcelona.


Thursday’s full Order of Play is here.

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Jack Draper Wins In Stuttgart, Potentially Faces Andy Murray in Round Two

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Jack Draper – ATP Monaco di Baviera 2024 (foto via Twitter @atptour)

Britain’s Jack Draper tight first round win headlined the opening day’s results at the Boss Open 2024 in Stuttgart – and possibly faces a second-round match with Andy Murray who takes on Marcos Giron tomorrow.

Less than 24 hours from the last ball being hit at Roland Garros, the ATP Tour had already switched surfaces onto the grass, and 22-year-old Draper was well tested but ultimately came through in two tie-breakers over Sebastian Ofner.

The sixth seed’s 7-6, 7-6 win contained just one break of serve each, both coming in the second set, as serve dominated proceedings on the faster grass courts in Germany.

While the Austrian won 75% on his first serve, Draper won a whopping 89% behind his first delivery as well as hitting eight aces. These kind of service stats will surely take him far during the grass court season.

“I thought it was a really good match,” Eurosport quoted Draper saying after his match. 
“Both of us played really clean tennis, executing really well.
“When it came down to it, I’m glad I competed really well and got over the line – it’s good to be back on the grass as well.”

There were also wins for Germany’s Yannick Hanfmann who won 6-3, 6-3 over wildcard Henri Squire, while compatriot Dominik Koepfer won in three sets over China’s Zhizhen Zhang 4-6, 7-6, 7-6. 

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Carlos Alcaraz Still Owns A Magical Racket

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The legend of Carlos Alcaraz and his magical racket lives on.

The 21-year-old Spaniard executed one magical shot after another with his racket and legs  Sunday afternoon in the French Open final. That bit of magic spelled defeat for Germany’s Alexander Zverev.

This was a final to remember, one of the great matches of all the Grand Slams. It just wasn’t in the cards for the 26-year-old Zverev to finally win a Grand Slam title.

HE HAD IT, THEN HE DIDN’T

Both players seemed to play a game of “he had it and then he didn’t.”

Alcaraz appeared to have everything under control in the first set, but Zverev rushed through the second set and then made a comeback from 5-2 down in the third set to win five straight games.

Zverev had everything going for him when he started the fourth set with a two-set advantage. It appeared that all the 6-6 Zverev had to do was to continue playing his masterful game of big serves and mighty ground strokes.

But Zverev couldn’t get started in the fourth set until he was down 4-0. So much for a smooth and easy ride to a Grand Slam title. By then, the magic of Alcaraz was heating up.

MAGIC OF ALCARAZ HEATING UP

Zverev still had his chances, even when he fell behind 2-1 in the fifth set. He had to feel pretty good about his chances when he took a triple break point lead against Alcaraz’s serve and appeared ready to even the set at 2-2. Even after Carlos came up with a winner to bring the  game score to double break point.

Zverev still was ready to even the entire match.

That’s when everything seemed to go haywire for the German, while all the while, Alcaraz was able to repeatedly come up with his magical shots as the Spaniard made critical shots that looked almost impossible to make.

ALCARAZ HEADED FOR GREATNESS

Everything for Zverev was lost in the magical racket of Alcaraz.

What was then initially called a game-ending Alcaraz double fault and a 2-2 deadlock quicky reversed itself and Alcaraz stayed alive by winning the next three points while taking a 3-1 advantage.

Zverev did get back to a 3-2 deficit and had a break point in the sixth game, but that was it for the hopes of Zverev. The last two games went rather easily in favor of Alcaraz to wrap up a 6-3, 2-6, 5-7, 6-1, 6-2 victory for Alcaraz.

That moved the Spaniard to a higher level of success on the ATP Tour. He became the youngest man to win Grand Slam titles on all of the different surfaces, clay, grass and hard courts.

Carlos Alcaraz and his magical racket appear to be headed for greatness.

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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Tsitsipas Brothers Hit With Trio Of Fines At French Open

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Stefanos Tsitsipas and his brother Petros have been fined more than 20,000 euros for multiple violations of the coaching rules at this year’s French Open. 

The brothers received a financial penalty during three different matches that they played in. Two of those were in the second and third rounds of the men’s doubles tournament. Furthermore, Stefanos was also penalised during his singles quarter-final match against Carlos Alcaraz, which he lost in straight sets. According to French newspaper L’Equipe, all three of those fines were issued as a result of coaching rules being broken.

Ironically, coaching is allowed during matches at the French Open but certain rules must be followed. ‘Verbal’ coaching can only be issued from the coaches and their team if they are sitting in the designated player’s box. Instructions must be limited to a few words and can only be given if the player is in the same half of the court as their coach. Although non-verbal coaching is allowed regardless of what side the player is on. Finally, players can’t start a conversation with their coach unless it is during a medical break, a bathroom break or when their opponent is changing clothes.

However, the Tsitsipas brothers have been found in violation of these rules, which is likely due to their animated father in the stands who is also their coach. Apostolos Tsitsipas has been given coaching violations in the past at other events, including the 2022 Australian Open. 

The value of the fines are €4,600 and €9,200 for the Tsitsipas brothers in the doubles, as well as an additional €7,400 just for Stefanos in the singles. In total, the value of their fines is €21,200. However, the penalty is unlikely to have an impact on the duo whose combined earnings for playing in this year’s French Open amount to roughly €495,000. 

So far in the tournament, the highest single fine to be issued this year was against Terence Atmane who hit a ball out of frustration that struck a fan in the stands. Atmane, who later apologised for his actions, managed to avoid getting disqualified from the match. Instead, he was fined €23,000. 

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