ATP/WTA Round-Up: April 28-May 11

May 13, 2014 | By Bennett Kelly
Photo credit: Adam Wolfthal

WTA
Portugal Open, April 26 – May 4
Oeiras, Portugal

Surface: Clay
Carla Suarez Navarro, the 16th ranked player in the world, made good on her number one seed in Portugal by winning her first WTA tournament, a three-set back and forth affair over the 7th-seed, Svetlana Kuznetsova. Suarez Navarro had previously gone 0 for 5 in finals, and it looked dire for the 25-year-old Spaniard after Kuznetsova jumped out to a 4-1 lead in the third set. But Kuznetsova unraveled into unforced error mode, and had four unforced in the final game alone that capped a five-game rally for Suarez Navarro, who finished with a 6-4, 3-6, 6-4 victory. Suarez Navarro leads the WTA tour in wins this year, with 26.

And it was the first trip back to a singles final since 2010 for the 28-year-old Kuznetsova, who is a two-time Grand Slam champion. Her biggest win of the tournament was a 6-4, 6-1 quarterfinal upset of the second seeded player, Eugenie Bouchard.



Madrid Open, May 3 – 11
Madrid, Spain
Surface: C
lay
A finalist last year, Maria Sharapova claimed the champion’s hardware this time around with a 1-6, 6-2, 6-3 victory over Simona Halep. The three-setter in the finale was Sharapova’s third match of the tournament to go the distance. After getting past American Christina McHale in three sets in the second round, Sharapova sent Grand Slam winners- Sam Stosur and Li Na- packing in the next two rounds, the latter of which also went three sets. Sharapova then defeated Agnieska Radwanska in the semifinals, this time in straight sets, for her third top-five victory of the tournament (Li, Radwanska and Halep).

The fifth-ranked Halep also played a difficult draw to reach the final, working through three top-20 players to get there- Sabine Lisicki, Ana Ivanovic and semifinalist Petra Kvitova. Kvitova reached the semifinal via a walkover from top-seeded and two-time reigning champ Serena Williams, citing a left thigh injury after a 6-2, 6-3 victory over Carla Suarez Navarro in the quarters.



ATP
Portugal Open, April 28 – May 5
Oeiras, Portugal

Surface: Clay
Unseeded and off the radar heading into the Portugal Open, 31-year-old Argentine Carlos Berlocq advanced to the final without dropping a set and defeated Thomas Berdych for the championship, 0-6, 7-5, 6-1, marking the second career title for Berlocq, both of which have come on clay. Defeating both the top seeded Berdych and second seeded Milos Raonic earned the veteran Berlocq an eleven-spot leap in the rankings, to 51st, which is ten spots below where he started in 2014. He now is 2-1 in ATP singles finals. As for the setting, Portugal may as well be a second home for Argentines. Berlocq is the fifth Argentine man to win the Portugal Open this decade, joining countryman Juan Martin del Potro, David Nalbandian, Gaston Gaudio and Juan Ignacio Chela in the winner’s circle.



Madrid Open, May 5 – 11
Madrid, Spain

Surface: Clay
Rafael Nadal won his fourth Madrid Open title with a victory over Kei Nishikori in the finals, 2-6, 6-4, 3-0 (ret.). Nishikori led Nadal 4-2 in the second set before his back flared up. The win reasserts Nadal’s position atop the clay court kingdom following his unprecedented title-less run in Monte Carlo and Barcelona.

Nishikori’s retirement from the final is brightened by a historic first: he is the first Japanese man to crack the ATP Top 10, effective once he reached the semifinals. But it was the second big tournament where Nishikori failed to complete a major round. In April, he withdrew from the Sony Open semifinals with a strained thigh. In Madrid it was a back injury. Despite the injury setbacks, he’s continued a steady rise from his year-end ranking of 17 to 9th, reaching the semifinals or better in three straight tournaments, including a win in Barcelona in April.

Madrid wasn’t kind to Stan Wawrinka, who won the previous Masters tournament last month in Monte Carlo. He was upset in the second round by the Austrian 20-year-old Dominic Thiem.



WTA Player to Watch
►Maria Sharapova: 
Sharapova moved her 2014 clay singles record to 11-0 after winning the Madrid Open, and is 46-3 on the surface dating back to 2011. Those three losses all came against Serena Williams. Heading into the French Open, where she is the reigning champ and reached the finals in 2012, Sharapova is gaining steam while a thigh injury nags Serena. Assuming Serena gets healthy enough by the May 25th start, a showdown between the two veterans looms, making a good a chance as any for Sharapova to snap her 15-match losing streak.

ATP Player to Watch
►Martin Klizan: 
Klizan, the 24-year-old Slovak who won the 2006 French Open junior title, entered the BMW Open in Munich as the 111th ranked player in the world. He won three rounds in qualifying, and then won all five rounds of the main draw to claim the prized trophy- a BMW convertible. Klizan’s triumph in Munich marks the first ATP title won this year by a player outside the top-100, but he’ll be hard pressed to match the feat for a while. After winning eight matches in nine days, Klizan moved up 49 spots to 62nd in the rankings. Klizan defeated Fabio Fognini 2-6, 6-1, 6-2 in the finals of the clay tourney. 


Bennett Kelly

Bennett Kelly may be reached by e-mail at bkelly1@fordham.edu.

Bethpage
Bethpage

March/April 2024 Digital Edition