AFP/Wuhan
Venus Williams won her biggest title in five years at the Wuhan Open yesterday after Garbine Muguruza retired, making her the fifth player to pull out mid-match in the late-season tournament.
Williams took the first set and was three games up in the second when the Spaniard stopped play at 53 minutes, handing the American veteran the 47th title win of her career, and her first victory at a WTA Premier Five event since she beat Victoria Azarenka in 2010 in Dubai.
Wimbledon finalist Muguruza—ranked world number eight, 16 places ahead of American veteran Williams—had a tough semi-final against Germany’s Angelique Kerber, winning in straight sets but falling during the closing tie break and injuring her ankle. But the 21-year-old said it was exhaustion not injury that made her pull out. “It’s a sad day I had to retire. Sometimes your body’s not recovered,” the 21-year-old said on court after the match.
Muguruza called her coach Sam Sumyk—who was wearing a t-shirt bearing the phrase “It’s not my fault”—on court during the first set but no words of advice could change the slow pace of the match. “I had my chances. But I knew with Venus, it’s hard with her serve, with her shots, if you’re not 100 percent,” the Spaniard said.
Williams, who turned pro the year that Muguruza was born, was also struggling during the final with leg pain and had both of her thighs wrapped. But she said that experience gained during her more than two-decade long career allowed her to put the injury out of her mind. “By the time I’m on the court, I’ve blocked it (pain) out if I’ve decided I’m going to play. At that point I’m in the match and not anywhere else,” Williams said.
Walking wounded
Williams had a gruelling semi-final the day before against her sister Serena’s nemesis Roberta Vinci—who beat Serena in the US Open semi-final, denying her a chance at the first calendar Grand Slam since 1988.
The title winner conceded that she would have had a tough match against Muguruza if her young opponent had been on form.
“I probably wouldn’t have had many chances if you (Muguruza) had been feeling well,” Williams said in an on court interview.
The 2006 women’s final at the Australian Open was also won on a retirement, with German Justine Henin-Hardenne handing France’s Amelie Mauresmo her first Grand Slam victory when she pulled out in the second set.
Novak Djokovic took his third consecutive title at last year’s ATP World Tour Finals when Roger Federer withdrew hours before the match blaming his decision on pain and his age.
Maria Sharapova led the charge of the walking wounded at Wuhan, retiring in the second set of her first match since Wimbledon. The world number three was followed by two-time major-winner Azarenka, Tokyo finalist Belinda Bencic and Coco Vandeweghe during her quarter-final meet with Angelique Kerber. The title win at Wuhan will put Williams inside the top 15 when the new rankings are released on Monday, after entering Wuhan as number 24.
The former world number one was diagnosed with an autoimmune disease in 2011, and while she continues to play some tournaments, she has struggled with her health and slipped down the rankings. Williams could now qualify for the season-ending WTA championships in Singapore, which she has not reached since 2009.
Muguruza will also achieve a career high of five in the world rankings after making the finals at Wuhan, and is sure to qualify for Singapore, barring any major upsets in next week’s China Open in Beijing.
Japan’s Nao Hibino wins Tashkent Open
Emerging Japanese star Nao Hibino captured her first WTA career title yesterday when she won the Tashkent Open.
Ranked 119th in the world and playing in the main draw of a WTA event for just the second time, the 20-year-old Hibino beat Croatian teenager Donna Vekic 6-2, 6-2 in the final.
Hibino did not drop a set in the entire tournament as she became just the 10th Japanese woman to win on the WTA tour.
“I’m so happy to win the first WTA title of my career here in Tashkent,” she said at the presentation. Vekic also finished runner-up at the Tashkent Open in 2012, when she was just 16. The Croatian won her first WTA title in Malaysia last year.
‘Humble’ Ivanovic coy on WTA Finals hopes
Ana Ivanovic didn’t dare to discuss her chances of reaching the end-of-season WTA Finals yesterday despite making a rip-roaring start to the China Open.
After a slow opening, the former world number one reeled off 10 games in a row to beat a shell-shocked Casey Dellacqua 6-4, 6-0 and set up a second-round match with Venus Williams. A raft of late-season injuries and retirements have raised the chances of ninth-ranked Ivanovic reaching the year-ender in Singapore but she refused to jinx herself by discussing it publicly.
“To be honest I’m not looking that far ahead. Every time you think about that it kind of backfires,” she said.
“You have to really stay humble and work hard for each match. We see there are so many tough opponents out there... so you really have to keep your head in the right place and play like you practice.”
Ivanovic is currently about 800 points adrift in the race for the eight-player WTA Finals later this month, with 1,000 points going to the winner in Beijing.
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