Anonymous wrote:I have been so delighted to see absolute joy on the faces of these two young players. We have all been starved for joy. I will be rooting for both of them. Neither can be truly disappointed with whatever the outcome is.
I can’t remember the last time I stayed up late to watch a tennis match! Agreed that this is a great tournament.
Anonymous wrote:I have been so delighted to see absolute joy on the faces of these two young players. We have all been starved for joy. I will be rooting for both of them. Neither can be truly disappointed with whatever the outcome is.
I can’t remember the last time I stayed up late to watch a tennis match! Agreed that this is a great tournament.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have been so delighted to see absolute joy on the faces of these two young players. We have all been starved for joy. I will be rooting for both of them. Neither can be truly disappointed with whatever the outcome is.
I can’t remember the last time I stayed up late to watch a tennis match! Agreed that this is a great tournament.
I also agree. I'm team Leylah, but I will be happy for whoever wins.
This has been a great tournament. I don't know how many others got sucked in to the Sakkari-Andreescu match the other night, but it was absolutely amazing. Such a shame it didn't start until after 11. Both women are so powerful and athletic. That was one of my favorite recent matches. It's such a shame that Maria had an off night last night.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Enjoy the teens but it doesn’t really speak well of women’s tennis that so many of the higher ranked players get hurt, can’t handle the pressure, or like Sabalenka choke and can’t close out matches. Maybe people will start to appreciate what Serena did more now that she’s no longer a contender.
In some ways, Sabalenka dictated many of the plays of the match. She goes for her shots with power and it was either lots of unforced errors or lots of winners. Leylah constructed a few good points, but for the most part just really needed to get the ball back. Lots of unforced errors especially the crucial double faults that put her at 3 match points down at 4-5 in the last set.
I felt terrible for Sabalenka. But she really let herself down there. The crowd didn’t help her a bit either. Fernandez got some illegal coaching according to whomever was commentating. Where is that ref from the infamous Serena Naomi final?
Anonymous wrote:I have been so delighted to see absolute joy on the faces of these two young players. We have all been starved for joy. I will be rooting for both of them. Neither can be truly disappointed with whatever the outcome is.
I can’t remember the last time I stayed up late to watch a tennis match! Agreed that this is a great tournament.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Enjoy the teens but it doesn’t really speak well of women’s tennis that so many of the higher ranked players get hurt, can’t handle the pressure, or like Sabalenka choke and can’t close out matches. Maybe people will start to appreciate what Serena did more now that she’s no longer a contender.
In some ways, Sabalenka dictated many of the plays of the match. She goes for her shots with power and it was either lots of unforced errors or lots of winners. Leylah constructed a few good points, but for the most part just really needed to get the ball back. Lots of unforced errors especially the crucial double faults that put her at 3 match points down at 4-5 in the last set.
Anonymous wrote:The nerves may be a factor for one. For each of them, to date, they had nothing to lose. Now they are going head to head with their peer. Whichever one wins it will be the same story and they have the same hunger. Great matches last night (and all these weeks). I'm so excited for the final.
Anonymous wrote:Enjoy the teens but it doesn’t really speak well of women’s tennis that so many of the higher ranked players get hurt, can’t handle the pressure, or like Sabalenka choke and can’t close out matches. Maybe people will start to appreciate what Serena did more now that she’s no longer a contender.