Williams
guaranteed year-end number one ranking
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[October 24, 2014]
By John O'Brien
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Serena Williams
clinched the year-end world number one ranking for the fourth time
without hitting a ball on Friday after Maria Sharapova, the only woman
with any chance of overtaking her, was eliminated from the WTA Finals.
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Needing to win in straight sets to stand any chance of advancing
to the semi-finals, Sharapova lost the second set of her match
against Poland's Agnieszka Radwanska at Singapore's Indoor Stadium,
ending her slim hopes of leapfrogging Williams for the top spot.
Sharapova had led 7-5 5-1 and appeared to be cruising towards
victory but Radwanska dug deep to reel off five straight games and
force a tiebreak, which she won 7-4 to even up the match and
effectively eliminate the Russian from the tournament.
Sharapova had already lost to Caroline Wozniacki and Petra Kvitova
in the White Group and although she went on to beat Radwanska 7-5
6-7(4) 6-2, the win served only as a consolation with her opponent
eventually advancing to the last four.
"I got the job done. I know I'm not moving forward, but I'm proud of
that effort and to finish the year off on this way," Sharapova told
reporters of her victory.
"I will not be chasing the number one ranking next season, I think
adding more grand slams is the top priority," the five times major
champion added.
Despite receiving the rankings boost, Williams, who previously
finished the year ranked number one in the world in 2002, 2009 and
2013, faces an anxious wait before knowing whether she has advanced
to the semi-finals.
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The reigning U.S. Open champion thrashed Eugenie Bouchard 6-1 6-1
on Thursday to finish the round-robin phase with a 2-1 win-loss
record after beating Ana Ivanovic in her opening match and then
losing to Simona Halep.
The only way she can miss out on the semis is if Ivanovic beats
Halep in straight sets on Friday.
"Well, my fate really rests on me," Williams said after beating
Bouchard. "If I wanted to win and be a part of the event, I should
have won my match yesterday or should have done better.
"So whatever happens, happens at this time. I did the best that I
could do this week. I should have thought about that sooner."
(Editing by Sudipto Ganguly)
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