Sharapova
delights at gutsy win on return from layoff
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[October 26, 2015]
By John O'Brien
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Maria Sharapova had
not completed a match since losing at Wimbledon in July, so the Russian
was naturally thrilled to emerge with a victory at the WTA finals on
Sunday after taking time to heal from a number of ailments.
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The world number three skipped the U.S. Open in September with a leg
strain and aborted a comeback bid in Wuhan at the end of last month
in the hope of being fit for the elite eight-woman event. Her
patience paid off with a typical gritty win.
Shaking off rust took a little time in her opening Red Group
encounter against Agnieszka Radwanska and despite dropping the first
set, Sharapova raised her intensity levels enough to grind out a
gutsy 4-6 6-3 6-4 triumph.
"Well, I haven't completed a match since July, so I think it's
always challenging to come back from not one injury, but a few,"
Sharapova told reporters after surviving a two hour, 48 minute
marathon against the tenacious Pole.
"I've had a lot of starts and stops and I was just really thrilled
that despite not playing these last few months and not playing my
best tennis, I was facing an opponent that obviously deserved a spot
in tournament.
"I just felt like I was able to take myself to another level
physically, which I didn't exactly expect that I would be able to.
So I think that was the emotion that I felt out of it."
Facing off against a player renowned for her incredible retrieving
skills was always likely to be a stamina-sapping test, so Sharapova
was impressed by her ability to stay consistent as the clock ticked
towards the three hour mark.
"I thought it was a very physical match. I think this court requires
all the matches to be. I think it's on the slower side... points are
longer," the 28-year-old said of the Singapore Indoor Stadium
surface.
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"It suits her game quite well. The ball stays low and she can take
it quite early and change direction," she added.
"We had quite a bit of long rallies. There was a lot of running.
Right now I feel good. Toes are a little frozen but other than that
I'm fine."
One facet of her game that Sharapova needs to work on is cutting
down unforced errors when the finishing line is in sight after
Radwanska fought back from 5-2 down in the decider to almost level
the scores as the Russian wobbled.
"I felt like my feet were glued on the ground and I wasn't making
the small steps to the ball," she admitted.
"I wanted to get a free point, go for a big first serve, a big first
ball and that's just not... obviously I had to learn from the whole
match that was just not very possible."
(Editing by Toby Davis)
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