Kvitova return adds sparkle to tough-to-call French Open
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[May 27, 2017]
By Julien Pretot
PARIS (Reuters) - The comeback of Petra
Kvitova will sprinkle some much needed stardust on this year's
French Open women's singles, with the absence of household names
Maria Sharapova and Serena Williams making the draw the toughest to
call in years.
Two-time champion Sharapova was denied a wildcard after returning
from a doping ban and three-time winner Williams is expecting a
child, while in-form Romanian Simona Halep has been struggling with
an ankle injury.
"The women’s is wide open I guess, because some of the top women
aren’t playing. There is an opportunity for someone who has never
won one to come through," former world number one John McEnroe told
Reuters.
"It’s as wide open as it’s been for a long time. Difficult to pick
someone right now.”
Adding to the uncertainty for the claycourt grand slam which starts
on Sunday, defending champion Garbine Muguruza, who has not won more
than three consecutive matches on the red dirt this season, was
handed a tough first-round draw against 2010 champion Francesca
Schiavone of Italy.
"It's very strange to find a first round with two past champions,"
Muguruza told reporters on Friday.
"And I saw her. I think she's playing good on clay. It's a good
match to start."Schiavone won the Bogota claycourt tournament and
reached the final in Rabat, also on clay.
The opportunity looks tailor-made for a new name to lift the Suzanne
Lenglen Cup with many pundits talking up the chances of Kristina
Mladenovic, runner-up in the Stuttgart and Madrid tournaments and
bidding to be the first French winner since Mary Pierce in 2000.
"(2014 runner-up) Halep was my pick but I don’t know how the ankle
is? I’m hoping she will be healthy," said 18-time grand slam
champion Chris Evert.
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Czech Republic's Petra Kvitova plays against China's Wang Yafan.
REUTERS/Thomas Peter/File Photo
"Mladenovic has a had a great claycourt season and I
think she will not be intimidated paying in Paris at all. She will
revel in it. She has reached a couple of finals and had a great
match against Halep in Madrid."
All eyes, however, will be on Kvitova when the Czech returns to
competitive tennis after recovering from being stabbed during a
burglary last December.
Kvitova said her left, playing hand, was not in perfect shape but
she was able to play.
"The hand doesn't have that power and the strength yet, but I'm
working on it. Hopefully one day everything will be perfect," the
two-time Wimbledon champion told reporters.
"I'm happy that when I'm playing I don't have pain in my hand. I
didn't test it in a match, of course. Maybe will be different when
the nerves come... but so far it's okay."
(Reporting by Julien Pretot and Martyn Herman; editing by John
Stonestreet) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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