Maria Sakkari, Paula Badosa cruise in WTA Finals openers
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[November 12, 2021] Maria
Sakkari is fond of Iga Swiatek, but the fourth-seeded Greek player
showed no mercy to her fifth-seeded Polish opponent Thursday until
after their first-round match at the WTA Finals at Guadalajara,
Mexico.
Sakkari rolled to a 6-2, 6-4 victory in 87 minutes to open Group A.
The group's second match was even more one-sided, with No. 7 Paula
Badosa of Spain routing No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus 6-4, 6-0 in
77 minutes.
Sakkari, the first Greek woman ever to make the WTA Finals,
attempted to comfort a crying Swiatek at the matching end, hugging
her at the net.
"More than anything we're human," said Sakkari, 26. "OK, it's
another tennis match. She's only 20 years old. She's going to have
many more chances than I'll have in the future because it's only the
beginning for her.
"I saw that she was struggling. It wasn't a nice thing to see from
the other side of the net. She's a very, very nice girl. I mean, we
always have great practices and great chats."
Sakkari never dropped her serve, saving both break points she faced.
She finished with a 15-8 edge in winners and had fewer unforced
errors, 29-22.
"I actually have a good game to play against her," said Sakkari, who
improved to 3-0 in her career vs. Swiatek. "All three times I played
her, I played one of the best matches of the season. Like even
today, I think I was very solid in these conditions."
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Badosa was similarly effective against Sabalenka,
particularly on the key points. She converted all five of her break
opportunities and saved six of Sabalenka's seven break chances.
While the winner totals were nearly identical (15-14 for Sabalenka),
the Belarusian struggled with unforced errors, giving along 31
points to just 19 from Badosa.
Group B play continues Friday. No. 8 Anett Kontaveit of Estonia and
No. 3 Karolina Pliskova of the Czech Republic face off in a matchup
of players who won their openers, while No. 6 Garbine Muguruza of
Spain and No. 2 Barbora Krejcikova of the Czech Republic will
attempt to bounce back from opening defeats.
The top two players in each group will advance to
the semifinals.
Upper Austria Ladies Linz
The semifinals in Linz, Austria, were cut short, with one match
ending after one set and the other never getting started.
Lucky loser Jaqueline Cristian got through to the final when her
Romanian compatriot, second-seeded Simona Halep, was forced to
default due to a left knee injury. Cristian became the fifth WTA
Tour player in the past 21 years to lose in qualifying for a
tournament, then luck into a spot the main draw and advance all the
way to the final.
In an all-United States semifinal, eighth-seeded Alison Riske won
the first set 7-5, then advanced when Danielle Collins was forced to
retire because of a right shoulder injury.
--Field Level Media
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