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Rookie's No-Hit Bid Ends in 9th 🤏

Welcome to Upset City for the Top-Tiered in Women's Tennis: Indian Wells

JA AllenMar 16, 2010

Justine Henin goes down in straight sets in her second-round match! Top-seeded Svetlana Kuznetsova loses her opening salvo! Feisty Chinese player Jie Zheng clobbers favored Maria Sharapova

Kim Clijsters is sent packing by Alisa Kleybanova in a third-round thriller! Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez ousts No. 3 seed Victoria Azarenka!

It is like watching the air burst from a balloon, allowing the deflating latex to spiral around the room once in a final spurt of glory before coming to land limp and lifeless on the turf. 

So goes the WTA’s top seeds as well as those “comeback” players expected to win at the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells.

To set the proper mood for this much-anticipated Masters Series event, Venus and top-ranked Serena Williams boycotted the tournament for the ninth consecutive year. Dinara Safina pulled out early with a persistent back injury. That propelled world No. 3 Svetlana Kuznetsova into the top spot as the No. 1 seed as action got under way.

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Svetlana Kuznetsova’s Quarter

After earning a first-round bye, Kuznetsova met Carla Suarez Navarro in the second round—a match Kuznetsova lost, 6-4, 1-6, 6-2. The Russian was unable to fight back against the Spaniard, even after winning the second set in compelling fashion.

Kuznetsova lacked match fitness in facing Navarro who seemed much sharper and moved much better. Kuznetsova could not find the mental edge she needed as the No. 1 seed in this major tournament.

That should have opened things up for Clijsters in the upper half of the Kuznetsova quarter as the Belgian faced Russian Kleybanova in the third round. It was the Russian who edged Clijsters, however, at the finish line, 6-4, 1-6, 7-6, to advance. Now Navarro faces Kleybanova for a spot in the quarterfinals.

Sitting in the bottom half of this quarter is Jelena Jankovic, who hung on to defeat Sara Errani of Italy; now she must get through Shahar Peer to make it to the quarterfinal matchup. Peer has been playing fine tennis of late. This quarter is wide open!

Victoria Azarenka’s Quarter

Seeded No. 3 overall, Azarenka had a real shot at going deep, perhaps even winning at Indian Wells. But like so many seeds before her, Azarenka lost early to Martinez Sanchez during a third-round encounter.

Lurking in the wings, however, is another youngster, German Yanina Wickmayer, seeded No. 13 at Indian Wells. Wickmayer has shot up in the rankings since the U.S. Open and is on the rise.

In the bottom half of Azarenka’s quarter is the 2009 defending champion, Vera Zvonareva. The anticipated match from a year ago between Ana Ivanovic and Zvonareva will not happen because the floundering Serb Ivanovic was dismissed during her first match against Latvian Anastasia Sevastova.

Expect Zvonareva to take out Samantha Stosur and make it through to meet Wickmayer in the quarterfinal match.

Elena Dementieva’s Quarter

Justin Henin, the favorite of many to win this tournament, was sent packing in her second-round match against Gisela Dulko. This was a huge surprise and letdown for those assembled to watch the Belgian climb back up the rankings. But Dulko had Henin’s number during the match and gave nothing away to the Belgian who struggled to find her game over the course of the night. 

Subsequently, Dulko fell to Agnieszka Radwanska. Seeded No. 5, Radwanska is another newcomer to watch carefully. She will meet Marion Bartoli in the fourth round.

But the player who was especially pleased to see Henin dismissed is Russian Elena Dementieva, who was dismissed prematurely from the Australian Open by Henin. Seeded No. 4 here, expect Dementievia to meet Radwanska in the quarterfinal match.

Caroline Wozniacki’s Quarter

The big disappointment for Maria Sharapova’s fans in this quarter was Jie Zheng’s dismissal of the Russian beauty in round three.

It happened in large measure because Sharapova’s errant serve caused innumerable double faults and unforced errors. The Russian continues to struggle with her wayward game since returning to the tour after shoulder surgery. 

Zheng will next face wild-card entry Alicia Molik of Australia in the fourth round while Caroline Wozniacki will face veteran Nadia Petrova.

The Russian Petrova should prove to be Wozniacki’s biggest stumbling block in her quarter. Ultimately, expect Wozniacki to win that match and continue to the quarterfinals. The question is will the No. 2 seed hold on to play another day?

The results?

As the tour heads to the next big event in Miami, where Azarenka won her first big tournament last year, you have to wonder who will come out of Indian Wells with the advantage and the big ranking points.

Will the wily veteran and favorite Dementieva finally get a win here after making it to the semifinals in 2000 and 2005 and the finals in 2006, when she lost to Sharapova?

Or will the No. 2 seed, Wozniacki, who made it to the quarterfinals in 2009, losing to eventual champion Zvonareva, finally take this tournament title as her own? 

Perhaps someone else will take the trophy, including the defending champion Zvonareva? Maybe it will mark a significant comeback for former world No. 1 Jelena Jankovic.

The only thing we know for certain is that seeds have been dropping like dead weights and there is no one who seems to be destined to win. Stay tuned...

Rookie's No-Hit Bid Ends in 9th 🤏

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