Sharapova’s dream fades Maria Sharapova

SINGAPORE. — Maria Sharapova’s hopes of ending a year as world number one for the first time in her tennis career faded dramatically yesterday when she crashed in straight sets to Petra Kvitova at the WTA Finals.
The Russian superstar needed a win to boost her chances of overtaking top-ranked Serena Williams but she blew up in spectacular fashion as Kvitova won 6-3, 6-2 in 75 minutes in Singapore.

It was the second upset in quick succession at the season finale after Simona Halep stunned Williams 6-0, 6-2 on Wednesday, the 18-time Grand Slam-winner’s worst defeat in 16 years.

To finish the year as world number one, second-ranked Sharapova (27) now needs to win the end-of-season championship and hope Williams doesn’t reach the final.

But her first loss to Kvitova since 2011 left her campaign hanging by a thread as she sits bottom of White Group with two defeats and one round-robin match left against Agnieszka Radwanska.

“Of course I had a long match, over three hours a day ago, but I don’t feel tired,” said Sharapova, who went down in three sets to Caroline Wozniacki in her opening match.

“I’m happy to be here, I’m happy to be part of this event. It’s easy to sit here and say, ‘Yeah, I’m tired’. I lost two matches. But that’s not the way I feel or the way that I choose to speak.

“I still have a match ahead of me, and I will do my best to finish it on a good note. That’s the only thing I can ask of myself.”
It was a very different story for the resurgent Wozniacki, who beat Radwanska 7-5, 6-3 to near a spot in the semi-finals. Sharapova won the first two games against Kvitova but then went to pieces as the Wimbledon champion won the next five straight and took the first set 6-3.

Another run of five games put Kvitova on the verge of victory before Sharapova finally earned a break of her own, and then saved two match points as she clung on in a 10-minute hold of serve at 5-1 down.

However, her resistance was broken when on the third match point, Kvitova blasted a magical looping forehand which landed on the baseline and beyond the crestfallen Russian.

Wozniacki took more than three hours to beat Sharapova on Tuesday and another long match looked likely when she fought with Radwanska in a tight opening set which featured five breaks of serve. — AFP.

 

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