A magical two weeks for Marketa Vondrousova 💫
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 21, 2023
Enjoy our Ladies' champions' best points from #Wimbledon 2023 👇
This year was so eventful (in every possible way) that I could have easily compiled a top 20 list--and I almost did. Iga Swiatek lost her number 1 ranking to Aryna Sabalenka, then won it back. The WTA Finals were a near-disaster, taking place during hurricane season in a stadium that was still under construction when the players arrived. And Barbora Krejciova and Katerina Siniakova broke up their very long doubles partnership--at least for 2024, the Olympics notwithstanding.
Barbora Strycova, who had already played her final singles match, played the last doubles match of her career with long-time partner Hsieh Su-wei, and won the Wimbledon title. And Australia's Storm Hunter became the number 1 doubles player in the world.
All of the above items could be considered "11."
The season was filled with disappointments, and the biggest one, for me, was Daniela Hantuchova's pronouncement that WTA players should just accept things the way they are and stop trying to get more prize money. Actually, "disappointed" doesn't begin to describe what I felt (and still feel) when Hantuchova made this sexist and inane statement.
Here, in ascending order, are my 2023 top 10 happenings:
10. But of course she did: In March, Petra Kivitova did something that I seriously doubt anyone was expecting--she won the Miami Open. And she had a very tough draw--The Czech star defeated Linda Noskova (with a second set bagel), Donna Vekic, Varvara Gracheva, Ekaterina Alexandrova, Sorana Cirstea, and Elena Rybakina. Kvitova dropped only one set (to Alexandrova) during her Miami run.
9. All the wheels on fire: In 2023, the great Esther Vergeer was finally inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame. Vergeer's record as an athlete is mind-boggling, and unlike that of any other athlete, ever.
Also in 2023, Diede de Groot won her third consecutive singles Grand Slam and her sixth consecutive masters championship. (She won't be eligible to win a fourth consecutive Grand Slam because the Paralympic Games will coincide with the US. Open--more stupid scheduling.) Diede the Great's mentor is none other than Esther Vergeer.
8. Putting the "back!" in "comeback": Elina Svitolina has been a very busy woman the last few years. She got married, had a baby, had to deal with some health issues, and worked tirelessly for the Ukrainian cause. After taking a year off, the former top 5 player returned to the tour in the spring of 2023 with a new, less defense-oriented game, and she had a Wimbledon run that was unforgettable.
During the course of that run, wild card Svitolina knocked out five-time champion Venus Williams, Elise Mertens, Sofia Kenin, Victoria Azarenka, and world number 1 Iga Swiatek. She was finally stopped by eventual champion Marketa Vondrousova, but Svitolina's mastery of the grass courts was a highlight of the season.
7. Czech treasure: Two players whom I could watch over and over are Bianca Andreescu (when she's "on") and Karolina Muchova, and--don't you know--those are the two players who are so cursed with injury that we don't even get to see them that much. However, the clever and gracefully athletic Muchova was healthy for the French Open, and she put on one of the greatest shows of the season.
Muchova began her Parisian campaign by defeating 8th seed Maria Sakkari, and went on to defeat the likes of WTA upstart Elina Avanesyan, 2021 finalist Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, and 2nd seed Aryna Sabalenka. She lost the final to top seed and defending champion Iga Swiatek, but not before taking Swiatek to three sets. Muchova was a joy to watch throughout the tournament. She would go on to have a semifinal run at the U.S. Open, and to qualify for the WtA Finals, from which she had to withdraw because of--all together now--injury.
6. They the North!: For the first time in history, Canada won the Billie Jean King Cup (formerly known as Fed Cup). Led by an absolutely on-fire Leylah Fernandez, the Canadian team defeated Italy in the final. Fernandez had some expert assistance from Gabriela Dabrowski and also from newcomer Marina Stakusic, who defeated Italy's Martina Trevisan in straight sets in the opening rubber.
5. Business as usual: There are those who are convinced that she's innocent, and those who are convinced that she must be guilty; the doping case of Simona Halep is complex and somewhat confusing. But regardless, the treatment of Halep by those in power leaves much to be desired. There is simply no excuse for the constant delays that the Romanian star has had to endure in the course of having her case processed.
But this is what we have come to expect from the organizations that oversee doping rules. In the case of Maria Sharapova (which, in some ways, was similar to Halep's), the head of WADA made a public statement that was outrageously discriminatory against Sharapova. Such a statement would have cost him his job in any other venue, and that would have been the end of the case, but there was no pushback at all. There are other examples of the doping system's failure to act fairly and consistently, and someone needs to take a serious look at that system. In the meantime, Sinona Halep has to wait--and wait.
4. Meeting her potential: No one ever doubted the talent of Aryna
Sabalenka, but the Belarusian star has had her ups and downs,
especially concerning her errant serve. However, she began the 2023
season in the best way possible--by winning the Australian Open.
Sabalenka took out Elise Mertens, Belinda Bencic, Donna Vekic, Magda
Linnette, and 2022 Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina. Sabalenka would go
on to be the finalist at the 2023 U.S. Open.
3. It was only a matter of time: The question, "When will Coco Gauff win a major?" was answered this year when Gauff won the U.S. Open. Gauff, seeded 6th, knocked out Laura Siegemund, young star Mirra Andreeva, Elise Mertens, Caroline Wozniacki, Alona Ostapenko, Karolina Muchova, and 2nd seed Aryna Sabalenka.
2. A French trilogy: In 2020, an unseeded Iga Swiatek stunned the tennis world by winning the French Open without dropping a set. In 2022, Swiatek won in Paris again, and this year, she did it for a third time. The world number 1 handed out four bagels in the course of the tournament, and she didn't drop a set until she had to face an on-fire Karolina Muchova in the final. Swiatek would go on to win the WTA Finals and end the year as the number 1 player in the world.
1. Destroying Wimbledon tradition: Anyone who reads this blog knows how pleased I am any time a Wimbledon tradition is broken or eliminated. This year, a very long-standing tradition was broken when the first unseeded woman in history won the tournament. And it was a Czech--of course. Marketa Vondrousova--who had to watch the event from the stands last year because she was recovering from surgery for a wrist injury (second injury, second surgery)--had to do some heavy lifting in London, and she did it with style. The 2019 French Open finalist and Olympic silver medalist defeated Peyton Stearns, Veronika Kudermetova, Donna Vekic, Marie Bouzkova, 4th seed Jessica Pegula, the very on-fire wild card, Elina Svitolina, and 2022 finalist Ons Jabeur.
Great list, as always! :)
ReplyDeleteNot sure what Gauff has to do to please some people (thankfully, it doesn't look as if she feels the need to do so). When the recent announcement of the new European television deal (Sky Sports) with the sport included a collage of photos (minus shots of any RUS/BLR players, which is a whole other issue... I mean, what, they're not going to show their matches?) that used a large image of Coco, of course, many jumped in to criticize using the photo of a "one-slam wonder."
How could we ever know *that* since there hasn't been another slam even *played* since she won her first? (Rolls eyes.)
The bigger issue might have been that Swiatek was given (at best) second billing on the women's side of the equation in the collage.
Free Simona (or at least tell her if the door is actually locked). Perpetual limbo is just cruel, though not in the least bit surprising.
I think the most impressive feat of Iga's career to date isn't her mastery of Paris, but her reaction when her position has been "threatened," first by working her way to the '22 U.S. Open title, then by turning her game back up this fall after losing the #1 ranking. Those runs were quite impressive.
(P.S. - Winning a slam on grass would fall right into this category, too... and maybe top the list.)
Honorable Honorable Mention: Elena Rybakina's near-"Sunshine Double" (Party Sunny Double?) w/ the Indian Wells title and Miami final (oh, and her "finding her voice" when the WTA finally did her wrong one time too many times). ;)
Yes, that was unfair (and ridiculous) criticism of Gauff; I think it reflected people's frustration over the "second billing" of Swiatek, which is really questionable.
ReplyDeleteIga is the spiritual daughter of Chris Evert (and, i suppose, the spiritual sister of Angie Kerber): Identify the problem, fix the problem. I would not be at all surprised to see her win Wimbledon. She also has the champion X factor.
Rybakina (a worthy honorable mention, indeed) is a breath of fresh air--may she never be quiet.
And thank you, Todd!
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