Pliskova, Muguruza surf new wave in Dubai

Published February 20, 2015
DUBAI: Garbine Muguruza of Spain returns the ball to Spain’s Carla Suarez Navarro during their quarter-final at the WTA Dubai Tennis Championships on Thursday.
—AFP
DUBAI: Garbine Muguruza of Spain returns the ball to Spain’s Carla Suarez Navarro during their quarter-final at the WTA Dubai Tennis Championships on Thursday. —AFP

DUBAI: Karolina Pliskova, the striking 22-year-old who is part of a new wave on the women’s tour, upset the seedings for a second time at the Dubai Open to reach the semi-finals on Thursday.

Pliskova also turned a surprising match dramatically on its head from a set and 1-3 down during a 3-6, 7-6 (7/5), 6-1 win over her 11th seeded compatriot Lucie Safarova.

Last week the six-foot one-inch Czech with one of the steepest and most dangerous first serves in the game reached the Antwerp semis, and last month she became the youngest top 20 player by breaking into the top score for the first time.

However, Pliskova had to survive a crisis at 5-5 in the second set when she slipped to 15-40, within one solid blow of probable defeat, before she changed the psychology of the match utterly in an emotion-turning last point of the tie-break.

It happened after Safarova reached the net in a favourable position, only for Pliskova to throw up an adequate lob that enabled her to counter-attack with radar accuracy through a gap in the net-player’s coverage.

Her victory followed an even tighter three-set success the previous day against Ana Ivanovic, the fourth-seeded former world number one, and ensured that she maintains one of the eight best win-loss records this year, having hit more than 100 aces.

“I’m really happy that I was able to achieve this,” said Pliskova, conscious that Safarova was seeking revenge fordefeat in Antwerp and had been buoyed by a straight sets win over titleholder Venus Williams the day before.

Embarking on a pair of serves from 4-5 which might have taken her to match point, Safarova was rallying solidly and in a sound position when Pliskova’s top spin forehand drive hit the net tape and dropped over.

Pliskova broke at once in the final set, broke again for 3-0, and looked a different, more fluent attacker by the end.

Later the tournament gained a breath of fresh air when the first semi-final became a match-up of two players from the new wave, Garbine Muguruza, the 21-year-old from Barcelona, coming through to face Pliskova.

Muguruza achieved this with a 6-7(4-7), 6-3, 6-3 win over her doubles partner Carla Suarez Navarro, the 13th seed who had eliminated former Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova the night before.

“It’s not easy to play your doubles partner. We have to play again but on the same side of the net in an hour’s time,” Muguruza said.

“In the first set I was nervous but I managed to forget that I had lost it - and this was important.”

Published in Dawn, February 20th, 2015

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