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Power, and Muguruza, Reign Supreme at WTA Tour Finals

The sport’s final tournament, an elite event for the best in the game, produced a veteran champion, and a glimpse of where women’s tennis is headed in 2022.

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By Matthew Futterman

GUADALAJARA, Mexico — As her final shot forced one final error, and Garbiñe Muguruza beat Anett Kontaveit and slammed an exclamation point onto the tennis season by winning the WTA Finals, the veteran player claimed more than just an individual triumph.

This was not simply a win for a single player, but for power and aggression in women’s tennis and the unique form of mental toughness it requires.

Muguruza, who prevailed, 6-3, 7-5, in 99 minutes, had her opponent on her heels from the start, finding opportunities to break Kontaveit nearly every time she served in the first set, pushing forward and making Kontaveit backpedal far behind the baseline and scramble across the back of the court. Kontaveit, an Estonian, made a battle of it, forcing Muguruza to raise her level of play in the second set. But after an hour and a half, Kontaveit resembled a prize fighter whose arms were still swinging but whose wobbly legs could not sustain her any longer.

“A dream come true to play here,” said Muguruza, a Spaniard the Mexican fans adopted as one of their own during the tournament.

Trying to guess the next dominant player in women’s tennis long ago became an act of futility. The game produces surprise champions practically every week. But what unfolded a mile above sea level in the middle of Mexico in the past week provided plenty of hints about where the women’s game is going. Players hoping to make it at the elite level would do well to figure out how to hit the ball as hard as they can, and then try to hit it even a little bit harder, and not care much when inevitable misses occur.

“It doesn’t always go your way,” said Kontaveit, who survived an onslaught from Maria Sakkari of Greece in the semifinals and figured out the modern power game of the moment as few others have during her white-hot final month of the season. “You miss some shots. Be kind to yourself, and look forward to the next point.”

The WTA Finals is different from other tournaments, where top players can usually spend a few rounds getting a feel for the ball against inferior competition. The WTA Finals includes only the best eight available players of the season. Every match is a test the caliber of a Grand Slam quarterfinal, or something even tougher, making it clear what it takes to win at the highest level, night after night.

The tennis of the past eight days was not for the faint of heart. This was a collection of women blasting ball after ball after ball, mostly trying to pummel opponents into submission rather than outthink them.

The eight-player field in Mexico included two players — Iga Swiatek of Poland and Barbora Krejcikova of the Czech Republic — who approach the court with an old-style mix of finesse and artistry. Swiatek and Krejcikova went a combined 1-5 in round robin play and failed to advance to the semifinals. The last four was made up of players whose specialty is hitting untouchable balls through the back of the court at withering speed. When the ball is landing inside the lines, the strategy wins points and games and crushes an opponent’s spirit.

Muguruza, a two-time Grand Slam champion who is 28, has been doing this for a while, though this was her first time reaching the final in the year’s ultimate tournament.

A dozen years ago, after she had sprouted to six feet tall, she realized that following in the stylistic footsteps of the Spanish greats of the previous generation was not going to work for her. They were classic defenders, so-called dirt-ballers who honed their games on clay and fought tennis wars of attrition.

“I’m a tall woman, big arms, and my personality did not match the classic Spanish game,” Muguruza said Tuesday. “I wanted to dominate.”

She did plenty of that in Guadalajara, and it was fitting that to get to the finals, Muguruza had to first beat the next iteration of herself in Paula Badosa, a 23-year-old Spaniard who modeled her game after Muguruza’s. Like Muguruza, Badosa is six feet tall, and she saw in Muguruza another way to play.

“Other Spanish players play different,” Badosa said. “She was the only one who played super aggressive.”

It’s true that had Ashleigh Barty of Australia, the world’s top-ranked player, opted to play this championship, finesse might have played a larger role in the past week. Barty’s greatest weapon is a slice backhand, though she, too, hits plenty of forehands through the back of the court and is among the game’s leaders in service aces. But Barty ended her season in September after spending six consecutive months on the road because of Australia’s restrictive rules for international travelers.

And so, the 2021 WTA Finals unfolded mostly as a series of slugfests in which brute strength was as potent a weapon as a drop shot.

There was a three-set brawl between Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus and Sakkari, the tour’s reigning gym rat. After outlasting Sabalenka, Sakkari spoke of using her supreme strength and fitness as weapons.

“It makes a lot of players be kind of like intimidated because they know that I can last long,” Sakkari said.

Playing with relentless aggression, though, is a high-risk, high-reward game, a tightrope walk without a safety net that brings wild swings within a season, or even a match.

Kontaveit lost four straight matches and nearly all of her confidence during the summer when she could not make enough consistent and true contact with the ball. Then she got on a roll in the fall and won the final two tournaments to grab the final spot in this championship.

Sabalenka seized the momentum and a 3-1 lead in the final set Monday night against Sakkari. Then the nerves kicked in, and her balls couldn’t find the court. With a game that is all power all the time, Sabalenka was out of options and barking at herself like a dog in the night as Sakkari reeled off five straight games to win their nearly three-hour battle.

But 21 hours later, in the semifinal, those same crushing, crosscourt backhands from Sakkari kept floating long and wide or getting hammered right back across the net by Kontaveit. Sakkari then found her groove and got within three games of the finish line. But her blasts started hitting the net and flying long once more, and she could not find a way out of a rut that was both physical and mental.

“A missed opportunity,” she said through tears when it was over.

Wednesday night’s championship match was one last heavyweight bout.

Muguruza muscled a backhand to earn her chance to win the first set, and oddly won it with a magical topspin lob, one of the few that anyone tried all week in Mexico. Soon, though, it was back to big hitting, serves darting for the corners and deep drives at the lines at the earliest opportunities. She fell behind late in the second set and needed one last burst of power to thrash through the final three games, collapsing on her back when Kontaveit’s final ball hit the middle of the net.

Great tennis players have remarkable long-term memories and terrible short-term ones.

They remember details of points played a decade earlier and can recall an opponent’s catalog of tendencies in the heat of competition.

But they also have a knack for forgetting a lost point, game or set as soon as it’s gone. They play each point, each shot, on its own merits. Blast a forehand into the net. Fine. Here comes the next one, hit just as hard and with the strongest belief that it will find the back corner of the court.

That is what Muguruza was able to do in the crucial moment Wednesday night.

With the power game ascendant, it’s the likely path anyone who wants to compete for championships and make it to this elite finale will have to take in 2022.

Matthew Futterman is a veteran sports journalist and the author of two books, “Running to the Edge: A Band of Misfits and the Guru Who Unlocked the Secrets of Speed” and “Players: How Sports Became a Business.” More about Matthew Futterman

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Insider Podcast: Krejcikova's road to recovery and passion for tennis

Barbora Krejcikova Stuttgart 2024

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As Barbora Krejcikova sat down to join the WTA Insider Podcast, she couldn't take her eyes off the tennis court in front of her. Zheng Qinwen was practicing on court ahead of the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix, and Krejcikova was finishing up a rather extensive 90 minutes of media obligations. 

Through it all, the Czech couldn't help herself. Her eyes would unconsciously drift to the court. Watching tennis, even just a practice session, seemed to soothe her. It's understandable.

"It's great to be back," Krejcikova said, "it's great to be playing again and to be healthy -- the most important thing -- and to be at a nice tennis venue."

Listen to Krejcikova's full interview on the newest episode of the WTA Insider Podcast below:

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When we caught up with Krejcikova in April, she was in the early stages of getting back into the swing of things. After a strong finish to the 2023 season, which saw her win the title in San Diego and make the final in Zhengzhou, the former No.2 looked prime to reclaim her spot in the Top 10 this year. 

It started well in Melbourne, where she made the quarterfinals of the Australian Open. But a back injury sidelined her in February, and she was unable to play for two months. 

"I missed being on the tour and playing and competing and having these challenges every week," Krejcikova said. "But on the other hand, staying home and spending time with my family and being busy in a different way, both of these things are important in balancing a career."

Krejcikova spent her time away dabbling in all manner of hobbies. She started cooking and gardening and found herself falling into a few Wikipedia rabbit holes online. The time away was good for her life balance, but being on tour remains her passion. 

"After every injury the journey is different. It needs a lot of patience and it's tough because you see all the girls and they're playing well. They're going deep in the tournaments and in the beginning when you're coming back, it's not really happening for you. You need to take more time and be more patient, which is difficult because you see the girls are playing and doing well. 

"On the other hand I think after such injuries, tennis has a different priority. You appreciate that you can actually be on court and that you can enjoy the tennis more."

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  1. WTA Tour

    Premier. International. v. t. e. The WTA Tour (currently known as the Hologic WTA Tour) is a worldwide top-tier tennis tour for women organized by the Women's Tennis Association. The second-tier tour is the WTA 125K series, and third-tier is the ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. The men's equivalent is the ATP Tour .

  2. Women's Tennis Association

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  9. Women's Tennis Association

    The Women's Tennis Association (WTA), formed in 1973 by Billie Jean King, is the main organizing body of women's professional tennis.It organizes the WTA Tour, the worldwide professional tennis tour for women. The WTA's counterpart organization for men's professional tennis is the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP).. The WTA was formed in the month of June 1973, and is able to trace its ...

  10. WTA Tour

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