Caroline Wozniacki adjusted and
adjusted again, and finally found the secret sauce to upset Maria Sharapova at
the United States Open on Sunday.
Wozniacki, seeded 10th, defeated the
fifth-seeded Sharapova, 6-4, 2-6, 6-2, by employing two separate game plans to
win two different sets and advance to the quarterfinals.
Wozniacki won the first set by
stretching the court and making Sharapova play as much as possible out of her
strike zone. Sharapova committed 28 errors in the opening set, mainly out wide
near the alleys reaching for the ball. Sharapova was not able to consistently
get her energy behind the ball as her arms were trying to play catch-up for
what her legs could not get to.
Wozniacki had a decisive 19-6
winning edge for rallies between five and eight shots in the first set as she
redirected and diffused Sharapova’s power out to the edge of the court.
Wozniacki won more baseline points, 24-18, in the set and faced only two break
points to Sharapova’s eight.
It was the perfect start against an
opponent who defeated her, 6-2, 6-2, the last time they played in the Indian
Wells finals last year.
But Sharapova, as she has
consistently done all season, roared back to win the second set with unadulterated
power. She crushed 22 winners in the second set alone, including 17 off the
forehand wing. It was the forehand, devouring anything and everything from the
middle of the court, that completely wrested control of the match away from
Wozniacki.
Being down in the score has
invigorated Sharapova this year, inducing her to swing as hard as she can when
backed into a corner .
At the end of the second set, the
heat rule was in effect, meaning the players took a mandatory 10-minute break
before resuming the third set. It was exactly what Wozniacki needed to regroup
and figure out the right countermove to Sharapova’s devastatingly good forehand
from the middle of the court.
The answer was counterintuitive:
Attack the forehand by taking her strong backhand down the line. Wozniacki
enjoyed success in the opening set with her backhand crosscourt, but Sharapova
was waiting for it in the second set.
After the extended break, Wozniacki
immediately started playing down the line with her backhand, catching Sharapova
cheating to her left expecting it to go crosscourt. Wozniacki hit four backhand
winners in the deciding set, and the tactic derailed Sharapova’s potent
forehand.
Sharapova was forced into eight
forehand errors in the third set.
With Wozniacki already in trouble at
15-30 in her first service game at 0-0 in the third set, she made a backhand
down the line after her serve that forced a running forehand error by
Sharapova. Wozniacki hit a spectacular, on-the-run backhand down the line on
the next point at 30-30 to force another Sharapova forehand error, and her
pathway to an unlikely victory was becoming obvious.
Wozniacki hit a backhand winner down
the line in the next game and another backhand down the line on the opening
point at 1-2 that led to a critical break of serve three points later.
It was a masterly display of move
and countermove by both players that ultimately went Wozniacki’s way because
she had one more move in her bag of tricks than Sharapova. On match point,
Wozniacki laced a backhand winner down the line to seal her victory. It was the
perfect ending to one of the smartest tennis matches she has ever played.
(New York Times)
Counterintuitive Adjustment Helps Caroline Wozniacki Upset Maria Sharapova At U.S. Open
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Monday, September 01, 2014
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