Kvitova and Bouchard Reach Wuhan Final in Wimbledon Rematch

September 26, 2014 | By New York Tennis Magazine Staff
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Photo credit: Calvin Rhoden

The final of the inaugural Dongfeng Motor Wuhan Open is all set and will feature a rematch of this summer’s Wimbledon final. Third-seeded Czech Petra Kvitova will take on sixth-seeded Canadian Eugenie Bouchard for the Wuhan Open crown as well as a spot in the WTA Finals in Singapore.

In the semifinals on Friday, Kvitova took on WTA Rising Star Elina Svitolina of Ukraine. The two had played each other once before, with Svitolina defeating Kvitova in Cincinnati this past summer. Kvitova would get even though, as she cruised to the 6-3, 7-5 win in 96 minutes.

After cruising through the opening frame, Kvitova allowed Svitolina to hang around in the second set. She squandered an early break point and failed to capitalize on two match points before eventually sealing a spot in the tournament’s title match.

“After I went up a break I thought it would be enough to just keep holding my serve, but then she broke me, and she was playing very well,” said Kvitova. “She was even leading. But I believed I could break her again and I did it. I’m lucky I was able to do that and that I won in the end.”

Kvitova’s serve was highly-effective against the Ukrainian. She won points on 81 percent of her first serves and only allowed one break point in the match. She also fired seven aces on her way to the straight-set victory.

In the finals, she will take on the 20-year-old Bouchard, who put on an impressive performance in the night session. She rolled past eighth-seeded Caroline Wozniacki 6-2, 6-3 in 78 minutes. Both players were extremely efficient as they both posted a solid differential of winners to unforced errors. While Wozniacki had 18 winners to 18 unforced errors, she was outdone by Bouchard who ripped 28 winners to just 20 unforced errors.

Bouchard was able to notch five break points in nine chances, while Wozniacki picked up just one in seven opportunities. 

“I think I played very aggressively, and it was all about trying to maintain it,” said Bouchard. “Of course I expected some resistance, and she definitely made me fight for every point, but I was happy with the way I was serving and stepping in and the way I kind of re-gathered by concentration.”

The win sets up a Wimbledon final rematch versus Kvitova. The two played just one other time prior to Wimbledon and Kvitova won that meeting as well.

“I think I didn’t impose myself enough in the Wimbledon final, and she was the one controlling the points all the time,” said Bouchard. “But she played really, really well, so there wasn’t much I could do, and that happens sometimes. I hope I can do my think more on the court tomorrow.”

Kvitova cruised in the Wimbledon final, winning 6-3, 6-0 in under an hour. Despite that, the Czech knows it will be a challenge as Bouchard is playing some of her best tennis this week.

“It’s going to be nice to play Genie in the final, so we can have a repeat match of the final at Wimbledon,” said Kvitova, who is vying for her third title of the year. “She’s a very good mover and plays very aggressively from the baseline—she takes the balls very early and returns very well. Those are some of the things she does great.”


New York Tennis Magazine Staff
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