Svetlana Kuznetsova on Friday toppled world No. 3 Karolina Pliskova 7-6 (7/5), 7-6 (7/2) to book an all-Russian BNP Paribas Open final against Elena Vesnina.
Vesnina powered past France’s Kristina Mladenovic 6-3, 6-4, continuing a sparkling campaign that has seen her shock Germany’s Angelique Kerber, soon to be world No. 1, in the fourth round and seven-time Grand Slam champion Venus Williams in the quarter-finals.
It was a sharp turnaround from Vesnina’s first-round ouster in qualifying at Indian Wells last year, and marks her first trip to a final of one of the WTA’s elite Premier Mandatory events.
Photo: EPA
World No. 8 Kuznetsova is back in the Indian Wells final for the first time since back-to-back runner-up finishes in 2007 and 2008.
She withstood 10 aces from Pliskova, who has already won titles at Brisbane and Doha this year.
“I tried my best to fight every point,” said 31-year-old Kuznetsova, the owner of two Grand slam singles titles who enjoyed a resurgence last year, winning two titles as she returned to the top 10 in the world for the first time since 2010. “Karolina is one of the best players this year.”
After falling behind 5-3, the Czech made Kuznetsova work to close out the opening set, saving a set point in the ninth game and four more in the tiebreaker after Kuznetsova seized a 6-2 lead in the decider.
A double fault left Kuznetsova with one more chance at 6-5, and she grabbed it with a forehand passing shot.
After an exchange of breaks in the second, they went to the tiebreaker, where Kuznetsova again took a 6-2 lead and the increasingly frustrated Pliskova surrendered with a string of errors.
Vesnina, who last year reached the Wimbledon semi-finals and has reached a career high of 15th in the world at the age of 30, said important doubles wins — including a gold medal at last year’s Rio Olympics — have helped her big-match composure.
“It’s not easy to hold your nerve, but I’m really happy the way I handled it,” she said. “I was very focused. I was not thinking about the final. I was just thinking particularly about every single game, every single shot.”
Vesnina built commanding leads in each set — 5-0 in the first and 5-1 in the second.
Mladenovic, who claimed a maiden WTA title in St Petersburg last month before reaching the final in Acapulco, could not find an answer no matter how she tried.
“I really think she was just too good for me today,” said Mladenovic, who went to her slice to no avail before attempting an aggressive serve and volley game late in each set in an bid to regain ground.
“I felt like I had to do kind of crazy points to win,” Mladenovic said. “She didn’t really allow me to put my game on tonight.”
Down a set and three service breaks at 5-1 in the second set, Mladenovic won three straight games — fending off one match point — before Vesnina held serve for the victory.
“Kiki was always trying to play her best tennis when she was behind on the score,” Vesnina said. “It’s not easy to come back from 5-0 and 5-1. It’s not easy at all.”
In men’s singles, Jack Sock thinks Roger Federer is the best tennis player in history, but that does not mean the 18th-ranked American is discounting his chances against the Swiss great in the semi-finals.
“In my opinion, he’s the best to ever play. It will definitely be a challenge,” Sock said after ousting world No. 5 Kei Nishikori 6-3, 2-6, 6-2 on Friday.
Sock notched his first victory over a top-five player and reached the semi-finals of an elite Masters series event for the first time.
However, with two titles to his credit already this season, Sock said he is a much-improved player from the one who lost to Federer in two prior meetings, both in 2015.
Sock called Federer’s 18th Grand Slam triumph at the Australian Open in January a “testament” to Federer’s ability, after the Swiss last year missed about six months due to injury.
However, he also noted that Federer was shocked by 116th-ranked Evgeny Donskoy in Dubai this month.
“The trend of tennis now is a guy who is playing well at any ranking can give any guy trouble,” Sock said. “When I played him here last, and I played him in Basel a couple years ago, I don’t think I went on the court giving myself a ton of chances of winning. I think that’s changed, for sure.”
“Obviously he’s playing incredible tennis, not only this year, but this week,” Sock said. “But on the flip side of that, I am playing confident tennis as well myself. And I think if I go out there and play the right tennis and play the right strategy, I think I can give myself a shot, for sure.”
Sock, who withstood four match points against Grigor Dimitrov in the third round and had another close shave against Malek Jaziri in the fourth, used his high kick serve and powerful ground strokes to overcome Nishikori — who had not dropped a set in his three prior matches.
“Kick serve, especially on these courts, is deadly for me,” Sock said. “So that was a big part of the game plan for me today going in.”
“If Kei is hitting the ball in the strike zone, he is going to beat pretty much anyone in the world on any given day,” he said. “For me, it was all about trying to get him out of that slot and let him not be taking balls at his hip and waist and dictating play. So the kick serve for me today was crucial, first and second serve, and that’s why I used it a lot.”
Nishikori was left regretting too many loose points and a slow start that let Sock leap to a 3-0 lead in the opening set, in which one early break proved all he needed.
While Nishikori played better in the second to level the match, he dropped the first game of the third set to again concede the advantage.
“I don’t think I played good enough to beat Jack today,” Nishikori said. “I think there were too many unforced errors and I wasn’t playing aggressive enough to get more chances.”
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