Good interview on the WTA site with Paula Badosa, who continues her hot run with, I believe something like 18 wins in her last 20?. She talks about needing to play more aggressively and how learning to play in Spain discourages that (her words! Don't shoot the messenger). Also a very good highlight video of her beating several good players in the Aussie tune-ups.
Article and highlights here:
https://na01.safelinks.protection.ou...%3D&reserved=0
When I watched Badosa win Indian Wells in one of the best WTA matches of the year, over Vika, she showed great speed, solid topspin off both sides, and occasionally great change of direction winners. Now, in Australia, she's quickly turning offense to defense and going for the aggressive shots earlier and much more often.
In particular, Paula vs Dasha starting at roughly 3:30 has two of the fastest WTA players engaged in some serious smackage. When was the last time you saw 3, backhand overhead putaways in one WTA vid? French Open champ Krejcikova looks helpless. The announcer (Sue Barker, former tennis star, perhaps?) runs out of adjectives. Then falling to her back, the big smile, the boyfriend model's fist pumps <g>.
At the same link there's a good interview with her (yes, on the WTA site and it's not fluff! Who knew?). Well worth a read. She's very candid. Excerpts:
WTA Insider: At what point during the tournament did you feel your game click?
Badosa: In the quarterfinals against Belinda. I played on Court 1 so it was even faster, and I was like, 'Oh, I cannot believe this. Why do I have to play in this court against Belinda who plays always super fast.' In that match, I think I improved a lot, even if that match didn't go my way - I was lucky and I won, I played very good - I think that made me play very well in the next match against Daria and today because [the court] it didn't give me an option to try to play the point. I had to go for it on the returns, I had to serve well. So that made me improve a lot and that made me give the level that I gave in the semifinals and in the final.
WTA Insider: On the theme of improvements, you won this title by being quite aggressive. How comfortable are you playing this way and what has been the key to evolving your game this way? Some players really struggle to make the change.
Badosa: I've never been that aggressive, but I think I had the capacity of being that. But I always preferred to play another way. So I think I had that capacity to do it. Of course, it's a big step mentally as well, to go for it and to not fear about it. But yeah, I think I had the shots, but sometimes I wasn't going for it.
I think that my coach helps me a lot on that, because sometimes when you miss you just regret it so much. Why did I do it like that? I had to play the point. He's always supporting me and being there, [saying] I don't care if you do 500 unforced errors because it's the only way. When you have your team that supports you and that you feel more confident and you see that it's OK if you miss. That's a little bit my change.
WTA Insider: Do you think this feeling of not wanting to miss, is that because you grew up on clay or do you think that's your personality?
Badosa: Well it has to be a mix of everything, but I think it's a little bit how Spanish players are educated when we are very small, very competitive. But the bad thing is that sometimes we want the other one to miss and we want to win the match like that. It's impossible if you want to be one of the best players in the world - now I'm Top 10 in the world - you cannot win tournaments like that. You can win small tournaments like that, but not against the best players because they play amazing.
So that's why I was very focused on improving on that and I'm lucky that I have a Spanish coach but his mentality is not Spanish. I think we're doing a step forward on that and I think we're very happy with our work.
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Article and highlights here:
https://na01.safelinks.protection.ou...%3D&reserved=0
When I watched Badosa win Indian Wells in one of the best WTA matches of the year, over Vika, she showed great speed, solid topspin off both sides, and occasionally great change of direction winners. Now, in Australia, she's quickly turning offense to defense and going for the aggressive shots earlier and much more often.
In particular, Paula vs Dasha starting at roughly 3:30 has two of the fastest WTA players engaged in some serious smackage. When was the last time you saw 3, backhand overhead putaways in one WTA vid? French Open champ Krejcikova looks helpless. The announcer (Sue Barker, former tennis star, perhaps?) runs out of adjectives. Then falling to her back, the big smile, the boyfriend model's fist pumps <g>.
At the same link there's a good interview with her (yes, on the WTA site and it's not fluff! Who knew?). Well worth a read. She's very candid. Excerpts:
WTA Insider: At what point during the tournament did you feel your game click?
Badosa: In the quarterfinals against Belinda. I played on Court 1 so it was even faster, and I was like, 'Oh, I cannot believe this. Why do I have to play in this court against Belinda who plays always super fast.' In that match, I think I improved a lot, even if that match didn't go my way - I was lucky and I won, I played very good - I think that made me play very well in the next match against Daria and today because [the court] it didn't give me an option to try to play the point. I had to go for it on the returns, I had to serve well. So that made me improve a lot and that made me give the level that I gave in the semifinals and in the final.
WTA Insider: On the theme of improvements, you won this title by being quite aggressive. How comfortable are you playing this way and what has been the key to evolving your game this way? Some players really struggle to make the change.
Badosa: I've never been that aggressive, but I think I had the capacity of being that. But I always preferred to play another way. So I think I had that capacity to do it. Of course, it's a big step mentally as well, to go for it and to not fear about it. But yeah, I think I had the shots, but sometimes I wasn't going for it.
I think that my coach helps me a lot on that, because sometimes when you miss you just regret it so much. Why did I do it like that? I had to play the point. He's always supporting me and being there, [saying] I don't care if you do 500 unforced errors because it's the only way. When you have your team that supports you and that you feel more confident and you see that it's OK if you miss. That's a little bit my change.
WTA Insider: Do you think this feeling of not wanting to miss, is that because you grew up on clay or do you think that's your personality?
Badosa: Well it has to be a mix of everything, but I think it's a little bit how Spanish players are educated when we are very small, very competitive. But the bad thing is that sometimes we want the other one to miss and we want to win the match like that. It's impossible if you want to be one of the best players in the world - now I'm Top 10 in the world - you cannot win tournaments like that. You can win small tournaments like that, but not against the best players because they play amazing.
So that's why I was very focused on improving on that and I'm lucky that I have a Spanish coach but his mentality is not Spanish. I think we're doing a step forward on that and I think we're very happy with our work.
#
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