Women’s title race too difficult to call

Women’s title race too difficult to call

MELBOURNE - Agence France-Presse
Women’s title race too difficult to call

Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark hits a return to Agnieszka Radwanska of Poland during their match at the Sydney International tennis tournament. REUTERS photo

Betting against one of the ‘Big Four’ lifting the Australian Open men’s crown would be foolhardy, but you’d need a crystal ball to predict the outcome of the women’s draw.

The top three female players have a combined total of just one Slam and last year there were four different champions in tennis’s major events, as the women’s game waits for its next big thing.
The women’s draw is one of the most open in years and adding to the sense of uncertainty in Melbourne are recent injuries to superstars Kim Clijsters and Serena Williams, who share 17 major titles but are both outside the top 10.

Belgium’s Clijsters, the 11th seed, is defending champion at the year’s opening Grand Slam, after beating Li Na in the 2011 Melbourne final, before the Chinese player went one step further at the French Open. 

Second seed Petra Kvitova of the Czech Republic won on grass at Wimbledon and Australia’s Samantha Stosur took the US Open title, upsetting home favourite Williams in the September 11 final in New York.

The name missing from the 2011 list of winners is top seed Caroline Wozniacki, yet to win her first grand slam, whose world number one ranking is under imminent threat from rising star Kvitova.
The two rivals have already clashed this year, with Kvitova of the Czech Republic winning in three sets at the mixed-teams Hopman Cup in Perth, which does not carry ranking points.

Wozniacki will be anxious to seal her maiden Grand Slam and silence critics who say she cannot be considered the world’s best without winning a major. 

“Obviously every time you go into a tournament you want to try to win it. Yeah, I want to try to win here. We’ll see if that will happen,” said the Dane.

“I’ve been number one for a long time already. Now my main focus is just to win as many tournaments as possible and the ranking will get there, will be there, if you play well,” added Wozniacki, who said her wrist would be “100 percent” after a scare in Sydney.

Kvitova, the breakout player of 2011 with six titles including Wimbledon and the WTA Championships, plus Fed Cup glory with the Czech Republic, said many players were in the mix.

“It’s really open now, women’s tennis. Everybody from the top can play really well,” she said.

Regardless of her relatively lowly seeding of 12th, five-time Australian Open winner Williams, still the biggest draw in the women’s game, comes into the Open under an injury cloud following her withdrawal from the Brisbane event earlier this month after painfully spraining her ankle.

Fourth seed Maria Sharapova is another player with Grand Slam pedigree but won the last of her three major titles in Melbourne in 2008 and the Russian is again battling injury as she struggles to shake off a left ankle problem.

Third seed Victoria Azarenka of Belarus has never been beyond the quarterfinals in Melbourne but comes into the Open buoyed by victory at the Sydney International over China’s Li last week.

Stosur will have the crowd behind her as Australia’s first women’s grand slam champion in decades, but she has already admitted feeling the pressure after early exits in Brisbane and Sydney this month.

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