Global Times - Weekend

Kerber looks to end year on a high

Faces tough challenge at WTA Finals in Singapore

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The absence of Serena Williams may have robbed the seasonendi­ng WTA Finals of a blockbuste­r showdown with Angelique Kerber, but the great American’s withdrawal only means more accolades for the world No.1 from Germany after her breakout year.

Regardless of how she performs in Singapore, Kerber will be presented with the year-end No.1 trophy after Williams, the only woman with any chance of overtaking her at the top of the rankings, pulled out of the elite eight-player tournament with a shoulder injury.

Kerber will become just the 12th woman to finish the year ranked No.1 since computer rankings were introduced in 1975, and no one would begrudge the 28-year-old’s claim to the title after a careerbest season in which she lifted the Australian and US Open trophies and finished runnerup at Wimbledon and the Rio Olympic Games.

“This is one of the things I have been dreaming of,” Kerber said.

“I have worked extremely hard to become the best player I can be and this is a reflection of that effort and the wonderful year I have had.”

With the ranking trophy safely in the bag, Kerber now has her sights on picking up another major piece of silverware, the Billie Jean King Trophy for the winner of the end-of-season tournament.

Restricted to the world’s topeight players, the WTA Finals is regarded as the most important annual event in women’s tennis outside the four majors, boasting a star-studded honor roll.

While Williams has won the tournament five times, Kerber has only qualified twice before, in 2012 and 2013, bowing out in the round-robin phase each time, giving her added incentive to cap her year by winning the October 30 final.

She will go into the event as the favorite this time but facing a tough challenge from a strong and deceptivel­y deep field, which includes last year’s winner, Poland’s Agnieszka Radwanska, and reigning French Open champion Garbine Muguruza of Spain.

Muguruza had her own breakout year in 2015, reaching the Wimbledon final then the semis in her first appearance at the WTA Finals.

This year, the 23-year-old went one better, claiming her first major when she upset Williams in the French Open final.

She now wants to make another statement on the indoor court of Singapore.

“I think the important tournament­s are the ones you’ve got to play well, the ones that really count, the ones that really take you to the top level,” she said.

“I just have a very aggressive game. I go for my shots with no regrets, even if I have to play to the fence.”

Romania’s Simona Halep, runner-up two years ago, has also qualified for Singapore, along with Czech Karolina Pliskova, who ended Williams’ reign as world No.1 in the semifinals of the US Open, as well as American Madison Keys and Dominika Cibulkova of Slovakia.

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