Shanghai Daily

Fatigued Wang bemoans ‘too many matches’

- (AFP)

CHINA’S No. 1 Wang Qiang has been left “really tired” at the end of a punishing season on the WTA Tour and believes she has played “too many matches.”

The world No. 22 has been on a spectacula­r run of form recently that has seen her leapfrog Zhang Shuai to become China’s top singles player.

But the gruelling schedule at the season’s climax has left the 26-yearold feeling fatigued — mentally and physically.

“It’s really too much,” she said at the WTA Elite Trophy in Zhuhai, southern Guangdong Province. “Too many tournament­s for me, too many matches. Especially the last two months.”

Wang won the Guangzhou Open in September, her second career title after beating compatriot Zheng Saisai at the Jiangxi Open in July. She made the semifinals at the Wuhan Open but had to retire with an injury.

And she impressed again in midOctober by staging an outstandin­g comeback to defeat former Wimbledon champion Garbine Muguruza to reach her first Hong Kong Open final.

Asked about her eye-catching 2018 season, the modest and softly-spoken Asian Games champion, who is playing in Zhuhai for the first time, said: “The top half of the year I didn’t feel so good, because my ranking went down to 91.

“But the last five months I felt really good and I won a lot of matches. So now my ranking is 22, so I came straight into this tournament.”

Chinese fans have warmed to Wang’s personalit­y, praising her as steely on the court but good-natured and humble off it.

She grabbed headlines at the French Open with her straight-sets demolition of Venus Williams, and overcame Karolina Pliskova in both Beijing and Wuhan.

And the right-hander from Tianjin has her sights set on a top-eight spot by the end of next season, when the WTA Finals tournament will take place in her home country.

“I want to play the WTA Finals in Shenzhen,” when asked about her ambitions for next year.

Wang, who has so far won US$2.677 million in prize money, has been touted by some as a potential successor to Chinese tennis icon Li Na.

The former world No. 2, who triumphed at Roland Garros in 2011 and won the Australian Open in 2014 before retiring later that year, is one of Wang’s idols and spurred a generation of tennis fans in China.

 ??  ?? Japan’s Kei Nishikori returns to Adrian Mannarino of France en route to his 7-5, 6-4 ATP 1000 Paris Masters second-round victory at the AccorHotel­s Arena yesterday. Meanwhile, an injured Rafael Nadal pulled out of the tournament yesterday guaranteei­ng Novak Djokovic’s return to the world No. 1 spot. — Reuters
Japan’s Kei Nishikori returns to Adrian Mannarino of France en route to his 7-5, 6-4 ATP 1000 Paris Masters second-round victory at the AccorHotel­s Arena yesterday. Meanwhile, an injured Rafael Nadal pulled out of the tournament yesterday guaranteei­ng Novak Djokovic’s return to the world No. 1 spot. — Reuters

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