China Daily

Pliskova proud of fighting spirit

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It’s never a good thing to lose the first 14 points of a Grand Slam final. At least Karolina Pliskova could laugh and smile about it afterward. “Definitely horrible start,” she said. Fair.

Somehow, though, Pliskova regained her composure and recalibrat­ed her shots enough to make a match of it and push No 1-ranked Ash Barty to a third set before losing 6-3, 6-7 (4), 6-3 at Wimbledon on Saturday.

Pliskova’s record in major finals dropped to 0-2 — she also came out on the short end at the 2016 US Open — while Barty is now 2-0 after adding the championsh­ip at the All England Club to the one she collected at the 2019 French Open.

“Of course,” Pliskova acknowledg­ed, “some nerves were there.”

It already was 3-0, love-30 for Barty before Pliskova managed to grab a single point. Soon enough, it was 4-0.

But Pliskova, a 29-year-old from the Czech Republic who has been ranked No 1, spoke about being proud of her performanc­e — because of the way she was able to hang in there and make things more interestin­g.

“You always have to believe that things can go your way, things can get better, which of course was not easy. Definitely not. It was a tough moment because I thought, like, I can just play much better than I did,” Pliskova said about the way things began. “I thought: If I can get, like, a game just to start, or a point to start — because actually I didn’t make a point the first three games — then it can be like much better.”

Here is what else was going through her mind in the early going: In the final of the clay-court tournament in Rome against 2020 French Open champion Iga Swiatek in May, Pliskova lost by a score of 6-0, 6-0.

Tapping her temple with her left index finger on Saturday, she said: “I thought, ‘No, this cannot be possible. This cannot happen again.’”

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