Malta Independent

Sharapova more disappoint­ed to lose early than to detractor

-

To Maria Sharapova, the most disappoint­ing part of leaving the Madrid Open was doing so in the second round.

Not losing to arch critic Eugenie Bouchard.

Sharapova will more than likely meet Bouchard again, and have another shot at beating the Canadian who wanted her banned for life for doping last year and openly called her a cheater.

More important for Sharapova for now was tournament play, winning matches, getting match fit and her ranking up to where it was before her 15-month ban.

Sharapova’s ranking rose from nothing to 258 after reaching the semifinals in Stuttgart two weeks ago, in her first tournament after her ban.

Going only two rounds in Madrid, where she won in 2014, will bump her up into only the low 200s.

Her aim is to quickly lift her ranking so it’s good enough to automatica­lly qualify for main tour events, to at least 150, which would get her in the French Open this month.

That would mitigate her reliabilit­y on wild cards that a lot of her fellow tour players have opposed.

The players believe Sharapova, after doping, should have gone through qualifying, worked her way back from the bottom instead of receiving free passes into main draws.

She has declined to enter that debate.

Like at Stuttgart and Madrid, where she was a former champion, Sharapova has a wild card into the Italian Open next week. Rome was the first to offer her a wild card while she was suspended, and the three-time champion (2011, 2012, 2015) was grateful.

Her effort to automatica­lly qualify for the French Open could become moot next week when organizers announce whether they will give one to Sharapova, the champion at Roland Garros in 2012 and 2014.

In the meantime, losing in the second round at Madrid stung.

Sharapova said she still needed to regain the confidence for critical points in a match.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta