Bangkok Post

Halep heads into French Open as clear favourite

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PARIS: Former champion Simona Halep arrives at the reschedule­d French Open as the player to beat in a women’s draw missing title-holder Ashleigh Barty and recent US Open winner Naomi Osaka, two of the world’s top three.

Serena Williams can never be discounted as she launches another bid for a record-equalling 24th Grand Slam singles crown, but Roland Garros is the American’s least successful major despite her wins in 2002, 2013 and 2015.

Garbine Muguruza, who defeated Williams in the 2016 final, is another contender while fellow former world No.1 Victoria Azarenka is hoping to take the momentum from her run to the US Open final into the clay swing.

Last year’s runner-up Marketa Vondrousov­a will again target a deep run in Paris having rediscover­ed some form at last week’s Italian Open in Rome, where she made the semi-finals before losing to compatriot Karolina Pliskova.

The fourth-ranked Czech retired from the final on Monday with a thigh injury after dropping the first set to Halep, who extended her winning run to 14 matches after capturing a second consecutiv­e title coming out of lockdown.

Pliskova, the second seed in Paris, said Halep was undoubtedl­y the favourite for a tournament pushed back from its traditiona­l spring slot for the first time in its history due to the coronaviru­s. “I think she’s going to be the [top] favourite from the women’s tournament, because I think also the way she played, she played already [won] Prague on clay. She won this tournament.

“So I feel like she’s confident. For sure she’s going to be dangerous.

“I know the weather is not looking that great in Paris, so I think the conditions just to like play aggressive game against her is going to be quite tough.”

Halep, who also won in Dubai before the five-month tour suspension, spent the break working hard on her fitness, but said the global health crisis had given her a fresh outlook on tennis.

“I’m more mature, I think. The pandemic got me in a place that I really dreamed to be,” she told WTA Insider. “I am more relaxed because I could see that the most difficult things are in life in general, not in sport.”

No woman has successful­ly defended the French Open title since Justine Henin won three times in a row between 2005 and 2007, a trend set to continue with Barty pulling out over the coronaviru­s fears that also prompted her to skip the US Open.

A sore hamstring has sidelined three-time Grand Slam champion Osaka, while Bianca Andreescu, the 2019 US Open winner, will miss the tournament as well. The Canadian hasn’t played since hurting her knee last October at the WTA Finals.

Despite the notable absentees, the field here is stronger than the US Open where six of the world’s top 10 players skipped the event, with the return of Halep, Elina Svitolina, Kiki Bertens and Belinda Bencic.

“As I said always, many girls from the top 10, top 15 have a chance to win a Grand Slam,” said Halep. “Roland Garros is very open, because it’s clay court but it’s a little bit faster, so also the big hitters can win it easy.”

The Romanian holds a 20-2 record this season and is unbeaten since January — her only losses came to Aryna Sabalenka in Adelaide and Muguruza in the Australian Open semi-finals.

 ??  ?? Simona Halep celebrates after winning the Italian Open in Rome this week.
Simona Halep celebrates after winning the Italian Open in Rome this week.

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