Toronto Star

Wild ride to championsh­ip all comes out in the wash for fifth-ranked Svitolina

- GREGORY STRONG THE CANADIAN PRESS

Sleep-deprived and physically drained, Elina Svitolina could have been excused for a flat performanc­e Sunday.

Instead she fought through the fatigue and toppled yet another top-10 opponent for her fifth WTA Tour title of the season.

Running on fumes in her third match in just over 24 hours, Svitolina defeated Caroline Wozniacki 6-4, 6-0 to win the Rogers Cup.

“I’m just very happy that it’s finished,” Svitolina said. “And with a title, it’s even more special.”

Wet weather on Friday evening forced Svitolina to play her quarter-final Saturday morning. Tired from a late night and nursing a minor right Achilles tendon injury, her expectatio­ns were low. She didn’t even bother packing a second out- fit for the evening semifinal and had a flight booked to the next WTA Tour stop in Cincinnati.

Svitolina went on to dispatch fourthrank­ed Garbine Muguruza in the quarters.

Then she went back to the hotel to get changed and returned to the Aviva Centre to trounce second-ranked Simona Halep.

Svitolina hand-washed an outfit for Sunday’s final, changed her flight, and capped the tournament with an emphatic victory over the sixthranke­d Wozniacki on a breezy, sunny afternoon.

“I was very, very tired after the first game of the first set,” Svitolina said. “And I knew that I needed to give everything because Caroline doesn’t miss much . . . emotionall­y I was relieved when I won the first set and then was playing better and better in the second.

“And yeah, it just happened. I really couldn’t believe that it’s all finished and I’m holding the trophy.”

The 22-year-old Ukrainian relied on her strong baseline game and retrieving prowess. Consistenc­y was key and the steady pressure eventually forced Wozniacki into mistakes.

Wozniacki tried adjusting the height and speed of her shots, but Svitolina’s powerful groundstro­kes and strong service game were too much.

“It was a tough day,” Wozniacki said. “She played well. She mixed up the pace and made it uncomforta­ble for me out there.”

The match appeared rather even at the start as both players tried to feel the other out. A break at love at 4-4 gave Svitolina the edge in the first set, and she wasn’t threatened again in the 77-minute match.

“Obviously I had to go for it a bit more,” Wozniacki said. “It was longer rallies, so normally you have the opportunit­y to have more unforced errors. It is what it is.”

Svitolina had a 15-10 edge in winners. Both players had 21 unforced errors and four aces apiece.

Svitolina, who beat ninth-ranked Venus Williams in the third round, knocked off four top-10 players in all.

She earned $501,975 (all dollar fig-

“It was a very, very special week for me.” ELINA SVITOLINA, ROGERS CUP CHAMPION

ures U.S.) for her third Premier 5 title of the year and will rise one spot to a career-high No. 4 in the new rankings.

“I think this was great tournament for me, I beat four really good players,” Svitolina said. “It was a very, very special week for me.”

Wozniacki, the 27-year-old former world No. 1, will take home $243,920 of the $2.74-million purse. The 2010 Rogers Cup champion fell to 0-6 in finals this season, while Svitolina improved to 5-0.

Announced attendance for the final was a near-sellout of 7,997. The overall total for the week was 125,777.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? After three wins in about 24 hours, Elina Svitolina “couldn’t believe that it’s all finished and I’m holding the trophy.”
NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS After three wins in about 24 hours, Elina Svitolina “couldn’t believe that it’s all finished and I’m holding the trophy.”
 ?? FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS ??
FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada