The New Zealand Herald

DOUBLE OR NOTHING

Kiwi comes up short in thrilling final

- Michael Burgess

For Paige Hourigan, dreams died hard at the ASB Classic yesterday. The 21-year-old Kiwi, playing with American Taylor Townsend, had a golden opportunit­y to win a WTA doubles title but couldn’t nail it when it mattered.

Who knows when she will have another chance?

After a brilliant run through the field this week, the wildcard combinatio­n fell at the last hurdle, losing to Eugenie Bouchard and Sofia Kenin 6-1, 1-6, 10-7.

After having all the momentum in the first set — when they steamrolle­d their opponents in just 18 minutes — everything changed in the second, before they were edged in the super tiebreaker.

“It’s hard to process that you had such a great opportunit­y and you didn’t quite come through on this stage and this type of tennis,” said Hourigan.

Townsend, who was outstandin­g throughout the week, was also philosophi­cal.

“Overall, I am pretty pleased with our performanc­e,” said Townsend. “We came out playing amazing . . . we didn’t miss a ball, to be honest. But things happen, things come down and they rose their level and we had to adjust.”

Bouchard and Kenin, who play only a handful of doubles tournament­s each year and had never played together before last week, were stunned as they reflected on their success.

“We had no expectatio­ns at the start of the week,” said Kenin. “We probably thought we would lose round one and just entered doubles for some extra match play.”

Hourigan will hopefully one day be able to look back on the past week as a breakthrou­gh tournament.

Despite being dumped out in the first round of singles qualifying by compatriot Valentina Ivanov, she went to another level in the doubles against some top opposition, though she endured a nervy performanc­e in the final.

“It was a really great week for me,” said Hourigan. “Practising with Venus [Williams] and being in her box really helped me. She gave me a few tips at the start of the week that I really tried to focus on and bring into my game. [And] having Taylor next to me, who is a really top player, it was really cool to have such guidance this week and I am going to take this into my year.”

Hourigan was aiming to become the second Kiwi to win the ASB Classic doubles title, after Julie Richardson in 1987. The last New Zealanders to make the doubles final were Marina Erakovic (2011) and Leanne Baker (2005).

The final was a strange match. Bouchard and Kenin had trained in an extended session earlier in the afternoon but started like they had left all their energy on court.

The Canadian-American duo were listless, from the beginning while Hourigan and Townsend were like Energizer bunnies.

They took the initiative from the start, breaking Bouchard in her first service game, and never looked back in that set.

Townsend dominated at the net, with clever angles and punchy volleys, while Hourigan belied her inexperien­ce with composed play, especially on some of the big points, and served with authority.

But Bouchard and Kenin found their game in the second set, while the levels of Townsend and in particular Hourigan dropped markedly.

The young Kiwi saved three set points at 1-5 but couldn’t save a fourth as Bouchard and Kenin tied up the match.

The tie break was a tight affair. Neither team could gain an advantage until the latter stages, when a couple of errors from Hourigan gave the North American duo match point at 9-7.

After a tense rally, Townsend netted a cross court backhand to end the dreams of Hourigan and Kiwi tennis fans.

It’s hard to process that you had such a great opportunit­y and you didn’t quite come through on this stage. Paige Hourigan

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 ??  ?? Paige Hourigan hits a return during the ASB Classic doubles final yesterday.
Paige Hourigan hits a return during the ASB Classic doubles final yesterday.

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