Scottish Daily Mail

IT’S ICE OUEEN V ACE OUEEN

Talents of chilled Barty will be tested by power of Pliskova

- MIKE DICKSON Tennis Correspond­ent at Wimbledon

The sporting genius that is Ash Barty has been living out of her kitbag since mid-March, and the latest step on the long road she has been travelling is today’s Wimbledon final.

This afternoon she will apply her remarkable hand skills to dismantlin­g the power of Karolina Pliskova, giving away eight inches to the towering Czech.

Barty had more than a year at home in Australia during the pandemic before restarting her overseas schedule at the Miami Open, which she proceeded to immediatel­y win.

That was just more evidence of a natural talent which is impressive­ly transferab­le. It is well known that she was able to spend a season playing profession­al Big Bash cricket when she felt she needed a break from tennis, but that is not the limit of her abilities.

While hunkered down in Australia she also won the annual club championsh­ip at her home golf club, despite playing sparingly. her fluid method had already drawn the attention of Tiger Woods when he played at the President’s Cup in Melbourne.

‘She’s got a great swing, are you kidding me?’ commented Woods when he saw her strike a ball over the Yarra River.

Barty loves being at home, and her coach Craig Tyzzer revealed yesterday that he was slightly concerned how she would react to month after month on the road, necessitat­ed by Covid.

‘This is the longest we’ve ever been away,’ he said. ‘It always has been a stretch, through the clay court season leading into Wimbledon, but this is an extra-ordinarily longer time.

‘Because we missed all of last year, in the end Ash really missed playing tennis, the competitio­n, that side of it, she really put her head down and said: “Okay, if this is what we have to do, this is what we have to do”. She’s accepted it a lot better. It’s a long stretch, but we’ve made it as enjoyable as we possibly can.’

Barty is a wonderful player with an enormous toolbox. Among those are her varied returns of serve, and this afternoon sees the statistica­lly best server of the tournament against its most effective blocker.

It should make for a vivid contrast as the 5ft 5in Queensland­er seeks to win the women’s title 50 years after evonne Goolagong, with whom she shares aboriginal heritage, first triumphed at the All england Club.

Pliskova has served 54 aces in the tournament and won four out of five points on her first serve. Technical tweaks to her delivery, such as changing her stance, are already paying off.

Nonetheles­s, former world No1 Tracy Austin believes that Barty is good enough to condemn the 29-year-old Czech to continue her status as the best active female player not to have won a Grand Slam. That could be the difference from the semi-finals, when Pliskova overcame fellow power merchant Aryna Sabalenka.

‘her variety is going to favour her because she can make it awkward for Pliskova,’ said Austin, who has been analysing for the BBC. ‘Sabalenka doesn’t really have those tools, she was trying to outhit Pliskova whereas Ash can change the pace, change the angles, drag her off the court.

‘She moves so well, she has the backhand slice, she floats across the court. her personalit­y is pretty chilled, and we know that evonne Goolagong was the same. If there is anybody on the Tour now who replicates evonne’s game and demeanour it would be Ash.

‘I think the Aussies really put Wimbledon at the top, they really want to win that title, and she has a game that is tailor-made for it. I think her experience of the past in winning Roland Garros helps when she is in the Wimbledon final. She was very calm in her semi-final, after going 5-2 down in the second set.

‘She just trusts herself and has the ability to change up her game to adapt to situations in matches. She has got so much variety, so many tools. Because it’s the final of a major hopefully they won’t be overwhelme­d by the situation and it’s a beautiful contrast in styles.’

It will also be a clash of temperamen­ts, with the phlegmatic Barty up against the more intense Czech. Pliskova hails from a country with a rich tennis tradition, where the game is akin to a national sport and which is now producing generation after generation of outstandin­g players.

Pliskova’s coach Sascha Bajin, who once worked with Serena Williams, has found the experience interestin­g.

‘I’ve learned that Czech mentality can be very stubborn,’ he said. ‘It’s okay sometimes to go through the door, not through the wall.’

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Final battle: contrastin­g styles of Barty (far left) and Pliskova
GETTY IMAGES Final battle: contrastin­g styles of Barty (far left) and Pliskova
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