Sharapova overcomes slow start to prevail, Hingis wins
By Matthew Cronin
SAN DIEGO (Reuters) – Second seed Maria Sharapova overcame
a slow start against fellow Russian Vasilisa Bardina before
reeling off 10 of the last 11 games to record a 6-4 6-1
second-round victory at the Acura Classic on Tuesday.
Earlier, eighth seed Martina Hingis marched into the third
round with a 6-2 6-3 win over American Meilen Tu.
In search of her first title of the summer hardcourt
season, Sharapova fell 4-1 behind to the feisty 18-year-old
qualifier before warming to the task of winning the match.
“I felt pretty good after she broke me early,” Sharapova
told reporters.
“I felt like I made her play a little bit after that and
when she was serving at 70 mph, I took advantage of that. I was
moving well, seeing the ball well.”
Bardina surprised Sharapova when they began their warm-up
by starting at the net and also called for a trainer to treat a
shoulder injury when trailing 4-1 in the second set.
“She pulled all the tricks out of her bag except for the
win,” Sharapova added.
“I don’t know anything about her except that every time I
see her dad, he walks barefoot. I think that’s cool.”
ROUTINE VICTORY
Two times champion Hingis, who is making her first
appearance at the tournament since 2001, mixed up her strokes
adeptly against the veteran Tu in a routine victory.
It was the Swiss’s first match since she was upset in the
third round of Wimbledon by Japan’s Ai Sugiyama at the end of
June.
“Coming off a long layoff, it’s never easy,” the former
world number one said after her victory over an opponent who
beat her in the 1994 U.S. Open junior final.
“You feel like you can train forever, but once you get in a
match you feel rusty. I didn’t play my best tennis, but it will
come with matches. I know that I can play better than what I
played today. But it was a solid performance.”
Hingis, who returned to the tour in January, more than
three years after announcing her retirement due to injury and
burn out, was also presented with the tournament’s Corina
Morariu Comeback Award.
“When (the court announcer) was talking all about my past
and what I’ve achieved, it kind of reads like a fairytale,”
Hingis said.
“It’s one part of my life, and then I was doing other
things. Now I’m back here. I feel like a rookie more than a
comeback.”
Other seeded winners included number seven Nicole Vaidisova
of the Czech Republic, who destroyed Spain’s Virginia
Ruano-Pascaul 6-1 6-0.
Number 11 Daniela Hantuchova of Slovakia advanced when
Czech Kveta Peschke retired from their first round match with a
thigh injury when trailing 6-1 4-0.
Number 15 Katarina Srebotnik of Slovenia thrashed France’s
Marion Bartoli 6-3 6-0 in another opening round encounter.
However, not every seed fared so well.
Vera Zvonareva of Russia, who recently captured the
Cincinnati title, upended 13th seed Sugiyama 6-1 7-5 in a first
round tie, and Elena Vesnina of Russia took out number 10
Anna-Lena Groenefeld of Germany 3-6 6-3 6-3.
