Top seed Elina Svitolina eyes third Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships crown

Top seed Elina Svitolina could begin her bid for a third Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships crown against former two-time Grand Slam winner and three-time Dubai finalist Svetlana Kuznetsova. (AFP)
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Updated 06 March 2021
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Top seed Elina Svitolina eyes third Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships crown

  • In her first match Svitolina could face two-time Grand Slam winner Svetlana Kuznetsova 

DUBAI: Top seed Elina Svitolina could begin her bid for a third Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships crown against former two-time Grand Slam winner and three-time Dubai finalist Svetlana Kuznetsova as play gets underway at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Stadium this week.

The 2017 and 2018 champion receives a first round bye, and will then face either Kuznetsova or Qiang Wang. And should she progress to the quarter-finals, Svitolina could then find 2019 winner and number six seed Belinda Bencic in her path.

“It is clear that there will be many intriguing matches during the coming week, not least in the early rounds,” said Colm McLoughlin, Executive Vice Chairman and CEO of Dubai Duty Free. “We welcome the players and officials and look forward to seeing so many of the world's top players entertain us.”

With the top eight seeds receiving first round byes, it is in the second round that further dramatic clashes could occur. The most intriguing is between seventh seed and 2020 US Open finalist Victoria Azarenka and three-time Grand Slam champion Angelique Kerber, although Kerber has to first overcome Caroline Garcia.

A mouth-watering third round clash could take place between reigning French Open champion and number eight seed Iga Swiatek and former Wimbledon and French Open winner Garbine Muguruza, while another third round battle could see fourth seed, two-time Wimbledon winner and former Dubai champion Petra Kvitova play 2020 Dubai runner-up Elena Rybakina.

Second seed Karolina Pliskova, who reached the 2015 final, could face Azarenka or Kerber in the quarter-finals, third seed Aryna Sabalenka will play one of two former finalists, Alize Cornet or Daria Kasatkina, in the second round, and fifth seed Kiki Bertens has the sensational teenager Coco Gauff, 12th seed Marketa Vondrousova and Rybakina as well as Kvitova in her section of the draw.

And much local interest will deservedly centre around Ons Jabeur, who has demonstrated that she can challenge the very best as she continues to be a trailblazer for Arab women. She also is in the section of the draw that includes Kvitova, Bertens, Rybakina Vondrousova and Gauff, and starts against Katerina Siniakova.

“We are happy to award wild cards this week to Coco Gauff, Timea Babos and Anastasia Potapova,” said Tournament Director Salah Tahlak. “Still only 16, Coco Gauff has made a huge impact on the sport, not only winning her first career title last in Linz where she earned her first win over a top 10 opponent but reaching the fourth round of Wimbledon as a qualifier. She was also a semi-finalist in Adelaide last month.

“Timea Babos is not only a fine singles player with three singles titles and a further five finals to her name, but an outstanding doubles player four Grand Slam crowns. Anastasia Potapova is a rising star who won the 2016 Junior Wimbledon title and was ranked as the junior world number one, and last year she reached three quarter-finals on the WTA Tour.”

Following the WTA1000 event will be the equally exciting ATP contest for the title, headed by reigning US Open champion and world number four Dominic Thiem, who will be in competition for the title against five-time 2020 title-winner and world number eight Andrey Rublev, 2021 ATP Cup finalist Matteo Berrettini, three-time Grand Slam champion Stan Wawrinka, 2020 US Open quarter-finalist Denis Shapovalov, 2020 Dubai semi-finalist Gael Monfils, 2018 Dubai champion Roberto Bautista Agut, 2021 Montpellier winner David Goffin and 2020 US Open semi-finalist Pablo Carreno Busta.


Formula 1 champion Norris hungry for more glory

Updated 15 sec ago
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Formula 1 champion Norris hungry for more glory

  • The McLaren driver said that claiming the drivers’ crown had not changed his work ethic or his desire to be regarded a “hunter” rather than “the hunted“
MELBOURNE: Lando Norris said on ‌Thursday that winning his first Formula One championship had only made him hungry for more as he gears up to launch his title defense at the Australian ​Grand Prix.
The McLaren driver said that claiming the drivers’ crown had not changed his work ethic or his desire to be regarded a “hunter” rather than “the hunted.”
“I’ve probably done the most training and things during the course of the off-season than I’ve ever done,” the Briton told reporters at Albert Park.
“So it’s certainly not the case that I was relaxing more or partying more or whatever it might have been. It ‌was quite ‌the opposite, in fact.
“No, I’m still just as ​hungry. ‌I ⁠think ​it made ⁠me want it more, in a way, because you get that feeling.
“The same as when you have one win, you want another one in a race.
“For me, it was the same feeling as a championship; that one is amazing, but then you definitely want to achieve two.”
Norris won last year’s race from pole after arriving in Melbourne raving about the ⁠car’s performance during winter testing.
The constructors champions are less ‌bullish about the MCL40 car’s off-season performance ‌this year, with team boss Andrea Stella saying ​they were a step behind ‌Ferrari and Mercedes.
Norris’s teammate Oscar Piastri, who led last year’s championship ‌before finishing third, was similarly reserved about their early-season prospects, saying on Wednesday they should not be considered favorites to win in Melbourne.
Norris was more upbeat.
“Even if you’re second, third, or fourth quickest, I don’t think that’s on the back ‌foot,” he said.
“I think that’s still a very good position to start in. And I think in ⁠previous years where ⁠it’s been harder to improve over the course of a season, we’ve certainly proved that you could.”
This year’s championship has plenty of unknowns due to F1’s major overhaul to chassis and engine regulations.
Ferrari’s seven-times world champion Lewis Hamilton said drivers faced their most challenging season ever as they grappled with the power management demands of the more electrified engines.
Norris said he was still adapting to the changes and would probably continue to well into the season.
“(It will) probably (be) at least a third of the way through this year until we drive different tracks, ​different tires, different tarmacs, different ​weather conditions until I can get close to that level of accuracy that I was requiring last year,” he said.