New Haven, Connecticut, August 27: Three-time defending champion Caroline Wozniacki beat Francesca Schiavone in straight sets in the semifinals of the New Haven Open on Friday, setting up a final against giant-killing Czech qualifier Petra Cetkovska.
Wozniacki, who is now 16-0 during her four years at the tournament, downed the third-seeded Italian 7-6 (2), 6-3 and got a kiss from her boyfriend, golfer Rory McIlroy, on court after the match.
The Danish world No. 1 trailed 4-2 early against Schiavone, but won an entertaining rally to break back and tie the set at 5-5, then dominated the tiebreaker and the second set.
Cetkovska, ranked No. 40, upset French Open champion Li Na in a dramatic third-set tiebreaker 6-2, 5-7, 7-6 (9) earlier Friday to reach her first WTA final—which has been moved forward from 5 p.m. to 1 p.m. local time Saturday to avoid the anticipated effects of Hurricane Irene.
The 26-year-old Czech has beaten Agnieszka Radwanska, Marion Bartoli and now Li—seeded fifth, fourth and second respectively—to become one of the more unlikely finalists on tour this year.
“It's amazing,” she said. “I'm really happy about it. If somebody told me that before this tournament, I don't think I would believe it. But since the beginning, I really like the conditions and I was just happy to play every single match.”
Cetkovska won her fifth match point in a match that lasted over 2 hours, 40 minutes. She led 3-1 in the second set and 3-0 in the third, and said a case of nerves allowed Li back into the match. The Czech double faulted while serving for the match to make it 5-5, and failed to convert three times on match point in the tiebreaker.
“I was really stressed,” she said. “It was really difficult for me to control my movements. The hand, the legs, everything was slowed down. It's life. It's tennis. There are a lot of emotions. But I'm really happy in the end that I could have fight with my emotions and be able to win this match.”
Li failed to hold serve in the first game of each set, and found herself fighting from behind the entire match. The Chinese star, ranked No. 7, failed to convert on two match points of her own in the tiebreaker.
“Today's serve was like the worst ever,” she said. “No first serve.”
In the tiebreaker Cetkovska took an early 3-1 lead, but Li won four of the next five points, and the two went back-and-forth from there.
Li double-faulted on her serve to give Cetkovska a 9-8 lead. But for the third time in the tiebreaker, Cetkovska couldn't close it out, sending a hard forehand volley into the net.
Li ended the next rally with a shot that was just long, and Cetkovska finally took advantage.
She handled Li's serve cleanly with a hard return and when Li's volley sailed long and wide, Cetkovska let out a loud scream and threw her arms into the air. AP