Recent form. It’s one of the crutches that all tennis prognosticators use as we try to peer into the unknown and predict who will win a match. But it’s one of our fallacies, as well.
If a player is in the middle of a hot streak, does that mean she’ll stay hot for one more day, or does it mean she’s due, as everyone is at some point, to cool off? Can one player beat another every single time? How much does the result of a tiny tune-up event mean for the more pressure-packed Grand Slam to follow?
These are the questions that every tennis pundit must ponder, and they were the ones I asked before Wednesday’s quarterfinal between Victoria Azarenka and Angelique Kerber. In this case, Azarenka was the player on the hot streak. She hadn’t lost a set this season, and she’d won the warm-up event in Brisbane with a 6-3, 6-1 victory over Kerber in the final. On the men’s side, Brisbane had proven to be prophetic. The winner, Milos Raonic, has continued to show off the same newly-complete game that he used to beat Roger Federer in the final there.
Going into their quarterfinal in Melbourne, Azarenka had won all six of her previous meetings against Kerber. Was No. 7 a lock? As of Wednesday morning, that was the conventional wisdom.