“Sometimes you’re just going along for the ride,” Johanna Konta said with a laugh earlier this week in Wuhan, when she was asked what it’s like to play—and lose to—an in-form Petra Kvitova.
The Kvitova ride has always been a roller coaster; there are ups, downs, bumps, free falls, uphill climbs and unexpected loop de loops. Until this week, though, her 2016 season had hardly been worth the price of admission. Kvitova picked up a bronze medal in Rio, but she hasn’t won a tournament, she lost in the second round at Wimbledon—her favorite event—and after five straight years in the Top 10, she’s currently ranked just 16th. And the one place where she had always been steady—her coaching setup—suddenly turned unstable this season. Kvitova split with longtime mentor David Kotzya in January, and earlier this month she fired his replacement, Frantisek Cermak. It seemed possible that, at 26, Kvitova may have begun her career descent.
For the moment, though, she’s happy to have landed in China. While some top players dial it back in the fall, Kvitova hits the accelerator when she gets to Asia. In 2013, she won the title in Tokyo. In 2014, she won Wuhan and reached the Beijing final. Now she has put together her best week of 2016 to make the Wuhan final again. Her run has included a classic, three-set, three-hour victory over world No. 1 Angelique Kerber, and her first win over Simona Halep, in a 6-1, 6-2 blowout. In that one, the Kvitova coaster was rolling straight downhill; when that happens, all you can do is get out of the way and hope she derails.