“Why did I even play this tournament?”—Eugenie Bouchard, to her coach Nick Saviano after losing the first set of her second round-robin match at the WTA Finals to Ana Ivanovic, 6-1.
Ivanovic’s 6-1, 6-3 win over Bouchard today in Singapore provided a vivid commentary on just how far the Serb has come in her rebuilt career—and perhaps just how far Bouchard will have to go to become comparably poised, professional, and comfortable with herself.
Ivanovic once walked—okay, ran—in more or less the same shoes Bouchard wears today. A 20-year-old from Francophone, Quebec, Bouchard has rocketed to No. 5 in the rankings, largely because of her outstanding results at the first three Grand Slam tournaments of the year (two semifinals plus a Wimbledon final). She hails from a nation that has long been a tennis backwater, but the folks in Canada love her. Bouchard also has plenty of sex appeal, which has already transformed her into a marketing dynamo.
Does anyone remember Ivanovic in those happy and halcyon days in 2008, when she struck the first major blow for Serbia by winning the French Open and capturing the No. 1 ranking? Her talent, combined with her girl-next-door charm, catapulted her to fame and fortune. But by the end of 2011, she was a star adrift. She fell out of the Top 25, struggled with confidence, and cried herself to sleep on more than one occasion.
You have to wonder if Bouchard isn’t destined to undergo a similar wake-up call, for she seems to be in the throes of rebellion against all that is now expected of her. And her situation will only become more challenging next year, when she has all those points to defend.