Greetings, everyone. Yesterday in Melbourne, the top players put the hammer down. After two exciting and sometimes unpredictable rounds for all but the dominant ATP and WTA stars, order was restored. At least temporarily.
Granted, there were a few exciting three-set (WTA) or longer encounters between well-matched opponents. But by and large the favorites laid down the law, as if to say “Enough with the monkey business, let’s take this baby to the next level.”
The only seeded male player to lose to an unseeded rival was No. 22 Fernando Verdasco (Kevin Anderson of South Africa took him down in five sets, in one of those non-upset upsets) , and the closest thing to a WTA upset was No. 11 Marion Bartoli’s failure against No. 19 Ekaterina Makarova.
The only other favorites to lose even a set while posting a win were No. 8 Janko Tipsarevic (who lost two to the lowest men’s seed, No. 32 Julien Benneteau) and Julia Goerges, the No. 18 seed who lost a set to unseeded Jie Zheng.
So with all quiet on the southern front, let’s take a look at what some of the players had to say on an otherwise slow news day:
The Flying Dutchman of Japan
You know the tale of the Flying Dutchman, the ghost ship doomed never to make port? Kimiko Date-Krumm, the pint-sized, 42-year old Japanese, knows how the ghost crew of that vessel must feel.
Date-Krumm is having a stellar Australian Open; she’s in the third round of the singles, and yesterday she and Aranxta Parra Santonja upset the No. 2 seeds in doubles, Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka. But when a reporter marveled at how much she’s played and asked what her schedule for this year was like, she just laughed and replied:
“I hope less than last year. Because I play last year 27 or something, so I try to not play not so much. But if I lose first round many times, then no choice. I need to go more. So I hope not play more than 25 this year.”
Yes, Let’s do About the Weather