Clay, at first glance, would not seem to be Karolina Pliskova’s surface. Yes, she reached the semifinals at Roland Garros in 2017, but before Sunday she had won just one tournament on dirt, three years ago at the lower-level event in Prague. Pliskova’s flat, low-margin shots, strike-first attitude, and sometimes-casual footwork wouldn’t seem to be a winning recipe for this grinder’s paradise.
But watching her edge Coco Vandeweghe on Sunday, 7-6 (2), 6-4, I started to wonder if clay isn’t the perfect surface for Pliskova. Because she knows she needs to be more consistent and more patient, she is more consistent and more patient. Because she knows she can’t win points as easily or as quickly with outright winners, she doesn’t try for as many outright winners. Because she needs to use her feet to survive rallies, she’s more diligent with her footwork. The Stuttgart draw was jammed with most of the Top 10, yet Pliskova, who hadn’t won a tournament this year, and who had become something of an afterthought at the top of the tour despite reaching No. 1 last season, made her way through the field with the loss of just one set.
“I think it’s huge for me because I did some work [over the last month], but not always after you do some good work, you get rewarded immediately with a title,” Pliskova said. “I think it was a great week with a lot of tough matches, which is always important. I think it was a good start, but hopefully I can have some more victories on clay.”
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If you needed to be reminded of how wide open the French Open women’s draw will be, the Stuttgart final provided the early proof; while Pliskova had won just one clay-court event, Vandeweghe hadn’t won any. But both of them showed how much a powerful serve and ground game can mean on dirt, provided you do the little things to get yourself in position for shots and stay in points.
This was the type of big-hitting, serve-dominated contest you would normally expect to see on grass. Those types of matches are typically decided by just a few points, and Pliskova won virtually all of them against Vandeweghe. Pliskova has always had the serve and the shot-making skills, and she has always liked fast courts because of it. But slowing down her game just a little bit, which is what clay forces her to do, may be just what she needs.