Archive for the ‘Special Articles’ Category

Serbia ‘08: Ana Ivanovic

Monday, December 17th, 2007

2008: The Year Serbia Rules The Tennis World

Ana Ivanovic

2007 Year In Review
Ana started the year ranked 14th but won three titles, reached the French Open finals and Wimbledon semifinals, she finished the year ranked 4th. Her titles included Berlin (clay), Los Angeles (hard) and Luxembourg (indoors). She also reached the finals in Tokyo.

What To Expect In 2008
Ana needs to break through in order to challenge the top three: Henin, Kuznetsova and Jankovic. Ivanovic is strong on all surfaces but has to play more consistent in the Slams and Tier I events.

Let’s see how Ana would fare at the Grand Slams:

Australian Open
Ana had a horrible stay in Melbourne in 2007, losing to Vera Zvonareva in a romp. This will be the first test to see just how much Ana improved in 2007 and what she worked on in the off season and what she will have to still work on. She really dropped off at the end of the year and anything more than a quarterfinal showing would be a bonus.

French Open
Like her countrywoman Jelena Jankovic, Ana has a strong chance to take the French and has proved in 2007 that she can play with the best on clay. Her powerful strokes can be neutralized on the slow clay and the ball would sit up for a player like Henin or Jankovic who can control the point better. Also, Ivanovic won’t be surprising anyone this year, the top players along with fast rising players like Tatiana Golovin will know how to play her more effectively. Look for a semifinal showing at best.

Wimbledon
This is where Ana will shine. Anything less than holding the trophy at the end of two weeks would be disappointing. Her power game should get her the title. By the start of Wimbledon, Ana should have a few titles under her belt and will be riding a lot of confidence. A win here will be the start of a very strong summer for Serbia.

US Open
Ana had a bad summer heading into the Open last year. Even though she did win the title in Los Angeles, she bombed out in the second round in Toronto before losing in the fourth round in New York. It should be different in ‘08. If Ana gets a good draw, she should at least live up to her seeding and make the semifinals. After that, it depends on who she plays. Jankovic has proven to be tough at the US Open and should be the biggest challenge to Ana.

Rankings
It’s doubtful that Ana could crack the top two if Justine or Jelena play as well as they should. With the amount of points Justine has, it doubtful we would see a new number 1 in 2008 unless she has a serious injury or falls off completely.

Hurdles
Ana needs to work on her mental game specifically staying focused and changing tactics when her A game isn’t working. Her powerful strokes won’t be enough to get her to the top, she will have to work on her volley and her footwork. These aren’t major problems, but would obviously compliment her power game to help her finish off points quickly and not get drawn into long rallies with other power players like the Williams’. As I said before, she won’t be surprising anyone this year so developing into a complete player is an absolute must to stay in the top 5.

In Summary
Australian Open - Quarterfinals
French Open - Semifinals
Wimbledon - Champion
US Open - Semifinals

Tomorrow: Novak Djokovic

2008: The Year Serbia Rules The Tennis World

Sunday, December 16th, 2007

2008: The Year Serbia Rules The Tennis World

A few years ago, Russia dominated the tennis headlines but quickly faded as Maria Sharapova and Svetlana Kuznetsova went winless for a couple of years and Anastasia Myskina and Elena Dementieva dropped out of the headlines.

2007 saw the rise of Serbia with Jelena Jankovic and Ana Ivanovic getting the bulk of the press on the women’s side and Novak Djokovic quickly moving up the rankings on the ATP Tour.

At FutureTennisStars.com we’re going to be looking at those three players in greater detail and see what we can expect from them in 2008 starting with Jelena Jankovic.

Jelena Jankovic

2007 in Review
Jelena started the year ranked 12th and finished 3rd. Her biggest titles came in Charleston and Rome, both Tier I events. Her best Slam performance came at the French where she reached the semifinals. She won a total of 4 events.

What to expect in 2008
Jelena played, and won, an insane amount of tennis in 2007 so she will have a lot of points to defend. However, at the Slams and a the Tier I events, she has room to get more in 2008. She will be playing a toned down schedule so she will have more time to focus on her biggest goal, not winning a Slam, but beating Justine Henin. Jankovic was not able to beat the top ranked Henin in 7 tries in 2007. In Doha, Warsaw and Berlin, the matches went three sets and only two matches, Paris and Madrid, weren’t close with both being 6-2, 6-2 losses for Jankovic.

Jankovic can beat anyone else on tour so if Jankovic can beat Henin in a Slam, Jelena will most likely win the title. Let’s have a look at how Jankovic may fare at the Slams.

Australian Open
Jankovic started 2007 with a win in Auckland and the finals in Sydney so she can quickly adjust to the time and weather, the two big things that can affect the top players if they don’t prepare for Melbourne right. Jankovic just happened to run into a hot Serena Williams last year but this year could be different. Jelena will be determined to set the tone for 2008 and a strong showing is what she will get in Melbourne. I doubt she will overcome Henin at the Australian but a semifinal finish is what we should see.

French Open
Her best chance will come at the French where her clay game can neutralize the power of the other players and give her the opportunity to use her ball control to keep her opponents off guard. Even though Henin is extremely tough on clay, definitely the best on tour, Jelena should still pull an upset in Paris. Her strong showing in Charleston, Rome and reached the semis in Berlin. No woman has won 4 straight French titles in the Open Era and I don’t think Henin will do it in 2008. Jankovic wins the French Open and should be ranked No. 2 after the win as she is less than 300 points behind Kuznetsova.

Wimbledon
Jelena won in Birmingham and reached the finals in the Netherlands before Wimbledon last year so she can handle the transition from clay to grass better than most. An unthinkable loss to Bartoli last year (but hey, no one saw Bartoli coming) stopped her from challenging for the title. I don’t think that will happen again and Jankovic should have a clear path to the semis at least. There, she should face Ivanovic, Sharapova perhaps even Golovin. The player that should give her the most trouble here is Ivanovic and I don’t see Jankovic winning against her countrywoman on grass. A semifinal appearance at least should be her result here, but most likely not the title.

US Open
The US Open is a symbolic place for Jankovic. She completed her turnaround in 2006 in New York and she played a great match against Williams in the quarters last year. Even though Jankovic can play on the hard courts, she will face a lot more contenders in New York than probably at any other Slam. Henin, Sharapova, the Williams’, Ivanovic and others could challenge Jankovic. Still at the end of a long year, in the heat and on hardcourts, anything can happen. Henin isn’t as dominant in New York, Sharapova is prone to mental lapses, the Williams’ may not be ready depending on how much they do or do not play. Injuries play a large factor in New York so if Jelena can stay healthy, she will be one of the two or three big favourites. It’s hard to predict a win without seeing a draw, but I would say a title isn’t out of the question depending on her health.

Rankings
Jankovic can make up some ground on Kuznetsova in the rankings not only at the Slams but also at the Tier I events. In Tokyo, San Diego, Indian Wells and Miami, Jankovic lost early. Unless Henin really falls apart and Jelena tears up the schedule, it’s doubtful that Jankovic could overtake Henin in the rankings.

Hurdles
Jankovic’s biggest hurdle will be the mental aspect. For someone who almost never gets hurt, she is prone to mental letdowns if she is up in the third set. Her serve is the weakest part of her game, something she knows and has committed to working on.

In Summary
Australian Open - Semifinals
French Open - Champion
Wimbledon - Semifinals
US Open - Champion

Tomorrow: Ana Ivanovic