Iga Swiatek Anna Blinkova France Germany Switzerland Iga Swiatek Anna Blinkova France Germany Switzerland

Transition from clay to grass easier every year, says Swiatek

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Claycourt specialist Iga Swiatek has never been beyond the fourth round at Wimbledon but the world number one says the transition to slick grass surfaces is becoming a little easier each year.The Pole warmed up for this year's grasscourt Grand Slam by reaching her first quarter-final on the surface at the Bad Homburg Open.

She brushed aside Switzerland's Jil Teichmann 6-3 6-1 in the last 16 of the WTA 250 event on Wednesday for her 37th win of the season but only an eighth career victory on grass."It's getting easier every year to convert my claycourt style to more grasscourt style," said Swiatek, who won her third French Open title this month.The 22-year-old, whose coach Tomasz Wiktorowski previously worked with former world number two Agnieszka Radwanska, said her grass game would improve with experience. "I have a coach who knows how to coach players who are good on grass courts like Aga Radwanska, so I'm pretty positive about my future on grass."Swiatek faces Anna Blinkova later on Thursday for a place in the semi-finals of the German event."I think it's my first grasscourt quarter-final, so pretty excited," she added. "For now I'm just focusing on the process and learning as much as possible."Wimbledon runs from July 3-16.

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Iga Swiatek pulled out of her Bad Homburg Open semi-final on Friday morning, blaming “fever and possible food poisoning.” The 22-year-old world No. 1 had been due to take on Lucia Bronzetti in a match that would have been her first semi-final played on grass at the elite level, however she has instead withdrawn from a WTA tournament for the first time in her career. Ad She had beaten Russia’s Anna Blinkova 6-3 6-2 in the quarter-finals in Germany.
BAD HOMBURG, Germany: Top-ranked Iga Swiatek seems to be finding her groove on grass ahead of Wimbledon.
Iga Swiatek, Aryna Sabalenka and Elena Rybakina have won the last five women’s Grand Slam titles between them. So impressive have the trio been that there has been talk that they have started to form a ‘Big Three’ in women’s tennis. Ad But will they make it six from the last six at Wimbledon? It does not look guaranteed.
Iga Swiatek will gear up for Wimbledon by staying open-minded about her prospects as the world number one bids to improve her modest record on a surface she has not fully mastered yet.
Iga Swiatek reached her first grass court quarter-final following a convincing 6-3 6-1 victory over Switzerland’s Jil Teichmann in the Bad Homburg Open. It is Swiatek’s 37th win of the season but just her eighth career victory on grass. Ad The match took just one hour and 19 minutes as Swiatek dominated with 14 winners, converting four of her five break points.

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