Tauson Beats Brady at French Open, Giron Saves Match Point in Marathon Win; La Salle Drops Men's and Women's Tennis; Georgia Tech Receives Coaching Endowments
Seventeen-year-old Clara Tauson of Denmark could have been satisfied with qualifying for the French Open this year, but the 2019 Australian Open girls champion made her main draw debut even more memorable by saving two match points against US Open semifinalist and No. 21 seed Jennifer Brady in a 6-4, 3-6, 9-7 victory.
Tauson matched Brady in the power department and neither woman dialed back on their aggressive playing style even as the stakes got higher in the third set. Brady led 4-2 in the third set, but failed to consolidate the break, and Tauson pulled even at 4-all. Serving at 5-6 Tauson went down 15-40, but then won eight of the next nine points, to find herself serving for the match at 7-6. But it was Brady's turn to step up, saving three match points with big hitting to make it 7-7, but Tauson broke to get another chance to serve it out.
It wasn't easy, as Tauson had to save a break point and couldn't convert her fourth match point, but she closed it out on her fifth, celebrating quietly with a look of disbelief on her face as she headed to the net for the racquet tap.
"We played an amazing match today, probably the highest-quality tennis I’ve ever played in my life,” Tauson told Danielle Rossingh in this article for the tournament website. “I have adjusted, and I think that I am ready to be on this level, but you still have to break into the top 100 and there is still a long way for that...and I feel good to play against those kind of players.”Wednesday’s French Open second round matches featuring Americans:
Serena Williams[6] v Tsvetana Pironkova(BUL)
Coco Gauff v Martina Trevisan(ITA)
Bernarda Pera v Amanda Anisimova[25]
Mackenzie McDonald v Rafael Nadal(ESP)[2]
Jack Sock[Q] v Dominic Thiem(AUT)[3]
Sebastian Korda[Q] v John Isner[21]
Taylor Fritz[27] v Radu Albot(MDA)
Tommy Paul v Casper Ruud(NOR)[28]
Division I La Salle announced today that it was cutting seven sports, including men's and women's tennis, after this academic year, leaving them with 18 sponsored varsity sports. In the announcement, the private university in Philadelphia says that this "is not a cost-cutting decision," but then goes on to say its doesn't have enough money to properly fund 25 sports, so that seems more aimed at heading off fund raising efforts than anything else.
The other sports being cut are men's swimming and diving, men's water polo, softball and volleyball.
1 comments:
Disheartening to see another college tennis program dropped, or any college teams for that matter. Less opportunities for student athletes to play the sport and gain an education. Probably not much chance these programs can come back after the pandemic. Its gonna be a long haul.
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