28 Ağustos 2018 Salı

No. 1 Simona Halep Exits the U.S. Open in the First Round

It just appeared as though Simona Halep impacted the world forever Monday in a New York minute. As a matter of fact, it took all of 76 minutes for her to wind up the first No. 1 ladies' seed in the historical backdrop of the United States Open to lose in the first round, falling by 6-2, 6-4 to Kaia Kanepi. As Halep's trademark on-court cleanser musical shows go, the shocking miracle was as yet quick, relatively standard. Kanepi, a 33-year-old Estonian who is positioned No. 44, overwhelmed a lazy Halep in the primary set before stopping her rally to 4-4 from 0-3 in the second in the principal principle draw coordinate at the new Louis Armstrong Stadium. How to clarify Halep's competition being done before lunch, regardless of whether the Romanian has a past filled with first-round flameouts — 12 of every 34 profession Grand Slam occasions — and Kanepi has six noteworthy quarterfinals on her list of qualifications, including one a year back in New York? [Get live outcomes and examination from the primary day of the 2018 U.S. Open.] Halep did not refer to exhaustion, in spite of keeps running in back to back weeks in the current month to the finals in the Rogers Cup and Western and Southern Open, winning the previous and losing the last before pulling back from a week ago's occasion in Connecticut. She didn't accuse the loud conditions in the generally welcomed Armstrong Stadium, where outside walkways and concessions make a consistent commotion. She admitted that, for reasons unknown, "I never play my best tennis" in New York. Consistent with character, legitimate as common in her post-coordinate confession booth, Halep proposed it was increasingly the voices in her mind that most added to the bleak end to a Grand Slam season that started with an awful thrashing to Caroline Wozniacki in the last of the Australian Open and a hotly anticipated achievement title at the French Open over Sloane Stephens "No doubt, nerves," she before including with a liable as-charged grin, "since I'm conceived this way, I think." It very well may be difficult to watch players battle against their passionate evil spirits in their desolate profession, however that makes it much all the more thrilling to see a memorable expulsion. To that final product, Halep was moved to cheerful tears in Paris after the Stephens coordinate, amid which she appeared to be made a beeline for a fourth real last annihilation before wearing out her rival and quickening to the wrap up. So was her mentor, Darren Cahill, who surrendered the situation for a spell, exasperated by Halep's purposeless sessions with self-hatred. The evil spirits clearly never stray sufficiently far away to be for all time fixed. This mid year, even as she fixed her hold on the best positioning that she will keep up regardless of Monday's annihilation, Halep was seen on TV summoning Cahill to the court amid one changeover in Montreal — he waved her off — and hopeless to him for having missed a second-set match point against Kiki Bertens in the Western and Southern Open last before shrinking in the third. Her matches have turned out to be convincing docudramas, as mentally depleting as they've been physically tiring. Liberally recorded at 5 feet 6 inches, in a time since a long time ago marked Big Babe Tennis by the supporter Mary Carillo, Halep has splendidly battled her way to the highest point of the visit by winning wars of strategic steady loss against near monsters. Cahill persuaded her throughout the most recent two years to go greater on her groundstrokes, with clear achievement. Be that as it may, not a lot worked in the principal set and the following three amusements of the second against the 5-foot-11 Kanepi, who barbarously assaulted Halep's 80 or more miles-per-hour second serve, belting clean victors and breaking her four times.
Between sets, Halep disposed of her top, however that didn't stop the dying. She was broken instantly and after that, after a wide strike to begin the second diversion, she savagely acquainted her racket with the hard court — twice. "It's no issue venting and getting so much stuff out, that is no issue, as long as you will have any kind of effect," Cahill had addressed her in one of his vital on-court get up and go talks amid a 2017 match with Johanna Konta in Miami. "What's more, on the off chance that she beats you playing extraordinary tennis, no stresses. Shake her hand and disclose to her well done." When Halep achieved the media gathering room on Monday, that was the conclusion she seemed to have come to. The detail sheet was in full understanding. Kanepi hit 26 victors to Halep's 9. Halep won 30 percent of her second-benefit focuses (6 of 20) contrasted and Kanepi's 60 percent (9 of 15). "She played extremely solid, pushed me back," Halep said. Cahill, she stated, had given her an embrace and "said that it's okay." She knew coming into the match that the draw had not been thoughtful. Kanepi was unquestionably no weakling — if not exactly the first-round test that Maria Sharapova was in expelling Halep, at that point the No. 2 seed, at the Open a year ago. At first indifferent to Kanepi's first-set level, the Armstrong swarm, swelling with the fragrance of a furious, endeavored to lift Halep by droning her first name. Kanepi pondered what was up with that in the wake of breaking Halep's second-set force by pivoting a 40-15 shortage to crush spirit to 5-4 preceding serving out the match. "Why they cheer such a great amount for her? Since typically they cheer for the underdog," Kanepi said. She was grinning, almost certainly mindful of how Serena Williams' nonappearance from the visit after the introduction of her girl last September had thrown a roundabout focus on others, particularly in the United States. In the fantastic plan of things, Halep at her size could be viewed as an underdog against a large number of her best rivals, including those vexing evil spirits inside. The fight against them proceeds. Kaynakça
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