When I saw Novak Djokovic in person for the first time last year, in Montreal, he gave off the aura of a world No. 1. I was curious to see if Azarenka, whoâs occupied the top spot for just over a month, would do the same today. She certainly looked the part, wearing the same attire as she had for the first 17 matches of 2012, all wins. And for a while, she played the part, too. Azarenka made Barthel pay for any short ball, returned aggressively, and generally played points long enough to either put herself in a winning position or force an error from her opponent.
But one thing Azarenka never had working today was her serve. Barthel also returned aggressively, not necessarily by choice, but because she couldâ"Azarenka didnât dictate play when holding the balls. Double faults were plentiful; she had 12 in all.
But a so-so serve doesnât matter much when youâre leading by a set and two breaks. However, it was at this juncture that the silent Barthel produced some deadly tennis. The German flattened out her strokes, pushing Azarenka back and into retrieval mode. This occured in both playersâ service games, sending the already vocal Azarenka into several screaming fits. Before you knew it, Azarenkaâs lead was just 5-4, and when she failed to convert a match point, Barthel took full advantage, winning an eventual tiebreaker. For Vika, it was opportunity for an easy night lost. For Mona, it was a work of art.
A new set did nothing to change the momentum of the match. Barthelâs blitzkrieg continued, which included a number of down-the-line winners that elicited huge cheers from the growing, curious crowd. Azarenkaâs frustration mounted, punctuated when she double-faulted on three consecutive points to fall behind 4-1.
Still, if the world No. 1 can blow a double-break lead and lose a set, so can the world No. 37. And thatâs exactly what happened, more because of Barthelâs nerves than anything. Her once fearsome groundstrokes vanished, along with her follow-through. She was unlucky, tooâ"up a Hawk-Eye review confirmed that Azarenka saved a break point by an angstrom; it would have given Barthel an even greater cushion. Ultimately, that may have cost her the match. Tight as a drum, Barthel failed to serve it out at 5-4, and suddenly she knew how Azarenka felt a set earlier.
At that point, I felt confident that Azarenka couldnât possibly lose. My conviction was tested when Barthel again had a chance to serve out the match at 6-5, and when Azarenkaâs 3-0 lead in the third-set tiebreaker became 4-4. But three hours after it began, Azarenkaâs winning streak improved to 18 matches. What did we learn from this? Iâll let Steve Tignor try his hand on that in a forthcoming post. But I can say this for sure: Not all wins are created equal.
â"Ed McGrogan
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