As much as any of the Junior Grand Slams, the winner of the French
Open has tended to go on and establish themselves as a solid upper level WTA
player. Last year’s champion, Belinda Bencic, has been touted as one of the
most promising young players around, while previous champions in the past eight
years include Agnieszka Radwanska, Alize Cornet, Simona Halep and Elina
Svitolina. While they have not quite achieved success yet, Kristina Mladenovic
and Annika Beck have both reached the top 50 as well. So, who are the names
that we should be looking out for in this year’s edition?
The top seed will be Serbia’s Ivana Jorovic. Currently the
#2 in the rankings, she has mainly concentrated on the senior tour in 2014, but
drops back to the junior level in search of an elusive Grand Slam title. Last
year, she burst onto the scene in May with a winning run of 24 matches on clay
in Grade 1, Grade 2 and a $10k ITF event, with notable wins over Aliona Bolsova
Zadoinov, Jil Belen Teichmann and Anna Bondar. She went close to winning her
first Grade A title at the Orange Bowl, where she battled her way to the final
before going down in three sets to Varvara Flink. However, she has found it
harder in 2014, failing to make it past the second round of a tournament until
this week in Maribor. Despite this, the experience gained against older players
should give her a boost.
The second seed is undoubtedly the form player on the junior
tour in 2014. Catherine Cartan Bellis has catapulted herself up the rankings
after winning 28 out of 29 matches on the junior tour this year, including
three Grade 1 titles and a first Grade A title on the clay in Milan last week.
Just to emphasis her talent, she is the third youngest player in the draw, yet
arguably starts as the favourite to lift the title. She has already beaten
several former top-200 players on the senior tour and will be very difficult to
beat here as she looks to become the first American champion at Roland Garros
since Jennifer Capriati in 1989 (you can read more about Bellis here).
CiCi Bellis is the form player on the junior tour in 2014 |
The Americans also have a second major hope in the shape of
Tornado Alicia Black. Last year’s US Open finalist is more at home on the hard courts
than the clay, but it would be dangerous to write her off, given she does have
a senior $10k title to her name on the clay at Amelia Island. She made her
first appearance on the junior tour at the Trofeo Bonfiglio in Milan last week,
where she reached the quarter-final before losing to Jil Belen Teichmann, but
will hope to go further in Paris.
While those are the two Americans with the best chances of
winning, the USA is represented in force in this tournament with Sofia Kenin,
Usue Maitane Arconada, Katrine Isabel Steffensen and Dasha Ivanova in the main
draw and Kaitlyn McCarthy and Michaela Gordon both having chances to
successfully navigate qualifying.
The Moldovan-born Spaniard, Aliona Bolsova Zadoinov, will be
the fourth seed and already has two Grade 1 titles on clay to her name in 2014,
having won in Beaulieu Sur Mer and at the Banana Bowl in Brazil. However, she
will have been disappointed with her performance last week against Bellis in
Milan, where she collapsed to a 6-2, 6-0 defeat amid a flurry of double faults.
Her limited appearances on the senior tour this season have not returned the ranking
points that she would have been hoping for, but a title challenge here would
give her confidence to push on.
Jil Belen Teichmann has enjoyed a good year thus far. The
Barcelona-born Swiss player lifted the Grade A title on the clay in Porto
Alegre in March, beating Zadoinov in the final, avenging her defeat the
previous week at the Banana Bowl. She reached the semi-final at the Trofeo
Bonfiglio last week, losing to Naiktha Bains, but did record good wins over
Sandra Samir and Tornado Alicia Black, and she will have gained plenty of
confidence from her most recent appearance on the ITF tour, where she beat two
top-400 players before pushing Lucie Hradecka to a third set. She may only be
the fifth seed, but she is one of the real contenders for this title.
Jil Belen Teichmann already has one Grade A clay court title this year |
Varvara Flink is the first player mentioned to have played
at Roland Garros before, although she will be hoping to improve on her first
round exit last year. She won the prestigious Orange Bowl Grade A title back in
December on the clay, beating Ivana Jorovic in the final. She has also started
to make an impact on the senior tour with an impressive run to the semi-final
at the $50k event on the clay in Medellin, which should give her confidence
here.
Two of last year’s quarter-finalists return this year, hoping
to go even better. Russia’s Darya Kasatkina and Slovakia’s Kristina Schmiedlova
both had excellent runs last year and will be hoping to draw on those memories
in 2014.
Kristina Schmiedlova has a Grade 1 title on clay to her name
in 2014 and will be looking to live up to the achievements of her sister, Anna,
who beat Venus Williams in the second round of the senior draw. Recent results
on clay have been slightly disappointing, but she has shown in the past that
she has the talent to go far in Paris, no more so than last year when she was a
surprise quarter-finalist before losing to Louisa Chirico.
Darya Kasatkina is the only girl to have beaten CiCi Bellis
in 2014, which means that she must be treated as a real contender. That win was
in Santa Croce two weeks ago, where she dropped just five games in beating the
American and lifting the Grade 1 title. Bellis took her revenge last week in
Milan, going one better and dropping just four games in a 6-2, 6-2 victory. It
would be no surprise if they were to meet in Paris and settle their best-of-three
series and the winner would be a likely winner of the tournament. The Russia
has good memories of Paris from last year when she reached the quarter-final, only
being stopped in a tough three-set battle against Ana Konjuh, who has since
made a real impact on the senior tour.
Former French Open quarter-finalist, Darya Kasatkina is the only player to beat Bellis in 2014 |
The other two players that make up the top 10 seeds are
Anhelina Kalinina, who prefers the hard courts, but who does have a run to the
final of a senior $25k event on clay to her name, and China’s Ziyue Sun, who
has struggled on clay in the past.
The best hope for Britain to find their first French Open
champion in almost 40 years is Katie Boulter. However, it seems unlikely given
that she has failed to record a win on the clay courts at the junior level since
August 2012.
Australia’s challenge will be led by the trio of Priscilla
Hon, who should be seeded 11th, Kimberley Birrell, seeded 16th,
and Naiktha Bains, who put in by far the best clay court performance of her
career to day in Milan last week, where she reached the final, beating
Schmiedlova, Sun and Teichmann. She fell just short against Bellis in the final,
but if she can repeat that form, she will certainly be a player that the
leading contenders will want to avoid early on.
Given the nature of the junior rankings, there are always a
number of dangerous lurkers in the draw, simply due to the fact that they have
not played much junior tennis over the past twelve months. Jelena Ostapenko
certainly falls into this category, having already won three $10k ITF events on
the clay this year to add to the Eddie Herr Grade 1 title that she won in
December. Francoise Abanda is another threat, having won a $25k title on clay
this year as well as reaching the quarter-final of a $50k event in
Charlottesville. She has beaten Belinda Bencic at Roland Garros in the past, so
she has the talent to go far, despite her lack of seeding.
Former Wimbledon finalist, Francoise Abanda has already enjoyed success at the senior level on clay |
Marketa Vondrousova, at just 14-years old, is the youngest
player in the draw, but has a Grade 2 title to her name this year, where she
beat Kristina Schmiedlova, and pushed Bellis as much as anyone in Milan. She is a future star, but this
is probably a year too early for her. She could certainly worry some of the
contenders though.
Fiona Ferro is France’s best hope of a home champion for the
third time in eight years. She has enjoyed a couple of decent wins on the ITF
tour this year against the likes of Arina Rodionova and Sachia Vickery and was
awarded a wildcard into the main draw here, where she lost 6-1, 7-5 against
Sabine Lisicki. However, she has never seriously challenged for a major clay
court title and this could be a step too far for her.
Paula Badosa Gibert only just crept into the main draw, but
is certainly capable of a major upset on her day. She leapt to attention in
Casablanca, where she came through qualifying to lift the Grade 1 title,
beating Kristina Schmiedlova and pre-tournament favourite, Sandra Samir, before
proving that run was no fluke as she made it two Grade 1 titles for 2014 after
winning the Trofeo Juan Carlos Ferrero in Villena last month. She has also
beaten Ivana Jorovic on the ITF tour this year.
Hungary’s Anna Bondar has reached a trio of clay court
semi-finals in 2014 at the Banana Bowl, in Porto Alegre and in Santa Croce, losing
to Bolsova Zadoinov and Bellis in the two most recent tournaments. While she
could make it through a couple of rounds, I struggle to see her beating the top
names.
Unlike last year, there is no standout favourite for the
French Open. While there are several strong contenders, there are a large
number of players that could potentially go on a run to the title. If I were to
pick my top 5 favourites, I would probably go with CiCi Bellis, Darya
Kasatkina, Jil Belen Teichmann, Varvara Flink and Francoise Abanda, but it
would be no surprise were the winner to be one of the other players that have
been mentioned.
Personally, I suspect that Bellis will show the class that has seen her collect so many wins in 2014, but there will be plenty of pressure in just her second ever Grand Slam event and there are a number of other players that will be waiting to cause the upset.
Personally, I suspect that Bellis will show the class that has seen her collect so many wins in 2014, but there will be plenty of pressure in just her second ever Grand Slam event and there are a number of other players that will be waiting to cause the upset.
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