Train Ride |
Farmland |
The site had three indoor courts but being in France it might have been outdoors it was so cold on the court. A few mornings when warming up you could see your breath. It was like playing Winter Nationals out in Arizona in Decemeber. When matches started at 8am so you were warming up at 7am playing in the dark dressed in your warmest clothes while all the parents were sitting in the cars with the heat on. So I guess I should have been used to it. Well in the first round of qualifying I played a French girl Enmer. I won in three sets 6-4,3-6,6-3. I didn't play the greatest but it was enough. The second set I missed a lot and she was hardly missed. She got a lot back and so I was forcing shots and it didn't work. Obviously. The third set though, I was relaxed and just out played her by being aggressive and not giving her anything for free.
Second round I played Lemmens, a Belgian. I won that match in two sets 6-3,6-3. It was a tough one. Every point was earned and most games had multiple deuce points. I played this match aggressively and smart. I moved well and I was lucky enough to win most of the key points. I think she was playing well enough that if I wasn't moving and hitting the way I was, even had a small mental lapse then she would have won the match. So the way the match really played out the score should have read 7-6,7-6. It was that close. But i made it to the main draw after that win, so something else to be happy about.
In the first round of the main draw I was up against another French player Cheli who was given a wild card into the main. Apparently, she wasn't sure she was going to play because she hurt her ankle before the tournament, but she played. She managed to only play a set. She retired when she was down 6-0,1-0. She couldn't run much so she just hit hoping to hit winners but she mostly just missed. I didn't realize she was stopping because her and the umpire were speaking in French and then the umpire said she's done. Then the tournament supervisor who always reminds me of my grandfather
just in his stature came out and winked and nodded that she was finished. But good for me bad for her. I got my point and was moving on to the next round.
Second round I played another French player Arcangioli and won 6-3,6-3. Again it was a close match but I played aggressive, I moved well, and I was focused every point. I didn't give her a single free point. I ran every ball down forcing her to hit into smaller and smaller targets and eventually she made an error. So again it was another good effort on my part.
In the quarterfinals I was up against Kostova and lost 4-6,6-3,3-6. In the first set I found myself down 0-3 rather quickly. I was being pushed around the court and I was playing passively. Then from that changeover I was determined to just run for everything, look for an opportunity to take charge of the point right from the start, and to stand my ground and not let her pace knock me off the baseline. So once I did that I won four straight games and was up 4-3. Then she called for the trainer to get her leg rubbed out and well all my momentum I had came to a screeching halt. I lost the next three games and the set. But I was mad over the medical timeout so I wanted to beat her even more because I felt she abused the rules a bit. Like when players go to the bathroom. No one ever really has to use the bathroom. In women's tennis yes there will be times when it is an emergency, but that is rare. So when people go to the bathroom they really just go a stand there, some players take their water bottles with them, to make it sound more realistic, other wash their face. But the point of a bathroom break is to use the bathroom. Most players don't. Well anyway I don't know if she was really hurt but it was interesting timing. So the second set I just continued with the same gameplan. Being aggressive, moving, take control of the points. And by doing that I took the second set 6-3. I even came out of my shoe one point I was moving around the court so fast. And yes my shoe laces were tied tight so it wasn't like it was easy to get out of. In the third set we both were going at it. She would yell come on when she won a point, and I would yell come on when I won a point. We came to a point at 3-3 and I had a game point and I got cautious. I had a chance to take control of the point when I got a high ball in the middle of the court. I backed up and instead of hitting it to her forehand which was the weaker of the two groundstrokes and keeping me in forehand rallies which I wanted I changed my mind at the last second and floated my forehand to her backhand and she just cracked it and she took control of the point and won it.. Then after that she won the game and took control of the match. After that and in the final game I pressed a bit too much. Came to net too soon, or went for a bigger shot then needed and lost. But I competed until the very end. I save two match points but unfortunately not the third. But it was a great match. It was a great tournament. I competed. I was mentally tough. I moved really well. And I gave nothing for free. So I was very happy with my result in Dijon.
The courts |
Indoor |
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