Beatrice's opponent is the daughter of the great Argentine champion, Guilermo Vilas, and is another player barely past their 14th birthday to play in these Spanish Q draws. Scary pedigree!
Japan have a lot of ranked players right now - around 28 inside the top 500 and another 28 in the top 1000.
They seem to traveeling the world in groups right now !
[...] L32 Eden Silva WR 464 v Erina Hayashi (JPN) WR 491
Laura R. played Hayashi last year on May 20th, in the SF, en route to her title in the Kurume $60K. The Japanese was WR693 on that day, so has clearly been making good progress since. Indeed, her 2016 final ranking was 943, her 2017 final was 482. However, fully half her points came in that run in Kurume, and there's not been much since. So, hard to know what to expect.
Just need Eden to use what she learned in Dubai, and keep up the generally positive trajectory.
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Data I post, opinions I offer, 'facts' I assert, are almost certainly all stupidly wrong.
Eden Silva is in the main draw and it seems to be the trend to draw Japanese opponents.
L32 Eden Silva WR 464 v Erina Hayashi (JPN) WR 491
Maybe they come because they don't have any home 15ks. As they've more players than we have perhaps we should swap the LTA for the Jap equivalent. I bet they get less salaries and bonuses than our lot. We will be very lucky to have more than 25 ranked singles and doubles players by the end of the year.
The Japanese have certainly had a big crew in Australia, I guess relatively home for them !
Re the GB top 25, concerns re it have been voiced before but seem more possible now. The theoretical worst case scenario is we could be down to 25 ranked players by the end of September.
The 8 that need points to avoid losing their ranking by then start with Foster and Sainsbury in April and follow with in order Nicholls and Ola Pitak in June, Deigman in July, Hurst in August, and Arbuthnott and Larkin in September. And we have no players currently sitting on two counters, just one short of a ranking.
Some will no doubt be fine, particularly say Emily Arb who will no doubt pick up points again in the summer, as will probably some others from the grass season. But a few of these have been very quiet of late.
'Credit' to the LTA for such assistance in quite likely helping reduce our number of ranked players, with such limited home opportunities, even before the big ITF changes from next year. Ahead of their time
Beatrice's opponent is the daughter of the great Argentine champion, Guilermo Vilas, and is another player barely past their 14th birthday to play in these Spanish Q draws. Scary pedigree!
Thanks for posting, Vilas had a colourful career on and off the court and it looks like there are a couple of other young Vilass in the pipeline. I hope she enjoys her tennis and does well, will keep an eye out for her.
The Japanese have certainly had a big crew in Australia, I guess relatively home for them !
Re the GB top 25, concerns re it have been voiced before but seem more possible now. The theoretical worst case scenario is we could be down to 25 ranked players by the end of September.
The 8 that need points to avoid losing their ranking by then start with Foster and Sainsbury in April and follow with in order Nicholls and Ola Pitak in June, Deigman in July, Hurst in August, and Arbuthnott and Larkin in September. And we have no players currently sitting on two counters, just one short of a ranking.
Some will no doubt be fine, particularly say Emily Arb who will no doubt pick up points again in the summer, as will probably some others from the grass season. But a few of these have been very quiet of late.
'Credit' to the LTA for such assistance in quite likely helping reduce our number of ranked players, with such limited home opportunities, even before the big ITF changes from next year. Ahead of their time
The situation is a little distorted as there are also 100 players of either sex playing college tennis which for almost all of them is a sensible decision, the best of whom if they had gone pro could have got some points but would be sitting the wrong side of 800.
I feel there is some strength in the cohort of 18-22 year old young ladies out there ie players are increasingly making informed decisions and turning pro with a realistic chance of at least winning on the futures tour and looking to step up beyond the 25k level. Generating 2 or 3 top 20 juniors a year who choose to go pro and at least break 300 strikes me as realistic and leaves fewer less talented players chasing rainbows at great cost to themselves, as we all know there is a pot of gold at the end of them but this one has a tiny neck and only lets s few hands in at any one time.
-- Edited by Oakland2002 on Monday 26th of February 2018 01:02:29 PM