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2019 WTA Finals

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tennis tournament
2019 WTA Finals
Date27 October – 3 November
Edition49th (singles) / 44th (doubles)
Draw8S / 8D
Prize money$14,000,000
SurfaceHard (indoor)
LocationShenzhen,China
VenueShenzhen Bay Sports Centre
Champions
Singles
AustraliaAshleigh Barty
Doubles
HungaryTímea Babos /FranceKristina Mladenovic
← 2018 ·WTA Finals· 2021 →

The2019 WTA Finals, also known by its sponsored nameShiseido WTA Finals Shenzhen, was a women'stennis tournament held inShenzhen,China. It was the 49th edition of the singles event and the 44th edition of the doubles competition.[1] The tournament was contested by eight singles players and eight doubles teams.[2] This was the first time Shenzhen held theWTA Finals.

Champions

[edit]

Singles

[edit]
Main article:2019 WTA Finals – Singles

Doubles

[edit]
Main article:2019 WTA Finals – Doubles

Tournament

[edit]

The 2019 WTA Finals took place at theShenzhen Bay Sports Center the week of October 28, 2019, and is the 49th edition of the event. This was the first time Shenzhen hosted the event.[3] The tournament is run by theWomen's Tennis Association (WTA) as part of the2019 WTA Tour. Shenzhen is the tenth city to host theWTA Finals since the tournament's inauguration in 1972.

Qualifying

[edit]

In the singles, point totals are calculated by combining point totals from sixteen tournaments. Of these sixteen tournaments, a player's results from the fourGrand Slam events, the fourPremier Mandatory tournaments, and (for the top 20 players at the end of 2018) the best results from twoPremier 5 tournaments must be included.
In the doubles, point totals are calculated by any combination of eleven tournaments throughout the year. Unlike in the singles, this combination does not need to include results from the Grand-Slam or Premier-level tournaments.

Format

[edit]

Both the singles and doubles event features eight players/teams in a round robin event, split into two groups of four. Over the first four days of competition, each player/team meets the other three players/teams in her group, with the top two in each group advancing to the semifinals. The first-placed player/team in one group meets the second-placed player/team in the other group, and vice versa. The winners of each semifinal meet in the championship match. The doubles event returns to the round robin format for the first time since 2015.

Round robin tie-breaking methods

[edit]

The final standings are made using these methods:

  1. Greatest number of [match] wins.
  2. Greatest number of matches played.
  3. Head-to-head results if only two players are tied, or if three players are tied then:
a. If three players each have the same number of wins, a player having played less than all three matches is automatically eliminated and the player advancing to the single elimination competition is the winner of the match-up of the two remaining tied players.
b. Highest percentage of sets won.
c. Highest percentage of games won.

Prize money and points

[edit]

The total prize money for the BNP Paribas WTA Finals 2019 is US$14,000,000.The tables below are based on the updated draw sheet information.

Singles
StagePrize moneyPoints
ChampionRR1 + $3,505,000SF + 750
Runner-upRR + $1,180,000SF + 330
SemifinalistRR + $80,000RR
Round robin win per match+$305,000250
Round robin loss per match125
Participation Fee3 matches = $305,000
2 matches = $265,000
1 match = $220,000
Alternates2 matches = $210,000
1 match = $165,000
0 matches = $125,000
1 RR means prize money or points won in the round robin round.
Doubles
StagePrize moneyPoints
ChampionRR1 + $700,000SF + 750
Runner-upRR + $225,000SF + 330
SemifinalistRR + $15,000RR
Round robin win per match+$50,000250
Round robin loss per match125
Participation Fee3 matches = $150,000
2 matches = $130,000
1 match = $110,000
Alternate2 matches = $90,000
1 match = $70,000
0 matches = $50,000
1 RR means prize money or points won in the round robin round.

Qualified players

[edit]

Singles

[edit]
#PlayersPointsTournDate Qualified
1AustraliaAshleigh Barty6,476149 September
2Czech RepublicKarolína Plíšková5,3151815 September
3JapanNaomi Osaka5,246164 October
4RomaniaSimona Halep4,962162 October
5CanadaBianca Andreescu4,942122 October
6Czech RepublicPetra Kvitová4,401167 October
7SwitzerlandBelinda Bencic4,1202419 October
8UkraineElina Svitolina3,9952114 October
Ashleigh Barty won her maiden Grand Slam title at Roland Garros.
Main article:2019 Ashleigh Barty tennis season

On 9 September,Ashleigh Barty became the first qualifier.[4]

Ashleigh Barty began the year at theHopman Cup where she teamed up withMatthew Ebden but ended up second in their group thus failing to reach the final. She then competed at theSydney International, where she reached the final but lost toPetra Kvitová in a third set tiebreak. She then reached the quarterfinals of a slam for the first time at theAustralian Open but lost again to Kvitová in straight sets. She then represented Australia inFed Cup where they faced United States in the quarterfinals where they won with Barty winning both her matches. At the Sunshine Double, she reached the fourth round of theBNP Paribas Open but lost toElina Svitolina in three sets. She, however, bounced back by winning her first Premier Mandatory event at theMiami Open defeatingKarolína Plíšková in the final in two tight sets. She then continued her good form by giving Australia two wins in the semifinals of the Fed Cup against Belarus. At the clay season, she reached the quarterfinals of theMadrid Open but lost toSimona Halep in two tight sets. At theItalian Open, she suffered a shock loss toKristina Mladenovic in the third round in two quick sets. Despite the average results during the clay season, Barty was able to capture her first slam title at theFrench Open, in a battle of maiden grand slam finalists, when she defeatedMarkéta Vondroušová in the final.

The grass-court season she began with her third title of the year at theBirmingham Classic defeatingJulia Görges and in the process also claiming the world No. 1 ranking for the first time, to be the first Australian number 1 in more than 40 years. She came into theWimbledon Championships as one of the favorites but was upset byAlison Riske in the fourth round. At the US Open Series, she lost her first match at theRogers Cup toSofia Kenin but bounced back by reaching the semifinals of theWestern & Southern Open losing toSvetlana Kuznetsova. At theUS Open, she suffered another fourth round slam loss, this time toWang Qiang. At the Asian swing, Barty delivered good results when she reached the semifinals of theWuhan Open losing to defending and eventual championAryna Sabalenka and then reached the final of theChina Open losing toNaomi Osaka.

Karolína Plíšková claimed four titles in the year.

On 15 September,Karolína Plíšková took the second spot.[5]

Karolína Plíšková began the year by winning theBrisbane International defeatingLesia Tsurenko in the final in three sets. At the Australian Open, she saved match points and came back from 1-5 down in the third set in the quarterfinals againstSerena Williams but lost toNaomi Osaka in the semifinals in three sets. She represented the Czech Republic in theFed Cup, where they lost 2-3 to Romania (she won her first match, but lost her second). She then reached the quarterfinals of theDubai Tennis Championships but lost toHsieh Su-wei despite leading 5-1 in the final set and the quarterfinals of the BNP Paribas Open and lost toBelinda Bencic. She reached her second final of the year at the Miami Open losing toAshleigh Barty in two tight sets. She began her clay-court season at theStuttgart Open, as the defending champion, but lost in her first match toVictoria Azarenka. She suffered a second round upset toKateryna Kozlova at the Madrid Open. She bounced back at the Italian Open when she won the title defeatingJohanna Konta in the final. However, at the French Open she fell in the third round toPetra Martić.

She began her grass season at the Birmingham Classic but lost to sisterKristýna in the second round in a third set tiebreak. She bounced back with a title at theEastbourne International without dropping more than four games in a set the entire tournament. At the Wimbledon Championships, she was upset by compatriotKarolína Muchová in the fourth round despite serving for the match twice but finally lost a game away from a match tiebreak. At the US Open Series, she reached the quarterfinals of the Rogers Cup and the Western & Southern Open losing toBianca Andreescu andSvetlana Kuznetsova, respectively. She had another poor slam run at the US Open, when she lost toJohanna Konta in the fourth round despite leading their head-to-head 6-1 prior to the match. She then claimed her fourth title of the year at theZhengzhou Open defeating Martić in the final. However, the rest of her Asian swing was poor, losing back-to-back in the third round of the Wuhan Open to Yastremska and at the China Open toJeļena Ostapenko in the first round.

Main articles:2019 Simona Halep tennis season and2019 Bianca Andreescu tennis season

On 2 October,Simona Halep andBianca Andreescu qualified for the event.[6]

Simona Halep won the Wimbledon Championships.

Simona Halep began the year without a full-term coach, losing her opening match of the year at theSydney International with a loss to Ashleigh Barty. She then reached the fourth round of the Australian Open, losing toSerena Williams in a three-set thriller. SteeringRomania towards a shock 3-2 win over powerhousesCzech Republic inFed Cup, Halep followed up that result by reaching her first final of the year at theQatar Total Open (where she lost toElise Mertens), beatingElina Svitolina along the way after coming from 1-4 down in the final set. She then played at theDubai Tennis Championships, losing in the quarterfinals toBelinda Bencic in three sets. At theBNP Paribas Open, she lost toMarkéta Vondroušová in the fourth round. A semifinal appearance at theMiami Open (losing toKarolína Plíšková) soon followed, allowing her to rise to No. 2 in the rankings. In the Fed Cup semifinals, even though she won both of her singles matches, Romania lost to France 2-3.

Her clay-court season started at theMadrid Open, where she reached the final before losing toKiki Bertens in straight sets. At theItalian Open, she fell to Vondroušová in her opening match. Tipped as the huge favourite atRoland Garros, Halep fell to a shock defeat against talented youngsterAmanda Anisimova in the quarterfinals and hence ending her title defence. Surprisingly, Halep enjoyed a far more successful grass court season, losing toAngelique Kerber in the quarterfinals of theEastbourne International before picking up her first title of the year by lifting her second Major title atWimbledon, beating Serena Williams 6-2, 6-2 in the final. An achilles injury forced Halep to retire in theRogers Cup quarterfinals againstMarie Bouzková, and a tough stretch of results followed as she lost toMadison Keys in the third round of theWestern & Southern Open and was shocked byTaylor Townsend in the second round of theUS Open. Similar to previous years, she struggled during the Asian swing, and was plagued by a back injury which was causing her discomfort. She had to retire in the third round of theWuhan Open facingElena Rybakina and lost toEkaterina Alexandrova in theChina Open second round.

Bianca Andreescu won the US Open

Bianca Andreescu began her year at theAuckland Open where she reached her first WTA final as a qualifier but lost toJulia Görges in three set. She then qualified for the Australian Open before losing toAnastasija Sevastova in the second round. She won her first WTA 125K title atNewport Beach defeatingJessica Pegula. She represented Canada in theFed Cup, where they defeated the Netherlands 4-0 after two Andreescu wins. She then reached the semifinal of theMexican Open, losing toSofia Kenin.

Andreescu had a breakout tournament at the BNP Paribas Open Premier Mandatory event, when she won in three tight sets overAngelique Kerber for her first WTA tour title. At the Miami Open, she retired in the fourth round againstAnett Kontaveit. She then missed the clay season preparation due to a right shoulder injury. At the French Open, she withdrew before the second-round match against Sofia Kenin. Subsequently, she missed grass-court season to spend more time healing the shoulder injury. Andreescu returned to play in her home tournament, the Rogers Cup in Toronto, where she claimed the title after Serena Williams experienced back spasms and was forced to retire down 1–3 in the first set. At the US Open, she faced Serena again in the final and came through in two tight sets. At the China Open her 17-match winning streak was broken by Osaka, losing to the Japanese in the quarterfinals in three sets.

Naomi Osaka won the Australian Open

On 4 October,Naomi Osaka booked her spot to the WTA Finals.[7]

Naomi Osaka began her 2019 season reaching the semifinals at Brisbane, where she lost to Lesia Tsurenko. However, she was able to showcase her best at the Australian Open, where she lifted her second consecutive Grand Slam title after beating Petra Kvitová in a thrilling three-set contest, thus ascending for the first time in her career to the world No. 1. Shortly after, she parted ways with her coach,Sascha Bajin. Osaka then went to theDubai Tennis Championships, where she lost in the second round to Kristina Mladenovic. She returned to the competition at theBNP Paribas Open, where she entered the tournament as the first seed and defending champion, but ended up losing to Belinda Bencic in the fourth round. Moreover, she went on to lose in the third round at the Miami Open to Hsieh Su-wei in three hard-fought sets.

Osaka began the clay-court season at Stuttgart, where she reached the semifinals before withdrawing from her match againstAnett Kontaveit due to an abdominal injury. She then took part in the Madrid Open and Italian Open, where she reached the quarterfinals in both (losing to Bencic and withdrawing against Bertens respectively). Osaka went on to finish the clay-court swing with a shocking third-round loss toKateřina Siniaková at the French Open, which ended her 16-win streak at Grand Slam tournaments.

Osaka entered the Birmingham Classic as the first seed but she lost in the second round toYulia Putintseva in straight sets. Furthermore, Osaka went on to lose once again to Putintseva at Wimbledon in the first round. Osaka resumed competition at the Rogers Cup and Western & Southern Open, reaching the quarterfinals, where she lost toSerena Williams and Kenin (by retirement), respectively. Finally, she capped off the US Open Series at the US Open, where she entered as the defending champion but was defeated in the fourth round by Bencic. She then claimed the titles at theToray Pan Pacific Open and China Open defeatingAnastasia Pavlyuchenkova and Barty in the finals.

Petra Kvitová reached the final of the Australian Open.

On 7 October,Petra Kvitová was announced to be the sixth qualifier.[8]

Petra Kvitová began the year at the Brisbane International, where she lost in the second round to Kontaveit. She then bounced back after claiming the title at the Sydney International defeating Barty in the final. At the Australian Open, she reached her first slam final since Wimbledon 2014 but lost to Osaka, losing her first slam final. The following week, she competed at theSt. Petersburg Ladies Trophy and lost in the quarterfinals toDonna Vekić. She reached her third final of the year at the Dubai Tennis Championships but lost to Bencic in three sets. Her Sunshine Double was not successful, losing in the second round toVenus Williams in the second round of the Indian Wells Masters and the quarterfinals of the Miami Open to Barty. She began her clay season at the Stuttgart Open and claimed the title when she defeated Estonia's Kontaveit.

She was the defending champion at the Madrid Open and made the last eight where she lost to eventual champion Bertens, in a rematch of last year's final, in straight sets. At the Italian Open, her first appearance there since 2016, Kvitová made the third round where she faced Sakkari but retired with an injured calf while trailing in the decider. She then pulled out of the French Open with an arm injury, bringing her clay court swing to a premature close. Returning to competition atWimbledon after a six-week layoff, sixth-seeded Kvitová cruised to the fourth round, her first appearance in the second week there since winning the title in 2014, but lost to 19th seed Johanna Konta in three sets. She was forced to withdraw from theRogers Cup to recover from the arm injury. She returned to action at the Western & Southern Open where she fell in her opener to Sakkari in three sets. This was followed by a loss to Andrea Petkovic in the second round of theUS Open, making it her first ever loss at this stage of the tournament in 12 overall appearances. However, she bounced back with strong results during the Asian swing. At the Wuhan Open, she sailed to the last four but was then stopped byAlison Riske. The following week at the China Open she reached the quarterfinal, where she succumbed to world No. 1 Barty in three sets.

Elina Svitolina qualified for the third straight year.

On 14 October, defending championElina Svitolina was announced to be the seventh qualifier.[9]

Elina Svitolina opened the season with an unsuccessful title defense at the Brisbane International, where she lost her first match to the previous year's finalist,Aliaksandra Sasnovich. She rebounded by reaching the quarterfinals of the Australian Open, where she was defeated by eventual champion Naomi Osaka in straight sets. Svitolina then reached three semifinals in a row at the Qatar Total Open losing to Halep, Dubai Tennis Championships losing to Bencic and the BNP Paribas Open losing to Andreescu. At the Miami Open, she suffered a surprise defeat in her opening match againstWang Yafan. Svitolina's clay-court season began with back-to-back opening round losses toPauline Parmentier at the Madrid Open and toVictoria Azarenka at the Italian Open, where she was the two-time defending champion and had held a match point leading 5–2 in the final set. At the French Open, Svitolina was defeated in the third round by the 2016 champion, Garbiñe Muguruza. After losing in her opening rounds at the Birmingham Classic (toMargarita Gasparyan) and Eastbourne International (toAlizé Cornet), Svitolina proceeded to reach her first Grand Slam semifinal at Wimbledon, she faced eventual champion Simona Halep and was defeated in straight sets.

Svitolina's North American hard-court season began at theSilicon Valley Classic, where as the top seed, she fell toMaria Sakkari in the quarterfinals. She would then fall toSofia Kenin in both the quarterfinals of the Rogers Cup and the Round of 16 at the Western & Southern Open. At the US Open, she reached her second successive Grand Slam semifinal, where she was defeated in straight sets by Serena Williams. In the Asian swing, Svitolina reached the quarterfinal in the Zhengzhou Open, losing toKristina Mladenovic, the second round in the Guangzhou Open, retiring toMarie Bouzková, the quarterfinal in the Wuhan Open losing to eventual runner-up Alison Riske, and lost toKiki Bertens in the China Open quarterfinals. Finally, she lost toVeronika Kudermetova in the second round of the Kremlin Cup.

Belinda Bencic qualified for the first time at the WTA Finals.

On 19 October,Belinda Bencic was announced as the final qualifier after reaching the final in Moscow.[10]

Belinda Bencic began her year at the Hopman Cup, where she represented Switzerland withRoger Federer, they won the title defeating Germany in the final. She reached the semifinals at the Hobart International toAnna Karolína Schmiedlová and made it to the third round at the Australian Open, losing to eventual finalistPetra Kvitová. At the St. Petersburg Ladies Trophy, she lost toVeronika Kudermetova in the second qualifying round. In theFed Cup she won both of her matches, helping Switzerland to a 3-1 win over Italy. She had a breakthrough at the Dubai Tennis Championships defeating Kvitová in three sets in the final. Bencic continued her win streak with a semifinal appearance at the BNP Paribas Open losing toAngelique Kerber. However, at the Miami Open, she lost in the opening round toYulia Putintseva.

At theCharleston Open, she reached the quarterfinals but fell toPetra Martić. At theLadies Open Lugano, she was upset byAntonia Lottner in the first round. She then played at the Stuttgart Open but fell in three sets toKiki Bertens in the second round. At the Mutua Madrid Open, she reached the semifinals losing to Halep and at the Italian Open, she was upset byKristina Mladenovic in the second round. At theFrench Open, she advanced to the third round for the first time, where she was defeated by No. 24Donna Vekić. During the grass court season, Bencic made her second WTA final of the year at theMallorca Open, but finished runner-up toSofia Kenin despite having three match points in the second set. She then competed at the Eastbourne International losing toEkaterina Alexandrova in the second round. At the Wimbledon Championships, she made the third round losing toAlison Riske in three sets. After Wimbledon, she played at the Rogers Cup, she fell toElina Svitolina in straight sets in the round of 16. At the Western & Southern Open, she drewVictoria Azarenka in the first round, retiring being a set and game down. At the US Open, she reached her first slam semifinal but lost to the eventual championBianca Andreescu in straight sets. However, in her next three events, she fell to Kudermetova in her opening match at the Wuhan Open, lost to Kvitová in the third round of the China Open and was upset byAnna-Lena Friedsam in the first round of the Linz Open. Bencic won theKremlin Cup by defeatingAnastasia Pavlyuchenkova in three sets.

Groupings

[edit]

Singles

[edit]

The 2019 edition of the year–end finals will feature four world-No.-ones, five major champions and one major finalist. The competitors were divided into two groups.

Red group:
Ashleigh Barty, Naomi Osaka, Petra Kvitová & Belinda Bencic
Purple group:
Karolína Plíšková, Simona Halep, Bianca Andreescu & Elina Svitolina

Day-by-day summaries

[edit]

Day 1 (27 October)

[edit]
Matches
EventGroupWinnerLoserScore
Day Session
Singles round robinRed GroupJapanNaomi Osaka [3]Czech RepublicPetra Kvitová [6]7–6(7–1), 4–6, 6–4
Singles round robinRed GroupAustraliaAshleigh Barty [1]SwitzerlandBelinda Bencic [7]5–7, 6–1, 6–2
Evening Session
Doubles round robinPurple GroupCzech RepublicBarbora Strýcová
Chinese TaipeiHsieh Su-wei [2]
AustraliaSamantha Stosur
ChinaZhang Shuai [7]
6–4, 4–6, [10–5]
Doubles round robinPurple GroupCzech RepublicBarbora Krejčíková
Czech RepublicKateřina Siniaková [6]
CanadaGabriela Dabrowski
ChinaXu Yifan [4]
6–4, 6–2

Day 2 (28 October)

[edit]
Matches
EventGroupWinnerLoserScore
Day Session
Doubles round robinRed GroupHungaryTímea Babos
FranceKristina Mladenovic [3]
Chinese TaipeiChan Hao-ching
Chinese TaipeiLatisha Chan [5]
6–2, 5–7, [10–6]
Singles round robinPurple GroupUkraineElina Svitolina [8]Czech RepublicKarolína Plíšková [2]7–6(14–12), 6–4
Evening Session
Singles round robinPurple GroupRomaniaSimona Halep [5]CanadaBianca Andreescu [4]3–6, 7–6(8–6), 6–3
Doubles round robinRed GroupGermanyAnna-Lena Grönefeld
NetherlandsDemi Schuurs [8]
BelgiumElise Mertens
BelarusAryna Sabalenka [1]
7–5, 1–6, [10–7]

Day 3 (29 October)

[edit]
Matches
EventGroupWinnerLoserScore
Day Session
Doubles round robinPurple GroupAustraliaSamantha Stosur
ChinaZhang Shuai [7]
CanadaGabriela Dabrowski
ChinaXu Yifan [4]
4–6, 6–4, [10–5]
Singles round robinRed GroupNetherlandsKiki Bertens [9]AustraliaAshleigh Barty [1]3–6, 6–3, 6–4
Evening Session
Singles round robinRed GroupSwitzerlandBelinda Bencic [7]Czech RepublicPetra Kvitová [6]6–3, 1–6, 6–4
Doubles round robinPurple GroupCzech RepublicBarbora Strýcová
Chinese TaipeiHsieh Su-wei [2]
Czech RepublicBarbora Krejčíková
Czech RepublicKateřina Siniaková [6]
6–2, 1–6, [10–5]

Day 4 (30 October)

[edit]
Matches
EventGroupWinnerLoserScore
Day Session
Doubles round robinRed GroupBelgiumElise Mertens
BelarusAryna Sabalenka [1]
Chinese TaipeiChan Hao-ching
Chinese TaipeiLatisha Chan [5]
7–6(7–5), 6–4
Singles round robinPurple GroupUkraineElina Svitolina [8]RomaniaSimona Halep [5]7–5, 6–3
Evening Session
Singles round robinPurple GroupCzech RepublicKarolína Plíšková [2]CanadaBianca Andreescu [4]6–3, ret.
Doubles round robinRed GroupHungaryTímea Babos
FranceKristina Mladenovic [3]
GermanyAnna-Lena Grönefeld
NetherlandsDemi Schuurs [8]
7–5, 6–2

Day 5 (31 October)

[edit]
Matches
EventGroupWinnerLoserScore
Day Session
Doubles round robinPurple GroupAustraliaSamantha Stosur
ChinaZhang Shuai [7]
Czech RepublicBarbora Krejčíková
Czech RepublicKateřina Siniaková [6]
6–3, 7–6(9–7)
Singles round robinRed GroupAustraliaAshleigh Barty [1]Czech RepublicPetra Kvitová [6]6–4, 6–2
Evening Session
Singles round robinRed GroupSwitzerlandBelinda Bencic [7]NetherlandsKiki Bertens [9]7–5, 1–0 ret.
Doubles round robinPurple GroupCanadaGabriela Dabrowski
ChinaXu Yifan [4]
Czech RepublicBarbora Strýcová
Chinese TaipeiHsieh Su-wei [2]
2–6, 6–4, [11–9]

Day 6 (1 November)

[edit]
Matches
EventGroupWinnerLoserScore
Day Session
Doubles round robinRed GroupHungaryTímea Babos
FranceKristina Mladenovic [3]
BelgiumElise Mertens
BelarusAryna Sabalenka [1]
4–6, 6–2, [10–5]
Singles round robinPurple GroupUkraineElina Svitolina [8]United StatesSofia Kenin [10]7–5, 7–6(12–10)
Evening Session
Singles round robinPurple GroupCzech RepublicKarolína Plíšková [2]RomaniaSimona Halep [5]6–0, 2–6, 6–4
Doubles round robinRed GroupGermanyAnna-Lena Grönefeld
NetherlandsDemi Schuurs [8]
Chinese TaipeiChan Hao-ching
Chinese TaipeiLatisha Chan [5]
6–2, 6–4

Day 7 (2 November)

[edit]
Matches
EventWinnerLoserScore
Day Session
Doubles SemifinalsHungaryTímea Babos
FranceKristina Mladenovic [3]
AustraliaSamantha Stosur
ChinaZhang Shuai [7]
1–6, 6–4, [10–6]
Singles SemifinalsUkraineElina Svitolina [8]SwitzerlandBelinda Bencic [7]5–7, 6–3, 4–1 ret.
Evening Session
Singles SemifinalsAustraliaAshleigh Barty [1]Czech RepublicKarolína Plíšková [2]4–6, 6–2, 6–3
Doubles SemifinalsCzech RepublicBarbora Strýcová
Chinese TaipeiHsieh Su-wei [2]
GermanyAnna-Lena Grönefeld
NetherlandsDemi Schuurs [8]
6–1, 6–2

Day 8 (3 November)

[edit]
Matches
EventWinnerLoserScore
Doubles FinalHungaryTímea Babos
FranceKristina Mladenovic [3]
Czech RepublicBarbora Strýcová
Chinese TaipeiHsieh Su-wei [2]
6–1, 6–3
Singles FinalAustraliaAshleigh Barty [1]UkraineElina Svitolina [8]6–4, 6–3

Porsche Race to Shenzhen

[edit]
  • Charts sourced from WTA[11]

Singles

[edit]
  • Players in gold qualified for the WTA Finals.
  • Players in brown withdrew from consideration of competing as alternates.
RankAthleteGrand Slam tournamentPremier MandatoryBest two
Premier 5
Best otherTotal pointsTournWTA
Titles
AUSFRAWIMUSOINWMIAMADCHI12123456
1AustraliaAshleigh BartyQF
430
W
2000
R16
240
R16
240
R16
120
W
1000
QF
215
F
650
SF
350
SF
350
W
470
F
305
R16
105
R32
1
6,476143
2Czech RepublicKarolína PlíškováSF
780
R32
130
R16
240
R16
240
QF
215
F
650
R32
65
R64
10
W
900
QF
190
W
470
W
470
W
470
QF
190
QF
190
R16
105
5,315184
3JapanNaomi OsakaW
2000
R32
130
R128
10
R16
240
R16
120
R32
65
QF
215
W
1000
QF
190
QF
190
W
470
QF
190
SF
185
SF
185
R16
55
R32
1
5,246163
4RomaniaSimona HalepR16
240
QF
430
W
2000
R64
70
R16
120
SF
390
F
650
R32
65
QF
190
QF
190
F
305
R16
105
R16
105
QF
100
R32
1
R16
1
4,962161
5CanadaBianca AndreescuR64
110
R64
70
A
0
W
2000
W
1000
R16
120
A
0
QF
215
W
900
F
198
W
160
SF
110
W
50
QF
9
4,942123
6Czech RepublicPetra KvitováF
1300
A
0
R16
240
R64
70
R64
10
QF
215
QF
215
QF
215
F
585
SF
350
W
470
W
470
R16
105
QF
100
R16
55
R32
1
4,401162
7SwitzerlandBelinda BencicR32
130
R32
130
R32
130
SF
780
SF
390
R64
10
SF
390
R16
120
W
900
R16
105
W
470
F
180
W
115
SF
110
QF
100
R32
60
4,120242
8UkraineElina SvitolinaQF
430
R32
130
SF
780
SF
780
SF
390
R64
10
R64
10
QF
215
SF
350
QF
190
QF
190
SF
185
R16
105
QF
100
QF
100
R16
30
3,995210
Alternates /WTA Elite Trophy
9United StatesSerena WilliamsQF
430
R32
130
F
1300
F
1300
R32
65
R32
65
A
0
A
0
F
585
R32
60
3,93580
10NetherlandsKiki BertensR64
70
R64
70
R32
130
R32
130
R16
120
R16
120
W
1000
SF
390
SF
350
R16
105
W
470
SF
185
SF
185
SF
185
F
180
F
180
3,870252
11United KingdomJohanna KontaR64
70
SF
780
QF
430
QF
430
R32
65
R64
35
R32
65
A
0
F
585
R64
1
F
180
QF
60
R16
55
R16
55
R16
55
Q2
13
2,879160
12United StatesSofia KeninR64
70
R16
240
R64
70
R32
130
R64
35
R64
10
R64
10
R16
120
SF
350
SF
350
W
280
W
280
W
280
F
180
R16
105
R16
105
2,615233

Doubles

[edit]
  • Teams in gold qualified for the WTA Finals.
  • Team in brown withdrew from consideration of competing as alternates.
RankTeamPointsTotal PointsTournTitles
1234567891011
1BelgiumElise Mertens
BelarusAryna Sabalenka
W
2000
W
1000
W
1000
SF
780
F
585
QF
430
R16
240
R16
10
R32
10
R16
1
R16
1
6,057113
2Chinese TaipeiHsieh Su-wei
Czech RepublicBarbora Strýcová
W
2000
W
1000
W
900
W
470
R16
240
R16
240
QF
215
QF
190
R16
120
R16
105
R16
10
5,490134
3HungaryTímea Babos
FranceKristina Mladenovic
W
2000
F
1300
SF
780
QF
430
W
280
QF
215
SF
185
R32
10
R32
10
R16
1
5,211102
4CanadaGabriela Dabrowski
ChinaXu Yifan
F
1300
F
650
QF
430
QF
430
SF
390
SF
350
W
280
QF
215
QF
215
QF
190
SF
185
4,635211
5Chinese TaipeiChan Hao-ching
Chinese TaipeiLatisha Chan
W
470
W
470
W
470
QF
430
SF
390
SF
390
SF
350
SF
350
F
305
W
280
R16
240
4,145204
6Czech RepublicBarbora Krejčíková
Czech RepublicKateřina Siniaková
W
900
SF
780
F
650
QF
430
SF
350
W
280
QF
215
QF
190
SF
185
R64
10
R32
10
4,000112
7AustraliaSamantha Stosur
ChinaZhang Shuai
W
2000
F
650
QF
430
QF
215
QF
190
R32
130
R16
120
R16
105
QF
60
R64
10
R32
10
3,920131
8GermanyAnna-Lena Grönefeld
NetherlandsDemi Schuurs
F
585
F
585
F
585
QF
430
SF
350
F
305
F
305
QF
215
QF
215
QF
190
R32
130
3,895150
Alternates
9BelarusVictoria Azarenka
AustraliaAshleigh Barty
F
1300
W
900
SF
390
SF
350
R16
240
R16
130
R16
120
R32
10
3,44081
10United StatesNicole Melichar
Czech RepublicKvěta Peschke
W
470
W
470
W
470
QF
430
QF
430
R16
240
QF
215
QF
190
QF
190
F
180
R32
130
3,415253

Player head-to-head

[edit]

Singles

[edit]
Below are the head-to-head records as they approached the tournament.2019 WTA Finals – Singles
 BartyPlíškováOsakaHalepAndreescuKvitováBencicSvitolinaOverallYTD
1AustraliaAshleigh Barty3–22–21–30–02–40–00–58–1653–11
2Czech RepublicKarolína Plíšková2–32–23–70–11–30–15–313–2050–15
3JapanNaomi Osaka2–22–21–41–01–01–33–311–1440–11
4RomaniaSimona Halep3–17–34–10–03–12–25–424–1242–15
5CanadaBianca Andreescu0–01–00–10–00–01–01–03–148–5
6Czech RepublicPetra Kvitová4–23–10–11–30–04–17–219–1037–13
7SwitzerlandBelinda Bencic0–01–03–12–20–11–42–19–944–21
8UkraineElina Svitolina5–03–53–34–50–12–71–218–2335–21

Doubles

[edit]
Below are the head-to-head records as they approached the tournament.2019 WTA Finals – Doubles
 Mertens
Sabalenka
Hsieh
Strýcová
Babos
Mladenovic
Dabrowski
Xu
Chan
Chan
Krejčíková
Siniaková
Stosur
Zhang
Grönefeld
Schuurs
OverallYTD
1BelgiumElise Mertens
BelarusAryna Sabalenka
1–11–12–01–01–11–01–08–329–8
2Chinese TaipeiHsieh Su-wei
Czech RepublicBarbora Strýcová
1–11–03–02–10–01–02–010–228–8
3HungaryTímea Babos
FranceKristina Mladenovic
1–10–11–00–02–02–10–06–323–7
4CanadaGabriela Dabrowski
ChinaXu Yifan
0–20–30–10–12–01–10–13–933–19
5Chinese TaipeiChan Hao-ching
Chinese TaipeiLatisha Chan
0–11–20–01–00–21–12–35–940–16
6Czech RepublicBarbora Krejčíková
Czech RepublicKateřina Siniaková
1–10–00–20–22–00–12–05–623–10
7AustraliaSamantha Stosur
ChinaZhang Shuai
0–10–11–21–11–11–00–04–620–12
8GermanyAnna-Lena Grönefeld
NetherlandsDemi Schuurs
0–10–20–01–03–20–20–04–729–17

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"WTA Finals at WTA Official Website".wtatennis.com.WTA. Retrieved27 December 2017.
  2. ^"2019 WTA calendar"(PDF).wtatennis.com. WTA Tour, Inc. Retrieved2018-05-11.
  3. ^"2018 WTA Calendar".wtatennis.com.WTA. Retrieved27 December 2017.
  4. ^"Barty, Mertens-Sabalenka qualify for 2019 Shiseido WTA Finals Shenzhen". 9 September 2019. Retrieved9 September 2019.
  5. ^"Karolina Pliskova Secures Qualification at 2019 SHISEIDO WTA FINALS SHENZHEN". 15 September 2019. Retrieved15 September 2019.
  6. ^"Halep, Andreescu, Dabrowski-Xu qualify for 2019 Shiseido WTA Finals Shenzhen". 2 October 2019. Retrieved2 October 2019.
  7. ^"Osaka becomes fifth qualifier for Shiseido WTA Finals Shenzhen". 4 October 2019. Retrieved12 October 2019.
  8. ^"Kvitova, Chan-Chan, Stosur-Zhang qualify for 2019 Shiseido WTA Finals Shenzhen". 7 October 2019. Retrieved12 October 2019.
  9. ^publisher_wta2 (2019-10-13)."Svitolina, Groenefeld-Schuurs and Krejcikova-Siniakova qualify for 2019 Shiseido WTA Finals Shenzhen".WTA Tennis. Retrieved2019-10-14.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  10. ^"Bencic reaches Moscow final, qualifies for WTA Finals".
  11. ^"WTA points race"(PDF). Retrieved23 March 2020.

External links

[edit]
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