By Richard Pagliaro | Saturday, March 13, 2021
Garbiñe Muguruza saved a set point scoring a 7-6(6), 6-3 win over Barbora Krejcikova to win her first title in two years at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships.
Photo credit: @DDFT
Contesting her third final of the season, Garbiñe Muguruza was in no mood for moral victories.
A driven Muguruza saved a set point in the first set tie breaker and broke twice in the second set scoring a 7-6(6), 6-3 win over Barbora Krejcikova to win her first title in two years at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships.
A week after dealing with the disappointment of 6-2, 6-1 loss to Petra Kvitova in the Doha final, Muguruza displayed resilience and raw desire to get over the line continuing a fantastic start to the season. Muguruza has played five tournaments and contested three finals this season.
“I lost finals before so I really wanted this title. I mean it paid off this week,” Muguruza said afterward. “The other weeks I was close, but today I fought harder. I don’t know, I’m very happy about it—very happy. I feel like the consistency is so hard to get being able to play three finals is a great sign we are on the right way.”
The moment of TRIUMPH 🙌🇪🇸@GarbiMuguruza | #DDFTennis pic.twitter.com/usgHj1DVWR
— wta (@WTA) March 13, 2021
The two-time Grand Slam champion improved her 2020 record to a WTA-best 18-4 capturing her eighth career title.
It’s Muguruza’s first title since she successfully defended Monterrey in 2019.
Tennis players cope with loss on a weekly basis, but Muguruza, who is projected to rise to No. 13 when the new rankings are released Monday, trusted her game at crunch time today. Muguruza drilled saved aces against one double fault, denied seven of nine break points and saved set point with a bold forehand winner.
The former Wimbledon winner’s eighth title came under unusual circumstances as coach Conchita Martinez tested positive for Coronavirus upon arrival in Doha and has been monitoring Muguruza’s matches from a skype connection over her iPhone.
“It was very challenging,” Muguruza said. “I feel more than people think with so many things that happened in this Middle East swing but we stood strong. I’m very proud of my whole team all week. Very tough [week], I feel like if you want to get the trophy you gotta beat everybody on the way. Today was a very tough match—but all of them were tough.”
.@GarbiMuguruza wins her eighth career title and the first in two years.#DDFTennis pic.twitter.com/YIon5bqeZU
— Tennis GIFs 🎾🎥 (@tennis_gifs) March 13, 2021
This final featured former singles world No. 1 Muguruza vs. former world No. 1 doubles player Krejcikova, coming off her third straight Australian Open mixed doubles crown.
The first Spanish woman to contest the Dubai final showed some jitters at the start missing a smash and dropping serve in the opening game. Muguruza broke right back and used her superior power to punish a series of crackling returns carving out a second break for 4-2.
Playing her second career singles final, Krejcikova was not over-awed by the occasion. The lowest-ranked singles finalist in tournament history showed soft hands and all-court skills using a series of slice backhands to subdue the Spaniard before cranking a two-handed backhand crosscourt to break back in the seventh game.
Serving with new balls, Krejcikova knifed a high backhand volley winner that helped her hold to draw even after eight games.
The ninth-seeded Spaniard seized triple set point in the 12th game. Krejcikova saved the first two set points then hit a backhand behind Muguruza, who slipped and crashed to the court. The world No. 63 showed sheer tenacity rapping a backhand pass down the line holding from love-40 down to force the first-set tie breaker.
A nervy tie breaker saw Muguruza, a few feet from net, frame a backhand that looped high and landed in but Krejcikova missed an open-court pass giving the Spaniard a 3-2 lead. Krejcikova came right back forcing three errors to go up 5-3 on a netted forehand. Muguruza got the mini break back on an error leveling at 5-all, but sprayed a shot long handing the Czech set point.
Staring down set point 10 minutes after she squandered a triple set point chance, a gutsy Muguruza erased it with the wide serve and inside-out forehand winner.
¡VAMOS! 🇪🇸Very little between the two in the opener, but @GarbiMuguruza saves set point and edges it, 7-6(6)!#DDFTennis pic.twitter.com/WbFKI006Hn
— wta (@WTA) March 13, 2021
Sliding her fourth ace off the sideline gave Muguruza a fourth set point. When Krejcikova narrowly missed the mark on a diagonal forehand, Muguruza snatched a one-set lead after 65 minutes. Krejcikova, who won one more point in the first set, left the court for a refreshment break.
The world No. 63 returned seemingly refreshed racing out to a 40-love lead only to see Muguruza tear five streak points belting a backhand down the line to start the second set with her third break.
Dodging a pair of break points, Muguruza bent low to lash a backhand winner down the line backing up the break for 2-0.
By then, Krejcikova was off rhythm a bit on serve catching her toss repeatedly. Still, she held firm in the third game.
Serve games began to get stickier for the 6′ Spaniard, who used every inch of her reach to poke a backhand down the line erasing break point in the sixth game. Facing another break point, Muguruza smacked her fifth ace out wide to save it, navigating a complicated hold for 4-2.
Congratulations @GarbiMuguruza @WTA #DDFTennis pic.twitter.com/LcVYuaETw8
— Dubai Tennis Champs (@DDFTennis) March 13, 2021
Seeing the finish line, Muguruza raced toward it slicing an ace for 5-3. Muguruza banged out the final break with a series of crackling backhands closing in two hours, eight minutes.
“I want to dedicate this to Audrey my physio she worked so hard these two weeks and also to Conchi that she got the virus she was so upset she couldn’t come,” Muguruza said. “This one is for her. I feel like improving physically helped me to resist round after round I feel like that’s the key for these matches to be able to come back physically and still give them a good level.”