Vandeweghe Loses to Schiavone in Fed Cup Final Opener; Mattek-Sands Next
U.S. Fed Cup Captain Mary Joe Fernandez hoped that Fed Cup debutante Coco Vandeweghe could dial-in the level of tennis that saw her upset current world No. 2 Vera Zvonareva earlier this year. Instead, opening the Fed Cup final for the U.S. against Italy’s Francesca Schiavone, Vandeweghe put in a nervous, error-filled display in a 6-2, 6-4 loss.
ADHEREL
Even on a fast indoor hardcourt that suits her big serving and forehand, the 18-year-old was no match for the reigning French Open champ Schiavone, who sliced and diced and gave the American youngster just enough rope to hand herself. The Italian remained calm, weathering bouts of big serving and hitting from Vandeweghe, and showing veteran composure in moving the not-fleet-of-foot American around with deft angles.
Vandeweghe went down a break immediately in both sets, and in the initial game of the match showed what a mental struggle it would be on the big stage when she double faulted on game point.
Late in the second set it was Schiavone’s time to feel the nerves, playing some poor points to drop serve and even the set at 4-4. Vandeweghe then gave up the next game with two unforced forehand errors and two unforced backhand errors. Schiavone then easily served out the match.
Vandeweghe is much like teammate Melanie Oudin was when she first appeared on tour — not in the best of shape, with a bit of a “gut” visible, and a poor mover. That changed for Oudin when she worked with her trainers to erase the extra body fat and gain speed. Hopefully that is ahead for Vandeweghe, and not just a reliance on a thumping serve and forehand.
In the audience for the match was Vandeweghe’s mother Tauna, and her uncle Kiki Vandeweghe, the former NBA player and head coach. The just-grip-it-and-rip-it mentality apparently runs in the family, as the mother Tauna was interviewed in the crowd, saying she wished her daughter would “just play her game,” which according to mom was “pounding the ball down the center of the court.” Ironically as she said it, her daughter ran around a forehand return, pounding it down the middle of the court, which Schiavone then guided into the open court for a winner.
The shellacking for Vandeweghe at the hands of Schiavone should be enough for U.S. captain Mary Joe Fernandez to sit the rookie and give the “veteran” Oudin a shot on Sunday.
American Bethanie Mattek-Sands is up next, hoping to level the match against Italy’s Flavia Pennetta.
You Might Like:
U.S. Down 0-2 After Mattek-Sands Loss in Fed Cup Final
Venus Williams’s Bid For A Fifth Gold Falls Short In Mixed Final In Rio, Loses With Ram To Sock/Mattek-Sands
U.S. Chances Van-de-way Off in Fed Cup Final?
Opinion: U.S. Women Bomb, Prepare for Complete Exit at Indian Wells; Where is Improvement?
Williams Sisters, Loaded Field at WTA Rome