Keys upsets Rybarikova at Bank of the West Classic

Keys upsets Rybarikova at Bank of the West Classic
Updated 24 July 2013
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Keys upsets Rybarikova at Bank of the West Classic

Keys upsets Rybarikova at Bank of the West Classic

STANFORD, California : American teenager Madison Keys wandered around the Stanford University campus wondering what it would have been like had she chosen school over tennis.
This would have been her freshman year.
“I could be going to college soon,” Keys said. “I’m pretty happy where I am.”
Keys, one of 11 Americans ranked in the top 100, beat No. 8 seed Magalena Rybarikova 6-2, 6-2, in the first round of the $795,000 Bank of the West Classic on Monday.
Her likely major? “Something that doesn’t have math it,” she said.
Keys, ranked a career-high 44th, played a typical match in topping the 39th-ranked Slovakian for the second time in three career meetings.
Keys recorded four aces and had three double faults. She won 70 percent of her first serve points. In 40 previous matches this season, the 18-year-old phenom averaged 3.8 aces and 1.35 double faults per match while winning 69.7 percent of her first-serve points.
“I had a little bit of nerves,” Keys said. “The court was really fast and I tried to get used to it. It was also the first tournament on hardcourt and I’m always nervous at the beginning of a tournament.”
She’s still looking for her first WTA Tour title, but she’s had her moments in her career.
A few months after turning pro on her 14th birthday, she beat Serena Williams 5-1 in a World Team Tennis match. She’s 6-5 in Grand Slam events, reaching the third round at both the Australian Open and Wimbledon.
In her last match, Keys took Wimbledon finalist Agnieszka Radwanska to three sets at the All-England Club.
“That gave me a lot of confidence,” she said. “I realized afterward that I had played well and that made me want to work that much harder.”
Keys did take some time off after Wimbledon, spending time with relatives and hitting the beach.
“I got to have four whole days of summer,” she said. “But I was also happy to get back to tennis.”
Sorana Cirstea, the only other seeded player on opening day, beat Ayumi Morita 6-2, 6-2.
Cirstea, seeded fifth, played a clean game, with few unforced errors and no double faults, in beating the 51st-ranked Japanese player.
Cirstea, ranked 32nd, played Morita for the third time this season and sixth overall.
In other first-round matches, Belarus’ Olga Govortsova downed Germany’s Julia Goerges 7-6 (2), 6-2; Italian Francesca Schiavone topped American and former Stanford All-American Mallory Burdette 7-5, 6-3; and Sweden’s Stefanie Voegele bettered wild card Ajla Tomljanovic of Croatia 6-4, 6-0; and Stanford senior Nicole Gibbs defeated The Netherlands’ Kiki Bertens 6-4, 6-1
Top-seeded Jovanovski triumphs
In Baku, Azerbaijan, top seed and defending champion Bojana Jovanovski advanced to the second round of the Baku Cup, overcoming a rough start to beat Nigina Abduraimova of Uzbekistan 6-3, 6-3 on Tuesday.
Jovanovski, of Serbia, lost the first three games before taking the next six. In the second set, she broke serve twice but dropped her serve in each subsequent game and twice double-faulted on match points.
Also on the oudoor hard-courts of the Baku Tennis Academy, Kristyna Pliskova of the Czech Republic eliminated eighth-seeded Vesna Dolonc of Serbia 6-1, 6-2. Pliskova fired six aces and saved all three of her break points.