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Maria Sharapova: Rusty Or Rested?

WTA Insider Courtney Nguyen 

A favorite on paper and the most rested player in the field, Maria Sharapova came to Singapore with a relatively full tank of gas. But how rusty is the engine?

Published October 24, 2015 12:12

SINGAPORE - On the eve of the start of her tournament at the BNP Paribas WTA Finals Singapore presented by SC Global, No.3 seed Maria Sharapova told reporters this WTA Finals feels markedly different. The 2004 champion is competing in the WTA Finals for the eighth time in her career. Drawn into the Red Group, she holds a combined 19-5 record against the women in her group: Simona Halep, Agnieszka Radwanska, and Flavia Pennetta.

On paper she's the favorite to make it out of round robin play and into the semifinals. But paper has been pretty worthless for Sharapova in 2015, a season that has seen her momentum repeatedly halted by ill-timed injuries and illness. Thanks to her strong results in the first half of the year, which included an Australian Open final, Wimbledon semifinal, and two titles in Brisbane and Rome, Sharapova qualified for this year's final relatively early.

Yet she has yet to play a completed match in over four months. Her last complete match came in the Wimbledon semifinals, a loss to eventual champion Serena Williams, and she did not play the North American hardcourts due to a leg injury. Fully fit and recovered, she made an attempt at a comeback in Asia. That was thwarted by yet another setback, this time a left arm injury.

So despite being dealt a group with favorable match-ups, Sharapova still sees her week in Singapore as a major test. "I think because I haven't played [much], everyone I would face no matter who was in my group would be a challenge for me," Sharapova told reporters at WTA All-Access Hour on Saturday. "Look, it's a big step for me to be here and feel that I am healthy. It will be a bigger step that I'll be able to compete in those three matches and finish them off healthy. That's my goal."

With the WTA Finals and Russia's Fed Cup final looming, Sharapova retired to Barbora Strycova in Wuhan after feeling pain in her arm and withdrew from the China Open. She headed to Germany to get treatment for what turned out to be inflammation. She says the injury has improved and she's feeling good now.

In other years the absence of her greatest rival, Serena Williams, might skew the competition back in her favor. Not so this year. "Personally, especially in this case, in this tournament, considering I haven't played much, it doesn't change much for me," Sharapova said. "It's not so much who I'm playing against or what my record is than it is about me being out there and staying healthy and working my way through the matches."

Injury and rustiness aside, Sharapova is undoubtedly the most rested player in the field. The WTA Finals will be just her 12th tournament of the season. With this year's Road To Singapore coming down to the wire - four of the eight players secured their spots in the final two weeks via heavy tournament schedules - Sharapova came to Singapore with a relatively full tank of gas. But how rusty is the engine?

"I actually don't feel like it's the last tournament for me because I missed many tournaments," Sharapova said. "That's one of the reasons I'm participating in Fed Cup final this year. Usually I'm already thinking of the Monday where I'll be traveling on holiday, and I'm already ready to start the off season. It's just a different way of thinking for me now than it's been in the last few years where I've had the full season."

Injuries have been a been a concern all season for the tour's top players, with Caroline Wozniacki and Agnieszka Radwanska recent calls for schedule changes to give players more rest and recovery. Sharapova did not seem to share their concern. She credited her father and her team for keeping her schedule light early in her career and that practice has stuck over the years. Chasing ranking points is simply not in her DNA.

"If I look at my schedule, I feel that I do have the amount of rest [I need]," she said. "I think for me it's more important to have good rest and more quality time on the court than traveling around the world and playing seven weeks in a row. I don't know if my body's capable of doing that.

"I think it's just a different mentality, more of a self- belief. I think maybe some players need more tournaments to be ready for a tournament, whereas I feel if I commit myself and I'm healthy, if I commit myself to the right amount of weeks of training, yes, I might have to go through rust, get over some moments where I make a few errors. I just have to let that go. But I believe I will get through that and I will have chances to go far in the tournament."

Now it's just a matter of finding her game right out of the gates. Sharapova opens her tournament on Sunday against No.5 seed Agnieszka Radwanska. Sharapova leads their head-to-head 12-2 and has won their last five matches, including their last two at the WTA Finals. The match begins at 7:30pm local time (GMT + 8)

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