Hong Kong WTA event “postponed indefinitely”

The Hong Kong Open, scheduled for Oct. 5-13, has been “postponed indefinitely” because of the ongoing protests in that part of the world.

Victoria Park is the host site. But it has been referred to as “ground zero” for the anti-government protests that have been going on for three months now.

It’s just the latest in a series of events that were scheduled for the area that have been postponed.

The tournament issued this statement on its website.

“In light of the present situation, Hong Kong Tennis Association and the WTA are announcing a postponement of the 2019 Hong Kong Tennis Open. The event will no longer take place during 5-13 October.

The Open is the flagship event on our annual calendar and one of the most popular International sporting events in the city, attracting thousands of local fans and overseas travellers every year.

As the winner of the WTA International event of the year award in 2018, we strive to maintain a high standard of the event for all participants, players and the fans in particular. However, after extensive discussions with our key stakeholders, we conclude that a smooth running of the tournament can be better assured at a later time.

The event organisers and WTA are in active discussion on identifying an alternate week for the hosting of the event. Further announcement will be made in due course.

We sincerely apologise for any inconvenience caused to our players, fans, partners and supporters. We will announce ticket refund procedures via the event website, www.hktennisopen.hk, on 16 September 2019.”

Wiped off the WTA Tour website

The Hong Kong Open, which was to hold its sixth edition, won’t be held this year – at least not in its current week, because of the protests in that part of the world.

The tournament was named the best “international-level” event for 2018 (it helped that it tripled the prize money for the standard International event, which is $250,000, to $750,000 for the 2018 edition).

It’s hard to figure where else they can fit in this event, as the Asian fall is already full (there are three events this week alone). 

As well, there’s no way to know when the protests will end, and therefore when the conditions will be adequate to host the event again.

The reaction by the WTA on this is … curious.

There is no mention on the website about this event being postponed – no brief or official statement. (In their defense, their players made a whole lot of news Thursday. They also managed to put up a brief today about the “official reasons” Bianca Andreescu and Belinda Bencic withdrew from next week’s tournament in Osaka).

And yet, everything related to the tournament is completely wiped off the website. It’s not on the schedule. It’s hard to access the tournament page.

If you go to it from a Google search, you get … this. 

Kong

You can find last year’s page, but you really have to look.

As well, (thanks to Carolyn Nichols for the heads up), there remains an ITF seniors’ event scheduled for later the same month at Victoria Park in Hong Kong.

The WTA may come up against a similar situation next month with its inaugural Tour Finals in Shenzhen, which is right across the harbor from Hong Kong.

According to this piece in the Guardian last month, the Shenzhen Bay Sports Centre – which is hosting the first edition as the permanent stadium won’t be ready on time – had been hosting more than 100 paramilitary vehicles. They were parked in adjacent soccer stadium.

What will the players do?

The deadline hasn’t yet hit for the tournament, which is one of several post-US Open tournaments that have much more short-term deadlines than the typical six-weeks window.

The idea is to allow players who still have a shot at qualifying for Shenzhen to add last-minute tournaments to their calendar – and therefore improve the fields for these fall events.

Kong
The Hong Kong Open Facebook page announces the postponement, but hasn’t yet taken down its banner. (Facebook)

Linz, Austria (with $250,000 in prize money) and Tianjin, which offers double that purse, are the other options that week.

It’s hard to tell exactly who had signed up for Hong Kong. But we do know for sure that Americans Venus Williams, Sofia Kenin and Amanda Anisimova, as well as Aussie Ajla Tomljanovic, had entered because they are also entered in Tianjin, but that event is listed as their second choice.

So far, Qiang Wang is the top-ranked player entered in Tianjin (even though she was a finalist in Hong Kong a year ago). 

We’ll see who else enters those events in the next few days.

Dayana Yastremska, currently ranked a career-high No. 30, is the defending champion in Hong Kong.

Where does Bouchard go from here?

The first legitimate question that has to be asked about Genie Bouchard’s abbreviated Asian swing: what is she doing there, really?

Perhaps she took the long flight from Miami in the hope that she could salvage a few wins from a difficult season.

And perhaps she hoped to finish off 2017 with even a little momentum she could take into the off-season and 2018. There no doubt was some appearance money on the table.

The 23-year-old Canadian is hitting the ball very well, which is encouraging.

But it’s not translating into victories.

At this point, it’s rarely even translating into three solid points in succession.

The 6-1, 6-1, first-round loss to No. 3 seed Caroline Wozniacki in Hong Kong Tuesday night was surely not unexpected. But it didn’t even take an hour.

Genie Bouchard
Wozniacki made quick work of Bouchard Tuesday night in Hong Kong.

Playing lower-ranked players hasn’t translated into wins. Playing a Singapore-bound player against whom she has far less to lose turned out not to be the answer, either.

The two had met only once, back in 2014 on this same Asian swing. It was one of the better weeks of Bouchard’s career, as she reached the final with a 6-2, 6-3 win over Wozniacki in Wuhan.

The two were neck-and-neck in the rankings back then. And both would be headed to the Tour finals in Singapore the following month.

Bad matchup

But it’s not a great matchup for the Canadian. Bouchard needs to execute her down-the-line backhand to find Wozniacki’s weaker forehand side and turn the points in her favour. And that’s not a good shot for her unless she’s supremely confident.

Worse, there’s a tell when Bouchard about to hit it – a hesitation. And that gives her opponent a head start to defend it.

So it was Wozniacki who controlled the points. And the Dane can exchange crosscourt backhands with Bouchard all night long and come out on the winning end most of the time.

There was resignation in Bouchard’s mien. And only when she was down 0-5 in the second set did she put together a five-minute patch of play that allowed her to at least get on the scoreboard in the second set.

She has doubles with American Shelby Rogers Wednesday.

Her last tournament of the season is scheduled to be Luxembourg next week.

So you have to ask again: was the decision to play the second half of the fall swing really the right one?

Had she not received a wild card into Beijing, she might not have made the trip. Who knows? Falling in the qualifying may have done more harm than good.

But Bouchard could have turned it down. Instead, she was out before Monday even rolled around after a straight-sets loss to Magdalena Rybarikova of Slovakia.

Genie Bouchard
Bouchard peers at the Hawkeye review on one of her serves Tuesday against Caroline Wozniacki. She was correct; but it didn’t help much.

Coaching carousel continues

With Thomas Högstedt having bailed out after the US Open, Bouchard will spend yet another off-season searching for a new coach.

It’s hardly uncharted territory.

Diego Ayala, the south Florida-based coach she took with her on this three-tournament swing, is an option she has had in front of her before. And she didn’t exercise it.

Ayala went to Australia with her in 2015 after she parted ways with longtime guru Nick Saviano. That one was a surprise, in the wake of a great 2014 season that ended on a sour note in Singapore. But there was a lot going on behind the scenes despite the great results on court.

Bouchard wouldn’t even refer to Ayala as her coach then; she insisted he was her hitting partner.

A few weeks later, she ended up hiring the more-decorated Sam Sumyk. it was a stint that lasted less than six months. It didn’t end particularly well.

At the end of 2015, after all the issues around the concussion she suffered at the US Open, Bouchard returned to the WTA Tour to finish off the season with Högstedt. That didn’t go well. But at least she had a solid plan in place for the looming off-season.

But by April, 2016 Högstedt was gone. And Saviano was back. 

At the end of that season, Bouchard skipped the Asian swing. She took an extended break. And by the time she got back to work, the options on the coaching side were limited. She ended up getting Högstedt back.

But now he’s gone, too. Högstedt was in Beijing on a trial with the Russian Ekaterina Makarova.

Perhaps the most crucial off-season yet

Hindsight is always 20/20, of course. But it’s already October. Only a little more than two months remain before the WTA Tour circus takes to the road again. And in that relatively limited time frame, Bouchard has much to do.

She has to figure out who’s available on the coaching side, who she wants to work with – and who wants to work with her. She also has to develop a little chemistry if it’s someone she doesn’t know well.

Then, she has to get to work trying to maximize that time, to figure out what if anything she can upgrade in her game to come out swinging in 2018.

Because after three consecutive years of struggles, there just can’t be another year added on. 

It’s not a lot of time. And the way this final swing is going, she’s wasting precious weeks.

(All screenshots from WTAtv.com)