MONTREAL, Canada
- Martina Hingis and Nicole Vaidisova faced tough tasks en route to the
third round of the Rogers Cup presented by National Bank Tuesday night
on the hardcourts of Uniprix Stadium.
No.7 seed Hingis trailed
4-1 in the second set but, after an on-court chat with coach and mother
Melanie Molitor, managed to pull out a 75 76(5) victory over Mara
Santangelo. No.5-seeded Vaidisova caught a slow start against
countrywoman Lucie Safarova but still prevailed, 36 75 61.
Santangelo
was serving for the second set at 5-4 when Hingis turned things around
with solid ground strokes to avoid a third set. The Swiss received a
first round bye and was the first player to enter the third round of
the $1,340,000, Tier I event.
"I don't think it was an easy match
from the beginning," Hingis said. "I've never played her before. I knew
what she was going to be like, but it's not so easy to always try to
control those wide shots. And she served very well, a very high
percentage and it was hard to break her. I think overall it was a good
match to win in straight sets."
Leading 4-1 in the second set,
Santangelo took a medical timeout and Hingis asked Molitor to come on
court, as part of the on-court coaching trial conducted here for the
first time.
"It was just to loosen up. (My mother) knows my game
inside and out and sometimes when you have an overview from the
outside, it helps. She told me just try to play your game," said
Hingis, who will next face either No.11 Daniela Hantuchova or Jamea
Jackson.
Hingis made the Rogers Cup semifinals in 1998 and won
titles in 1999 and 2000. In her first championship run, she defeated
Arantxa Sánchez-Vicario in the quarters, Mary Pierce in the semis and
Monica Seles in the final, without dropping a set. A year later, she
beat Conchita Martínez in the semis and Serena Williams in the final.
Williams retired trailing 3-0 in the third set due to a foot injury.
This is Hingis' second US Open Series tournament this year. Two weeks
ago at San Diego, she made the quarters and lost to eventual champion
Kim Clijsters.
In the final match of the day, Vaidisova notched
her second Sony Ericsson WTA Tour victory over Safarova. The two faced
each other earlier this year at Amelia Island and Safarova won 64 in
the third. This time Vaidisova left her opponent no chance in the third
set. She will next meet either Nicole Pratt or Marie-Ève Pelletier.
After reaching her first career Tier I semifinal at San Diego,
17-year-old Vaidisova broke into the Top 10 for the first time and is
only the 12th-youngest Tour player to do so.
No.10 Anna-Lena
Groenefeld eliminated lucky loser Julia Schruff, 63 63, and will next
face American qualifier Shenay Perry. Groenefeld had an impressive week
in her first summer hardcourt event at Stanford, reaching the singles
quarterfinals and winning her fifth career Tour doubles title.
No.11
Hantuchova swept aside Gisela Dulko, 62 60, to set up a second round
meeting with qualifier Jackson. The 23-year-old Slovak, who won her
lone Tour singles title four years ago at Indian Wells, made a first
round exit at Stanford but reached the third round at San Diego.
Pelletier
and Stéphanie Dubois became the first Quebecers since 1984 to advance
to the second round of this event. Pelletier dispatched No.16 seed Li
Na, 64 62, to score her first Top 20 win, while Dubois ousted world
No.57 Tathiana Garbin, 64 64.
"It's my best victory ever, yes, for sure," Pelletier said. "And yes, to do it here on centre court, it's awesome. Awesome."
Other
Tuesday winners were Perry, Cara Black, Jackson, Pratt, Marta
Domachowska, Jelena Jankovic, Zheng Jie, Ai Sugiyama and Anna
Chakvetadze.
On Wednesday, top seed and defending champion
Clijsters plays Dubois, No.3 Nadia Petrova takes on Chakvetadze, No.4
Svetlana Kuznetsova is up against Domachowska and No.6 Anastasia
Myskina will meet Shahar Peer.