Many Congrats to Mirra. 🎉🥳👏🎊🙌🍾🥂
She fully deserves this trophy 🏆 and it’s a testament to her great work ethic and belief in herself.
I noticed in the last month there has been a dramatic improvement in her form.
She now has the belief she can win by playing her own game. Mirra has great technique and is now hitting through her shots with power and precision… 👏👏👏
The match she played against Kostyuk was full of brilliant serving and shotmaking off both wings.
Take a rest Mirra, enjoy your win, and we look forward to see you playing at Wimbledon. 🎾🎾🎾
ZVEREV vs MENSIK - MATCH ANALYSIS AND COMMENTS
Zverev completely outclassed Mensik in their French Open Semi-Final, winning 7-5, 6-2, 3-6, 6-3.
The final score suggests a competitive match, but in reality Zverev dominated large periods of the contest and looked the superior player from start to finish.
The key moment came in the first set when Mensik led 4-2 and held three break points for a 5-2 lead. A lesser player may have folded, but Zverev rose to the occasion, saved the danger, and gradually took complete control of the match.
For the first two sets Mensik looked overwhelmed by both the occasion and the quality of his opponent. He appeared tentative, rarely came forward to the net, and looked nothing like the confident player who had defeated João Fonseca in the previous round.
The statistics tell the story:
• Aces: Zverev 8, Mensik 4
• 1st Serve %: Zverev 75%, Mensik 61%
• 1st Serve Points Won: Zverev 79%, Mensik 72%
• 2nd Serve Points Won: Zverev 62%, Mensik 50%
• Break Points Won: Zverev 4/7, Mensik 1/4
• Winners: Zverev 42, Mensik 32
• Unforced Errors: Zverev 37, Mensik 41
Perhaps the most revealing statistic was Zverev winning 79% of his first-serve points while landing 75% of his first serves. Those are elite numbers on clay and gave Mensik very few opportunities to apply pressure.
The second set was complete domination. Zverev won an incredible 93% of his first-serve points in that set and Mensik won only 25% of his second-serve points.
Mensik did take the third set, but in my opinion that was due more to a temporary drop in Zverev’s level than any major shift in momentum. Zverev’s unforced errors increased significantly, allowing Mensik back into the match briefly.
At only 20 years of age, Mensik will learn a great deal from this defeat. Young players often learn more from losses like this than they do from victories.
In the end, experience, composure, serving quality and big-match mentality proved decisive.
Zverev didn’t just beat Mensik.
He totally outclassed him.
🎾
ZVEREV vs MENSIK - MATCH ANALYSIS AND COMMENTS
Alexander Zverev completely outclassed Jakub Mensik in their French Open Semi-Final, winning 7-5, 6-2, 3-6, 6-3.
The final score suggests a competitive match, but in reality Zverev dominated large periods of the contest and looked the superior player from start to finish.
The key moment came in the first set when Mensik led 4-2 and held three break points for a 5-2 lead. A lesser player may have folded, but Zverev rose to the occasion, saved the danger, and gradually took complete control of the match.
For the first two sets Mensik looked overwhelmed by both the occasion and the quality of his opponent. He appeared tentative, rarely came forward to the net, and looked nothing like the confident player who had defeated João Fonseca in the previous round.
The statistics tell the story:
• Aces: Zverev 8, Mensik 4
• 1st Serve %: Zverev 75%, Mensik 61%
• 1st Serve Points Won: Zverev 79%, Mensik 72%
• 2nd Serve Points Won: Zverev 62%, Mensik 50%
• Break Points Won: Zverev 4/7, Mensik 1/4
• Winners: Zverev 42, Mensik 32
• Unforced Errors: Zverev 37, Mensik 41
Perhaps the most revealing statistic was Zverev winning 79% of his first-serve points while landing 75% of his first serves. Those are elite numbers on clay and gave Mensik very few opportunities to apply pressure.
The second set was complete domination. Zverev won an incredible 93% of his first-serve points in that set and Mensik won only 25% of his second-serve points.
Mensik did take the third set, but in my opinion that was due more to a temporary drop in Zverev’s level than any major shift in momentum. Zverev’s unforced errors increased significantly, allowing Mensik back into the match briefly.
At only 20 years of age, Mensik will learn a great deal from this defeat. Young players often learn more from losses like this than they do from victories.
In the end, experience, composure, serving quality and big-match mentality proved decisive.
Zverev didn’t just beat Mensik.
He totally outclassed him.
🎾
ZVEREV vs MENSIK - MATCH ANALYSIS AND COMMENTS
Zverev completely outclassed Mensik in their French Open Semi-Final, winning 7-5, 6-2, 3-6, 6-3.
The final score suggests a competitive match, but in reality Zverev dominated large periods of the contest and looked the superior player from start to finish.
The key moment came in the first set when Mensik led 4-2 and held three break points for a 5-2 lead. A lesser player may have folded, but Zverev rose to the occasion, saved the danger, and gradually took complete control of the match.
For the first two sets Mensik looked overwhelmed by both the occasion and the quality of his opponent. He appeared tentative, rarely came forward to the net, and looked nothing like the confident player who had defeated João Fonseca in the previous round.
The statistics tell the story:
• Aces: Zverev 8, Mensik 4
• 1st Serve %: Zverev 75%, Mensik 61%
• 1st Serve Points Won: Zverev 79%, Mensik 72%
• 2nd Serve Points Won: Zverev 62%, Mensik 50%
• Break Points Won: Zverev 4/7, Mensik 1/4
• Winners: Zverev 42, Mensik 32
• Unforced Errors: Zverev 37, Mensik 41
Perhaps the most revealing statistic was Zverev winning 79% of his first-serve points while landing 75% of his first serves. Those are elite numbers on clay and gave Mensik very few opportunities to apply pressure.
The second set was complete domination. Zverev won an incredible 93% of his first-serve points in that set and Mensik won only 25% of his second-serve points.
Mensik did take the third set, but in my opinion that was due more to a temporary drop in Zverev’s level than any major shift in momentum. Zverev’s unforced errors increased significantly, allowing Mensik back into the match briefly.
At only 20 years of age, Mensik will learn a great deal from this defeat. Young players often learn more from losses like this than they do from victories.
In the end, experience, composure, serving quality and big-match mentality proved decisive.
Zverev didn’t just beat Mensik.
He totally outclassed him.
🎾
ZVEREV vs MENSIK - MATCH ANALYSIS AND COMMENTS
Zverev completely outclassed Mensik in their French Open Semi-Final, winning 7-5, 6-2, 3-6, 6-3.
The final score suggests a competitive match, but in reality Zverev dominated large periods of the contest and looked the superior player from start to finish.
The key moment came in the first set when Mensik led 4-2 and held three break points for a 5-2 lead. A lesser player may have folded, but Zverev rose to the occasion, saved the danger, and gradually took complete control of the match.
For the first two sets Mensik looked overwhelmed by both the occasion and the quality of his opponent. He appeared tentative, rarely came forward to the net, and looked nothing like the confident player who had defeated João Fonseca in the previous round.
The statistics tell the story:
• Aces: Zverev 8, Mensik 4
• 1st Serve %: Zverev 75%, Mensik 61%
• 1st Serve Points Won: Zverev 79%, Mensik 72%
• 2nd Serve Points Won: Zverev 62%, Mensik 50%
• Break Points Won: Zverev 4/7, Mensik 1/4
• Winners: Zverev 42, Mensik 32
• Unforced Errors: Zverev 37, Mensik 41
Perhaps the most revealing statistic was Zverev winning 79% of his first-serve points while landing 75% of his first serves. Those are elite numbers on clay and gave Mensik very few opportunities to apply pressure.
The second set was complete domination. Zverev won an incredible 93% of his first-serve points in that set and Mensik won only 25% of his second-serve points.
Mensik did take the third set, but in my opinion that was due more to a temporary drop in Zverev’s level than any major shift in momentum. Zverev’s unforced errors increased significantly, allowing Mensik back into the match briefly.
At only 20 years of age, Mensik will learn a great deal from this defeat. Young players often learn more from losses like this than they do from victories.
In the end, experience, composure, serving quality and big-match mentality proved decisive.
Zverev didn’t just beat Mensik.
He totally outclassed him.
🎾
My advice to this individual (who spent $1.5 billion on running a losing Presidential Campaign), is to go back to school and learn how to speak coherently so people can even half understand what she is actually talking about.🤷♂️
Harris is what one might call a person who has hung on to the Titanics anchor as it deep- dived into the depths of the North Atlantic Ocean 🌊
No chance of recovery…🤷♂️🫣🫣🫣🤷♂️