Shvedova Mulls Quitting Doubles

© RIA Novosti . Alexey Kudenko / Go to the mediabankYaroslav Shvedova
Yaroslav Shvedova - Sputnik International
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Two-time doubles Grand Slam winner Yaroslav Shvedova told R-Sport on Thursday she is considering sacrificing her successful doubles career to improve in singles.

Two-time doubles Grand Slam winner Yaroslav Shvedova told R-Sport on Thursday she is considering sacrificing her successful doubles career to improve in singles.

Shvedova is ranked No. 28 in singles and No. 19 in doubles and has won the women's doubles at Wimbledon and the U.S. Open.

This season, she has stormed into the top 30 after starting outside the top 200 and won plaudits for her charge to the quarterfinals of the French Open.

"If I get better and better in singles, maybe I'll even quit doubles, but I'm not planning to do that yet," she said.

Quitting doubles would improve Shvedova's singles game by removing the need for her to concentrate on two different styles of play, she said.

Shvedova is competing in the Kremlin Cup in her home city of Moscow, where she lost to Russia's Maria Kirilenko in the second round Thursday.

The crowd opposed Shvedova because she switched allegiances to represent Kazakhstan in 2008, she said.

"A whole lot of people are maybe unhappy that I moved and because of that maybe rooted against me," she said.

"I'm a little bit sad of course that people feel like that about me, but what can I do?"

Shvedova said that the crowd was also probably strongly behind Kirilenko as the last Russian representative left in the women's draw.

She said she did not regret her move to Kazakhstan, and those of several other Russian tennis players, which she said was sparked by the poor facilities for players in Russia.

"A lot of players have moved. We didn't move because we don't love our country," she said.

"We go because of the conditions in the country. It's hard to train and there aren't few conditions to prepare well. It's necessary to move."

Shvedova represented Kazakhstan at the Olympics in London in August, where she beat Romania's Simona Halep in her first match but lost to Germany's Sabine Lisicki in the second round.

She is also known for her performance at Wimbledon in July, when she made the record books with only the second so-called Golden Set in the tournament's history, winning all 24 points in a set against Italy's Sara Errani.

 

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