Caroline Wozniacki vs Anastasia PavlyuchenkovaPonte Vedra Beach Quarter-final

Ponte Vedra Beach · WTA · Quarter-final
36 yrs · 177 cm · Right-handed
Last 10 · pre-match
LWWWLWLWLW
0 — 0
Sets
Monday, 5 April 2010
clay
#400WTA
1775ELO
1692Clay ELO
35 yrs · 177 cm · Right-handed
Last 10 · pre-match
LWWLLLLLLL
Wozniacki C.
6-1 6-3
Pavlyuchenkova A.
Wozniacki C.
662
Pavlyuchenkova A.
13

Caroline Wozniacki defeated Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 6-1 6-3 in the Ponte Vedra Beach quarter-final on clay. The result followed the form book — Caroline Wozniacki came in leading the head-to-head 6–2, defending the title. Caroline Wozniacki extended the head-to-head to 7–2.

Key context

Head to head

62
DateTournamentRoundSurfaceWinnerScore
2024-08-12CincinnatiR32hardAnastasia Pavlyuchenkova7-5 6-4
2017-10-02BeijingR32hardCaroline Wozniacki6-2 6-2
2017-09-18TokyoFhardCaroline Wozniacki6-0 7-5
2012-08-13CincinnatiR16hardAnastasia Pavlyuchenkova6-4 6-4
2010-09-27TokyoR16hardCaroline Wozniacki6-1 6-2
2010-06-21WimbledonR32grassCaroline Wozniacki7-5 6-4
2010-03-22MiamiR16hardCaroline Wozniacki6-2 6-2
2009-08-24New HavenR16hardCaroline Wozniacki6-1 6-4

Serve vs return

This season
Wozniacki C.serving71% hold

wins 59% of points on serve vs Pavlyuchenkova A.

Pavlyuchenkova A.serving64% hold

wins 56% of points on serve vs Wozniacki C.

Baseline battle — serve is shaky, expect plenty of breaks

Each player's serve crossed against the other's return, converted to expected hold of serve. Recent completed matches, ATP, WTA & Challenger. About

Statistics

This season
1st serve in·Even
66%
64%
1st serve points won·Even
65%
65%
2nd serve points won·Even
47%
45%
Service points won·Even
59%
58%
Return points won·Even
46%
44%
Break points saved·Even
59%
55%
Aces / match·Even
2.7
3.0
Double faults / match·Dominant
2.2
4.5

Averages over each player's completed matches in the selected window (199 vs 200). ATP, WTA & Challenger.

Clutch

Under pressure
Clutch Rating·Even
89
85
Break points saved·Slight edge
92
87
Break points won·Slight edge
97
91
Deciding sets·Even
90
88
Tiebreaks·Even
84
86

Performance in the biggest moments — break points, deciding sets and tiebreaks (0–100, higher is better). About