Sharapova cant wait to get back
Wuhan: World number three Maria Sharapova returns from injury at next
week's Wuhan Open as she starts her build-up to the WTA Finals season
finale.
Sharapova last played at Wimbledon, where she lost in the semi-finals
to Serena Williams for the 17th time in succession. The Russian
subsequently pulled out of a WTA event in Toronto and the Cincinnati
Masters hoping to be ready for the US Open, but a persistent leg injury
kept her out of that one too.

Sharapova |
"I've been working hard to get myself ready to compete again and I
can't wait to get back out," the five-time Grand Slam champion said in a
statement announcing her wild card entry to the Wuhan Open.
Sharapova is among a star-studded line-up for the USD 2.4 million
hard court event, which was only established last year on the back of
the success of China's two-time Grand Slam winner Li Na, who was born
and raised in Wuhan.
Twenty-eight-year-old Sharapova has already booked her place in next
month's WTA Championships in Singapore -- which sees the top eight
players on tour fight for the final prize of the year. But the field
remains open for all but the world's top three, and competition at the
Wuhan Open is certain to be intense with 18 of the top 20 players
attending. Points are close among many of the players, and a strong
performance from down the ranks could shake up the line up for
Singapore.
Serena Williams is sitting the tournament out and US Open winner
Flavia Pennetta -- whose surprise grand slam victory saw her shoot up
the rankings from 26 to 7 -- withdrew at the last minute with a foot
injury. Pennetta announced her retirement at the US Open final, and
could now only have one tournament left before she exits tennis.
But the Italian's appearance at the WTA Finals could be jeopardy if
any of the players who sit just below her in the rankings -- Germany's
Angelique Kerber, Czech Karolina Pliskova or Spain's Carla Suarez
Navarro and Garbine Muguruza -- make it to the quarter-finals or beyond
at Wuhan.
The points they would earn could push Pennetta out of the top
eight.Romanian Simona Halep enters as the tournament's top seed, and
double Wimbledon winner Petra Kvitova is the third seed.
The Czech was diagnosed with glandular fever this year but has been
given the medical clearance to compete. Denmark's Caroline Wozniacki is
seeded fourth ahead of Muguruza and sixth seed Kerber. Suarez Navarro
and Pliskova are seventh and eighth.
All seeded players have a first round bye. Li will return to her
hometown Wuhan for the second edition of the tournament and to open a
new 15,000-capacity stadium, its mammoth capacity highlighting the rapid
growth of tennis in China.
Li retired from tennis last September on the eve of the inaugural
Wuhan Open -- one of three WTA events in China added to the calendar
last year -- eight months after winning her second Grand Slam title at
the Australian Open. She gave birth to a daughter Alisa in June. The
first round of the tournament began Friday and will reach its climax on
October 3.
|