2015 Preview: WTA No. 9, Angelique Kerber

The German should probably avoid any mid-season trips to Australia in 2015. This past April, Angelique Kerber joined her Fed Cup teammates for a tie in Brisbane; they won the battle that weekend, but Kerber lost the war with jet lag over the next month, when she went out in the first round of three clay-court events. If she had avoided that slump, her year would have looked much better, and she almost certainly would have qualified for her third straight year-end championship.

Outside of her spring swoon, Kerber was her usual steady self, routinely reaching the quarterfinals or better at tournaments. But as with Agnieszka Radwanska, this wasn’t a year of progress for Kerber; the two retrievers, each firmly in their mid-20s, were swept aside by two younger, more offensive-minded players in Simona Halep and Genie Bouchard;  the Canadian stopped Kerber at both the French Open and Wimbledon. Was this is a sign that defense doesn’t win titles,  or at least earn high rankings, anymore on the women’s side? We’ll find out more in Kerber’s 2015 campaign.

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Kerber’s game doesn’t deviate much, in style or quality. You know she’ll play dogged defense and make her share of quarters and semis. In 2015, a lot may depend on the staying power of last year’s breakout performers, Halep and Bouchard. If they falter, she should move back into the Top 8 or higher.

In 2012, Kerber was swept into the Top 10 in a defensive wave that included Radwanska and Sara Errani. In 2014, a subsequent, more offensive wave threatened to send all three back down the rankings again. We’ll see if that new wave continues,  and if more young players can join it.

Kerber will likely hold steady near the top of the second tier, but the WTA could be on the verge of passing by her defensive style.

For more 2015 season previews, click here.