Amanda Anisimova looks like the future of American tennis—again
“Like, all my shots were working today, which is like my favorite way to play,” Anisimova said with a laugh after steamrolling her countrywoman Coco Gauff, 6-1, 6-2, in the semifinals in Beijing on Saturday.
Everyone likes when their shots are working, of course. But none of us have shots like Anisimova’s. When she connects properly on a ground stroke, she can be pretty sure the ball isn’t going to come back. Even Gauff, the speediest of opponents, couldn’t do anything against her two-winged barrage, which started with the first swing of every rally.
Ceding just three games to the world No. 3 was a gobsmacking result. But if you’ve followed Anisimova’s career, we already know she can out-slug anyone. What we didn’t know until recently is that she can also outlast and out-compete some of the world’s best players. Twice this week, against two Grand Slam finalists, Karolina Muchova and Jasmine Paolini, Anisimova dropped the first set before coming back to win 6-4 in the third.
With each match, I’ve been surprising myself and trying to learn how to work with physical pain, pushing myself in tough matches. This week has been a lot of progress in that department. Amanda Anisimova
That newfound resilience was on display again in the final versus Linda Noskova. This time Anisimova jumped out of the gates in fifth gear, hitting 11 winners in a bagel first set. A determined Noskova turned that around in the second, and left Anisimova huffing and puffing between points. Once upon a time, Anisimova, who used to look for reasons to doubt, might have believed that this wasn’t her day, or that she was destined to lose another important final, the way she had at Wimbledon and the US Open.
Instead, she gathered herself, shook her racquet determinedly after good shots, and ran away with the third set. The crucial moment came with Noskova serving at 2-3, down break point. The two had been trading blows for an hour and half, with neither woman taking anything off the ball, and neither able to gain a permanent edge. Now they engaged in a bruising rally straight down the middle of the court. Boom, boom, boom, boom—until finally Anisimova proved more powerful, and Noskova lost control of a backhand.