Mirra Andreeva had finally made a mistake that mattered.
She has won a nearly flawless first set over Sorana Cirstea 6-0. She had kept that momentum going with an early break in the second. Serving with power and hitting with depth, weight, and tremendous extension from the baseline, the 19-year-old had given Cirstea no place to go with the ball. The Romanian couldn’t find room for a single winner in the first set.
Then, up 3-2, three games from her second semifinal at Roland Garros, Andreeva blinked. At break point, she took a full swing on a short forehand, a shot she’d hardly missed all day, and drilled it into the net. Broadcasters immediately swung the camera angle around in Court Philippe Chatrier to show us her reaction.
Would the teenager smack her thigh with her racquet, as she did earlier in this tournament? Would she chuck it down to the clay, which is her go-to move when she’s frustrated? Would she have words for her long-suffering coach, Conchita Martinez? Would she smack a ball into the stands, as she had during her quarterfinal loss to France’s Lois Boisson in this round a year ago?
