Tennis
Wozniacki has some fun with the media
Tennis

Wozniacki has some fun with the media

Published Jan. 20, 2011 12:00 a.m. ET

World No. 1 tennis star Caroline Wozniacki humbled media at the Australian Open in Melbourne with a hilarious rebuke Friday after being told reporters thought she was "boring."

After her win over Slovakia's Dominika Cibulkova in the third round, the 20-year-old did not ask for questions but decided she would do the media's job for them.

"Yesterday (I was told) my press conferences were kind of boring, that I always gave the same answers," she said. "I find it quite funny because I always get the same questions. I know what you're going to ask me already, so I'm just going to start with the answers."

Wozniacki then stunned journalists by rattling off a monologue answering the predictable questions she knew she would face.

ADVERTISEMENT

"I felt great out there today on the court. I think I played a pretty good match. I am happy I got the revenge since I lost to her in Sydney last week. It was not an easy match. She went out there, she was really on fire," Wozniacki dead-panned.

"I'm happy to be through to the next round. I don't know who I'm playing, so maybe you can ask me that afterwards. But I'm really looking forward to playing my fourth round. It's the second time in a row that that's happened."

She added that she felt she deserved to be world No. 1 and was happy with her new racket, to laughter from the journalists present.

Then Wozniacki challenged the media to ask her some "more interesting" questions than the ones she usually hears.

After a moment's hesitation, questions came about Kenny Dalglish becoming manager of EPL soccer club Liverpool, global warming and whether she was going to get married and have children.

Regarding Daglish, she said, "I'm hoping that will give some positive energy into the guys, into the lads. I'm hoping things will turn and they'll start winning more matches."

The extraordinary news conference overshadowed Wozniacki's 6-4, 6-3 win over Cibulkova, which avenged a shock defeat at last week's Sydney International.

Wozniacki took advantage of Cibulkova's 41 unforced errors, many on key points, to book a fourth round meeting with unseeded Latvian Anastasija Sevastova.

The far steadier Dane made only 11 winners, but she stayed in control because of her low error rate, just 11 over the two sets.

Wozniacki became world No. 1 in October but has faced questions over whether she deserves the top ranking because she has never won a Grand Slam tournament.

share


Get more from Tennis Follow your favorites to get information about games, news and more

in this topic