Perfect prep: Simona Halep takes 14-match win streak to French Open
Confidence boost stems from top seed's training schedule during tennis shutdown
Two months of physical training. Then three months of practice on clay courts, followed by two straight titles on the red dirt.
Amid all the tumult of the coronavirus pandemic, Simona Halep might very well have found the perfect formula to prepare for the French Open.
When the clay-court Grand Slam tournament begins Sunday, 2018 champion Halep will be on court against 70th-ranked Sara Sorribes Tormo.
"I was very strict to the schedule, and I have worked a lot and I have improved a lot physically," Halep said of her time at home in Romania during the lockdown. "That's why I can run, I can feel fit every match. My legs are stronger and stronger, which gives me confidence during the matches, and also on clay it's [helpful]."
Ranked second but seeded No. 1 at Roland Garros because defending champion Ash Barty is not playing, Halep enters with a 9-0 record since tennis restarted, with titles on clay in Prague and Rome.
WATCH | Simona Halep improves to 14-0 since February:
Separated from her Australian coach Darren Cahill for seven months during the pandemic, Halep spent the extended break from competition with her Romanian coach, Artemon Apostu-Efremov.
"First part of pandemic, it was mostly physical, because in Romania we weren't allowed to do any tennis until 15th of May," Apostu-Efremov told The Associated Press. "Then when it was possible to go out and play again, all our practice was on clay.
Fresher than the competition?
"We've been, for a while, on clay," he said, "and you get more used [to] the bounce, with the angles, and I hope this will be an advantage for her."
Another possible edge for Halep: She didn't play the recently concluded U.S. Open, having decided against travelling overseas due to health concerns amid the pandemic. So she wasn't worn down by a deep run in New York — or even just the travel and jet lag — like many of her main challengers.
At the Italian Open, Halep's final three matches came against Yulia Putintseva, Garbine Muguruza and Karolina Pliskova — all three of whom played at the U.S. Open. Putintseva and Pliskova each retired because of injury after losing the first set to Halep, while Muguruza was methodically worn down over the course of a long three-setter.
With the French Open being rescheduled from its usual May-June slot to late September and early October, cooler and wetter-than-usual weather could play to Halep's strongpoint: outlasting opponents over long rallies with her fluid movement and improved stamina.
"To play [an] aggressive game against her is going to be quite tough," Pliskova said. "And she [already] had big success in Paris, so I think she's going to be one of my favourites to go for the title."
Halep calls Paris her 'favourite' city
Halep's decision to sit out the U.S. Open was made with the same logic she used when she decided not to compete in the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics due to concerns over the Zika virus.
"If I don't feel relaxed mentally about the health, I don't go," she said. "So that's why I didn't play Olympics few years ago. That's why I didn't play U.S. Open. I just feel stressed. And when I feel stressed, I prefer to stay home."
While virus cases are increasing across France — the number of spectators at the French Open has been dropped to 1,000 per day — Halep clearly feels comfortable in Paris, a city she calls her "favourite."
Having previously lost two French Open finals, Halep claimed her first Grand Slam title at Roland Garros two years ago by rallying from a set down to beat Sloane Stephens. Halep added a second major trophy by dropping only four games against Serena Williams in last year's Wimbledon final.
So consider Halep, who can reclaim the top-ranking from Barty if she wins Roland Garros again, ready to deal with the expectations of being a favourite.
"She has big expectations of herself," Apostu-Efremov said. "This is a strange year and everyone has to adapt to the new environment, new conditions, [fewer] spectators. Some do it better, some miss some of this old stuff."
Halep, it seems, is better prepared than ever.