WTA Prague 1st Round Preview: Wang Xinyu vs Harriet Dart
🧠 Form & Context
Wang Xinyu
🎢 Mixed 2025: A volatile year (17–16) filled with high peaks and early exits, but signs of life in recent months, especially on grass (7–3).
🏁 Big grass wins: Beat Gauff, Samsonova, and Kasatkina en route to the Berlin final; took out Muchova at Wimbledon before falling in R2.
🪫 Hard court worries: Just 4–7 on hard this season and 0–2 lifetime in Prague main draws outside of her 2021 semifinal run.
💣 Powerful but streaky: Her serve and forehand can dominate, but she can unravel quickly under pressure or against counterpunchers.
Harriet Dart
📉 Treading water: Dart is just 9–16 in 2025 and has dropped to outside the top 190. Her last WTA main draw win was in January.
⚠️ Hard court is her best surface: 4–5 on hard this year, and overall a more stable baseline performer indoors or on fast courts.
🇨🇿 Prague debut: Playing the tournament for the first time, and has only 2 wins in her last 10 main-draw matches.
🧠 Battle-tested: Nearly upset Krejcikova in Eastbourne and went three sets with Galfi at Wimbledon, showing some resistance despite poor form.
🔍 Match Breakdown
Wang leads their head-to-head 1–1, but their most recent meeting at Wimbledon 2024 saw the Chinese player survive a tight three-setter after losing the first set. That match is a fair representation of how this could unfold: Wang will try to dictate with power, while Dart looks to absorb and redirect with depth and angles.
On current form, Wang is simply playing at a higher level. While her inconsistency on hard courts remains a concern, Dart hasn’t shown enough recently to suggest she can pull off a clean performance—especially against someone with superior weapons.
Still, if Dart can serve efficiently and get Wang moving laterally, she could steal a set or drag the match into complications. But the likely path sees Wang eventually overpowering her.
🔮 Prediction
Prediction: Wang in 2 sets
The power differential is clear, and unless Dart finds vintage form from 2022–23, Wang should control the baseline and advance. If she limits unforced errors, this could be routine.
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