Alright, so I finally got around to watching that Emma Navarro vs Qinwen Zheng match everyone was talking about. Didn’t catch it live, had some things going on, but recorded it and sat down yesterday evening to see what the fuss was about.

Honestly, going in, I figured Zheng had this in the bag. You know, bigger game, more hype maybe? I’d seen her play a few times before, serious power there. Navarro, I knew she was solid, been climbing up, but I wasn’t sure if she had the weapons to really trouble Zheng consistently. That was my thinking anyway, sitting there with my cup of tea ready to watch Zheng maybe roll through.
My Watch-Through Experience
Well, that didn’t quite go as planned, did it? From the get-go, I noticed Navarro was just dialed in. She wasn’t trying to blast Zheng off the court, wasn’t playing her game. Instead, it looked like she was focused completely on her own strategy. Moving well, getting lots of balls back, really testing Zheng’s patience.
I saw Zheng trying to wind up for those big shots, the forehand especially. But Navarro just seemed to anticipate it so well. She wasn’t just defending either, she was redirecting pace, finding angles. There were quite a few moments early on where I literally thought, “Wow, Zheng looks a bit lost out there.” She was making errors, seemed rushed. It wasn’t the clean power hitting I expected to see dominate.
Then there was this phase, maybe mid-match, where Zheng started to connect a bit better. Found her range on a few serves, hit some clean winners. I thought, “Okay, here we go, maybe she’s settled down.” But it just didn’t last. Navarro soaked it up and went right back to her game plan. It felt relentless watching it. Not flashy, just incredibly solid and smart tennis from Navarro.
Digging Into What I Saw
You could really see the contrast. Zheng has that obvious power, the potential to hit winners from anywhere. But on this day, it felt like Plan A wasn’t working and there wasn’t really a solid Plan B. Maybe frustration crept in? Hard to tell just watching on TV, but the body language suggested things weren’t clicking.

Navarro, though, she just looked so composed. Like she knew exactly what she needed to do. Get the ball deep, use her legs, make Zheng hit uncomfortable shots. And it worked. I didn’t look up the unforced error stats afterward, but just watching, it felt like Zheng was gifting away way too many points. Navarro wasn’t playing lights-out, unbeatable tennis; she was just playing very, very smart and consistently. She minimized her own mistakes big time.
It kind of reminded me of some players back in the day, maybe not the most powerful, but super frustrating to play against because they just wouldn’t miss and always seemed one step ahead mentally.
So, yeah. That was my takeaway from watching the recording. A bit of an eye-opener regarding Navarro. She really executed her plan perfectly. Zheng, on the other hand, seemed to struggle to adapt when her big game wasn’t firing on all cylinders. An off day for her, maybe? Probably. But you have to give credit to Navarro for making it such an off day. Definitely going to keep a closer watch on her matches going forward.