Scheduled Event
Pennetta Wins Battle Of The Boot

In a final that proved to be more of a meatball than a Vesuvius, Flavia Pennetta (left) routed compatriot and defending champion Sara Errani 6-1, 6-2 in the final of Palermo on Sunday.
Pennetta's win confirmed her reputation as a queen of the small clay court tournaments outside of the main clay court season, as now six of her seven titles have come at such events. As long as they keep holding them, somebody's gotta win 'em.
Just like Bammer, Pennetta too is defending US Open quarterfinalist points she's unlikely to defend. I give her a better shot, though. She's not someone who has too many inexplicable losses (save the French Open this year vs. Glatch), and she should be facing lower ranked opponents for the first three rounds. Put her in the eighth of a Kuznetsova or a Jankovic and she could see her way into the later stages of the tournament with some ease. Though if she lands in Serena or Dementieva's territory, she could well go out without a wimper.
Errani never made a ton of noise during her strong 2008, but has made even less so far in 2009. She'll fall slightly in the rankings from this loss, and it will be interesting to see how much longer she can keep knocking on the door of the top tier. I don't think we'll hear too much more from her, but I could be wrong.
All-Italian Final in Sicily
The Internazionali Femminili Di Palermo trophy will stay in Italy for a second straight year, as Flavia Pennetta of Brindisi and Sara Errani of Bologna will play for the International level clay court title on Sunday.
Errani is ranked thirty-two places below Pennetta, but is the defending champion at Palermo, having defeated Pennetta in the semifinals of the tournament last year. The two have only faced each once outside of Palermo, with Pennetta defeating the younger Errani when she was still ranked a lowly #216 in 2007 at Acapulco.
The odds of having an all-Italian final looked pretty good by the semifinal round, with three of the four semifinalists hailing from the country. Anna-Lena Groenefeld of Germany was the only foreigner in singles action on the last day in Palermo, losing to Errani in a roller-coaster three setter, 6-3, 4-6, 6-1. Pennetta had decidedly less trouble dispatching fellow Italian veteran Tathiana Garbin, taking care of her country woman in fourteen games, 6-1, 6-1.
The real question for me going into this final is not how each will respond to the pressure of the occasion, or who the Sicilian crowd will be pulling for, but rather why Anabel Medina Garrigues wasn't in the draw. In AMG's last six times in Palermo, she's won four titles and made two semifinals. Medina Garrigues is scheduled to play Potoroz next week, so she's not injured--maybe she's just sick of winning in Sicily?

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