22nd career title ????@Simona_Halep | #IBI20 pic.twitter.com/JwICjsdDCV
— wta (@WTA) September 21, 2020
Putintseva wishes she had Rybakina's racquet. pic.twitter.com/6bc4hFMzke
— Reservoir Ducks ?? (@DuckDaBlackSwan) September 18, 2020
But she staged a comeback against the increasingly more error-prone Rybakina, winning in three sets to reach her first Premier 5 QF.
Yulia Putintseva comes back from the brink to defeat 10th seed Elena Rybakina 46 67 62 and advance to the Rome QFs.
— WTA Insider (@WTA_insider) September 18, 2020
Rybakina led by a set and 52 before Putintseva mounted her comeback.
Faces Halep next. #ibi20 pic.twitter.com/qiEswuxuZg
Putintseva retired in the 2nd set of her QF match with Simona Halep.
Azarenka: “Clay is different. Selection of shots, even though I had the right intention, sometimes I was making wrong choices at the wrong time, but it's all about adaptation. I felt that this was a great match for me to kind of figure it out, the first match on clay.” #ibi20 pic.twitter.com/7vnmfTrfyS
— WTA Insider (@WTA_insider) September 16, 2020
Compassion and camaraderie ??@vika7 | #IBI20 pic.twitter.com/OvgX2RxD49
— wta (@WTA) September 18, 2020
Vika then destroyed Sofia Kenin (love & love) a round later, and was tied 6-6 in the opening set with Dasha Kasatkina when the Russian was injured and forced to retire (Vika provided a helpful assist to her opponent, and even gave her an eye-to-eye pep talk in the changeover area), setting up just the fourth meeting between herself and Garbine Muguruza (the others were a tie two-break win for Vika en route to the '16 Miami title, and a pair of retirements, one from each woman, in last year's Monterrey final and in the 3rd Round of this same Italian Open event). The fourth meeting proved to be the charm for (finally) a three-setter. Azarenka rallied from 3-1 down in the 3rd, getting to 4-4 before an ill-timed loss of serve allowed the Spaniard to serve out the win, knotting their head-to-head series at 2-2. Azarenka's lone semifinal result at RG came seven years ago, and she's gone just 3-4 in Paris since. But her current form virtually dares one to leave her off the "short list" of favorites for (at least) a SF/F run beginning next Sunday. While Azarenka's comeback trip to the U.S. Open final is front of mind at the moment, remember, Muguruza staged a similar rally en route to the Australian Open final back in January. After her rusty Restart debut at Flushing Meadows, Rome offered Muguruza the chance to find her feet on the clay. After a straight sets win over Sloane Stephens, Garbi won a tough three-set battle with Coco Gauff, then took out Johanna Konta in two. In the QF, Muguruza's late final set break allowed her to serve out a 6-4 3rd set win over Azarenka. In the semis, after staging a comeback from 5-1 down in the 3rd against Simona Halep, the Spaniard's week finally ended with an unfortunate match-concluding pair of back-to-back DF that sent the Romanian to the final, but the former Roland Garros champ heads to Paris in the mix for another '20 slam final appearance.
"Of course I wanted to hold the trophy but, I played good matches against great opponents and I have a lot of positives to take from this week..." -- Garbiñe Muguruza pic.twitter.com/3GsaM54pbZ
— TennisNow (@Tennis_Now) September 20, 2020
Wow ??@DKasatkina | #IBI20 pic.twitter.com/q1VaGcInvv
— wta (@WTA) September 18, 2020
Spot on drop shot ??@DKasatkina | #IBI20 pic.twitter.com/7yJhcACpTP
— wta (@WTA) September 18, 2020
Arriving in Rome ranked #74, the former Wimbledon/RG quarterfinalist and one-time Top 10er's lowest position since January 2016, the Russian made it through qualifying while allowing a total of five games to Arina Rodionova and Gaby Dabrowski. In the main draw, Kasatkina dropped four to Vera Zvonareva, then only five against Katerina Siniakova to put together her first five-match winning streak since her Kremlin Cup title run in '18 (she hadn't won more than three consecutive matches since). She had reached a 1st set tie-break in her 3rd Round match with Azarenka, only to roll her ankle and be forced to retire. One step forward, two steps back? Well, at least the injury doesn't seem catastrophic, and the Russian says she'll *try* to be ready for Paris. After all the misfortune she's encountered over the past year and a half, it's nice to see she's kept her sense of humor...
Konjuh's injury-plagued career finally had it's first good week in quite a while, as the still-only-22 year old Croat returned from a 19-month absence to win a $25K challenger title in Zagreb. Konjuh won her maiden tour title at age 17 in 2015, and was a U.S. Open quarterfinalist a year later (the youngest in a decade, and the first woman from Croatia to advance so far in a dozen years) en route to a Top 20 ranking. By the end of 2017, though, her nearly four-year battle to right an elbow injury had begun. She had her fourth surgery for the problem last year, finally returning this week. She took the title without dropping a set, defeating Tereza Mrdeza in the final to claim her first singles title since that '15 win on the grass in Nottingham, adding her name to the growing list of players who've emerged in the Restart after long absences (perhaps because their competitors were mostly in the same boat, somewhat leveling the playing field a bit) to find quick success.
Ana Konjuh, who already had to undergo four surgeries (!) in her young career, is back in the winners' circle!
— Alex | Tennis ?? (@Alex_Boroch) September 20, 2020
In her 1st tournament since Feb 2019, the 22 y/o Croatian didn't drop a single set on her way to the ?? at the ITF W25 in ????, overcoming Mrdeza 6-4, 6-2 in the final. pic.twitter.com/1oLnoUOgXd
After her runner-up result in Paris (her third final of the year), Vondrousova's 2019 season had ended with Wimbledon, and she came into this past week having gone just 4-8 since her return to action in January (she opened with a two-win QF result in Adelaide in Week 2, so she'd won two of ten matches since). In Rome, she ran off four straight wins over Misaka Doi, Arantxa Rus, Polona Hercog and Elina Svitolina, the latter her first Top 10 victory since her win over Simona Halep at last year's Italian Open. She was finally ousted by the defending champ, countrywoman Karolina Pliskova, in straight sets in the semis.
Meanwhile, Haddad Maia claimed her second challenger crown in her third final in the three weeks since her return from suspension from a failed drug test at the beginning of the year. At Santarem, Portugal the 24-year old improved her return record to 13-1 by taking the $15K title, finishing up the week by double-bageling Polish teen Martyna Kubka in the final.
?? Brisbane
— wta (@WTA) September 20, 2020
?? Dubai
?? Doha
?? Rome
What a year so far!@BaraStrycova | #IBI20 pic.twitter.com/O7xNecdeqK
TOYOTA OPEN????(ITF2)
— ?? ??/Manami TANAKA (@mnm_t28) September 21, 2020
Single WR??/Doubles WR??
?????????
????????????????????????????????????????!
????????????????????
1???????1??????????????? pic.twitter.com/1JFuNPl81b
After years of #2 Yui Kamiji essentially being the lone high-level Japanese participant on the women's WC tour (and being a non-factor in Paralympic doubles when being teamed with a countrywoman), things are starting to change as the '21 Games in Tokyo near. Tanaka (now #13) makes it three women from the nation currently ranked in the Top 15 (along w/ #10 Momoka Ohtani), just one less than the longtime dominant contingent from the Netherlands (which still has three of the Top 4). The men's #1, Shingo Kunieda, is also from Japan (the '20 U.S. Open champ, he needs only a Wimbledon singles win to join Diede de Groot as the only players who've won all eight slam crowns, and the *only* to do that *and* win s/d Paralympic Golds). Considering the vast possibilities of wheelchair athletics in the U.S., it's still a huge disappointment that the highest ranked U.S. women are just #11 and #27 (and there are just two men in the Top 50, as well). There seems to be a tremendous lost opportunity taking place here, as wheelchair tennis is the *one* such sport that holds major competitions (the slams) both at the same time -- and on the same site -- as another widely-covered able-bodied event. Even what is considered the top WC competition, the Paralympics -- though in the same host city -- takes place weeks *after* the Olympics. There are so many eyes in Melbourne, Paris, London and New York (on site or via TV/streaming coverage) there to be attracted, but the USTA (or whichever U.S. body would take the lead) seems to be content with blissfully ignoring such golden opportunities that could be used as lures to attract wheelchair athletes to the sport.
Trailing by a set and a break late in the 2nd, @D_Yastremska comes back to beat Anisimova 4-6, 7-6, 6-4. #IBI20 pic.twitter.com/gHt3jjr2j6
— wta (@WTA) September 16, 2020
Comeback complete for @PutintsevaYulia!°°
— wta (@WTA) September 18, 2020
She rallies from a set and 5-2 down to defeat Rybakina 4-6, 7-6(3), 6-2#ibi20 pic.twitter.com/3G5gBazOqA
In Strasbourg, another Kazakh -- Zarina Diyas -- staged a comeback from 7-6/4-0 down to defeat Christina McHale on Monday.
Azarenka on Kasatkina: "I really hope she will recover, because she's been playing so beautifully, so smart on the court, putting me in very uncomfortable situations where I had to really push myself.
— WTA Insider (@WTA_insider) September 18, 2020
"It was really great battle out there.”#ibi20 pic.twitter.com/3v3cl7DKUW
For good, or bad, Dasha has been here before...
in this horrendous scenario I had a flashback: Daria Kasatkina had the same injury, with the same dynamic, *on that same court* in 2017 vs Barbora Strycova
— Diego Barbiani (@Diego_Barbiani) September 18, 2020
on Grandstand she was trying to reach a drop shot and rolled her ankle, like today pic.twitter.com/5HBYsNHMFo
Flawless tennis! ??@vika7 takes out the No.3 seed Kenin, 6-0, 6-0.#IBI20 pic.twitter.com/4hZDifVwZp
— wta (@WTA) September 17, 2020
This was Vika's first love & love win since she double-bageled Magdalena Rybarakova on her way to winning in Indian Wells in 2016.
A huge roar ?????? from @PutintsevaYulia after she beats Martic 6-3, 6-7, 6-4.
— wta (@WTA) September 17, 2020
Martic had forced a 3rd after coming back from 5-1 and match point down. #IBI20 pic.twitter.com/7xPtumecQL
.@Simona_Halep wins the title in Rome after Pliskova retires injured in the second set.
— wta (@WTA) September 21, 2020
The final score: 6-0, 2-1. #IBI20 pic.twitter.com/oicosbouyO
This match is the perfect example of the idiocy of commentary that rips a player for retiring mid-way through a 2nd set when it's clear they can't put up a fight, just so their opponent can "win" the match. This one was pretty much over *before* it began. Kudos for Pliskova for not making Halep risk injury and having everyone else awkwardly go through the motions by dragging this out for another half a set.
Hsieh + Strycova = ??@BaraStrycova | #IBI20 pic.twitter.com/JqzO4zm1yZ
— wta (@WTA) September 20, 2020
"Well, I'm always the one who has to speak"
— wta (@WTA) September 20, 2020
We waited 6 months for this. The Babs and Su show is finally back.@BaraStrycova | #IBI20 pic.twitter.com/Yk3E0HQvwl
.@vika7 switched it up!#ShotOfTheDay | #IBI20 pic.twitter.com/n3y0E8vsNK
— wta (@WTA) September 16, 2020
Be bold. Make history.
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) September 17, 2020
Fed Cup is now the Billie Jean King Cup by BNP Paribas#BillieJeanKingCup pic.twitter.com/jf8NJm2oZE
I will never forget the joy I felt as a member of the 1st Fed Cup team in 1963. It was a privilege to play for my country.
— Billie Jean King (@BillieJeanKing) September 17, 2020
It is with the same feelings of joy & gratitude that I am thrilled to share Fed Cup is now the Billie Jean King Cup by @BNPParibas. #BillieJeanKingCup pic.twitter.com/hzDuWQjv6I
Tennis is back in ?????????? ??#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/RlnBIv0l26
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) September 18, 2020
Naomi Osaka, fresh off her win at the U.S. Open tennis tournament last week, announced that she would not compete in the French Open because of a sore hamstring. https://t.co/JLkOva0GpH
— The New York Times (@nytimes) September 18, 2020
Congratulations to the French Tennis Federation on the completion of this spectacular roof @rolandgarros.
— Billie Jean King (@BillieJeanKing) September 21, 2020
Looking forward to watching more exciting tennis as the tournament starts today. #RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/CvzxvILj5Y
Updated WTA 2020 proposed calendar pic.twitter.com/vW1hIJ70cq
— wta (@WTA) September 17, 2020
Queen of Rome, Queen of Clay: Aside from Serena Williams, Simona’s now the only active player to have won all the major clay titles. pic.twitter.com/DmQRz6SAWD
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) September 21, 2020
Since 2013, when Simona Halep won her 1st of 22 titles, only Serena Williams (27) has won more titles than the Romanian.
— WTA Insider (@WTA_insider) September 21, 2020
Halep is the first ???? woman to win @InteBNLdItalia. #ibi20 pic.twitter.com/B1r6OchKBu
As for Vika: She’s an incredible, loving mother to her son but she is also one of the fiercest most intimidating competitors the sport has ever seen and can we please stop mentioning her motherhood in every sentence. I understand that it makes people appreciate her achievements
— Andrea Petkovic (@andreapetkovic) September 15, 2020
?? it’s true tho https://t.co/tDmkkdZwl1
— victoria azarenka (@vika7) September 19, 2020
Côte d'Azur ????? pic.twitter.com/tVSGwu08Kz
— victoria azarenka (@vika7) September 21, 2020
All the people that were telling me to “keep politics out of sports”, (which it wasn’t political at all), really inspired me to win. You better believe I’m gonna try to be on your tv for as long as possible.
— NaomiOsaka????? (@naomiosaka) September 15, 2020
Thank you @HarpersBazaarJP ?? pic.twitter.com/PFJG1mQJwF
— NaomiOsaka????? (@naomiosaka) September 19, 2020
The multi talented @ashbarty isn’t heading to @rolandgarros so she decided instead to win the Women’s club Championship at Brookwater Golf Club... fyi men’s champ @louisdobbelaar is a gun and will be on the tour in no time! pic.twitter.com/k38iUBWNW6
— Todd Woodbridge (@toddwoodbridge) September 20, 2020
*CAREER WTA SINGLES TITLES - ACTIVE (last)*
73...Serena Williams (2020=1)
41...Kim Clijsters (2011)
49...Venus Williams(2016)
27...Petra Kvitova (2019)
22...SIMONA HALEP (2020=2)
21...Victoria Azarenka (2020=1)
18...Svetlana Kuznetsova (2018)
16...Karolina Pliskova (2020=1)
[15...Jelena Jankovic (2015)]
14...Elina Svitolina (2020=1)
*CAREER WTA CLAY TITLES - ACTIVE*
13 - Serena Williams, USA
9 - SIMONA HALEP, ROU
9 - Venus Williams, USA
7 - Sara Errani, ITA
6 - Kiki Bertens, NED
[6-J.Jankovic, SRB]
5 - Petra Kvitova, CZE
*MOST WTA FINALS in 2020*
4 - Elena Rybakina, KAZ (1-3)
3 - SIMONA HALEP, ROU (3-0)
2 - Sofia Kenin, USA (2-0)
2 - Naomi Osaka, JPN (1-0+L)
2 - KAROLINA PLISKOVA, CZE (1-1)
2 - Victoria Azarenka, BLR (0-1+W)
*MOST WTA FINALS (ACTIVE), 2018-20*
12 = 6/3/3 HALEP (7-5)
10 = 3/6/1 Barty (7-3)
10 = 5/4/1 Kvitova (7-3)
10 = 3/5/2 KA.PLISKOVA (7-3)
10 = 4/5/1 Bertens (6-4)
9 = 4/4/1 Sabalenka (6-3)
8 = 3/3/2 Osaka (5-2+L)
6 = 3/3/0 Goerges (3-3)
6 = 0/4/2 Kenin (5-1)
6 = 0/2/4 Rybakina (2-4)
6 = 4/1/1 Svitolina (5-1)
*MOST WTA SF in 2020*
4 - Elena Rybakina, KAZ (4-0)
4 - SIMONA HALEP, ROU (3-1)
3 - Naomi Osaka, JPN (2-1)
3 - GARBINE MUGURUZA, ESP (1-1+L)
3 - Ash Barty, AUS (1-2)
3 - Jennifer Brady, USA (1-2)
*MOST WTA DOUBLES FINALS in 2020*
5...HSIEH/STRYCOVA, TPE/CZE (4-1)
3...Melichar/Xu, USA/CHN (1-2)
2...K.Bondarenko/Fichman, UKR/CAN (1-1)
[individuals]
5 (4-1) = HSIEH SU-WEI, TPE
5 (4-1) = BARBORA STRYCOVA, CZE
3 (1-2) = Nicole Melichar, USA
3 (1-2) = Xu Yifan, CHN
2 (2-0) = Desirae Krawczyk, USA
2 (1-1) = Kateryna Bondarenko, UKR
2 (1-1) = Barbora Krejcikova, CZE
2 (1-1) = Sharon Fichman, CAN
2 (1-1) = Ellen Perez, AUS
2 (0-2) = Gaby Dabrowski, CAN
2 (0-2) = RALUCA OLARU, ROU
2 (0-2) = Zheng Saisai, CHN
*MOST 2019-20 WD TITLES - DUOS*
8...HSIEH/STRYCOVA (4/4)
4...Babos/Mladenovic (3/1)
4...Chan/Chan (4/0)
3...Aoyama/Shibahara (2/1)
3...Krejcikova/Siniakova (2/1)
3...Melichar/Peschke (3/0)
3...Mertens/Sabalenka (3/0)
2...Carter/Stefani (1/1)
2...Gauff/McNally (2/0)
2...Krawczyk/Olmos (1/1)
*DEFEATED BOTH SERENA & VENUS IN SAME YEAR [WTA events]*
1997 Lindsay Davenport
1998 Arantxa Sanchez Vicario (Sydney-W), Martina Hingis
1999 Steffi Graf (Sydney)
2000 Lindsay Davenport
2001 Martina Hingis (AO)
2002 Kim Clijsters (WTA Chsp-W)
2003 Amelie Mauresmo
2004 Lindsay Davenport (Los Angeles), Maria Sharapova
2005 Silvia Farina Elia
2006 Jelena Jankovic
2007 Justine Henin (U.S. Open-W)
2008 Jelena Jankovic, Li Na
2009 Kim Clijsters (U.S. Open-W), Elena Dementieva
2010 Jelena Jankovic (Rome)
2011 Samantha Stosur
2012 Angelique Kerber
2013 Sabine Lisicki
2014 Ana Ivanovic
2015 -
2016 Angelique Kerber, Karolina Pliskova (U.S. Open), Svetlana Kuznetsova
2017 -
2018 Angelique Kerber
2019 Simona Halep, Bianca Andreescu
2020 Victoria Azarenka
--
(x): in same tournament; "W" if also won title
*ROLAND GARROS WILD CARDS*
Genie Bouchard, CAN (26)
Clara Burel, FRA (19)
Elsa Jacquemot, FRA (17) - slam debut
Chloe Paquet, FRA (26) - 4th con. RG WC
Pauline Parmentier, FRA (34) - 2nd '20 slam WC (AO/RG)
Diane Parry, FRA (18) - 2nd con. RG WC
Tsvetana Pironkova, BUL (33)
Harmony Tan, FRA (23) - 2nd con. RG WC
*2020 SLAM WILD CARDS*
[youngest]
US - Robin Montgomery, USA (15)
US - Katrina Scott, USA (16)
RG - Elsa Jacquemot, FRA (17)
RG - Diane Parry, FRA (18)
US - Hailey Baptiste, USA (18)
RG - Clara Burel, FRA (19)
US - Claire Liu, USA (20)
AO - Priscille Hon, AUS (21)
US - CiCi Bellis, USA (21)
AO - Priscilla Hon, AUS (21)
[oldest]
US - Kim Clijsters, BEL (37)
RG - Pauline Parmentier, FRA (34)
AO - Pauline Parmentier, FRA (33)
US - Tsvetana Pironkova, BUL (33)
AO - Maria Sharapova, RUS (32)
[slam debuts]
AO - Han Na-Lae, KOR
US - Hailey Baptiste, USA
US - Robin Montgomery, USA
US - Katrina Scott, USA
RG - Elsa Jacquemot, FRA
i would like to personally thank everyone who voted third party of for the “lesser of two evils.” i hope your conscience remains clean over the next 50 years ??
— Jamie Hampton (@Jamie_Hampton) September 19, 2020
when are democrats going to realize that the republicans aren’t playing by any rules, constitutional or self-manufactured? calling for them to withhold a vote isn’t going to do shit. do something! if biden wins, the electoral college has to go. the supreme has to be expanded.
— Jamie Hampton (@Jamie_Hampton) September 19, 2020
all RBG and scalia’s friendship says to me is don’t be friends with your oppressor.
— Jamie Hampton (@Jamie_Hampton) September 19, 2020
Surreal moment as President Trump learns of Ruth Bader Ginsberg’s passing while Tiny Dancer plays in the background. Feels like a scene out of a twisted version of Almost Famous. pic.twitter.com/iUQRosPXIQ
— Mackay Taggart (@mackaytaggart) September 19, 2020
I’m sure it won’t upset Ginsburg’s grieving family at all that her dying wish as dictated to her granddaughter is now being called a Democratic hoax by the president of the United States. https://t.co/YsfSpXgRJL
— Jake Tapper (@jaketapper) September 21, 2020
The USPS had a plan to send 5 reusable facemarks to every household in early April. Even had a press release ready.
— Don Moynihan (@donmoyn) September 17, 2020
The White House blocked the plan.
“There was concern...that households receiving masks might create concern or panic." https://t.co/pYABjdzTCM pic.twitter.com/v4BLKRMPOc
CNN has obtained documents reported by NPR that show D.C. National Guard was asked by military officer whether his unit had a “heat ray” that could be used on protesters at Lafayette Square on June 1, when Trump held Bible outside church. w/ @mkraju pic.twitter.com/QKIWAwjesx
— Jim Acosta (@Acosta) September 17, 2020
'Nearly two-thirds of US adults unaware 6m Jews killed in the #Holocaust.'
— Auschwitz Memorial (@AuschwitzMuseum) September 16, 2020
According to survey of adults 18-39, 23% said they believed the Holocaust was a myth, had been exaggerated or they weren’t sure. https://t.co/9zHP1HZNBX
CDC reverses itself and says guidelines it posted on coronavirus airborne transmission were wrong - The Washington Post https://t.co/c3uT4Lo8zt
— Jake Tapper (@jaketapper) September 21, 2020
Canada probably feels like they live in the apartment above a meth lab right about now.
— Grande Capo (@VoLinxx) September 16, 2020
There’s an orange seal hanging out with a seal colony in Russia.
— Ana Navarro-Cárdenas (@ananavarro) September 14, 2020
Do not tell me this is not a political metaphor. https://t.co/zd7m1XD6WJ
Valerie Ziegenfuss explains how the #Original9 would promote the Virginia Slims Tour in its infancy.
— wta (@WTA) September 19, 2020
(??: @TennisChannel) pic.twitter.com/CpA89wFzUH
"Realize that your sorrow is also a gift,
— Diane Elayne Dees (@WomenWhoServe) September 21, 2020
but one that you can never return."
from "Advice I Might Have Given," a poem in my chapbook, Coronary Truth, now available from Kelsay Books https://t.co/RQIxkSZQ2A #poetry #chapbooks (Amazon reviews appreciated!)
I'm pleased to have a blank verse sonnet published today in @NewVerseNews. I invite you to read my tribute to #RuthBaderGinsburg, "Sonnet for the Collar" #poetry https://t.co/yoOBLjShKN
— Diane Elayne Dees (@WomenWhoServe) September 19, 2020
Rob Pattinson didn’t use a dialect coach and it shows ???? This is so funny It’s like he’s talking in cursive pic.twitter.com/N5CDE9Q6Q2
— beth (@vanelloki) September 17, 2020
In other news: "Venus is a Russian planet -- say the Russians:https://t.co/R3ur5ikj2A
— Chris Cillizza (@CillizzaCNN) September 19, 2020
These ppl found a baby goat trapped in a pit. They took him home & cared for him overnite.
— Rex Chapman???? (@RexChapman) September 10, 2020
The next day they tried to find the owner but had no luck. While looking - they found a group of goats with the same white fur.
Then this happened.
Humanity.????pic.twitter.com/tMR4hqmedY
The ladies on the other machines trying to keep it together...pic.twitter.com/hB30RhkLH0
— Rex Chapman???? (@RexChapman) September 20, 2020
Depends on the giraffe.
— Stephen King (@StephenKing) September 17, 2020
Has anyone ever seen @rogerfederer and Phil Dunphy from Modern Family in the same room? https://t.co/VbqqWLYoV2
— Andrea Petkovic (@andreapetkovic) September 17, 2020
The new mantra: When they go low, you go vote.
— Ben Meiselas (@meiselasb) September 19, 2020