Moscow - AFP
Australia's Samantha Stosur and Frenchwoman Marion Bartoli said Monday they are looking to sneak into a potential backdoor slot for the $4.9 million WTA Championships in Istanbul later this month. The 2011 US Open champion Stosur, currently ninth in the world but with Bartoli breathing down her neck, had been desperate to sneak into the season-ending WTA championship but missed out on the elite top-eight line-up after losing early to Julia Goerges in Beijing. That defeat allowed China's Li Na to claim the final spot in the money-spinning tournament, leaving 28-year-old Stosur dependent on an injury withdrawal if she is to extend her season. Stosur, top seed in Moscow this week, told reporters that this year, in contrast to some earlier sub-par showings in the Russian capital, she would be out to hit top form and take the title. "This year I'm definitely come into this tournament hoping to do well," the 28-year-old Stosur, who announced a last-moment withdrawal from playing in Moscow last year. "Last year I decided to withdraw from playing here just after the final in Osaka having already qualified for the WTA Championships. It was impossible to play all the Asian swing and then continue playing here. "But this year I have a goal to finish ninth if possible. Of course me and Marion (Bartoli) will watch closely each other's performance here, both hoping to finish as the first substitute in Istanbul. "And as far as we both failed to qualify for the main draw we'll go to Istanbul prepared to play at any moment looking what will happen to the other players there." Stosur, 28, also said that she was satisfied in general with her performance this season. "Compared to last year, this year looks probably more disappointing as my results were much lower," Stosur said. "I didn't have such a big win like the US Open, but I had lot of semis and lot of quarters this year and overall it wasn't really bad." Meanwhile, second-seeded Bartoli is keen to move up from her current ranking of 10th. Bartoli said that her experience of coming as a substitute in last year's WTA Championships -- where she played the final group match, coming in for the injured Maria Sharapova -- helped her to stay focused as the season nears its end. "I'll try to finish ninth (in the rankings) after the Kremlin Cup," the 28-year-old said. "I think in any case it's a great opportunity for any player to participate in the WTA championships, where only the world's best 10 players can appear." Bartoli, who refused to play for France in recent Fed Cup matches, also revealed relations had improved with her federation since Amelie Mauresmo became the team skipper. "She (Mauresmo) was a top-class player herself and she can understand how difficult it is to combine the WTA tour matches and the Fed Cup encounters," Bartoli said. "My relations with the federation have improved a great deal since Mauresmo became the skipper and I'm currently in talks about my participation in future Fed Cup matches.