account_circle
Register
menu
person
Premium Avatar
Log in
Register
Sabalenka defeated in Miami, Alcaraz gets off to a flying start

Sabalenka defeated in Miami, Alcaraz gets off to a flying start

It's been a traumatic week for world no. 2 Aryna Sabalenka, who was beaten in three sets in the 3rd round of the Miami Open by Ukraine's Anhelina Kalinina on Saturday.

The 6-4, 1-6, 6-1 victory by Kalinina, ranked 36th in the world, prompted Sabalenka, who had hitherto kept her emotions under control at Hard Rock Stadium, to smash her racket violently on the court.

On Monday, the Belarussian's former boyfriend, ex-NHL (ice hockey) player Konstantin Koltsov, died in Miami, with police ruling it an "apparent suicide". The two had been a couple until recently, and Sabalenka only announced their recent break-up after the death.

On Friday, Sabalenka had appeared to be in control of the situation, beating her friend, Spain's Paula Badosa, in two sets (6-4, 6-3). But she appeared more tense on Saturday, struggling to find any consistency.

After conceding the 1st set, she completely dominated Kalinina in the 2nd, her serve and powerful backhand completely overpowering the Ukrainian. But once Kalinina had broken in the 3rd set, Sabalenka lost her concentration and composure, and her opponent took full advantage.

"It was really tough on the nerves. But I managed to handle the difficult moments," said Kalinina. "So I'm a bit proud of myself today.

Prior to that, world No.1 Iga Swiatek had no trouble dismissing Italy's Camila Giorgi 6-2, 6-1, in a day of big names jostling for position, not least due to the multitude of matches postponed by rain on Friday.

"I felt very confident and just wanted to see how I would adapt to the surface. I felt comfortable, so I'm happy," said Swiatek.

Japan's Noami Osaka continued her current good momentum with a 6-2, 7-6(5) win over world No. 17 Elina Svitolina, in a match between two women returning to the tour after giving birth.

No.6 seed Ons Jabeur continued her poor run of form against Russia's Elina Avanesyan, aged 21 and ranked 65th in the world, losing 6-1, 4-6, 6-3.

Elena Rybakina qualified for the last 16 after a tough battle with American Taylor Townsend. The latter, ranked 72nd in the world, won the 2nd set in a tie-break, which led to a hard-fought deciding set, before the Kazakh won 6-3, 6-7(7), 6-4 in 2 hours and 22 minutes.

On the men's side, Carlos Alcaraz, seeded n°1, was simply too strong for his compatriot Roberto Carballes Baena, winning 6-2, 6-1 in 85 minutes.


- Sunshine Double

Like Swiatek, Alcaraz is looking to complete the "Sunshine Double" (winning Indian Wells and Miami in succession) after his victory in Indian Wells last week. And, as in the Californian desert, the two-time Grand Slam winner was in sparkling form.

The 20-year-old took the upper hand right from the start, powerful from the baseline and at the same time forward-thinking, with 10 winners to 1 in the 1st set.

He saved all three break points he had to defend against his opponent, ranked 64th in the world, who occasionally managed to cause him problems, but was generally not disappointed by the response.

In the next round, Alcaraz will face Gaël Monfils, who beat Australian Jordan Thompson 6-7(7), 6-1, 6-2.

Italy's Jannik Sinner, world No. 3 and Australian Open winner, got off to a confident start in Florida, beating fellow qualifier Andrea Vavassori 6-3, 6-4.

Defending champion Daniil Medvedev also qualified for the 3rd round, beating Hungary's Marton Fucsovics 6-4, 6-2.


By contrast, it was a difficult day for the Americans.

Taylor Fritz was beaten by Brazilian qualifier Thiago Seyboth Wild in two sets (6-3, 6-4). And three of the four highest-ranked Americans were eliminated from the tournament.

Fritz's premature defeat came shortly after Francis Tiafoe had been eliminated by another lower-ranked player, Australian Christopher O'Connell. The latter had the nerve to win 7-5, 7-6 (7/5), seeded n°21, in a match that started three hours late due to rain.

Tommy Paul, meanwhile, was forced to retire with an ankle injury against compatriot Martin Damm. Paul had won the first set 6-4 and was trailing 2-1 in the second when he had to throw in the towel.

Greece's Stefanos Tsitsipas, seeded No.10, also went out at Hard Rock Stadium, rather curtly beaten by the reviving Canadian Denis Shapovalov, currently ranked 126th in the world, 6-2, 6-4.

Finally, Britain's Andy Murray, twice titled in Miami, qualified for the 3rd round by defeating Tomas Martin Etcheverry 7-6 (7/0), 6-3.

Il y a 34 jours
TT Admin Publié par TT Admin
UKR Kalinina, Anhelina [32]
6
1
6
tick
BLR Sabalenka, Aryna [2]
1
6
4
POL Swiatek, Iga [1]
6
6
tick
ITA Giorgi, Camila
1
1
JPN Osaka, Naomi [PR]
7
6
tick
UKR Svitolina, Elina [15]
6
2
RUS Avanesyan, Elina
6
4
6
tick
TUN Jabeur, Ons [6]
3
6
1
USA Townsend, Taylor [Q]
4
7
3
KAZ Rybakina, Elena [4]
6
6
6
tick
ESP Alcaraz, Carlos [1]
6
6
tick
ESP Carballes Baena, Roberto
1
2
FRA Monfils, Gael
6
6
6
tick
AUS Thompson, Jordan [33]
2
1
7
ESP Alcaraz, Carlos [1]
6
6
tick
FRA Monfils, Gael
4
2
ITA Vavassori, Andrea [Q]
4
3
ITA Sinner, Jannik [2]
6
6
tick
HUN Fucsovics, Marton
2
4
RUS Medvedev, Daniil [3]
6
6
tick
BRA Seyboth Wild, Thiago [Q]
6
6
tick
USA Fritz, Taylor [12]
4
3
AUS O'Connell, Christopher
7
7
tick
USA Tiafoe, Frances [21]
6
5
USA Paul, Tommy [13]
1
6
USA Damm, Martin [WC]
2
4
tick
CAN Shapovalov, Denis [PR]
6
6
tick
GRE Tsitsipas, Stefanos [10]
4
2
GBR Murray, Andy
6
7
tick
ARG Etcheverry, Tomas Martin [29]
3
6
Aryna Sabalenka
2e, 7848 points
Anhelina Kalinina
32e, 1666 points
Iga Swiatek
1e, 10560 points
Camila Giorgi
114e, 691 points
Naomi Osaka
197e, 389 points
Elina Svitolina
18e, 2457 points
Ons Jabeur
9e, 3533 points
Elina Avanesyan
65e, 1053 points
Elena Rybakina
4e, 6293 points
Taylor Townsend
58e, 1093 points
Carlos Alcaraz
3e, 8145 points
Roberto Carballes Baena
68e, 821 points
Gael Monfils
40e, 1142 points
Jordan Thompson
33e, 1256 points
Jannik Sinner
2e, 8660 points
Andrea Vavassori
157e, 396 points
Daniil Medvedev
4e, 7085 points
Marton Fucsovics
53e, 942 points
Taylor Fritz
13e, 2560 points
Thiago Seyboth Wild
63e, 849 points
Frances Tiafoe
21e, 1685 points
Christopher O'Connell
67e, 822 points
Tommy Paul
16e, 2350 points
Martin Damm
177e, 343 points
Stefanos Tsitsipas
7e, 4030 points
Denis Shapovalov
132e, 465 points
Andy Murray
57e, 910 points
Tomas Martin Etcheverry
27e, 1475 points
Publier un Flash Publier un Flash
Top des commentaires comments
Surely Nadal does not lose twice in a row to the same guy? Not in clay anyway
3 thumb_up
Asktheexpert Asktheexpert
I don't think Rafa thought of this as a revenge match. I think he is playing against himself more likely. Just trying to build on each match he plays and hoping he stays pain free.
3 thumb_up
Christine N Christine N
@Asktheexpert....did you have 🍟 on the side & a glass of wine 🍷 to wash down those words 😉😂🤣
2 thumb_up
Aladdin Sane Aladdin Sane
⬇️ Agreed. And a 'daddy's boy'.
1 thumb_up
Christine N Christine N
Probably because Fergus upset him right at start over that contentious line call, it's wound 👑 Rafa up the wrong way. Vamos Rafa 💪
1 thumb_up
Aladdin Sane Aladdin Sane