logo
Swiatek swamps Rybakina, to face Paolini in Cincinnati final

Swiatek swamps Rybakina, to face Paolini in Cincinnati final

Yahoo4 hours ago
Iga Swiatek reached the final of the ATP-WTA Cincinnati Open for the first time on Sunday, surging past Elena Rybakina 7-5, 6-3 to book a title clash with Jasmine Paolini.
The six-time Grand Slam champion earned a Monday evening final against an opponent with nothing to lose after Paolini managed to "forget" a patch of bad form to claim a 6-3, 6-7 (2/7), 6-3 win over Russian Veronika Kudermetova.
The 29-year-old, who was a two-time Grand Slam finalist in 2024, will bid for the fourth title of her career when she faces Swiatek, who is set to compete in her 13th final at the 1000 level as she closes in on a return to world number two.
Swiatek, the reigning Wimbledon champion, recovered an early break in the opening set and powered away to beat 2022 All England winner Rybakina -- who had swept past world number one and defending champion Aryna Sabalenka in the quarter-finals.
The former world number one from Poland now ranked third, had twice stalled at the semi-final stage at the pre-US Open event, but booked her title chance on her third opportunity.
"It was a great match, and at the beginning, I was even surprised that I'm able to keep up with the pace, because we played so fast," Swiatek said.
"I wanted to be there when Elena starts making mistakes. It's impossible to play such a good level throughout the whole match."
Swiatek recovered from 3-5 down in the opening set, sweeping the last four games.
She jumped to a 4-1 lead in the second, sandwiching a pair of love service games around a break of Rybakina's serve.
But Kazakhstan's Rybakina made her work for it, fending off three break points in the sixth game and saving a pair of match points in the eighth before Swiatek closed it out a game later.
"I was playing with intensity and quality," Swiatek said. "I feel good about my game right now and would not change anything."
Swiatek has beaten Paolini in all five of their prior meetings with the Italian winning just one set.
But Swiatek said she was prepared for a tough final against a player who beat world number two Coco Gauff in the quarter-finals.
"Anyone who is there will have been playing well," she said.
- 'Keep fighting' -
Before her 6-0, 6-0 Wimbledon final win over Amanda Anisimova last month, Swiatek had been in a trophy drought with her last prior title coming in June 2024 at Roland Garros.
Another victory on Monday would be a strong springboard into the US Open, where first-round play starts on August 24.
Paolini looked headed to a straight-set victory but failed to serve out her match at 5-4 in the second set and admitted the lapse left her nervous.
"The key was to forget, get back into the fight and stay in the present," Paolini said after wrapping up the win in two and a quarter hours.
"I was fighting in the second set and all was fine. But I got nervous and thought I would lose the tiebreaker.
"I came back onto court in the third set trying not to think about what had happened. You have to keep going."
str/bb
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

U.S. Open mixed doubles lineup is loaded, but awaits Cincinnati Open results
U.S. Open mixed doubles lineup is loaded, but awaits Cincinnati Open results

New York Times

time2 hours ago

  • New York Times

U.S. Open mixed doubles lineup is loaded, but awaits Cincinnati Open results

The first edition of the new U.S. Open mixed doubles tennis tournament has its final field — at least for a day or two. After announcing 14 teams late last month, the United States Tennis Association (USTA) has given the last two wild card spots to Naomi Osaka and Gael Monfils, and Jannik Sinner and Katerina Siniakova. Advertisement Yes, indeed, the world's top-ranked men's singles player has ended up with one of the world's best doubles players — who is also a multiple Grand Slam winner and Olympic champion — at the last minute, immediately placing them among the favorites to win the $1 million first prize. Both the direct-entry field and the wild-card entries had last-minute changes. Sinner lost his original partner, Emma Navarro, who withdrew. When he ended up with Siniakova, their combined singles ranking was not high enough to receive direct entry, so they needed a wild card. Jasmine Paolini withdrew, and her previous partner, Lorenzo Musetti, re-paired with Caty McNally. They needed a wild card, too. But Frances Tiafoe and Madison Keys no longer needed one. So there was room for everyone, including Osaka and Monfils, and even Andrey Rublev and Karolina Muchova, who got in on direct entry. Here's the field. World No. 2 Coco Gauff is missing due to scheduling commitments, while world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka is opting out, too. The draw is filled with enticing first-round matchups. Alcaraz and Raducanu against Pegula and Draper. Swiatek and Ruud against Keys and Tiafoe, to name just two. The tournament begins Aug. 19, the day after the Cincinnati Open singles finals, and concludes Aug. 20. The winning team will receive $1 million. Doubles players have criticized the USTA for devaluing a Grand Slam trophy by introducing a new format and holding the tournament in the same week as singles qualifying, rather than alongside the tournament proper. USTA executives have responded that not enough people were watching or even thinking about mixed doubles. Nothing, they argue, devalues an event more than that. So out went the 32-team tournament played alongside the singles events. In came first-to-four-games sets, with no-ad scoring and a match tiebreak at a set apiece, with ESPN interviewing players between the sets. The business will get done well ahead of the singles, giving players a competitive warm-up and the broader tournament a promotional boost, or so the theory goes. The start of the U.S. Open proper on Aug. 24 should not take anyone by surprise. Advertisement But the biggest question — whether all the players who raised their hands to play will actually play — remains an unknown. The biggest complication might be the singles finals of the Cincinnati Open, which will take place on Monday, Aug. 18, the day before the mixed doubles start. Alcaraz, Świątek and Paolini are all playing that day, leaving no turnaround time. The USTA will have a few teams in reserve as injuries and scheduling conflicts arise. Maybe the actual doubles players of renown, people like Marcelo Arévalo, who had offered himself up with Siniakova, before she grabbed the chance to play with Sinner, will enter the mix. Or Desirae Krawczyk and Evan King, or Hsieh Su-wei and Jan Zieliński. $1 million is $1 million after all, and the actual doubles players think they have a built-in advantage against even the top singles stars. Olympic results from last year go some way toward proving that point: Rajeev Ram and Austin Krajicek eliminated the feted Rafael Nadal / Alcaraz partnership with a clinic in court geometry and rally tolerance at the net. But the loudly unspoken priorities of this new event — selling tickets and thrilling fans with an extra chance to see the biggest stars in the sport — have been met by this all-singing, all-dancing cast. The question is how many of them will make it from the poster to the stage. (Photo of Jannik Sinner: Dylan Buell / Getty Images) Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

Kristen Nuss and Taryn Brasher repeat as Manhattan Beach Open champions
Kristen Nuss and Taryn Brasher repeat as Manhattan Beach Open champions

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Kristen Nuss and Taryn Brasher repeat as Manhattan Beach Open champions

Kristen Nuss was covered in sand, dulling her neon two-piece swimsuit. A white lei hung around her neck as she attempted to balance her champion's plaque awkwardly in one hand. 'This thing is heavy,' she said, 'my arm is getting sore.' Despite her and partner Taryn Brasher repeating as Manhattan Beach Open champions — grinding out a 15-21, 21-18, 15-13 victory over former USC standouts Megan Kraft and Terese Cannon — on Sunday, the weight of both the hardware and the title wasn't lost on Nuss. 'This is Wimbledon,' Nuss said. 'It's the granddaddy of them all. My mom always said she wanted me to play at Wimbledon. ... This is definitely one of the most coveted trophies right here.' Partners since 2021, Nuss and Brasher were greeted with a roar before the first serve. On the other side of the net, Kraft and Cannon seemed to be the underdogs to the Paris Olympians. But as the former Trojan duo snatched the opening set, fans pressed shoulder to shoulder along the railings and bleachers, pulled into the possibility of a rally from the defending title-holders. Kraft's heavy serve and Cannon's long reach at the net gave them the first game at 21-15. During the changeover between games, Brasher and Nuss zeroed in on the cracks by serving together and passing cleaner. 'We don't like first sets,' Nuss joked. 'That is something we've learned this year especially ... we should just not play the first set. But we know we can battle back no matter what.' Down three points in the second set, Nuss and Brasher rallied and took a 21-18 win. And in the third set, with the teams even at five, Nuss — the smallest player on the sand — swung above her size, disguising her shots by glancing one way and spiking the ball the other. 'There is nothing — no deficit — that is going to scare Kristen,' Brasher said. Under the scorching Manhattan Beach sun, fans stayed jammed along the railings. But the second final would not follow the same fairytale ending. For Phil Dalhausser and Trevor Crabb, this year's Manhattan Beach Open doubled as both a curtain call and a chance to win a title. For the former, it was the final time he'd ever tower over California sand — a four-time Olympian, International Volleyball Hall of Famer and seven-time Manhattan Beach Open champion competing in the second-to-last AVP event of his career. Crabb entered the weekend looking to win the tournament for the second straight year. But Chase Budinger and Miles Evans had other plans, racing through the final and burying the storybook ending 21-19, 21-16 to clinch the men's title. Budinger and Evans tipped their caps to Dalhausser — recognizing the veteran who is a legend in the sport. '[Dalhausser] is the best player to ever play the game,' Budinger said. 'So every time I step on the court playing against him, I really try to cherish those times with him — those memories, those battles — because he's such an unbelievable player.' Dripping in champagne and holding his plaque, Evans said the triumph was validation for all the work the duo has put in to break through since pairing up in 2013. 'Hopefully this is the beginning of great things for us,' he said. Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Pavel Datsyuk: Red Wings Rookie Season Felt Like Arriving On A "Crazy Planet"
Pavel Datsyuk: Red Wings Rookie Season Felt Like Arriving On A "Crazy Planet"

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Pavel Datsyuk: Red Wings Rookie Season Felt Like Arriving On A "Crazy Planet"

It's hard to believe nowadays that the legendary 2001-02 Detroit Red Wings roster featured an astounding 10 future Hall of Fame players, a feat that we'll likely never witness again in the modern NHL. Oh, and they were also coached by Scotty Bowman, arguably the greatest head coach in professional sports. That team was nothing short of a juggernaut, and they capped the campaign by winning the 10th Stanley Cup in Red Wings history. There likely weren't many who would have expected young rookie forward Pavel Datsyuk, a fresh-faced rookie who didn't yet speak English, would not only soon be paired on a line with Brett Hull but would eventually have his own Hall of Fame career in Detroit. Bookmark The Hockey News Detroit Red Wings team site to stay connected to the latest news, game-day coverage, and player features. While stepping into a dressing room filled with some of the sport's most iconic names might have been intimidating for a first-time NHL player, Datsyuk never showed it outwardly. Datsyuk's entrance into a brand new culture was partially aided by the presence of Russian veterans Igor Larionov and Sergei Fedorov, whom he was able to communicate with in his native tongue as he adjusted to life in North America. Datsyuk recently appeared on Larionov's podcast, 'PARI with Larionov', and spoke about his feelings all those years ago on earning a roster spot with the Red Wings in the fall of 2001. "I got to some crazy planet, where another world opened up to me, the hockey world," Datsyuk said. "I could attend a training session, where every training session was like a lesson for me. One day I could watch one player, another day another." "It was such a wonderful time," he continued. "I remember it like this, like it happened to me in one day. How I ended up in Detroit and the whole time it was like I didn't close my mouth." Datsyuk quickly became a permanent fixture on the Red Wings and soon earned recognition as one of the most gifted and dynamic players in modern NHL history. He was praised as much for his offensive brilliance as for his defensive play, winning the Frank J. Selke Trophy as the league's best defensive forward in three straight seasons. Inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2024, Datsyuk became the 10th player from the 2001-02 Red Wings roster to be forever enshrined in Toronto. "I ended up with NHL stars on a team where I could learn, I ended up with the guys we were watching," he said. "Yes, I was a little shy talking to them, but I was there the whole time, watching, listening, getting advice." Never miss a story by adding us to your Google News favorites.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store