
Fritz has Zverev's number again in Stuttgart title win
Taylor Fritz has claimed his first title of the year with a 6-3 7-6 (7-0) win over top seed Alexander Zverev in the Stuttgart Open final, extending his winning streak against the German to five matches.
Fritz, who knocked out Zverev in the fourth round of Wimbledon last year, won the opening set 6-3 in 30 minutes on Sunday without facing a break point.
The American second seed broke for a 5-3 lead after Zverev double-faulted twice and missed a volley at the net.
The second set stayed on serve, with Zverev saving the only break point at 5-5 before Fritz pulled away in a one-sided tiebreak to seal victory.
It was Fritz's ninth career title, fourth on grass, and improved his head-to-head record against Zverev to 8-5.
The 28-year-old German is yet to win a title on grass, a surface he has long struggled on. The three-times grand slam finalist has never progressed beyond the fourth round at Wimbledon.
World No.7 Fritz, who fired down 11 aces and didn't face a break point while winning 88 percent of his first-serve points, is set to rise to fourth in the rankings ahead of Wimbledon.

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Perth Now
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A storm has stalled Adam Scott's push for US Open glory in Pennsylvania. The siren sounded to signal the suspension of play during the final round as Scott and his final-group partner Sam Burns were about to tackle the monster 301-yard par-3 eighth hole at Oakmont Country Club. The pair were in the midst of an engrossing Sunday tussle, with Burns still holding a one-shot lead over Scott, as he did when the pair hit off. Gusting winds made for some of the toughest conditions of the week even before a deluge left the greens waterlogged. No players still on the course were under par for their rounds, with Burns and Scott both dropping two shots in their opening seven holes. Bidding to become the oldest US Open champion since Hale Irwin in 1990, 44-year-old Scott made a nervy start with a bogey on the first and third holes. Australia's former world No.1 steadied with a near-eagle at the par-5 fourth to gain a share of the lead with Burns before a sloppy three-putt bogey on No.6 left Scott one back again. Like the entire field, Burns had his own troubles with dropped shots on the third and fifth holes to slip back from his overnight four-under score to two under. He and Scott were the only players in red numbers after American JJ Spaun, who started the round level with Scott at three under, leaked five shots in his first eight holes to tumble to two over. Burns and Scott backing up early gave their chasers some hope. Englishman Tyrrell Hatton was the biggest mover, negotiating his first eight holes in even par to remain at one over and pull within three strokes of Burns' lead. Norwegian superstar Viktor Hovland was tied for third with Hatton, while Mexican Carlos Ortiz and Spaun were a further shot back in equal fifth. Scotland's Bob McIntyre was relishing the tough conditions, moving to three over through 10 holes and right in the mix. Spanish ace Jon Rahm had the clubhouse lead at four over for the championship after finishing his final-round 67 with with three straight birdies. Should Scott go on to win, the 2013 Masters champion would also enter the history books for the longest wait by a player between their first and second major championship triumphs. He would also join five-times British Open winner Peter Thomson, his idol Greg Norman, who claimed the Claret Jug twice, and David Graham as only the fourth Australian man to capture multiple major championships. The popular Queenslander would also join Graham, the 1979 PGA Championship and 1981 US Open champion, as the only Aussie to snare both his majors in America.


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4 hours ago
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Queen of Queen's: Age no barrier for champ mum-of-two
German qualifier Tatjana Maria has become the first woman to win a title at Queen's Club since 1973 after beating eighth seed Amanda Anisimova 6-3 6-4 on the Andy Murray Arena. The 37-year-old mother-of-two claimed the biggest title of her career on Sunday to cap off the first women's tournament held at the historic west London venue in 52 years. It was a family affair for Maria, whose daughters, 11-year-old Charlotte and four-year-old Cecilia, joined her husband and coach Charles-Edouard Maria in the front row to watch her dispatch American Anisimova in one hour and 23 minutes. Maria, who knocked out top-20 players Karolina Muchova, Elena Rybakina and Madison Keys en route, becomes the oldest player ever to win a WTA 500 event and the most venerable in any tour singles event since 2020, when Serena Williams - who also returned to tennis after having children - won in Auckland at 38. "It means a lot to me, because I'm 37 years old and I won this trophy today," said Maria, who confirmed she would like her career to last for at least another two years so she can play doubles as soon as her eldest is eligible. "In the past, people were always saying, 'you're too old', but actually I'm a good example that even at my age, you can still win big trophies. "I'm super proud of myself that I could win this tournament, because I always believed, and my husband too. "That's why we kept going, because there was aways this belief that I could win big tournaments and do great things on the tour, so I'm really, really proud of this." Maria replaces Olga Morozova, who once coached a young Andy Murray after whom the club's centre court is now named, as the most recent female winner at Queen's. Fittingly, she marked the venue's new chapter by scribbling "queen of Queen's" on the TV camera lens. Maria entered this WTA 500 tournament at 86th in the rankings, but the triumph will catapult her to No.43 when they update on Monday -- when Emma Raducanu will also officially take over from Katie Boulter as British No.1. The 2022 German Wimbledon semi-finalist Maria won her first WTA title on grass at Mallorca in 2018, following it with back-to-back clay court trophies at Bogota in 2023. In the week's other WTA grass-court final at Rosmalen in the Netherlands, Belgian third seed Elise Mertens beat Romanian Elena-Gabriela Ruse 6-3 7-6 (7-4) to claim her second title of the year and her 10th in all. "It's been an incredible week," said Mertens, who had to dig deep to save 11 match points and overcome two-time winner Ekaterina Alexandrova in Saturday's semi-final. German qualifier Tatjana Maria has become the first woman to win a title at Queen's Club since 1973 after beating eighth seed Amanda Anisimova 6-3 6-4 on the Andy Murray Arena. The 37-year-old mother-of-two claimed the biggest title of her career on Sunday to cap off the first women's tournament held at the historic west London venue in 52 years. It was a family affair for Maria, whose daughters, 11-year-old Charlotte and four-year-old Cecilia, joined her husband and coach Charles-Edouard Maria in the front row to watch her dispatch American Anisimova in one hour and 23 minutes. Maria, who knocked out top-20 players Karolina Muchova, Elena Rybakina and Madison Keys en route, becomes the oldest player ever to win a WTA 500 event and the most venerable in any tour singles event since 2020, when Serena Williams - who also returned to tennis after having children - won in Auckland at 38. "It means a lot to me, because I'm 37 years old and I won this trophy today," said Maria, who confirmed she would like her career to last for at least another two years so she can play doubles as soon as her eldest is eligible. "In the past, people were always saying, 'you're too old', but actually I'm a good example that even at my age, you can still win big trophies. "I'm super proud of myself that I could win this tournament, because I always believed, and my husband too. "That's why we kept going, because there was aways this belief that I could win big tournaments and do great things on the tour, so I'm really, really proud of this." Maria replaces Olga Morozova, who once coached a young Andy Murray after whom the club's centre court is now named, as the most recent female winner at Queen's. Fittingly, she marked the venue's new chapter by scribbling "queen of Queen's" on the TV camera lens. Maria entered this WTA 500 tournament at 86th in the rankings, but the triumph will catapult her to No.43 when they update on Monday -- when Emma Raducanu will also officially take over from Katie Boulter as British No.1. The 2022 German Wimbledon semi-finalist Maria won her first WTA title on grass at Mallorca in 2018, following it with back-to-back clay court trophies at Bogota in 2023. In the week's other WTA grass-court final at Rosmalen in the Netherlands, Belgian third seed Elise Mertens beat Romanian Elena-Gabriela Ruse 6-3 7-6 (7-4) to claim her second title of the year and her 10th in all. "It's been an incredible week," said Mertens, who had to dig deep to save 11 match points and overcome two-time winner Ekaterina Alexandrova in Saturday's semi-final. German qualifier Tatjana Maria has become the first woman to win a title at Queen's Club since 1973 after beating eighth seed Amanda Anisimova 6-3 6-4 on the Andy Murray Arena. The 37-year-old mother-of-two claimed the biggest title of her career on Sunday to cap off the first women's tournament held at the historic west London venue in 52 years. It was a family affair for Maria, whose daughters, 11-year-old Charlotte and four-year-old Cecilia, joined her husband and coach Charles-Edouard Maria in the front row to watch her dispatch American Anisimova in one hour and 23 minutes. Maria, who knocked out top-20 players Karolina Muchova, Elena Rybakina and Madison Keys en route, becomes the oldest player ever to win a WTA 500 event and the most venerable in any tour singles event since 2020, when Serena Williams - who also returned to tennis after having children - won in Auckland at 38. "It means a lot to me, because I'm 37 years old and I won this trophy today," said Maria, who confirmed she would like her career to last for at least another two years so she can play doubles as soon as her eldest is eligible. "In the past, people were always saying, 'you're too old', but actually I'm a good example that even at my age, you can still win big trophies. "I'm super proud of myself that I could win this tournament, because I always believed, and my husband too. "That's why we kept going, because there was aways this belief that I could win big tournaments and do great things on the tour, so I'm really, really proud of this." Maria replaces Olga Morozova, who once coached a young Andy Murray after whom the club's centre court is now named, as the most recent female winner at Queen's. Fittingly, she marked the venue's new chapter by scribbling "queen of Queen's" on the TV camera lens. Maria entered this WTA 500 tournament at 86th in the rankings, but the triumph will catapult her to No.43 when they update on Monday -- when Emma Raducanu will also officially take over from Katie Boulter as British No.1. The 2022 German Wimbledon semi-finalist Maria won her first WTA title on grass at Mallorca in 2018, following it with back-to-back clay court trophies at Bogota in 2023. In the week's other WTA grass-court final at Rosmalen in the Netherlands, Belgian third seed Elise Mertens beat Romanian Elena-Gabriela Ruse 6-3 7-6 (7-4) to claim her second title of the year and her 10th in all. "It's been an incredible week," said Mertens, who had to dig deep to save 11 match points and overcome two-time winner Ekaterina Alexandrova in Saturday's semi-final. German qualifier Tatjana Maria has become the first woman to win a title at Queen's Club since 1973 after beating eighth seed Amanda Anisimova 6-3 6-4 on the Andy Murray Arena. The 37-year-old mother-of-two claimed the biggest title of her career on Sunday to cap off the first women's tournament held at the historic west London venue in 52 years. It was a family affair for Maria, whose daughters, 11-year-old Charlotte and four-year-old Cecilia, joined her husband and coach Charles-Edouard Maria in the front row to watch her dispatch American Anisimova in one hour and 23 minutes. Maria, who knocked out top-20 players Karolina Muchova, Elena Rybakina and Madison Keys en route, becomes the oldest player ever to win a WTA 500 event and the most venerable in any tour singles event since 2020, when Serena Williams - who also returned to tennis after having children - won in Auckland at 38. "It means a lot to me, because I'm 37 years old and I won this trophy today," said Maria, who confirmed she would like her career to last for at least another two years so she can play doubles as soon as her eldest is eligible. "In the past, people were always saying, 'you're too old', but actually I'm a good example that even at my age, you can still win big trophies. "I'm super proud of myself that I could win this tournament, because I always believed, and my husband too. "That's why we kept going, because there was aways this belief that I could win big tournaments and do great things on the tour, so I'm really, really proud of this." Maria replaces Olga Morozova, who once coached a young Andy Murray after whom the club's centre court is now named, as the most recent female winner at Queen's. Fittingly, she marked the venue's new chapter by scribbling "queen of Queen's" on the TV camera lens. Maria entered this WTA 500 tournament at 86th in the rankings, but the triumph will catapult her to No.43 when they update on Monday -- when Emma Raducanu will also officially take over from Katie Boulter as British No.1. The 2022 German Wimbledon semi-finalist Maria won her first WTA title on grass at Mallorca in 2018, following it with back-to-back clay court trophies at Bogota in 2023. In the week's other WTA grass-court final at Rosmalen in the Netherlands, Belgian third seed Elise Mertens beat Romanian Elena-Gabriela Ruse 6-3 7-6 (7-4) to claim her second title of the year and her 10th in all. "It's been an incredible week," said Mertens, who had to dig deep to save 11 match points and overcome two-time winner Ekaterina Alexandrova in Saturday's semi-final.


The Advertiser
4 hours ago
- The Advertiser
'Stay away from me!' - Zverev beaten by nemesis again
Alexander Zverev managed to see the funny side - just - after losing once more to his US nemesis in the Stuttgart Open final. Taylor Fritz claimed his first title of the year with a 6-3 7-6 (7-0) win over the top-seeded Zverev on Sunday, extending his winning streak against the German to five matches. "I've had enough, stay away from me!" joked Zverev to Fritz at the presentation ceremony. "Please don't come to Germany for the next two or three years..." It was his third loss in a home final on grass after defeats by Roger Federer in 2017 and by fellow German Florian Mayer in 2016, both in Halle. Fritz, who knocked out Zverev in the fourth round of Wimbledon last year, won the opening set 6-3 in 30 minutes on Sunday without facing a break point. The American second seed broke for a 5-3 lead after Zverev double-faulted twice and missed a volley at the net. The second set stayed on serve, with Zverev saving the only break point at 5-5 before Fritz pulled away in a one-sided tiebreak to seal victory. It was Fritz's ninth career title, fourth on grass, and improved his head-to-head record against Zverev to 8-5. The 28-year-old German is yet to win a title on grass, a surface he has long struggled on. The three-times grand slam finalist has never progressed beyond the fourth round at Wimbledon. World No.7 Fritz, who fired down 11 aces and didn't face a break point while winning 88 percent of his first-serve points, is set to rise to fourth in the rankings ahead of Wimbledon. In the day's other men's grass-court final in the Dutch town of Rosmalen, Canadian Gabriel Diallo battled past Belgium's Zizou Bergs 7-5 7-6 (10-8). In his second ATP Tour final after losing to Karen Khachanov in Almaty last October, the 23-year-old Diallo, who knocked out Australian Jordan Thompson earlier in the tournament, became only the fourth Canadian man this century to win a tour-level title, and the first to win a singles title on the grass. Alexander Zverev managed to see the funny side - just - after losing once more to his US nemesis in the Stuttgart Open final. Taylor Fritz claimed his first title of the year with a 6-3 7-6 (7-0) win over the top-seeded Zverev on Sunday, extending his winning streak against the German to five matches. "I've had enough, stay away from me!" joked Zverev to Fritz at the presentation ceremony. "Please don't come to Germany for the next two or three years..." It was his third loss in a home final on grass after defeats by Roger Federer in 2017 and by fellow German Florian Mayer in 2016, both in Halle. Fritz, who knocked out Zverev in the fourth round of Wimbledon last year, won the opening set 6-3 in 30 minutes on Sunday without facing a break point. The American second seed broke for a 5-3 lead after Zverev double-faulted twice and missed a volley at the net. The second set stayed on serve, with Zverev saving the only break point at 5-5 before Fritz pulled away in a one-sided tiebreak to seal victory. It was Fritz's ninth career title, fourth on grass, and improved his head-to-head record against Zverev to 8-5. The 28-year-old German is yet to win a title on grass, a surface he has long struggled on. The three-times grand slam finalist has never progressed beyond the fourth round at Wimbledon. World No.7 Fritz, who fired down 11 aces and didn't face a break point while winning 88 percent of his first-serve points, is set to rise to fourth in the rankings ahead of Wimbledon. In the day's other men's grass-court final in the Dutch town of Rosmalen, Canadian Gabriel Diallo battled past Belgium's Zizou Bergs 7-5 7-6 (10-8). In his second ATP Tour final after losing to Karen Khachanov in Almaty last October, the 23-year-old Diallo, who knocked out Australian Jordan Thompson earlier in the tournament, became only the fourth Canadian man this century to win a tour-level title, and the first to win a singles title on the grass. Alexander Zverev managed to see the funny side - just - after losing once more to his US nemesis in the Stuttgart Open final. Taylor Fritz claimed his first title of the year with a 6-3 7-6 (7-0) win over the top-seeded Zverev on Sunday, extending his winning streak against the German to five matches. "I've had enough, stay away from me!" joked Zverev to Fritz at the presentation ceremony. "Please don't come to Germany for the next two or three years..." It was his third loss in a home final on grass after defeats by Roger Federer in 2017 and by fellow German Florian Mayer in 2016, both in Halle. Fritz, who knocked out Zverev in the fourth round of Wimbledon last year, won the opening set 6-3 in 30 minutes on Sunday without facing a break point. The American second seed broke for a 5-3 lead after Zverev double-faulted twice and missed a volley at the net. The second set stayed on serve, with Zverev saving the only break point at 5-5 before Fritz pulled away in a one-sided tiebreak to seal victory. It was Fritz's ninth career title, fourth on grass, and improved his head-to-head record against Zverev to 8-5. The 28-year-old German is yet to win a title on grass, a surface he has long struggled on. The three-times grand slam finalist has never progressed beyond the fourth round at Wimbledon. World No.7 Fritz, who fired down 11 aces and didn't face a break point while winning 88 percent of his first-serve points, is set to rise to fourth in the rankings ahead of Wimbledon. In the day's other men's grass-court final in the Dutch town of Rosmalen, Canadian Gabriel Diallo battled past Belgium's Zizou Bergs 7-5 7-6 (10-8). In his second ATP Tour final after losing to Karen Khachanov in Almaty last October, the 23-year-old Diallo, who knocked out Australian Jordan Thompson earlier in the tournament, became only the fourth Canadian man this century to win a tour-level title, and the first to win a singles title on the grass. Alexander Zverev managed to see the funny side - just - after losing once more to his US nemesis in the Stuttgart Open final. Taylor Fritz claimed his first title of the year with a 6-3 7-6 (7-0) win over the top-seeded Zverev on Sunday, extending his winning streak against the German to five matches. "I've had enough, stay away from me!" joked Zverev to Fritz at the presentation ceremony. "Please don't come to Germany for the next two or three years..." It was his third loss in a home final on grass after defeats by Roger Federer in 2017 and by fellow German Florian Mayer in 2016, both in Halle. Fritz, who knocked out Zverev in the fourth round of Wimbledon last year, won the opening set 6-3 in 30 minutes on Sunday without facing a break point. The American second seed broke for a 5-3 lead after Zverev double-faulted twice and missed a volley at the net. The second set stayed on serve, with Zverev saving the only break point at 5-5 before Fritz pulled away in a one-sided tiebreak to seal victory. It was Fritz's ninth career title, fourth on grass, and improved his head-to-head record against Zverev to 8-5. The 28-year-old German is yet to win a title on grass, a surface he has long struggled on. The three-times grand slam finalist has never progressed beyond the fourth round at Wimbledon. World No.7 Fritz, who fired down 11 aces and didn't face a break point while winning 88 percent of his first-serve points, is set to rise to fourth in the rankings ahead of Wimbledon. In the day's other men's grass-court final in the Dutch town of Rosmalen, Canadian Gabriel Diallo battled past Belgium's Zizou Bergs 7-5 7-6 (10-8). In his second ATP Tour final after losing to Karen Khachanov in Almaty last October, the 23-year-old Diallo, who knocked out Australian Jordan Thompson earlier in the tournament, became only the fourth Canadian man this century to win a tour-level title, and the first to win a singles title on the grass.