logo
Kalinskaya to face Fernandez in DC Open womens final

Kalinskaya to face Fernandez in DC Open womens final

Mint27-07-2025
Anna Kalinskaya prevented a rematch of the 2021 US Open final by ousting Britain's Emma Raducanu to book a berth against Canada's Leylah Fernandez in Sunday's DC Open final.
The 26-year-old Russian, seeking her first WTA title, downed Raducani 6-4, 6-3 in Saturday's Washington hard court semi-finals to reach her third career tour final.
It denied what would have been the first meeting between Raducanu and Fernandez since they met as teen phenomenons four years ago in the final at Flushing Meadows, Raducanu taking a 6-4, 6-3 victory.
Left-hander Fernandez rallied to defeat third seed Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan 6-7 (2/7), 7-6 (7/3), 7-6 (7/3) after three hours and 12 minutes to book her spot in Sunday's championship match.
Fernandez won her only meeting with Kalinskaya, taking a first-round victory in 2021 at Guadalajara.
World number 36 Fernandez seeks her fourth career WTA title and first since the 2023 Hong Kong Open.
Raducanu, ranked 46th, has not reached a WTA final since her Grand Slam breakthrough in New York.
Fernandez reached her seventh career WTA final and first since June 2024 at Eastbourne. Kalinskaya reached her only tour finals last year at Dubai and Berlin.
World number 12 Rybakina, the 2022 Wimbledon winner, and Fernandez each surrendered only one break in their marathon match.
Rybakina fired winners on the final four points of the first tie-break, the last a service winner, to claim the opening set after 53 minutes.
In the second set, Rybakina broke on a backhand drop volley winner to take the opening game and took a 3-1 lead. Fernandez fought back from 0-40 down to hold in the fifth game then broke Rybakina in the 10th when she was serving for the match to pull level at 5-5.
In the second tie-breaker, Fernandez seized a 5-0 lead and forced a third set on a Rybakina double fault.
Both held into a third tie-breaker, in which Fernandez seized a 4-0 lead and ended matters when Rybakina swatted a forehand beyond the baseline.
Rybakina, the WTA season ace leader, fired 17 aces, two off her career high, and seven double faults but had 64 unforced errors and 44 winners.
Fernandez had 12 aces against three double faults and took 66% of her second serve points.
In the other semi, Raducanu sent a backhand long to surrender the first break of the match in the ninth game of the first set.
Kalinskaya fought off two break points in the 10th game and held on an overhead smash to claim the set in 53 minutes.
World number 39 Kalinskaya fired a backhand cross-court winner to break Raducanu in the opening game of the second set but the Briton responded by breaking back at love to 1-1.
Kalinskaya broke again for a 3-2 edge when Raducanu sent a backhand beyond the baseline, then saved a break point in the eighth game and held to end the match when Raducanu netted a forehand after 94 minutes.
The later men's semi-finals send French lucky loser Corentin Moutet against Australian seventh seed Alex De Minaur and Spanish 12th seed Alejandro Davidovich-Fokina against US fourth seed Ben Shelton.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Elena Rybakina's coach cleared by WTA Tour to return from suspension
Elena Rybakina's coach cleared by WTA Tour to return from suspension

Hindustan Times

timean hour ago

  • Hindustan Times

Elena Rybakina's coach cleared by WTA Tour to return from suspension

The coach of 2022 Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina has been cleared by the WTA Tour to return from his suspension for a potential breach of its code of conduct. Elena Rybakina's coach cleared by WTA Tour to return from suspension Stefano Vukov was provisionally suspended in January while the tour conducted an investigation. It announced in February that had been completed and that the ban remained in place, without saying how long it would last. The organization said Friday that Vukov would again be permitted to receive credentials allowing him access to player areas and practice courts at its events. 'The WTA is fully committed to providing a safe and respectful environment for all athletes and other participants, as set out in our WTA Code of Conduct and Safeguarding Code,' the tour said in a statement. 'Any sanctions issued following a breach of these safeguarding rules are carefully considered and are subject to appeal before an independent tribunal. While case details remain confidential, we can confirm that Mr. Vukov is eligible to receive credentials at WTA events.' The New York Times first reported that Vukov's ban had been lifted. Rybakina announced before last year's U.S. Open that Vukov would no longer be her coach, but then said before the Australian Open that he would be rejoining her team. She insisted that he had never mistreated her during their time working together. Rybakina, ranked No. 10 on the WTA Tour, just reached the semifinals of the National Bank Open in Montreal before losing to Canadian teenager Victoria Mboko, the eventual champion. tennis: /hub/tennis This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

Naomi Osaka and Victoria Mboko withdraw from Cincinnati Open shortly after Montreal Open final
Naomi Osaka and Victoria Mboko withdraw from Cincinnati Open shortly after Montreal Open final

The Hindu

time7 hours ago

  • The Hindu

Naomi Osaka and Victoria Mboko withdraw from Cincinnati Open shortly after Montreal Open final

WTA Montreal tournament champion Victoria Mboko and beaten finalist Naomi Osaka officially withdrew on Friday from the ATP-WTA Cincinnati Open in decisions openly telegraphed after their Thursday night final in Canada. Mboko, the 18-year-old Canadian who electrified Montreal with her run to a first WTA title, cited the wrist injury she suffered in the semi-finals while four-time Grand Slam winner Osaka blamed a 'schedule change' for her absence. Cincinnati tournament officials said the pair had received byes into the second round due to their performances at the previous event. The withdrawals vaulted four lucky losers from qualifying into the first round of the main draw of the last major event prior to the August 25 start of the US Open. After defeating Osaka 2-6, 6-4, 6-1 to win the Montreal title, Mboko revealed that the swelling in her wrist had been bad enough on Thursday morning to prompt her to have an MRI exam before the evening final. 'I woke up this morning, and I actually had my wrist a little bit swollen from (Wednesday's) fall,' she said. 'We quickly went to the hospital for an MRI and an X-ray before I came to the courts to practice.' Mboko said she and her team eventually 'got the green light that nothing too serious was going on in the wrist.' But she said Thursday night that she expected to give Cincinnati a miss. 'I'm not planning on playing Cincinnati at the moment. I just want to take care of my wrist a little bit right now,' she said. 'It's just very close and sudden for me to go there and play again (in), like, two days. 'I think I'm just going to sit out on that one and prepare for the upcoming tournaments.' Osaka was less definite, but said she was 'teeter-tottering'. 'It's going to be interesting to see, yeah, what my next match is and how I'm going to play,' the former world number one said.

Russia's push to end 10-year international athletics exile, address mistrust: Diplomacy, anti-doping audits, social media posts in English
Russia's push to end 10-year international athletics exile, address mistrust: Diplomacy, anti-doping audits, social media posts in English

Indian Express

time10 hours ago

  • Indian Express

Russia's push to end 10-year international athletics exile, address mistrust: Diplomacy, anti-doping audits, social media posts in English

Diplomatic engagements. Rigorous anti-doping audits. And a robust analysis of their social media game. As Russia steps up its efforts to end the 10-year international isolation — first because of state-sponsored doping and then, the invasion of Ukraine — top country's athletics bosses are dotting the i's and crossing the t's. And while they internally plan to secure their return, there is an increased attention on 'public communication in English' to change perception and address the 'mistrust on the other side, since there is a painful history.' Pyotr Fradkov, the chairman of Russian Athletics Federation, said they are in an 'open and frank discussion' with World Athletics, sharing 'information, views and positions on how to get our athletes back'. 'We certainly are working on it with our colleagues from World Athletics, and I think they hear our arguments. Certainly, they have their own evaluation of the situation,' Fradkov said. 'We believe that in the proximate future, there may be some decisions to get some of our athletes back, so they'll be restored in some way. But the most important thing is that we've been continuing to fulfill all the regulations since the ban, actually. In all spheres.' Athletes have not been able to compete for Russia since November 2015 after they were accused of state-sponsored doping, which led to President Vladimir Putin ordering a probe. Their ban was upheld in 2019 after the World Anti-Doping Agency declared the Russian doping-control authority as 'non-compliant' for manipulating laboratory data handed over to the investigators. In March 2023, World Athletics lifted the doping suspension after concluding that the Russian Athletics Federation met the conditions set by a taskforce. However, the country's athletes remain excluded from the international stage due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The International Olympic Committee (IOC) allowed Russian athletes to compete as neutrals at the Paris Olympics last year. And at the recent World Championship, Russia's swimmers — competing as neutrals — won 18 medals to finish fourth on the table. But some sports federations have adopted a tough stance, like World Athletics, which banned all athletes from a country from its competitions. In March, World Athletics president Sebastien Coe said the sanctions will remain in place until a 'peace agreement is reached.' Fradkov said he would 'try not to politicise the whole situation', but remained hopeful of a solution. The son of former Russia Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov and the chairman of state-owned bank, PJSC Promsvyazbank, Fradkov is considered to be a part of Putin's 'inner oligarch' circle, according to Fox News. In November 2024, he received the government's backing to take over as the head of the athletics federation and soon 'started sort of communication with World Athletics on one hand, (while) on the other, (there was) plenty of room for improvement inside ourselves.' 'I think that we're in a really constructive dialogue with our colleagues from World Athletics. The issue of getting back some of the athletes is quite feasible, achievable,' Fradkov said on the sidelines of the Russian National Championships. In interviews with Agence France-Presse earlier this week, former International Olympic Committee marketing executives Michael Payne and Terrence Burns agree that 'Russia at some stage has to be brought back in from the cold'. But Burns, talking in the context of the Olympics, warned that the 'Russians should not expect a speedy return' and demonstrate to the world that they have taken steps to change. 'If Russia wants back in, it's going to have to show it's willing to change,' Burns told AFP. Having delivered the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia, as the deputy CEO of the organising committee, Alexander Djordjadze understands the importance of building trust and changing perceptions. Djordjadze was appointed as the new secretary-general of the Russian Athletics Federation in January and insists the new team has started with a clean slate. 'There is no mistrust on our side, neither with us or the public. I understand what you're saying that there could be mistrust on the other side, since there is a painful history with this federation in particular,' Djordjadze said. 'We were not part of that history. We are new faces. We are trying to be as straightforward as we can be, and I think that the other side will gradually appreciate that. And thus, the trust will be built. That's the only way.' This means increased anti-doping awareness, more tests and constant monitoring of their top athletes so that they 'understand all the rules of the game'. Djordjadze said approximately 3,000 tests are conducted annually on Russian track-and-field athletes. 'And we have less than 10 anti-doping violations per year,' he claims. The federation's executive director Boris Yaryshevskiy concedes, however, that there is 'room for improvement in connection with the perception' of Russian athletes outside the country. 'Previously not enough effort was put into public communication in English, because, of course, we imposed Russian compliance regulation (with) the updates of the website, and social messages,' Yaryshevskiy said. 'But we started to analyse what we post on Instagram, what we post on Twitter, you know, on all these public socials. We understand clearly there's room for improvement. We need to, first of all, make the posts in English. It should be regular, so people should follow. So there is definitely room for improvement in connection with perceptions.' (The reporter is in Kazan at the invitation of the Russian Athletics Federation)

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