
Tennis-Title contender Andreeva hits the ground running in Paris
Tennis - French Open - Roland Garros, Paris, France - May 27, 2025 Russia's Mirra Andreeva in action during her first round match against Spain's Cristina Bucsa REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
PARIS (Reuters) -Title contender Mirra Andreeva eased into the French Open second round with a 6-4 6-3 victory over Spain's Cristina Bucsa on Tuesday to continue her fine form this season.
Andreeva, a surprise semi-finalist in Paris at the age of 17 last year, needed time to get going after quickly finding herself two breaks down and 3-0 behind in the first set.
The Russian teenager had trouble finding her range with 11 unforced errors in the opening six games.
"I can say she played amazing especially in the beginning," Andreeva said. "I felt I was playing not bad but how is it I am 0-3 behind? I told myself to keep playing."
"Step by step, point by point I found my rhythm, in the end it was easier to push and stay aggressive."
The sixth seed, who won back-to-back WTA 1000 titles in Dubai and Indian Wells this season, reined in her opponent, winning four consecutive games to snatch the first set with another break.
Andreeva kept up the pressure, running the world number 98 ragged across the baseline and earning another break with a fierce forehand down the line to move 3-1 up.
Andreeva set up a second-round match against Suzan Lamens of the Netherlands or American Ashlyn Krueger.
(Reporting by Karolos Grohmann, editing by Ed Osmond)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New Straits Times
an hour ago
- New Straits Times
Sweden's Maja Stark wins 80th US Women's Open
CHICAGO: Maja Stark captured her first major title in impressive style Sunday, carding an even-par 72 to win the 80th US Women's Open by two strokes over top-ranked Nelly Korda and Rio Takeda. Sweden's Stark put on a clinical display on the imposing Erin Hills course in Wisconsin, where back-to-back bogeys to finish her round proved inconsequential as her seven-under total of 281 gave her the victory with room to spare. She became the third player from Sweden to lift the trophy and the first since Annika Sorenstam won her third in 2006. "This just feels huge," said Stark, who admitted her best golf "felt like it was so far away" coming into the week. "You always kind of know that it's possible, but there are so many good golfers on this tour ... I (didn't) think I would be able to do it this week." Leading by one to start the day, Stark opened with five straight pars, benefitting from a lucky break at the fifth when her tee shot scooted through the left rough and settled in the fairway. She then pushed her lead to two strokes with her first birdie of the day at the par-three sixth, where she rolled in a 21-foot putt. She gave a stroke back at the seventh, where her tee shot found a fairway bunker, and was clinging to a one-stroke lead when she arrived at the 11th. That changed in moments however, Stark rattling in a 14-foot birdie putt at 11 shortly after Korda's three-putt bogey at the 13th dropped the American star to five-under, the sequence of events leaving Stark with a three-stroke cushion. Korda, who started the day three shots adrift, applied pressure with back to back birdies at the seventh and eighth. After her bogey at 13 she pulled a stroke back at the par-five 14th, where she had a look at eagle but settled for a birdie. Japan's Hinako Shibuno and Takeda also reached six-under with birdies at the 14th. But Stark held her nerve and extended her lead with a birdie of her own at 14, where her second shot from the fairway caught the slope of the green and rolled to a stop 11 feet below the pin. She left her eagle putt short, but tapped in for a birdie that pushed her lead to three strokes. Her rivals had already faltered -- Shibuno with a double-bogey at 15, Takeda with a bogey at 17 and Korda with a bogey at the last. Korda posted a one-under-par 71 and was joined on 283 by Takeda, who had three birdies to balance her bogey and a front-nine double bogey in a 72. Stark's nerves were finally showing when she went left off the tee at both the 17th and 18th. But she limited the damage to bogeys at both -- an impressive effort at the treacherous 18th where playing partner Julia Lopez Ramirez took a triple bogey eight that included a shot into the scoring tent. Stark laid up out of the rough at 18, then came up short of the green. After a long wait as Lopez Ramirez played she rolled a putt from off the green to 43 said her putt from there, leaving her a foot to claim the title, was the shot she'll remember "because it felt like there's just so much that could go wrong. "It's downhill, right to left, and if I hit it too hard then it was going to keep rolling," she said. For 22-year-old Lopez Ramirez it was a disappointing finish. Trailing by one to start she closed with a seven-over 79. Korda, owner of two major titles, notched her best finish in the US Open, improving on her tie for eighth in 2022. "Still very complicated," she said of her relationship with the championship. "It's just an absolute heartbreaker. Korda, 26, remains in search of a first victory since November, when she claimed the seventh LPGA title of her record-setting 2024 campaign. "Hopefully (I) can kind of build off of this, puting myself in contention at a major and obviously just slipping just short," Korda said. "Hurts a little, but I'm happy with the progress and hopefully I can continue like this."


New Straits Times
an hour ago
- New Straits Times
Shelton confident he is closing gap to top players despite Alcaraz defeat
PARIS: World number 13 Ben Shelton is confident he is cutting the distance dividing him to top players despite his loss to defending French Open champion Carlos Alcaraz in the fourth round on Sunday. Shelton, 22, pushed the world number two to four sets and though the Spaniard proved to be too good on the day, there were still plenty of positive takeaways. "For me, this is the closest that I've felt in a match against him, and the most pressure that I thought that I've applied, the most comfortable that I felt in the baseline exchanges, the best I've hit my open-stance backhand when he's put pressure there," he told a press conference. Shelton has now lost all three matches against Alcaraz but Sunday's was the first where he took a set. "In that way, it also being a clay court is kind of ironic, arguably his better surface, and arguably my least-experienced surface." Shelton had never before made it into the fourth round and he was one of eight Americans - five women and three men - to reach that stage in Paris, breaking a 40-year-old record. "There are a lot of positives to take from that because I feel like my game is improving a lot," he said. Shelton also lost to world number one Jannik Sinner at the Australian Open semi-final in January but that gap to the top has been closing, he said. He trails the Italian 5-1 in their head-to-head. "I don't want to be disrespectful and just be 'I'm right there' but I feel like I am close to starting to win some matches like that, give guys a run for their money more often, and have these deeper runs more consistently." "Not two bad guys to lose to. Those two matches I've lost at Slams this year, I consider myself a really good Grand Slam match player.


New Straits Times
an hour ago
- New Straits Times
Swiatek thankful for confidence-boosting win over Rybakina at French Open
PARIS: Defending champion Iga Swiatek is gunning for a fifth French Open title and fourth in succession but the Pole said Sunday's comeback win over Elena Rybakina was a much-needed reminder of her claycourt prowess in a lacklustre season. The fifth seed looked in deep trouble, trailing by a set and two games on Court Philippe-Chatrier, but completed a 1-6 6-3 7-5 win and later admitted that playing the big-hitting Kazakh was like facing men's world number one Jannik Sinner at times. The 24-year-old, who failed to win a title on clay in the build-up to Roland Garros after enduring some difficult moments following a short doping ban last season, celebrated the win in an effervescent manner unusual for her. "It means a lot. I needed this kind of win to feel these feelings that I'm able to win under pressure, and even if it's not going the right way, still turn the match around to win," Swiatek told reporters. "It's a great confirmation for me. Obviously it's great to also have full control over the match but against great players, it's not always going to be possible. I'm happy that I fought, and I also problem-solved on court." Victory extended Swiatek's superb winning streak at Roland Garros to 25 matches but also marked her first against Rybakina on clay and improved her head-to-head record to 5-4. "I wasn't expecting to have an easy score against Elena," Swiatek said, before pointing to past losses to Rybakina. "That wasn't something that I even considered today. No matter what the score is, I'm going to just try to play the best tennis possible any minute." - Reuters