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Iga Swiatek resets to beat Alex Eala at Madrid Open and open title defense
Iga Swiatek resets to beat Alex Eala at Madrid Open and open title defense

Yahoo

time24-04-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Iga Swiatek resets to beat Alex Eala at Madrid Open and open title defense

MADRID — Ahead of the Madrid Open, the Tennis Channel shared a graphic on X of Alexandra Eala's projected route to the final. This might have seemed a touch premature for the world No. 72, who is 19 and has never entered a WTA tournament without a wildcard, but it looked especially so given her second-round opponent. Seemingly a footnote in Eala's story was Iga Świątek, defending champion in Madrid, the winner of four French Opens, and already a contender to be the greatest women's clay-court player of all time at 23. There are limits to what can be read into a social media graphic, but Świątek's up-and-down start to the year, which most recently saw her lose to nemesis Jelena Ostapenko at the Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart, Germany, has lent an air of vulnerability to her tennis even on her favorite surface. Advertisement In this context, Thursday's 4-6, 6-4, 6-2 victory over Eala was especially satisfying. All the more so since Eala, a richly talented left-hander from the Philippines, stunned Świątek in their first meeting in Miami a month ago. On that occasion, Świątek struggled to handle Eala's angles and her omnidirectional forehand, overhitting on countless returns against a spinny but ultimately very slow serve. Świątek had to dig deep to ensure she avoided another a repeat of that result, recovering from a deficit of a set and twice a break down. The pair's meeting in Miami had been littered with service breaks, and so it was little surprise when Świątek dropped her serve straight away. She had a couple of chances to break back immediately but missed them both, as Eala's slow-paced deliveries appeared to affect her timing in the Madrid altitude. It set the tone for a set in which Świątek held break points in four out of five return games but only converted one — and by that stage she was already a double break down. Świątek was in control of most of the games and the points but kept overhitting early in rallies, unable to take advantage of Eala's limited movement on clay by constructing points and instead going for too much too early time and again. There were times when it seemed that she was thrown off by the slowness of her opponent's serve, borne out by the fact that in the first set, Eala won more points on her second serve (58 percent) than her first (54 percent). Świątek made 22 unforced errors in the first set, which accounted for 63 per cent of the 35 points Eala won. Advertisement Eala broke again at the start of the second set, helped by another wild double fault from Swiatek when she was up game point. Eala was standing well up on the Pole's second serve, her aggressive position forcing Świątek to go for too much. Świątek, by contrast, made little adjustment for the fact that her opponent's second serves were often crawling over to her side of the net at barely 70mph. She was though starting to get a better handle on Eala's delivery and broke back immediately for 1-1. And after exchanging another couple of breaks, Świątek broke to love with her most patient game of the match, moving Eala from side to side with margin and putting the ball away with plenty of space to the lines to win the second set 6-4 and level the match at one-set all. Belatedly taking the time to construct the points rather than going for the quick kill, Świątek greater consistency and durability saw her roll down hill from there, and despite Eala breaking once more to delay the inevitable at 1-5 down, Świątek smashed a return winner down the line at 2-5, 40-40 and then patiently built a rally to draw an error from Eala's racket and end the match. This wasn't just an important victory after last week's setback against Ostapenko, but a timely reminder that on a clay court, there are very few matches in which Świątek is not the protagonist — whatever the hype may be around her opponent. This article originally appeared in The Athletic. Tennis, Women's Tennis 2025 The Athletic Media Company

Iga Swiatek resets to beat Alex Eala at Madrid Open and open title defense
Iga Swiatek resets to beat Alex Eala at Madrid Open and open title defense

New York Times

time24-04-2025

  • Sport
  • New York Times

Iga Swiatek resets to beat Alex Eala at Madrid Open and open title defense

MADRID — Ahead of the Madrid Open, the Tennis Channel shared a graphic on X of Alexandra Eala's projected route to the final. This might have seemed a touch premature for the world No. 72, who is 19 and has never entered a WTA tournament without a wildcard, but it looked especially so given her second-round opponent. Seemingly a footnote in Eala's story was Iga Świątek, defending champion in Madrid, the winner of four French Opens, and already a contender to be the greatest women's clay-court player of all time at 23. Advertisement There are limits to what can be read into a social media graphic, but Świątek's up-and-down start to the year, which most recently saw her lose to nemesis Jelena Ostapenko at the Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart, Germany, has lent an air of vulnerability to her tennis even on her favorite surface. In this context, Thursday's 4-6, 6-4, 6-2 victory over Eala was especially satisfying. All the more so since Eala, a richly talented left-hander from the Philippines, stunned Świątek in their first meeting in Miami a month ago. On that occasion, Świątek struggled to handle Eala's angles and her omnidirectional forehand, overhitting on countless returns against a spinny but ultimately very slow serve. Świątek had to dig deep to ensure she avoided another a repeat of that result, recovering from a deficit of a set and twice a break down. The pair's meeting in Miami had been littered with service breaks, and so it was little surprise when Świątek dropped her serve straight away. She had a couple of chances to break back immediately but missed them both, as Eala's slow-paced deliveries appeared to affect her timing in the Madrid altitude. It set the tone for a set in which Świątek held break points in four out of five return games but only converted one — and by that stage she was already a double break down. Świątek was in control of most of the games and the points but kept overhitting early in rallies, unable to take advantage of Eala's limited movement on clay by constructing points and instead going for too much too early time and again. There were times when it seemed that she was thrown off by the slowness of her opponent's serve, borne out by the fact that in the first set, Eala won more points on her second serve (58 percent) than her first (54 percent). Świątek made 22 unforced errors in the first set, which accounted for 63 per cent of the 35 points Eala won. Advertisement Eala broke again at the start of the second set, helped by another wild double fault from Swiatek when she was up game point. Eala was standing well up on the Pole's second serve, her aggressive position forcing Świątek to go for too much. Świątek, by contrast, made little adjustment for the fact that her opponent's second serves were often crawling over to her side of the net at barely 70mph. She was though starting to get a better handle on Eala's delivery and broke back immediately for 1-1. And after exchanging another couple of breaks, Świątek broke to love with her most patient game of the match, moving Eala from side to side with margin and putting the ball away with plenty of space to the lines to win the second set 6-4 and level the match at one-set all. Belatedly taking the time to construct the points rather than going for the quick kill, Świątek greater consistency and durability saw her roll down hill from there, and despite Eala breaking once more to delay the inevitable at 1-5 down, Świątek smashed a return winner down the line at 2-5, 40-40 and then patiently built a rally to draw an error from Eala's racket and end the match. This wasn't just an important victory after last week's setback against Ostapenko, but a timely reminder that on a clay court, there are very few matches in which Świątek is not the protagonist — whatever the hype may be around her opponent. (Oscar J. Barroso / Europa Press via Getty Images)

Jelena Ostapenko stuns Aryna Sabalenka to win Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart
Jelena Ostapenko stuns Aryna Sabalenka to win Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart

Yahoo

time21-04-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Jelena Ostapenko stuns Aryna Sabalenka to win Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart

Jelena Ostapenko powered past world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka Monday to win the Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart, Germany. In a contest between two of the best linear ballstrikers on the WTA Tour, Ostapenko outmaneuvered Sabalenka as well as outhitting her, squeaking through a tight first set before steaming away with the second in a 6-4, 6-1 triumph. Ostapenko, who beat world No. 2 Iga Świątek for the sixth time in six meetings in the quarterfinals, decided the match with a run of 14 points in 17 in the middle part of the second set, as Sabalenka lost her range on her first serve. Ostapenko broke the world No. 1 four times in the second set, and ultimately won 20 of the last 24 points in the match. Advertisement Sabalenka, who has evolved her tennis since last year's clay-court swing with a focus on drop shots and feel in the forecourt, found some success in bringing her opponent forward. But Ostapenko won the defensive battle from the baseline, using squash shots and eking out slices when stretched more effectively than Sabalenka. She won over 80 percent of points on her first serve, giving Sabalenka very few moments of vulnerability to exploit aside from one loose game in the second set in which Sabalenka broke to love. Ostapenko responded with that extraordinary run of points to take the match back out of Sabalenka's grasp. 'You were just a better player than me today,' Sabalenka said of Ostapenko during the trophy ceremony. The Latvian, who rises to world No. 18 with the title, her first since the 2024 Linz Open in Austria, said that she just loves to play in Stuttgart. Her wins over Sabalenka and Świątek made her the first WTA player in 13 years to beat the world No. 1 and world No. 2 en route to a clay-court title. 'I'm waiting to come here the whole time,' Ostapenko said of the event in her winner's speech. Advertisement For Sabalenka, her run to the final extends her lead over Świątek at the top of the WTA rankings, but she has now lost three of the five finals she has played this year. She has only ever lost five times in Stuttgart — but four of those five defeats have come in finals. Sabalenka and Ostapenko will move on to the Madrid Open, where the WTA main draw begins April 22. This article originally appeared in The Athletic. Tennis, Women's Tennis 2025 The Athletic Media Company

Jelena Ostapenko stuns Aryna Sabalenka to win Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart
Jelena Ostapenko stuns Aryna Sabalenka to win Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart

New York Times

time21-04-2025

  • Sport
  • New York Times

Jelena Ostapenko stuns Aryna Sabalenka to win Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart

Jelena Ostapenko powered past world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka Monday to win the Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart, Germany. In a contest between two of the best linear ballstrikers on the WTA Tour, Ostapenko outmaneuvered Sabalenka as well as outhitting her, squeaking through a tight first set before steaming away with the second in a 6-4, 6-1 triumph. Advertisement Ostapenko, who beat world No. 2 Iga Świątek for the sixth time in six meetings in the quarterfinals, decided the match with a run of 14 points in 17 in the middle part of the second set, as Sabalenka lost her range on her first serve. Ostapenko broke the world No. 1 four times in the second set, and ultimately won 20 of the last 24 points in the match. Sabalenka, who has evolved her tennis since last year's clay-court swing with a focus on drop shots and feel in the forecourt, found some success in bringing her opponent forward. But Ostapenko won the defensive battle from the baseline, using squash shots and eking out slices when stretched more effectively than Sabalenka. She won over 80 percent of points on her first serve, giving Sabalenka very few moments of vulnerability to exploit aside from one loose game in the second set in which Sabalenka broke to love. Ostapenko responded with that extraordinary run of points to take the match back out of Sabalenka's grasp. 'You were just a better player than me today,' Sabalenka said of Ostapenko during the trophy ceremony. The Latvian, who rises to world No. 18 with the title, her first since the 2024 Linz Open in Austria, said that she just loves to play in Stuttgart. Her wins over Sabalenka and Świątek made her the first WTA player in 13 years to beat the world No. 1 and world No. 2 en route to a clay-court title. 'I'm waiting to come here the whole time,' Ostapenko said of the event in her winner's speech. For Sabalenka, her run to the final extends her lead over Świątek at the top of the WTA rankings, but she has now lost three of the five finals she has played this year. She has only ever lost four times in Stuttgart — all four defeats coming in finals. Sabalenka and Ostapenko will move on to the Madrid Open, where the WTA main draw begins April 22.

Aryna Sabalenka's ball-mark photo and the tennis dilemma of electronic line calling on clay
Aryna Sabalenka's ball-mark photo and the tennis dilemma of electronic line calling on clay

New York Times

time21-04-2025

  • Sport
  • New York Times

Aryna Sabalenka's ball-mark photo and the tennis dilemma of electronic line calling on clay

Welcome back to the Monday Tennis Briefing, where The Athletic will explain the stories behind the stories from the past week on court. This week, the tensions of electronic line calling on clay, the case for saying goodbye to byes, the divide between rankings and races — and too many cars on courts. If you'd like to follow our fantastic tennis coverage, click here. Clay season brings with it many tennis joys: sliding; more rallies than points ended by a single serve; players not believing where the ball has bounced and arguing with umpires about it. In Stuttgart, Germany, Aryna Sabalenka was down 3-3, 15-40 against Belgium's Elise Mertens. The world No. 1 floated a volley towards the baseline, which was called out by a line judge and so gave Mertens a break of serve. Sabalenka asked chair umpire Miriam Bley to challenge the decision. Stuttgart does not have electronic line calling (ELC) installed, so at moments of disagreement, the umpire will go to inspect a ball mark. Advertisement Bley confirmed the line judge's call, which meant the players sat down for a changeover at 4-3 to Mertens. During that changeover, Sabalenka used one of her team's mobile phones to take a picture of the ball mark, which earned her a code violation from Bley — and according to Sabalenka, a particularly firm handshake at the end of the match, which Sabalenka won 6-4, 6-1. 'When I gave her a handshake, there was a very interesting look and a very strong handshake, never had it before,' Sabalenka said in her on-court interview. Later, in a news conference, she added: 'I think you cannot make these kinds of mistakes. I think you have to, if you make the mistake, I think you have to have guts to admit it and make a call.' Sabalenka posted the photo of the ball trace to social media, which appeared to suggest that her shot had nicked the baseline — but as a recent campaign showing how ELC works on clay showed, they can be illusory. The trajectory of a shot and the amount of clay on a court can create false marks, which is not an ideal situation for umpires or players. It could be about to get worse. As electronic line calling is more widely adopted across clay-court events — including all ATP Tour events in 2025, but not the French Open — there will be more and more situations in which players will be asked to disbelieve what their eyes are telling them, not because they are reading a mark incorrectly, but because it does not tell the whole story of where the ball bounced. Chair umpires will then have to communicate that fact to those players, most likely on increasingly crucial points. ELC also has a margin of error built in, which means that it, like a human, is not 100 percent accurate. There might not be many more DIY line calls like Sabalenka's, but the central conflict is unlikely to go away. James Hansen The Tennis Grand Prix began April 14 in Stuttgart, Germany, but it took until April 19 for top seed Sabalenka to play her first match: a quarterfinal against Mertens, who had beaten two players for the right to face the world No. 1. Sabalenka was not competing in an exhibition event, but in a WTA 500 event, two rungs below the Grand Slams, which makes this kind of situation feel deeply unsatisfactory. Advertisement She reached the last eight without playing a match because she was given a bye through the first round, and then Russia's Anastasia Potapova pulled out of their second-round match because of injury. The second of those two incidents exposes the folly of the first. Draws of only 32 players should surely not include byes: not only does entering the tournament for the round of 16 feel too late, but it means the tournament is only one withdrawal away from a player being three wins from a title — and the 500 ranking points and prize money attached — without hitting a ball. For the tournament, the bye is a necessary carrot to attract the best players in the world. WTA 500s are not mandatory, and players of Sabalenka's ranking have to play six per year. There are 17, plus the United Cup, on the WTA Tour calendar for 2025. Events of that level need to bank on stars coming to attract ticket sales, as well as the sponsorships and media deals that help fund the events' existence. One solution would be to have a 'lucky loser' mechanism only for the draw slots against those players who received byes. Tennis players instinctively recoil at this suggestion, believing it's against the spirit of competition for someone who's lost a match to remain in the event, but is it really so different to receive a lucky-loser spot against someone who is yet to play a match than it is to receive one from qualifying to the first round, as can happen in every tennis event? Surely everyone would benefit, including the player with the free path to the quarterfinals — in this case, Sabalenka. Not playing a match for nearly a week is not ideal preparation for a change in surface from hard courts to clay, and she described the situation following Potapova's withdrawal as 'awkward.' It didn't deter from reaching the final, in which she will play Jelena Ostapenko. It takes place today (Monday, April 21) after a pause in play on April 19 to observe the Good Friday holiday. Charlie Eccleshare Different tennis players have different methods for measuring where they are in their season's journey. Some take the long view, loyalists to where they are in the overall ATP or WTA rankings. They measure performance during the previous 52 weeks from any given date and define the seedings for tournaments, as well as determining who gets straight in to a given event and who has to qualify. Advertisement Ben Shelton, who reached the Munich Open final, says the only thing he pays attention to is the tally of points he has won during the current season. For the men, those points make up the 'Race to Turin' in Italy; for the women, it's the 'Race to Riyadh' in Saudi Arabia. They are the venues for the season-ending ATP and WTA Tour Finals, in which the top eight players for the year meet. Those tournaments take place in November, which is when the rankings and the races end up singing from the same hymn sheet. Before that, they can spit out some pretty disparate data on who is the best in the world and who is the best in the world right now, which can indicate which players are having good seasons and which ones are projected for a downswing. On the women's side, Sabalenka is at the top of both ladders. After that, things get a bit messy. Coco Gauff is the world No. 4 but No. 11 in the race. Jasmine Paolini is world No. 6, but 14th for 2025 so far. Clara Tauson of Denmark is 21st in the rankings, but 7th in the race. There is a similar disorder for the men. Jannik Sinner, who returns from a three-month doping ban at the start of May, is still No. 3 in the race, having played just one event. Carlos Alcaraz is No. 3 in the world but No. 1 in the race; Alexander Zverev is No. 2 in both. Taylor Fritz, who has a career-high world ranking of No. 4, has been battling an abdominal injury most of the year. That's left him at No. 17 in the race. Jakub Menšík, the Miami Open champion, is ninth in the race but still outside the top 20 in the rankings. Then there's Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, 9th on the year and 29th in the rankings, and Daniil Medvedev, No. 10 in the world but No. 20 for the year. As for Shelton, he's likely feeling good. He's the world No. 13, but No. 8 in the race. For him, that's what. counts. Matt Futterman Forgive yourself if you caught some tennis during the past week and wondered why there were so many cars on the center courts. This is the world of sports sponsorship: why have a logo emblazoned all over the walls of a tennis venue when the real product can just pop up court-side instead? In Stuttgart, there were three in situ for the Porsche-sponsored Tennis Grand Prix. The middle one is a Macan Turbo, the prize for this year's winner. The blue one on the left is a Taycan Turbo GT. The white one on the right is a 911 Carrera T. Nearly every year, the event prompts some banter between players and interviewers — especially in 2024, when Elena Rybakina won the title and the car and promptly had to confess that she didn't have a driver's license. Advertisement Sabalenka, who has lost three finals in Stuttgart, has long lamented her inability to win the Macon Turbo. Yes, she could easily afford to buy one, but that's not the same. Over in Munich for the Munich Open, the men competed in the shadow of an offering from the tournament's lead sponsor, BMW. The winner there gets a car, too: the electric BMW I5. Then there is Barcelona, where organizers placed a Lexus LBX on a platform in the corner of the main stadium. Lexus is a major sponsor of the ATP Tour. Sadly, the Barcelona winner doesn't get a car: he just gets to jump fully clothed into a nearby pool with a bunch of ballkids, as Holger Rune did after beating Alcaraz. But none of these tournaments can hold a candle to the Delray Beach Open in Florida. That too has a BMW in situ, but it's on the court itself and fans can sit in it, if they want to have a disrupted view of a tennis match. That probably sounds like an accident waiting to happen, and at the 2022 event, Stefan Kozlov scraped the car while trying to return a serve from Tommy Paul. Thanks to YouTube user 'Ryan The First Avenger,' the world can see what it looks like to watch from inside the vehicle. Matt Futterman 🎾 ATP: 🏆 Holger Rune def. Carlos Alcaraz (1) 7-6(6), 6-2 to win the Barcelona Open (500) in Barcelona, Spain. It is his first ATP Tour title since April 2023. 🏆 Alexander Zverev (1) def. Ben Shelton (2) 6-2, 6-4 to win the Munich Open (500) in Munich. It is the German's third Munich Open title. 🎾 WTA: 🏆 Elina Svitolina (1) def. Olga Danilović (3) 6-4, 7-6(8) to win the Rouen Open (250) in Rouen, France. It is the Ukrainian's 18th WTA Tour title. 📈 Alexander Zverev moves up one place from No. 3 to No. 2 after his win in Munich. 📈 Olga Danilović ascends five spots from No. 39 to No. 34 after her run to the final in Rouen — a new career high. 📈 Holger Rune reenters the top 10 after rising four spots from No. 13 to No. 9. 📉 Casper Ruud falls 5 places from No. 10 to No. 15. 📉 Marta Kostyuk drops 11 places from No. 25 to No. 36, falling outside the seeding cut-off of No. 32. 📉 Jan-Lennard Struff tumbles 29 spots from No. 51 to No. 78. 🎾 ATP 📍Madrid: Madrid Open (1,000) featuring Carlos Alcaraz, Alexander Zverev, Novak Djokovic, Joao Fonseca. 📺 UK: Sky Sports; U.S.: Tennis Channel 💻 Tennis TV 🎾 WTA 📍Madrid: Madrid Open (1,000) featuring Aryna Sabalenka, Iga Świątek, Jessica Pegula, Coco Gauff. 📺 UK: Sky Sports; U.S.: Tennis Channel Tell us what you noticed this week in the comments below as the men's and women's tours continue.

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