You are here

Alcaraz exits China Open as Sinner reaches final

By AFP - Oct 03,2023 - Last updated at Oct 03,2023

Italy’s Jannik Sinner (right) is congratulated by Spain’s Carlos Alcaraz following his victory in their men’s singles semifinal match during the China Open tennis tournament at the National Tennis Centre in Beijing on Tuesday (AFP photo)

BEIJING — World No.2 Carlos Alcaraz slumped out of the China Open on Tuesday, collapsing in the second set to hand Italy’s Jannik Sinner a place in the men’s final against Daniil Medvedev in Beijing.

Both players traded several breaks of serve in a breathless first set that tipped Sinner’s way when he cracked a blistering return off the Spaniard’s second serve to take the all-important tie-break.

But Alcaraz — the tournament favourite in Novak Djokovic’s absence — then fell apart, gifting Sinner three service games before crowning an error-laden second set with a tame backhand into the net to give the World No.7 a 7-6 (7/4), 6-1 victory.

Sinner and Medvedev will go toe-to-toe for the trophy on Wednesday.

Earlier, Medvedev hailed his “perfect” serve as he eased into the men’s final with a 6-4, 6-3 win over Alexander Zverev.

The semifinal got off to a close-fought start but Medvedev then notched a crucial break of serve and managed to see out the first set.

It was a similar story in the second set, with the Russian breaking for 5-3 and serving out the match with a pair of fierce aces.

“Today was a perfect service match. I don’t think there was one bad thing I can say about my serve,” Medvedev said at a post-match news conference.

“I think the fact that the play was faster — the faster the court is, the easier you can hit aces... [and] the easier you feel when stepping into the serve,” the 27-year-old said.

“Today I was going faster and I was really not thinking much about anything, just serving.”

The top-ranked women’s player Aryna Sabalenka said her performances in “key moments” were crucial to surviving a major scare in the second round, after she defeated unseeded Katie Boulter 7-5, 7-6 (7/2) in Beijing.

Sabalenka saved seven break points at 5-5 and then forced the stubborn Briton, ranked 56th in the world, into a rare backhand error to clinch the opening set.

The Belarusian notched another must-win break in the second set to again draw level at 5-5 before triumphing in a tie-break by slamming down an unreturned serve.

She will battle Italy’s Jasmine Paolini in the next round for a place in the quarter-finals.

“I think what made the difference was that in the key moments I played a little bit better than her,” Sabalenka said at a post-match news conference.

“I think it was all about those last games in each set. She had the opportunity and I’m super glad that I didn’t give her those sets easily.”

“I kept fighting, kept trying, and that’s what made the difference,” she said.

 

Gauff hails ‘mental victory’ 

 

US Open champion Coco Gauff also had to dig deep to get the better of Croatia’s Petra Martic in a rollercoaster tie that lasted three hours.

Martic was serving for the match against Gauff but the world number three fought back to take the game and went on to dominate the ensuing tie-break, winning 7-5, 5-7, 7-6 (7/2).

“Today was a mental victory. I was happy I was able to get through it,” said Gauff, who will face Russia’s Veronika Kudermetova in her next match.

 

up
51 users have voted.


Newsletter

Get top stories and blog posts emailed to you each day.

PDF