Abu Dhabi
Rybakina leads seeds into Abu Dhabi semis

Former Wimbledon winner Elena Rybakina needed a mere 64 minutes to power into the Abu Dhabi semi-finals as she crushed lucky loser Cristina Bucsa 6-1, 6-4 on Friday.
Rybakina beat the Spaniard for the second time in as many months, rallying from 3-1 down in the second set.
The Kazakh who triumphed at the All England Club in 2022 and reached the Australian Open final 13 months ago will bid for the final against Liudmila Samsonova.
The eighth seed booked her spot with a similar easy win, upsetting former Roland Garros champion and fourth seed Barbora Krejcikova 7-5, 6-4.
Samsonova holds a formidable 4-0 career record over Rybakina, who lost just eight points in her dominating opening set against the 74th-ranked Busca.
Top seed Rybakina went down a break in the second set but recovered in style, winning five of the last six games with the loss of just five points on first serve.
At the bottom of he draw, Adelaide finalist and seventh seed Daria Kasatkina will take on sixth seed Beatriz Haddad Maia, playing the semis here for a second consecutive edition.
The Brazilian knocked out second seed Ons Jabeur 6-3, 6-4 in 90 minutes a day after struggling to a second-round win – longest of the WTA season – which took more than three and three-quarter hours over Magda Linette.
Haddad Maia stands 2-0 over Jabeur, top Arab player in the women’s game and a local crowd favourite in the USE capital. The winner backed up her defeat of three-time Grand Slam finalist Jabeur in a 2023 Roland Garros quarter-final.
Kasatkina defeated Romanian Sorana Cirstea 6-2, 6-0.
Jabeur was not helped against Haddad Maia by 28 unforced errors.
Abu Dhabi
Bencic notches Abu Dhabi title in motherhood comeback

Belinda Bencic held nine-month-old daughter Bella in one arm and the WTA Abu Dhabi trophy in the other after claiming the title on Saturday in a 4-6, 6-2, 6-1 fightback finals win over Ashlyn Krueger.
The Swiss who won Olympic gold in Tokyo had only returned to the Tour last autumn; she backed up her trophy here from 2023, the year before she left the circuit for a pregnancy pause.
Bencic worked for nearly two and a half hours to secure victory in only her fourth event since returning to tennis; she reached the Australian Open fourth round last month in a show of strength and an indication of possible things to come.
She is the first mother to claim a singles title since Elina Svitolina in Strasbourg, May, 2023.
Bencic now owns nine WTA trophies and stands a flawless 9-0 at the Gulf venue.
The 27-year-old Swiss will shoot up the rankings from 157th to around 65th. She will miss next week’s tournament in Doha but will reappear in the final tournament of the February Gulf swing in Dubai from February 17.
She won that prestigious UAE event in 2019.
Main photo:- Belinda Bencic and daughter Bella with Abu Dhabi Trophy – by WTATennis.com
Abu Dhabi
AO title is suddenly a jinx for unlucky Keys

Last month’s breakthrough Grand Slam title at the Australian Open has turned into a curse for Madison Keys after the January title winner withdrew from her third straight post-Melbourne tournament.
The 29-year-old American was riding the wave at Melbourne Park after upsetting world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka with a three-set win in the final just over 10 days ago.
But the newly-hyped seventh-ranked Keys was then forced to withdraw from the WTA minor event in Austin under a rule which allowed only one already entered top 10 player (Jessica Pegula) in the field at that event level.
Keys accepted her fate but was then forced out of this week’s 500 event in Abu Dhabi by the hamstring injury which has forced her to pull from the 1000-level Dubai tournament starting February 17 in the emirate.
Keys will be hoping for fitness in time to play the American 1000 pair in Indian Wells and Miami next month.
Abu Dhabi
Another first round exit for Raducanu

Emma Raducanu exited in the first round of successive tournaments at the Abu Dhabi Open today following her loss in Singapore Open.
World No. 56 Raducanu was unable to capitalise on being promoted to the main draw rather than having to qualify for the first time since her fairytale run from qualifying in the 2021 US Open to winning the final, losing 3-6,4-6 to former Wimbledon Champion Marketa Vondrousova
The Brit started well against Vondrousova, leading 3-1 after an early break of serve, but then lost five consecutive games and the first set.
The Czech who had returned from a six-month break in January following shoulder surgery, saved four break points early in the second set before breaking for a 5-3 lead and served out for the match, taking her third match point.
She will play fourth seed Yulia Putintseva from Kazakhstan in the next round.
-
Dubai3 weeks ago
Kasatkina confirms move to Australia
-
ATP4 weeks ago
Henman joins Team Europe as Noah’s assistant
-
ATP4 weeks ago
Dimitrov casts his spell on Khachanov
-
Rouen5 days ago
Dart apologizes for “stinky” opponent jibe
-
Miami Open4 weeks ago
Paolini powers past Osaka in Miami
-
ATP3 weeks ago
Badosa aims for back injury return by Madrid
-
Miami Open4 weeks ago
Raducanu set for huge rankings boost after Miami Open win
-
Miami Open4 weeks ago
Philippine teen swats Swiatek in Miami