Riyadh
Sabalenka off and running in Saudi
Aryna Sabalenka made a running start at the WTA Finals on Saturday, starting the year-ender with a 6-3, 6-4 group win over China’s Zheng Qinwen.
The world No. 1 has now beaten the seventh-ranked Olympic gold medalist all five times they have played. The match was a repeat of the Wuhan final played only weeks ago.
Sabalenka earned her 21st win from her last 22 matches.
The top seed is fighting this wrapup week to hold off rival Iga Swiatek, who lost the top WTA ranking due to inactivity this autumn as she skipped Asian events to reorganise her coaching team.
Sabalenka can assure herself of year-end No. 1 status by winning her next two group matches. Another route: reach the final no matter how Swiatek performs in Riyadh.
Zheng out-aced the winner eight to three but Sabalenka is not worried after her solid performance.
“Anytime we come to the tournament, we want to win. That’s the first goal.
“I’m trying to be focused on the first part. I prefer to focus step by step. Let’s just start slowly.”
Riyadh
Gauff beats Paolini to level Saudi record
Holder Coco Gauff got her WTA Finals defence back to level-pegging on Tuesday as the American defeated Jasmine Paolini 6-3, 6-2.
Gauff squared her record at the year-ender after losing her opening group match on Sunday in three sets to compatriot Jessica Pegula.
The loss in 80 minutes knocked Italy’s Paolini out of title contention according to WTA calculations.
Gauffl managed victory with 14 winners and a massive 30 unforced errors. The American continues to be plagued by errors after losing to Pegula at the weekend thanks in part to 45 unforced errors including 17 double-faults.
Her win over Paolini showed some improvement in those numbers; the Italian with a pair of 2024 Grand Slam singles finals remains alive in the doubles here with Sara Errani.,
Paolini had defeated Gauff in three of four previous meetings this season, with Gauff winning their October meeting in Wuhan as she earned that Chinese title.
ATP
Coach defends Sinner’s Saudi mega-payday
Coach Darren Cahill has rallied to the defence of Jannik Sinner after the world No. 1 sparked controversy with his record-breaking USD 6 million prize money haul from last month’s Saudi exhibition.
The Italian banked the biggest cheque ever cut in tennis for winning the hit-and-giggle event among six top players last month,
Asked as to what influence the outsized payday had on his participation, the native German-speaker answered in English to Eurosport: “I don’t play for money. It’s very simple.
“Of course it’s a nice prize, but I went there because there was possibly the six best players in the world and you can measure yourself with them. It was also a nice event,”
That somewhat unbelievable response drew a laughing emoji form veteran Stan Wawrinka in an online post.
The situation may have inspired Australian Cahill to jump into the controversy in an effort to save face for his VIP client.
“What he said about not going to Riyadh for the money was misinterpreted.
“Or maybe he didn’t explain himself well. The truth is that he had never played an exhibition, he has always been focused on improving his tennis. He knows what his priorities are.
“Then he got an offer for the Six Kings Slam, with the six best players in the world and a lot of money. He consulted us and we said why not, and he accepted.”
Sinner is headlining from Sunday at the this week at the ATP finals in Turin, where he is top seed as the eight best players this season clash.
Main photo:- Darren Cahill with Andre Agassi after winning 2003 Australian
Open – by Roger Parker International Sports Fotos
Riyadh
Rybakina ambushes Sabalenka; Pegula pulls out
Aryna Sabalenka fell victim to a 6-4, 3-6, 6-1 upset at the hands of former Wimbledon winner Elena Rybakina as the world No. 1 moved into the knockout stage of the WTA Finals on Wednesday.
Sabalenka had already assured herself a semi-final place but would have surely preferred to leave the group stage in Riyadh with a clean slate after three matches.
Rybakina ends standing 1-2 as she competed for the first time since pulling injured from the US open with a back injury and playing just three matches since Wimbledon.
Sabalenka’s loss was only her fourth in the series after defeating her Kazakh rival six times; the top seed had won her previous seven matches before running into Rybakina.
American Jessica Pegula quit the year-end event with injury while Australian Open finalist Zheng Qinwen defeated Jasmine Paolini 6-1, 6-1.
US Open runner-up Pegula, who lost that final to Sabalenka, was replaced by alternate Daria Kasatkina.
“Just been kind of struggling with a little bit of an injury,” Pegula said, “and for whatever reason, it kind of really flared up this week.
“I’m not really sure why. In the few days before practice, it felt really, really good, but it started creeping up right before my first match.
“I”m not feeling comfortable moving on court.”
Kasatkina will face No.2 Iga Swiatek on Thursday.
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