Reigning US Open champion Emma Raducanu fails to reach the quarter-finals of the Madrid Open

new balance

free keto book

Reigning US Open champion Emma Raducanu fails to reach the quarter-finals of the Madrid Open after losing to Anhelina Kalinina

  • Raducanu failed to progress through to the quarter-finals on the Madrid Open
  • She lost 6-2 2-6 6-4 to Anhelina Kalinina after two hours and eighteen minutes
  • Raducanu, 19, had to leave the court after the first set to get some treatment 
  • She then had a couple of slips at 4-4 in the decider and that was the difference

The search for a deep run at a tournament outside a Grand Slam goes on for Emma Raducanu, who agonisingly missed out on the quarter finals of the Madrid Open on Tuesday night.

A third straight win at a tournament beckoned for the first time since New York, only for her to be edged by Anhelina Kalinina, one of the Ukrainians currently competing on the tour with a fire inside.

See also  De Minaur and O’Connell offer light on otherwise dull day for Australians at US Open | US Open Tennis 2023

She finally prevailed 6-2 2-6 6-4 after two hours and eighteen minutes, during which there was precious little to separate them. Raducanu, who left the court after the first set for some treatment, had a couple of slips at 4-4 in the decider and that was the difference.

Emma Raducanu (above) failed to progress through to the quarter-finals on the Madrid Open

Emma Raducanu (above) failed to progress through to the quarter-finals on the Madrid Open 

The US Open champion nearly broke straight back in the final game, but was left to trudge off. It will be little consolation that, overall, progress continues to be made in a phase of the season that is a learning process.

Kalinina is not one of the better-known Ukrainian women but showed why she has claimed an increasing amount of good wins this year.

She struck the ball superbly in the opening set and Raducanu, who had been holding her lower back early on, had little response.

After the hiatus caused by her treatment the Kent teenager closed off her opponent’s highly effective cross court backhand and served more consistently, extracting far more errors from the other end.

Raducanu (R) lost 6-2 2-6 6-4 to Anhelina Kalinina (L) after two hours and eighteen minutes

Raducanu (R) lost 6-2 2-6 6-4 to Anhelina Kalinina (L) after two hours and eighteen minutes

Kalinina (above) is one of the Ukrainians currently competing on the tour with a fire inside

Kalinina (above) is one of the Ukrainians currently competing on the tour with a fire inside

See also  Doubles pair disqualified from French Open after ball girl is struck by Miyu Kato

Louis Cayer, the veteran LTA coach being used as a part-time technical consultant by Raducanu, was watching courtside and would have been pleased.

Kalinina left the court after the second set and she rediscovered her range to go 3-1 up. The pendulum swung both ways thereafter in the kind of match which showed why women’s tennis has so few players able to establish any kind of superiority right now.

Earlier Jack Draper showed that he will already be a threat at Wimbledon this summer, for which he looks set to be automatically qualified.

The 20 year-old’s rapid improvement was further emphasised when he came close to defeating world number eight Andrey Rublev before being pipped 2-6 6-4 7-5 in the second round.

Having started the season at 265 he is now on the cusp of the top 100, which ought to see him straight into The Championships without the need of a wildcard.

The power of his southpaw serve and forehand at times drew gasps from the crowd, and had the Russian – whose own groundstrokes are huge – rocked back on his heels for a lot of the match.

Raducanu, 19, had to leave the court after the first set to get some treatment from the physio

Raducanu, 19, had to leave the court after the first set to get some treatment from the physio  

See also  Serena Williams insists she has 'high goals' at Wimbledon and will go in search of an eighth title
The 19-year-old then had a couple of slips at 4-4 in the decider and that was the difference

The 19-year-old then had a couple of slips at 4-4 in the decider and that was the difference

Draper did not quite have the knowhow to close the match out from 3-0 in the decider, and played a slightly loose game at 5-5, but it is little wonder that he is being talked about as comfortably having top ten potential.

If he can trouble the in-form Rublev on clay – the Russian won the recent ATP event in Belgrade – then he is soon going to be a handful for anyone on more favoured surfaces.

‘I’m gutted that I couldn’t sustain my level and come through the match, but at the same time, this week’s a new experience for me, being on the clay in a top event like this and playing a top-10 player,” said Draper, who is from Leatherhead.

‘I surprised myself a little that I can play a very high level on the clay. I still feel like I’ve got so much more in me. There is such a long way to go in all areas, which is really exciting.’

Andy Murray was facing Denis Shapovalov with the winner getting a third round against Novak Djokovic.

More to follow… 

Advertisement

anti radiation

new balance


Source link

crypto quantum