Sabalenka survives scare to beat Linette, Rybakina eases past Bronzetti

Aryna Sabalenka survived a second-set scare to overcome Magda Linette 6-4 3-6 6-3 and reach the Madrid Open third round.

The defending champion got the job done in two hours and 12 minutes after recovering from a tricky second set, where the match was starting to unravel for the Belarusian.

This result continues Sabalenka’s 100 per cent record against Linette after four meetings, but the world No.2 won each of the three previous matches in straight sets, so this represents an improvement for the Pole.

Neither player gave much away in a cagey opener until Sabalenka managed to break through Linette’s serve and claimed the first set after a second set point.

Linette’s response left the two-time Grand Slam winner in a bit of a pickle, after breaking her serve for the first time to move 3-1 ahead and later going on to seal emphatic hold to love at 5-2.

The world No.2 had a break point advantage that came and went in the ninth game before the 32-year-old restored parity in her first set point.

The world No.48 continued to go toe-to-toe with Sabalenka in the decider, but her admirable resistance was ended when Sabalenka claimed her final break in the eighth game to go 5-3 in front and wrapped up the match on her own serve at 6-3.

Sabalenka could now face British No.1 Katie Boulter in the third round, if she beats Robin Montgomery later on Friday.

Speaking after the match Sabalenka said: “She’s a tough opponent who always provides me with tough battles.

“It was an up-and-down match today, but I was happy to be able to close it out and get through another one.”

Rybakina prevails past Bronzetti

Elena Rybakina booked her place into the third round of the Madrid Open with a 6-4 6-3 win over Lucia Bronzetti.

The world No.4 was made to sweat by the Italian at times, but ultimately progressed after a mere one hour and 16 minutes of play, setting up a meeting with either Marta Kostyuk or Mayar Sherif.

Bronzetti was emphatically broken on her opening serve to give the Kazakh a 2-0 lead, but managed an immediate break in an impressive early showing of resilience.

The 25-year-old failed in her attempts to prolong the set on her own serve, as Rybakina drew first blood after her first set point in the tenth game.

Bronzetti came out fighting at the start of the second, and emphatically broke Rybakina to love, but failed to continue that momentum and allowed the 2022 Wimbledon winner a break back.

The writing appeared to be on the wall when the Italian surrendered on her serve for a fourth time in the match to move 3-1 down, and Rybakina did not look back from that point to win the contest after her first match point.

Speaking after the match, she said: “Really happy with the win. I struggled a bit here and there. Overall, I think it was a good match.

“The first set was quite close. I was getting a little frustrated with easy mistakes. Also my first serve percentage wasn’t the greatest throughout the whole match. There are things to improve. Hopefully the next match is going to be better.”

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Madrid Open: Are Nadal, Djokovic, Alcaraz and Raducanu playing?

The Madrid Open will feature the top stars from the ATP and WTA tours.

Carlos Alcaraz has won the men’s title the last two successive years and is bidding to become the first player to win three in a row.

The women’s trophy was won by Aryna Sabalenka as she beat Iga Swiatek in the final.

Who’s playing the Madrid Open this season? Are Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal, Alcaraz, Swiatek and Sabalenka playing? When is the draw?

When is the Madrid Open?

The WTA main draw at the Madrid Open starts on Tuesday, April 23 and the ATP main draw starts on Wednesday, April 24.

Play starts at 10am UK time every day until midway through the second week. From May 1 to May 3, play begins at midday UK time, and on finals weekend play starts at 2.30pm.

There are also night sessions running from April 26 to May 3 which start at 7pm.

The women’s final will be held on Saturday, May 4 and the men’s final will be on Sunday, May 5.

When is the Madrid Open draw?

The women’s singles draw will be held on Sunday, April 21 at 5pm UK time and the men’s draw will be on Monday, April 22.

Who is playing the Madrid Open?

The Madrid Open was set to be the first clay event that both Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal have played since the 2022 French Open – until Djokovic pulled out.

Djokovic has not given a reason for his withdrawal, but his absence means world No. 2 Jannik Sinner will be the top seed.

Nadal will be unseeded as he continues his comeback using a protected ranking.

Carlos Alcaraz’s status is unknown after he missed Monte Carlo and Barcelona due to an arm injury.

The world No. 3 is in Madrid ahead of the tournament, but said last week in Barcelona: “My goal is to try and go to the Madrid Open, but at the moment nothing is certain.

“I was given specific recovery times and I’ve respected them, but I haven’t felt good. I don’t want to get ahead of myself.”

Alcaraz hasn’t played since losing in the Miami Open quarter-finals.

Iga Swiatek and Aryna Sabalenka will headline the women’s draw.

The pair contested the final in Madrid last year and as the top two seeds could meet again with the trophy on the line.

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Aryna Sabalenka won Madrid in 2023

Image credit: Getty Images

Coco Gauff and Elena Rybakina will be among those looking to challenge for the title, while two-time champion Simona Halep and former runner-up Caroline Wozniacki have both got wildcards.

This will be Halep’s second tournament since returning to the tour after her doping ban was reduced from four years to nine months.

Naomi Osaka is also on the entry list but Emma Raducanu isn’t currently in the draw.

However, as she is not ranked high enough for entry, unless she gets a late wildcard she looks set to miss Madrid.

Djokovic set for Rome return

This is only the third time since 2015 that Djokovic has not won a title by this stage of the season.

The other two times were in 2022, when he was unable to play in Australia or the United States due to being unvaccinated for Covid-19, and 2018, when he had elbow surgery early in the year.

This season he had only played three tournaments before Monte Carlo, losing to Alex de Minaur at the United Cup, Jannik Sinner in the Australian Open semis, and then the upset in the third round at Indian Wells against lucky loser Luca Nardi.

It looks like he is next going to play the Italian Open, which starts on May 8, as he builds up for the French Open, Wimbledon and Olympics.

“I want to reach my peak for Paris – that’s where I want to play my best tennis,” said Djokovic in Monte Carlo.

“Anything else is a bonus, so let’s see what happens.”

Stream top tennis action, including the 2024 French Open, live on discovery+

Madrid Open: Are Nadal, Djokovic, Alcaraz and Raducanu playing?

The Madrid Open will feature the top stars from the ATP and WTA tours.

Carlos Alcaraz has won the men’s title the last two successive years and is bidding to become the first player to win three in a row.

The women’s trophy was won by Aryna Sabalenka as she beat Iga Swiatek in the final.

Who’s playing the Madrid Open this season? Are Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal, Alcaraz, Swiatek and Sabalenka playing? When is the draw?

When is the Madrid Open?

The WTA main draw at the Madrid Open starts on Tuesday, April 23 and the ATP main draw starts on Wednesday, April 24.

Play starts at 10am UK time every day until midway through the second week. From May 1 to May 3, play begins at midday UK time, and on finals weekend play starts at 2.30pm.

There are also night sessions running from April 26 to May 3 which start at 7pm.

The women’s final will be held on Saturday, May 4 and the men’s final will be on Sunday, May 5.

When is the Madrid Open draw?

The women’s singles draw will be held on Sunday, April 21 at 5pm UK time and the men’s draw will be on Monday, April 22.

Who is playing the Madrid Open?

The Madrid Open was set to be the first clay event that both Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal have played since the 2022 French Open – until Djokovic pulled out.

Djokovic has not given a reason for his withdrawal, but his absence means world No. 2 Jannik Sinner will be the top seed.

Nadal will be unseeded as he continues his comeback using a protected ranking.

Carlos Alcaraz’s status is unknown after he missed Monte Carlo and Barcelona due to an arm injury.

The world No. 3 is in Madrid ahead of the tournament, but said last week in Barcelona: “My goal is to try and go to the Madrid Open, but at the moment nothing is certain.

“I was given specific recovery times and I’ve respected them, but I haven’t felt good. I don’t want to get ahead of myself.”

Alcaraz hasn’t played since losing in the Miami Open quarter-finals.

Iga Swiatek and Aryna Sabalenka will headline the women’s draw.

The pair contested the final in Madrid last year and as the top two seeds could meet again with the trophy on the line.

picture

Aryna Sabalenka won Madrid in 2023

Image credit: Getty Images

Coco Gauff and Elena Rybakina will be among those looking to challenge for the title, while two-time champion Simona Halep and former runner-up Caroline Wozniacki have both got wildcards.

This will be Halep’s second tournament since returning to the tour after her doping ban was reduced from four years to nine months.

Naomi Osaka is also on the entry list but Emma Raducanu isn’t currently in the draw.

However, as she is not ranked high enough for entry, unless she gets a late wildcard she looks set to miss Madrid.

Djokovic set for Rome return

This is only the third time since 2015 that Djokovic has not won a title by this stage of the season.

The other two times were in 2022, when he was unable to play in Australia or the United States due to being unvaccinated for Covid-19, and 2018, when he had elbow surgery early in the year.

This season he had only played three tournaments before Monte Carlo, losing to Alex de Minaur at the United Cup, Jannik Sinner in the Australian Open semis, and then the upset in the third round at Indian Wells against lucky loser Luca Nardi.

It looks like he is next going to play the Italian Open, which starts on May 8, as he builds up for the French Open, Wimbledon and Olympics.

“I want to reach my peak for Paris – that’s where I want to play my best tennis,” said Djokovic in Monte Carlo.

“Anything else is a bonus, so let’s see what happens.”

Stream top tennis action, including the 2024 French Open, live on discovery+

‘She has the game’ – Swiatek ends Raducanu run in Stuttgart, Sabalenka stunned

Emma Raducanu’s run at the Stuttgart Open came to an end against Iga Swiatek as the world No. 1 earned an “intense” straight-sets quarter-final victory on Friday.

The Brit fell to a 7-6(2) 6-3 defeat in just over two hours as Swiatek set up a semi-final date with Elena Rybakina to continue her bid for a third consecutive title in Germany.

“It was a pretty intense match,” Swiatek said. “I was happy that I was able to keep the intensity even though we played some tough games for like two hours.

“It wasn’t easy. I had a lot of break points which I didn’t convert so still I’m happy that I could finish it with a better score in the second set than in the first.”

Swiatek is yet to lose at the event, winning all 10 of her matches so far, but was pushed hard by Raducanu in the opening set.

The former US Open champion went toe-to-toe with Swiatek as the players earned one break each before the Pole took control in a tie-break.

The second set was more decisive from Swiatek, who did not face a single break point and took two of the seven she earned to march into the last four.

Swiatek’s head-to-head record against Raducanu now stands at a perfect 3-0, the four-time major champion winning every set in those matches, but she believes the young Brit can climb the rankings once more.

“There are a lot of factors coming in if you want to stay consistently at the top but I hope [Raducanu] will be able to do it,” Swiatek said.

“For sure she has the game but it’s not easy.”

Raducanu bowed out with her head held high as her comeback from an injury-hit 2023 continues.

Her wins over Angelique Kerber and Linda Noskova in Stuttgart followed up two victories at the Billie Jean King Cup to mark the first time the Brit has won four matches in a row since her stunning triumph at Flushing Meadows in 2021.

Swiatek is gearing up for a tilt at a fourth Roland-Garros title in five years and will go to Paris as the two-time defending champion when the second Grand Slam of the year kicks off on May 20, live on Eurosport and discovery+.

Rybakina digs in for win

Rybakina was first to book her spot in the final four, reaching the semi-finals in Stuttgart for the first time by beating Jasmine Paolini in three sets.

The fourth seed triumphed 6-3 5-7 6-3 as she bids for a third title of the season in her first tournament appearance since losing the Miami Open final to Danielle Collins.

Rybakina and Swiatek’s meeting will be a repeat of the Qatar Open final, where the world No. 1 triumphed in straight sets in February.

Sabalenka stunned by Vondrousova

Second seed Aryna Sabalenka crashed out to Marketa Vondrousova in an eventful two-hour quarter-final clash.

The Wimbledon champion, seeded sixth in Stuttgart, had not beaten her Belarusian counterpart for six years, but came from behind to win 3-6 6-3 7-5.

Victory meant Vondrousova has reached a semi-final for the first time since her shock win at SW19 last year, and she will face Coco Gauff or Marta Kostyuk for a place in the final.

An unpredictable match featured 13 breaks of serve and saw Sabalenka hit 35 winners to her Czech opponent’s 17, but rack up 48 unforced errors to 19.

Stream top tennis action, including the 2024 French Open, live on discovery+, the Eurosport app and at eurosport.com

Sabalenka hoping to ‘finally’ win Stuttgart trophy after losing in three straight finals

Aryna Sabalenka is determined to finally get her hands on the Stuttgart Open trophy after losing in the final for the last three years.

Sabalenka was edged out by world No. 1 Iga Swiatek in the 2023 and 2022 finals, having lost to former world No. 1 Ashleigh Barty in the 2021 final.

With Sabalenka and Swiatek the top two seeds again, a third straight final between the pair could be on the cards.

“I keep coming back here with the hope that this year I can finally get it,” Sabalenka told Eurosport.

“I love it here, love the tournament, the courts, the atmosphere.”

Australian Open champion Sabalenka will start her Stuttgart title bid against good friend Paula Badosa on Wednesday.

It will be the second tournament in a row that Sabalenka has faced Badosa after also beating her at the Miami Open last month.

Although clay has historically not been Sabalenka’s strongest surface, last year she won Madrid and was a point away from making the French Open final.

“I love to play on clay,” she says about the surface.

“It’s always not enough for me, every time when the clay season finishes I think I just start feeling it, I need a couple more tournaments! I love the game on clay.”

While Sabalenka has emerged as a force on clay, Swiatek has been the one to beat on the surface over the last few seasons.

She will be aiming to become the first player to record three straight Stuttgart wins since Maria Sharapova a decade ago.

“I always feel comfortable during this change of surface from hard court to clay,” Swiatek, who has won the French Open for the last two seasons, told Eurosport.

“The way the ball bounces. I can play a bit differently and have different tactics. I can use more of my intuition because I was raised on clay and it’s a bit easier for me.”

Swiatek will face Elise Mertens or Tatjana Maria in her opening match on Wednesday.

Emma Raducanu will open against home favourite Angelique Kerber.

Stream top tennis action, including the 2024 French Open, live on discovery+

When is the 2024 French Open? What’s the schedule? Will Djokovic and Nadal play?

As one of four Grand Slam tournaments, the French Open is one of the most prestigious events on the tennis calendar.

The clay major has seen some all-time great champions in recent years, including Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal and Iga Swiatek, as well as plenty of epic matches.

The top stars from the men’s and women’s tours will be back at Roland-Garros this summer as they look to get their hands on the French Open trophy.

Eurosport and discovery+ will again be the exclusive home of the French Open in the UK, and here’s all you need to know about the Grand Slam, including when it starts, who should be playing, how to watch every match and what else is in store…

When is the 2024 French Open?

Qualifying for the French Open starts on Monday, May 20 and finishes on Friday, May 24.

The main draw starts on Sunday, May 26, as the French Open is one of two Grand Slams, along with the Australian Open, that is run over 15 days instead of 14 this year.

The singles finals will be held on the weekend of June 8.

Play starts at 10am UK time every day except for finals weekend, and there will be an evening session scheduled from 7.15pm UK time every day until the semi-finals start on Thursday, June 6.

French Open 2024 schedule

  • Monday, May 20 – Friday, May 24: Qualifying
  • Sunday, May 25: Men’s and women’s singles first round
  • Monday, May 26: Men’s and women’s singles first round
  • Tuesday, May 27: Men’s and women’s singles first round
  • Wednesday, May 28: Men’s and women’s singles second round
  • Thursday, May 29: Men’s and women’s singles second round
  • Friday, May 30: Men’s and women’s singles third round
  • Saturday, June 1: Men’s and women’s singles third round
  • Sunday, June 2: Men’s and women’s singles fourth round
  • Monday, June 3: Men’s and women’s singles fourth round
  • Tuesday, June 4: Men’s and women’s singles quarter-finals
  • Wednesday, June 5: Men’s and women’s singles quarter-finals
  • Thursday, June 6: Women’s singles semi-finals
  • Friday, June 7: Men’s singles semi-finals
  • Saturday, June 8: Women’s singles final, men’s doubles final
  • Sunday, June 9: Men’s singles final, women’s doubles final

When is the 2024 French Open draw?

The timings for the draw for the French Open has not been confirmed but it will likely be held on Thursday, May 23.

How to watch and stream the 2024 French Open

You can watch every day of the 2024 French Open live on Eurosport, eurosport.co.uk, the Eurosport app and on-demand on discovery+.

Enjoy the action ad-free on the Eurosport app and via eurosport.co.uk. Download the Eurosport app now for iOS and Android.

As well as coverage from around Roland-Garros, there will be expert analysis from on-site and in The Cube.

Who’s playing the 2024 French Open?

The top players from the ATP and WTA tours will all hope to be competing at the French Open.

The headline name on the men’s side could be 14-time champion Rafael Nadal.

Nadal has been troubled by injuries since the start of 2023 and missed the French Open last year after undergoing hip surgery.

He has said this could be his final year on tour and it has been predicted that either the French Open or the tennis event at the 2024 Paris Olympics, which is also played at Roland-Garros, could be his last tournament.

Novak Djokovic will be looking for a record-breaking 25th Grand Slam title as he defends his French Open crown.

Djokovic beat Casper Ruud in last year’s final to win in Paris for the third time in his career.

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Highlights: Djokovic makes history by winning 23rd Grand Slam against Ruud

He is currently tied with Margaret Court for the most Grand Slam wins in history.

Iga Swiatek will be the defending women’s champion as she aims for a fourth victory at the French Open.

The Polish star beat Karolina Muchova in the 2023 final and has looked unstoppable at times at the tournament.

Aryna Sabalenka, Coco Gauff and Elena Rybakina will all be looking to challenge Swiatek.

Katie Boulter is set to be the leading British contender in the women’s draw.

Stream top tennis action, including the 2024 French Open, live on discovery+, the Eurosport app and at eurosport.com