Tennis: Olympic champion Bencic thrashed in Luxembourg quarter-finals

LUXEMBOURG (AFP) - Switzerland's Olympic tennis champion Belinda Bencic suffered a 6-1, 6-4 defeat to Russia's Liudmila Samsonova in the quarter-finals of the Luxembourg Open on Friday (Sept 17). Samsonova, ranked 48th, claimed her second win over Bencic in as many attempts, having beaten her in the final of the grass-court tournament in Berlin in June. Top seed Bencic dropped serve three times in her first event since reaching the quarter-finals of the US Open, where she lost to eventual champion Emma Raducanu. The seventh-seeded Samsonova will take on 2017 French Open winner Jelena Ostapenko for a place in the final. More on this topic   Related Story Olympics: Switzerland's Bencic beats Vondrousova to win women's tennis title

Tennis: Olympic champion Bencic cruises into US Open second round

NEW YORK (REUTERS) - Belinda Bencic, playing with a new found sense of freedom after winning a gold medal in the singles competition at the Tokyo Olympics, breezed past Dutchwoman Arantxa Rus 6-4 6-4 to reach the second round of the US Open on Tuesday (Aug 31). Bencic, who reached the US Open semi-finals in 2019 and sat out last year's tournament amid the Covid-19 outbreak, used a solid service game to improve to 3-0 all-time against the left-handed Rus. Asked in an on-court interview what pleased her most about the win, Bencic, who did not face a break point during the 90-minute match, replied "Definitely my serve. "She (Rus) is a great player, she makes it really hard for me to play against her, the typical lefty game, and I've played a lot of lefties in the last couple of matches so I was a little bit prepared." Bencic, who is seeded 11th, broke Rus in the first game of the match en route to taking the opening set and again in the second set to go ahead 3-2 before wrapping up the match by forcing a forehand error. The 24-year-old Swiss, who will face Italy's Martina Trevisan in the second round, said she had been more relaxed on court since her Olympic triumph. "I kind of achieved my dream in Tokyo. I'm so kind of happy and I'm sure it was my proudest moment which I will ever achieve," said Bencic. "I feel like it gives me a lot of calmness and just relaxing and I can really play just very free now and I'm playing for fun. "I am feeling good on the court right now so I am not putting any pressure on myself." More on this topic   Related Story Tennis: Osaka kicks off US Open title defence with straight sets win   Related Story Tennis: Pliskova rolls into US Open second round in bid for maiden major

Tennis: ‘Amazing to be back’, says Keys as she beats fatigued Bencic in Qatar

DOHA (AFP) - America's Madison Keys made a triumphant return to play against sixth seed Belinda Bencic, clinching three games in a row as she opened her campaign, winning her first match since September 6-4, 6-1. But Swiss Bencic, making her third appearance at the Qatar Open where she made the quarter-finals last year, began her fightback in the fourth game. The fatigue of playing into the final at the Adelaide International last week and the punishing flight to Qatar surely contributed to Bencic's visible fatigue. Keys was more proficient in the big moments, meaning Bencic struggled in vain to steal a break, allowing the American to mop up five of the first seven games. But Bencic bounced back when she was two games behind Keys, securing the ninth game and an ace in the 39th minute which could have helped her go level. Keys overcame her resistance to steal the first set and her backhand side allowed her to maintain the pressure on Bencic in the second. Keys closed out the final games with stellar serving, a superb forehand and a memorable backhand to take the penultimate game. Her form was reminiscent of that which got her to the US Open final in 2017. "It's amazing to be back - I'm smiling under my mask," said Keys whose coronavirus diagnosis meant she missed the Australian Open. She will now face Maria Sakkari who also had a good win in her first-round match. Qualifier Laura Siegemund also pulled off an upset, seeing off Elena Rybakina 7-6 (9/7), 7-6 (7/5) having lost both her last encounters with Rybakina in 2019. Quarantine advantage Wang Qiang, coached by Pat Cash, quickly applied pressure to Jessica Pegula during her opening service game but succumbed 6-3, 6-1. But American Pegula fought back from several break points with defensive tennis, forcing Wang into errors with the Chinese player nonetheless scraping out an important win in the seventh game. I’m reading all your tweets and just soooo happy to finally be back on tour. Thank you all for your support! ♥️ pic.twitter.com/58mAgCrZXQ— Madison Keys (@Madison_Keys) March 2, 2021 Welcome back to the party, @Madison_Keys 🥳Takes down No.6 seed Bencic 6-4, 6-1 in her first match since September!#QatarTotalOpen2021 pic.twitter.com/I6VgYNFzF2— wta (@WTA) March 2, 2021 Wang served to stay in the set, taking it to eight games. Wang came out of the gates fighting in the second game of the second set, achieving a break back. Overall, Wang gave the impression of being out of sorts while Pegula consolidated her game and looked in form. Pegula, who was making her debut in the main draw, was clinical in the closing stages of the match, dispatching Wang in just over an hour. "I worked really hard in the (Australian Open) quarantine and got really healthy. I just decided I was going to be the mentally tough one," she said. She will face Latvia's Jelena Ostapenko in the second round. Tunisia's Ons Jabeur, who reached the Qatar Open quarter-finals in 2020 and is famed for self-proclaimed "crazy shots", efficiently saw off Russia's Anna Blinkova 6-2, 6-2. Neither has won a singles title before but Jabeur is now in a position to better her Qatar quarter-final performance last year as she progresses to the second round. Jabeur raced into the lead, buoyed by the Tunisian expats in the modest crowd, running rings around Blinkova with her deft touches. "We love to play each other here in Doha... it's going to be extremely tough," said Jabeur of number two seed Karolina Pliskova who she will face in the second round. Japan's Misaki Doi closed the day's proceedings, beating China's Zheng Saisai 6-4, 6-3.