ARYNA Sabalenka of Belarus in action against Robin Montgomery of the US during their Madrid Open round-of-32 match at Park Manzanares.—Reuters
ARYNA Sabalenka of Belarus in action against Robin Montgomery of the US during their Madrid Open round-of-32 match at Park Manzanares.—Reuters

MADRID: Carlos Alcaraz passed a “test of fire” to breeze into the Madrid Open last 16 with a straight-sets victory over Thiago Seyboth Wild here on Sunday, while Aryna Sabalenka staved off teenager Robin Montgomery to progress in three sets.

Double defending champion Alcaraz came through 6-3, 6-3 and will face last year’s runner-up Jan-Lennard Struff in the next round after another impressive showing before adoring fans on home soil.

World number three Alcaraz, 20, missed a month prior to Madrid with a forearm issue but returned to crush Alexander Shevchenko in the second round and looks in fine shape ahead of the French Open, the second Grand Slam event of the season.

Still wearing a protective sleeve on his right arm, he had far too much for Seyboth Wild, who had ousted 28th seed Lorenzo Musetti.

“Maybe today I was a bit nervous about how it would be, Thiago hits the ball so hard, I didn’t know how the forearm would hold up,” said Alcaraz on court.

“Today was the test of fire, no discomfort, feeling spectacular... from here, we’ll be getting better.”

After taking two breaks in a solid first set, Alcaraz stepped up a gear in the second, breaking in the second and fourth games as he raced ahead 5-0.

Seyboth Wild battled to a hold and a break to salvage some pride but Alcaraz triumphed on serve when the Brazilian went long.

German fourth seed Alexander Zverev made the last 16 with a 6-4, 7-5 win over Canada’s Denis Shapovalov.

Andrey Rublev came back from 5-0 down in a first set tie-break to beat Alejandro Davidovich Fokina 7-6 (12-10), 6-4 in a tense affair.

The world number eight saved five set points to stun his opponent, before a similarly hard-fought second set. Rublev broke for a 5-4 lead with a shot which the Spaniard chose to leave as he thought it was long, but Hawk-Eye showed it was in by a whisker.

In other third-round clashes, eighth seed Hubert Hurkacz of Poland downed Germany’s Daniel Altmaier 6-4, 7-6 (7-2) while Taylor Fritz of the US beat Argentina’s Sebastian Baez 6-2, 6-3.

On the women’s side, world number two Sabalenka scraped past plu­cky 19-year-old Montgomery 6-1, 6-7 (5-7), 6-4 in two-and-a-half hours.

The big-hitting Belarusian started her Madrid title defence slowly in the second round with a three-set win over Magda Linette and again was tested after claiming the first set easily.

Sabalenka broke twice for a 5-1 lead against Montgomery, who steeled herself and battled well in the final game, saving three set points before Sabalenka sealed it.

The American hit two aces to hold in the first game of the second set, showing she would fight against the Grand Slam champion.

Sabalenka survived two set points in the gripping tie-break before 183rd-ranked Montgomery forced a decider.

The 25-year-old Australian Open champion broke in the second game but Montgomery hit back immediately.

Sabalenka brought up three match points in the 10th and final game, taking the first when Mont­go­mery pushed a shot into the net.

World number four Elena Rybakina eased to a 6-1, 6-4 win over Egypt’s Mayar Sherif to reach the last 16.

The Kazakh, who has a tour-leading three titles this season after triumphing in Stuttgart last week, broke twice in the first set to move 5-0 ahead on the Spanish clay, bef­ore edging a closer second stanza.

Rybakina will face teenager Sara Bejlek in the next round after the Czech defeated American Ashlyn Krueger 6-3, 6-1.

Mirra Andreeva defeated Wim­bledon champion Marketa Vondro­usova 7-5, 6-1 to return to the last 16 for the second year running.

The Russian, who turns 17 on Monday, won 25 points to nine in the second set against the world number seven from the Czech Republic.

Published in Dawn, April 30th, 2024

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