Sabalenka battles to keep Wuhan record alive, Pegula survives marathon

Published October 9, 2025
SLOVAKIA’S Rebecca Sramkova hits a return to Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus during their Wuhan Open match on Wednesday.—AFP
SLOVAKIA’S Rebecca Sramkova hits a return to Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus during their Wuhan Open match on Wednesday.—AFP

WUHAN: Defending champion Aryna Sabalenka battled hard on Wednesday to keep her unbeaten record in Wuhan intact, having to come from behind to beat Slovakia’s Rebecca Sramkova 4-6, 6-3, 6-1.

The world number one started slowly in her first match since she clinched a fourth Grand Slam title at the US Open last month.

But the Belarusian found her power game in the final set to reach the Wuhan Open last 16, where she will face the 16th-seeded Russian Liudmila Samsonova.

Sabalenka is chasing a fourth consecutive crown in Wuhan where she has a perfect 18-0 win-loss record.

Sramkova quickly took a 3-1 lead and served out to take the opening set in 35 minutes.

Sabalenka shook off the rust in the second and then swept through the decider to win in just under two hours.

“She played incredible tennis, especially in the first set. There wasn’t much I could do against her,” said Sabalenka.

“I knew after that little break [after New York], it will be not that easy to get back in my rhythm.

“But I’m really glad that in the second set I found my game, I stepped in, and I think I played really great.”

The other four-time major champion in action on Wednesday, Naomi Osaka, slumped to a 7-6 (7-2), 6-3 defeat to last week’s Beijing runner-up Linda Noskova.

“I tried to keep the rallies going as much as I could and staying in the aggressive mode as good as I could,” said the Czech, who is at a career-high 17 in the world rankings.

Japan’s Osaka, the 11th seed, dropped just three points behind her first serve but could not convert any of her four break point opportunities during the 90-minute showdown.

Third seed Coco Gauff, a semi-finalist in Wuhan last year, booked her place in the last 16 with a smooth 6-1, 6-0 performance against Japanese qualifier Moyuka Uchijima.

Gauff was flawless throughout a 51-minute victory that was her 18th on Chinese soil since 2023, the most at WTA level by any pla­yer in China during that period.

Gauff will square off with Chinese wildcard Zhang Shuai for a place in the quarter-finals.

In contrast, world number six Jessica Pegula survived a “wild ride”, needing seven match points and almost three hours to overcome fellow American Hailey Baptiste 6-4, 4-6, 7-6 (8-6).

Pegula served for the match twice, at 5-2 and 5-4 in the third set, but Baptiste dug deep to save five match points and took four games in a row for a 6-5 advantage.

Pegula steadied the ship to force a tiebreak and she finally wrapped up the victory on her seventh match point.

“It’s been brutal,” said Pegula, who will face Russian ninth seed Ekaterina Alexandrova in the third round.

“Match points, then she started playing well, I think I just got a little tentative,” admitted Pegula.

“And that’s all it takes sometimes for someone to come back.

“I’m really proud of myself for how I held it together because I think I easily could have just collapsed. But I held tough, so yeah, that was a wild ride.”

Heat again played a factor as 12th-seeded Karolina Muchova joined the likes of Emma Raducanu, Jelena Ostapenko and Dayana Yastremska on the list of mid-match retirees in Wuhan.

With temperatures soaring above 30C, Muchova struggled with the heat and had her vitals checked on court before she retired while trailing Magdalena Frech 7-6 (7-1), 4-1.

Published in Dawn, October 9th, 2025

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