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Alcaraz overcomes rain to gain revenge on Paul in Cincinnati

Alcaraz overcomes rain to gain revenge on Paul in Cincinnati
Carlos Alcaraz of Spain reaches to return a shot to Tommy Paul of the US during their third round match at the Western & Southern Open at Lindner Family Tennis Center in Mason, Ohio. (File/AFP)
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Updated 18 August 2023

Alcaraz overcomes rain to gain revenge on Paul in Cincinnati

Alcaraz overcomes rain to gain revenge on Paul in Cincinnati
  • Alcaraz is into his fifth Masters 1000 quarterfinal this season and his 11th overall
  • In the WTA draw, world No. 1 Iga Swiatek changed her dress after losing the opening set and came back a new woman, defeating China’s Zheng Qinwen 3-6, 6-1, 6-1

CINCINNATI: Carlos Alcaraz withstood a string of frustrating rain delays to beat Tommy Paul 7-6 (8/6), 6-7 (7/0) 6-3 on Thursday, avenging a loss to the American last week and reaching the quarterfinals of the ATP/WTA Cincinnati Open.

Paul was unable to repeat his sensational upset of the world No. 1 from last Friday in Toronto, where he stunned the Spaniard in the quarterfinals.

Alcaraz had squandered three match points before the first of a string of rain delays that forced players off and on the court in a logistics ballet that finally ended after more than three hours.

But he held on to book a quarterfinal meeting with Australian Max Purcell, a 6-4, 6-2 winner over Swiss Stan Wawrinka.

After the final rain pause, Alcaraz, up a break in the third, came out and finished off the final few points, advancing with 40 winners and 61 unforced errors.

ā€œI really wanted to win after what happened against him last week.

Alcaraz is into his fifth Masters 1000 quarterfinal this season and his 11th overall. He improved to 21-3 in the elite series this season, standing 51-5 overall.

Alcaraz applied the pressure and brought out the best of his big game to tame Paul in a contest first interrupted at 4-3 in the deciding set by the weather.

The top seed came back from a break down four times in the first two sets, but he couldn’t put it away when he had three opportunities in the 12th game of the second set.

The 15-minute game saw Paul launch his fightback. He then dominated the tiebreaker, winning the last nine points of the set to square the contest after two and a half hours.

A brief rain pause after the fifth game became a full-fledged suspension with Alcaraz up a break and serving at 4-3.

A frustrating stop-start scenario saw the court dried and players warmed up only for rain to start again.

ā€œAll of the starting and stopping was not easy,ā€ Alcaraz said. ā€œI handled the waiting well.

ā€œI’m happy with my level and pleased to be in the quarter-finals. I feel my game is getting better and better.ā€

Alexander Zverev won a battle of former champions over third-seeded Daniil Medvedev 6-4, 5-7, 6-4.

The 16th-seeded German, who missed the second half of last season with a serious ankle injury, won his eighth consecutive Cincinnati match dating to his 2021 title run.

ā€œIt was such a difficult time for me last year,ā€ said Zverev, the recent Hamburg clay champion. ā€œI couldn’t walk and couldn’t play.

ā€œIt’s moments like this that make it all so special.ā€

Fourth seed Stefanos Tsitsipas also lost, 6-3, 6-4 to Poland’s Hubert Hurkacz.

In the WTA draw, world No. 1 Iga Swiatek changed her dress after losing the opening set and came back a new woman, defeating China’s Zheng Qinwen 3-6, 6-1, 6-1.

ā€œMy coach told me a few weeks ago it might be a good idea to change clothes and reset,ā€ the Pole said.

ā€œI tried it and it worked, I got a different vibe in the second set — thank you, coach.ā€

Swiatek, who has spent 72 weeks on the top WTA ranking, called out what she termed ā€œhatersā€ on the Internet who criticize her every time she loses a set.

ā€œI feel it would be such a better place if we didn’t judge each other so quickly,ā€ she said. ā€œThe amount of hate and criticism that me and my team get after even losing a set is just ridiculous.ā€

Wimbledon champion Marketa Vondrousova beat Sloane Stephens 7-5, 6-3 to reach the quarter-finals of an event in which she was 0-3 in prior appearances.

ā€œIt has been really special this week. I came here not knowing how I would play,ā€ she said. ā€œIt’s such a pleasure to be back as Wimbledon champion.ā€

Third-seeded Jessica Pegula, last week’s Montreal winner, was defeated in a match which concluded in light drizzle, losing 6-4, 6-0 to Marie Bouzkova. Fourth seed Elena Rybakina joined number eight Maria Sakkari in exiting.

Rybakina, last year’s Wimbledon champion retired at 6-4, 2-5 against Italian qualifier Jasmine Paulini while Sakkari went down 6-3, 2-6, 6-3 to Czech Karolina Muchova.

Croatia’s Donna Vekic was forced to retire with viral illness, handing a 5-2 decision to fifth seed and three-time Grand Slam finalist Ons Jabeur.