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Aussie No.1 falls early on grass and AO champ follows

Aussie No.1 falls early on grass and AO champ follows

Perth Now3 days ago

Daria Kasatkina's poor start to the grasscourt season has continued with a first round defeat to Wang Xinyu in the Berlin Open.
The 6-3 6-2 loss followed a first round loss to Briton Sonay Kartal at Queen's Club last week.
World No.16 Daria Kasatkina's baseline game was matched by the 49th-ranked Chinese blow for blow and she was beaten in 67 minutes.
The Australian No.1's exit was not the only surprise in Germany with Naomi Osaka and Madison Keys also beaten.
Four-time major winner Osaka tumbled out after Russia's Liudmila Samsonova battled from a set down to win 3-6 7-6 (7-3) 6-4.
It was a disappointing start to the former world No.1's grass season, with Wimbledon in just under two weeks. The 27-year-old Japanese had won her first title in May in almost two years following a maternity break.
Current Australian Open champion and seventh seed Keys also suffered an early exit, with Czech Marketa Vondrousova, the 2023 Wimbledon champion, moving into the next round with a 7-5 7-6 (8-6) win.
Vondrousova, who had been out for three months earlier this year with a shoulder injury, will face Diana Shnaider in the round of 16 after the 21-year-old Russian overran Croatia's Donna Vekic 6-2 6-4.
with Reuters

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The 23-year-old was fully tested by world No.32 Nakashima and his powerful game began to misfire as he lost the second set on the Andy Murray Arena. But Draper settled back into the groove in the deciding set and broke serve in the seventh game with one of his trademark forehand pile drivers. The left-hander had to save a break point when serving for the match at 5-4 but recovered to seal victory and set up a clash with Czech Jiri Lehecka, the conqueror of Alex de Minaur who had earlier on Friday beaten Britain's Jacob Fearnley 7-5 6-2. "It means the world to me to reach the semi-finals here," said Draper, bidding to become the first British player to win the title at the prestigious west London club since Murray won for a record fifth time in 2016. "I think there's going to be an even bigger buzz at the weekend and that will give me more energy to keep progressing." 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The 23-year-old was fully tested by world No.32 Nakashima and his powerful game began to misfire as he lost the second set on the Andy Murray Arena. But Draper settled back into the groove in the deciding set and broke serve in the seventh game with one of his trademark forehand pile drivers. The left-hander had to save a break point when serving for the match at 5-4 but recovered to seal victory and set up a clash with Czech Jiri Lehecka, the conqueror of Alex de Minaur who had earlier on Friday beaten Britain's Jacob Fearnley 7-5 6-2. "It means the world to me to reach the semi-finals here," said Draper, bidding to become the first British player to win the title at the prestigious west London club since Murray won for a record fifth time in 2016. "I think there's going to be an even bigger buzz at the weekend and that will give me more energy to keep progressing." 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