Osaka falls in Miami

Credit to Author: Tempo Online| Date: Sun, 24 Mar 2019 15:30:30 +0000

MIAMI (AFP) – Naomi Osaka crashed out of the third round of the WTA and ATP Miami Open on Saturday as Hsieh Su-Wei exacted revenge for a painful Australian Open defeat with a 4-6, 7-6 (7/4), 6-3 victory.

World number one Osaka had looked in little danger after winning the first set and moving a break ahead in the second.

But Taiwan’s Hsieh, who was a set and 4-1 up in Melbourne earlier this year before losing to the Japanese star in the third round, battled superbly.

Naomi Osaka of Japan reacts in her match against Su-Wei Hsieh of Taipei (JULIAN FINNEY / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / AFP)

Naomi Osaka of Japan reacts in her match against Su-Wei Hsieh of Taipei (JULIAN FINNEY / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / AFP)

‘‘This was a very emotional win for me,’’ said Hsieh, whose 39 winners were one less than her opponent. ‘‘Any time you beat one of the top players it is amazing.’’

It wasn’t the only shocker of the day, as Spanish veteran David Ferrer rallied to beat world number three Alexander Zverev 2-6, 7-5, 6-3 to reach the third round.

Ferrer, 36 and ranked 155th in the world, received a wild card into the tournament as he continues a limited schedule in a 2019 billed as his farewell tour.

Zverev, runner-up to John Isner here last year, coughed up 12 double faults as he suffered his second straight early exit in succession after a third-round departure at Indian Wells.

Osaka was coming off a fourth-round exit at Indian Wells, but Hsieh’s coach said her victory wasn’t all that surprising.

‘‘She has enough experience to stay strong and you saw that,’’ French coach Frederic Aniere, who has worked with Hsieh for the last two years and is also her boyfriend, told AFP.

‘‘Yes it’s huge, but for her it’s not a big surprise.’’

Osaka’s second-round win over Belgian Yanina Wickmayer on Friday saw a second set wobble from the two-time Grand Slam winning star and it was more of the same against Hsieh, who simply refused to give up the fight.

‘‘I was kind of immature because I was thinking too much, like everything was on my racquet,’’ admitted Osaka. ‘‘I got ahead of myself.

‘‘Of course I want to win every match and I think I have dealt with people always asking me if I am going to win because I have number one next to my name,’’ added the Japanese star.

‘‘I thought I was doing fine with that but I guess I am not.’’

The 33-year-old Hsieh will play Caroline Wozniacki in the fourth round of the women’s draw, which now looks wide open following Osaka’s defeat and former world number one Serena Williams’s surprise exit with a left knee injury.

The American has completed just seven matches this year, withdrawing in Indian Wells with illness midway through a round of 32 match with Garbine Muguruza.

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