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Aus Open PIX: Swiatek crushes Lys; Keys stuns Rybakina

Last updated on: January 20, 2025 16:24 IST

Images from Day 9 of the 2025 Australian Open in Melbourne on Monday.

Iga Swiatek

IMAGE: Poland's Iga Swiatek in action during her fourth round match against Germany's Eva Lys. Photograph: Jaimi Joy/Reuters

A ruthless Iga Swiatek slammed the door shut on German lucky loser Eva Lys with a 6-0, 6-1 win on Monday to breeze into the quarter-finals of the year's opening Grand Slam for the second time.

Five-times Grand Slam champion Swiatek came into the match having lost only 10 games in the tournament and the Pole sent out another warning to her title rivals by dismantling Lys in 59 minutes on Rod Laver Arena.

"Great, that was my first night session and I'm glad I have the chance to play on Rod Laver Arena," Swiatek said.

"I enjoyed it, which is the most important thing ... I'm still 23, so there's a lot to improve. I don't feel I'm at my peak. But these matches give me a lot of confidence.

"We don't know what's going to happen in the future, maybe I'll be better. I'm so glad I was able to play my game ... I'm feeling really comfortable and we're going well."

One of several searing forehand winners helped 2022 semi-finalist Swiatek break Lys for the first time and the 23-year-old did not take her foot of the gas pedal as she closed out the first set in 24 minutes.

World number 128 Lys had enjoyed a historic run after she replaced Anna Kalinskaya in the main draw following a loss in the qualifying event but there was only more suffering in store for the Kyiv-born player.

Lys managed a smile and pumped her fist when she went 40-30 up after conceding the opening three games and soaked up the loud applause after getting on the board to ensure she would avoid the dreaded double bagel.

Swiatek broke for the fifth time after a six-deuce game and served out in style to book a last-eight meeting with Emma Navarro or Daria Kasatkina.

Keys marches into quarters

Madison Keys

IMAGE: Madison Keys celebrates winning her fourth round match against Kazakhstan's Elena Rybakina at the Australian Open on Monday. Photograph: Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters

American Madison Keys upset sixth seed Elena Rybakina 6-3, 1-6, 6-3 in a roller-coaster match at Margaret Court Arena to march into the quarter-finals of the Australian Open and extend her win streak to nine matches this year.

Adelaide Open champion Keys had lost to the Kazakh in their last two encounters but was well in control for most of the last 16 tie, barring a rough patch in the second set when she lost four straight games.

Madison Keys

IMAGE: 19th seed Madison Keys chalked up her third win over a top-10 player this month. Photograph: Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters

Rybakina seemed to be struggling with a lower back injury that had affected her in the third round and Keys was able to play aggressively to neutralise her big serve and take control of the rallies.

"Her serve is such a weapon, so I knew that if I could just try to make at least some of her service games a little bit competitive, then I had a chance," said the 19th seed, who chalked up her third win over a top-10 player this month.

"So I was basically just trying to make anything that I could get my racket on back over the net, which worked sometimes."

Madison Keys

IMAGE: Madison Keys is congratulated by Elena Rybakina after winning the fourth round match. Photograph: Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters

The decider was neck-and-neck early on at 3-3 before Keys moved up a gear and sealed her spot in the next round with a searing cross-court winner on her second match point.

She will next play Ukraine's Elina Svitolina, who beat Veronika Kudermetova 6-4, 6-1 earlier on Monday.

Svitolina rallies from sloppy start

Elina Svitolina

IMAGE: Elina Svitolina celebrates winning her fourth round match against Russia's Veronika Kudermetova. Photographs: Jaimi Joy/Reuters

Ukraine's Elina Svitolina recovered from a sub-par first 20 minutes to charge past Russian Veronika Kudermetova 6-4, 6-1 on Monday and reach the last eight of the Australian Open for the third time.

The 30-year-old was 4-1 down in the first set but upped her aggression to rattle off the next five games and put one foot in the quarter-finals at a Grand Slam for the 12th time.

Kudermetova had a medical treatment at the end of the first set but could not stop the rot as Svitolina broke for 3-1 in the second stanza with a volley at the net.

The Ukrainian was by now charged with confidence and soon set up a tie against six-seeded Kazakh Elena Rybakina or American Madison Keys by sending another thunderous backhand winner down the Rod Laver Arena court.

"I was just trying to fight, it's the only thing I can do when things are not going my way," she said of her poor start to the match.

"I'm really happy I could fight my way back into the match and win in straight sets."

Elina Svitolina

There was no handshake at the net as Svitolina continued the boycott of the post-match tradition which Ukrainian players have maintained when facing Russians and Belarusians since the 2022 invasion of their country.

Svitolina, who is 7-0 against Russian players since the invasion and wrote the message "the Spirit of Ukraine" on the camera before she left the court, last reached the quarter-finals at Melbourne Park in 2019.

 

"I feel it was a lifetime ago," she said "To come back again and again, after the pregnancy, after the surgery, starting from zero, it's not easy, I can tell you.

"For me, it's a really amazing feeling to go deep in this kind of tournament, in the Grand Slams."

Svitolina said she would be on Margaret Court Arena later on Monday to cheer on her husband Gael Monfils in his fourth-round tie against American Ben Shelton.

"Playing the way he's playing now is special," she said of the 38-year-old Frenchman.

"We are witnessing something really nice."

Source: REUTERS
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