The Asian Age

Fluent start for Osaka

- — AFP

Beijing, Oct. 1: US Open champion Naomi Osaka needed just 68 minutes to power into round two of the China Open with a dominant performanc­e over Kazakh qualifier Zarina Diyas on Monday.

Also safely through on Beijing’s outdoor hard courts is another reigning Grand Slam champion, Australian Open winner Caroline Wozniacki.

With world number one Simona Halep retiring from the tournament with a back injury and Serena Williams absent, Osaka and Wozniacki are among the favourites.

The Japanese Osaka, who is enjoying a breakthrou­gh season after stunning Williams to win in New York, breezed past a bewildered Diyas 6- 4, 6- 3.

Osaka, a rising star of tennis at just 20, plays unseeded American Danielle Collins next.

Former world number one Wozniacki was similarly emphatic with a 6- 2, 6- 3 demolition of Switzerlan­d’s Belinda Bencic.

The world no. 2 Dane was never in serious trouble against 41st- ranked Bencic, although it has not always been like that down the years, Bencic winning four of their past six meetings.

Wozniacki will play Croatia’s unseeded Petra Martic in round two.

It was a case of seventh time lucky for another former number one, Garbine Muguruza, as the Spaniard set up a meeting with Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus.

Muguruza, who is now down in 15th in the world, made a fast start as she hammered Ekaterina Makarova 6- 0, 6- 4, making the seventh match point count against the Russian.

Elise Mertens, the 15th seed from Belgium, suffered a surprise defeat to home player Zhang Shuai, the Chinese winning 6- 1, 36, 6- 3.

‘ US OPEN TITLE NOT THE

HAPPIEST MEMORY’ Osaka made the startling admission on Monday that winning the US Open was “bitterswee­t” and “not the happiest memory” and revealed that she has been trying to forget about the career- defining victory.

The 20- year- old rising star from Japan stunned Serena Williams last month in a tempestuou­s final in which the American called chair umpire Carlos Ramos “a thief” and later accused him of sexism.

“There’s a lot of stuff I want to say about how I felt and whatever,” the world number six said.

Williams’s high- profile meltdown made headlines over Osaka’s feat in becoming the first Japanese to win a Grand Slam, although Osaka has declined to point the finger at the American great.

“For me, I don’t know, I don’t know, the memory of the US Open is a little bit bitterswee­t,” Osaka said.

“Right after, the day after, I really didn’t want to think about it because it wasn’t necessaril­y the happiest memory for me.

“I just sort of wanted to move on at that point.”

 ?? — AFP ?? Japan’s Naomi Osaka en route to her 6- 4, 6- 3 win over Zarina Diyas of Kazakhstan in their China Open first round match in Beijing on Monday.
— AFP Japan’s Naomi Osaka en route to her 6- 4, 6- 3 win over Zarina Diyas of Kazakhstan in their China Open first round match in Beijing on Monday.

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