Malta Independent

Jabeur, Bencic to square off for Charleston Open title

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No. 4 seed Ons Jabeur continued her run of success the past two years at the Credit One Charleston Open, overcoming Amanda Anisimova 2-6, 6-1, 6-4 on Saturday to reach the championsh­ip.

Jabeur of Tunisia will face Olympic gold medalist Belinda Bencic of Switzerlan­d, a 6-4, 6-3 winner of Ekaterina Alexandrov­a.

For Jabeur, it was just more good play on the green clay surface at Charleston. She reached the semifinals of this event last year. A week later in a second tournament at the facility, Jabeur got a step further before losing in the final.

Now, Jabeur has another chance of gaining her first win here and her second on the WTA tour.

Jabeur had breezed through her first three matches without dropping a set. But Anisimova, the 20year-old seeded 15th, pounced quickly on Jabeur's mistakes to grab the first set. After Jabeur roared back to take the second set, Anisimova opened a 3-1 lead in the decider.

Once more, Jabeur dug in to win five of the last six games and move forward. Jabeur and Bencic have only played once, the Swiss woman winning last year on the red clay of Madrid when Jabeur retired in the second set.

In Charleston, Bencic, ran off to a 4-1 lead, but Alexandrov­a won the next three games to tie things. That's when Bencic called on her steady serve and solid groundstro­kes to close out the set, breaking Alexandrov­a's serve to grab the lead before holding serve to end it.

Bencic won the final three games of the second to close out the match. She closed it with her fifth ace to reach her 14th WTA final. Bencic will look for her sixth career tour title.

Bencic said she started well and was surprised that Alexandrov­a tied it.

It hasn't been an easy path to the finals for Bencic at the year's opening clay-court event. She was two points away from eliminatio­n by China's Xiyu Wang in her first match here before winning a second-set tiebreak and rallying for a three-set victory.

Bencic lost the first set to No. 2 Paula Badosa of Spain in the quarterfin­als and again used a secondset tiebreak win on the way to her first victory over Badosa in four tries.

Bencic feels comfortabl­e and confident heading to the finals, planning on a good dinner and a good rest. "I think it's not going to be worse than before the Olympic final," she said. "That was a sleepless night."

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