Orlando Sentinel

Barty beats Bouchard in 3 sets

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KEY BISCAYNE — Ashleigh Barty stretched her winning streak to eight matches by handing former top-5 player Eugenie Bouchard a fourth consecutiv­e loss, 6-4, 5-7, 6-3 in the first round of the Miami Open on Wednesday.

Barty claimed the last three games of the match between two past junior Wimbledon champions whose careers have both been filled with ups and downs.

Barty, a 20-year-old Australian, was off the tour for about 11⁄2 years, including a stint playing cricket.

But she is back and better than ever now, ranked a career-high 91st after winning her first WTA title as a qualifier at Kuala Lumpur.

Bouchard, a 23-year-old Canadian, has exited in the first round of each of her past three tournament­s and is now ranked 56th after reaching No. 5 in 2014, the year she was the runner-up at Wimbledon and reached the semifinals at two other Grand Slam tournament­s.

Barty could have ended this match much sooner because three times she was a point from serving for it in the second set. But Bouchard fended off those chances, then took that set by breaking in the last game. At 3-all, Barty broke with a forehand winner.

She then saved a pair of break points to go up 5-3, and broke again when Bouchard double-faulted twice in a row to set up three match points. Barty converted on the second when Bouchard sent a forehand long.

Next up for Barty is an all-Australian match against 2011 U.S. Open champion Sam Stosur, who is seeded 14th.

In other first-round action Wednesday at the hard-court tournament, American wild-card entry Bethanie Mattek-Sands defeated Katerina Siniakova 6-3, 4-6, 6-4 in nearly 21⁄2 hours and American qualifier Madison Brengle got past Jelena Ostapenko 6-3, 3-6, 6-2.

An iguana also caused quite a racket by perching atop a scoreboard and then scurrying across the court. The rather large reptile showed up at Court 1 midway through the final set of Jiri Vesely's 6-7 (5), 6-3, 7-5 victory over Tommy Haas on Wednesday, delaying play for several minutes. At first, they tried to continue with the match. But action was halted as attempts were made to remove the iguana. Haas wandered over with a cellphone and snapped a selfie with the critter. Eventually, someone used a towel to grab the critter by the tail and carried him away.

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