Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

More from Key Biscayne.

- By Steven Wine

KEY BISCAYNE — Half an hour after Sloane Stephens won her hometown tournament, she lingered on the confetti-covered court, posing for photos and signing autographs as if reluctant to leave Key Biscayne.

The Miami Open is moving, and Stephens became the final women’s champion on the picturesqu­e island by beating Jelena Ostapenko 7-6 (5), 6-1 Saturday.

Stephens, a Plantation native, played on Key Biscayne as a junior. That made the reigning U.S. Open champion especially eager to win the Miami Open before it moves north next year to Hard Rock Stadium.

“This place is pretty special to me,” Stephens said. “I’m definitely happy I could be the last person to win here. I’ve had some amazing experience­s here, and I’ll definitely miss it.”

Even so, Stephens was surprised that fans jeered during the trophy ceremony when tournament director James Blake mentioned the relocation.

“I was kind of confused by that,” she said. “I’m excited for the move. I think it will be great for the tournament — a new facility. I’m sure it will be beautiful.”

Mike and Bob Bryan won their 115th doubles title and their biggest in nearly two years when they beat Andrey Rublev and Karen Khachanov 4-6, 7-6 (5), 10-4.

John Isner tries for the biggest title of his career today when he faces Alexander Zverev in the men’s final. Isner could give the United States its first sweep at Key Biscayne since 2004, when the champions were Andy Roddick and Serena Williams.

The No. 13-seeded Stephens won with defense, repeatedly extending rallies until Ostapenko would make a mistake. Ostapenko had a 25-6 advantage in winners but committed 48 unforced errors to 21 by Stephens.

“She was moving really well,” Ostapenko said. “Sometimes I was going for an aggressive winner when I didn’t have to. I was sometimes missing shots I was normally making this week.”

Stephens was the surprise champion at the U.S. Open last September, and then lost her next eight matches, including the first two of 2018. But she shook her slump on Key Biscayne, improved to 6-0 in finals and will break into the top 10 for first time next week at No. 9.

“It’s incredible,” Stephens said. “I knew if I just got back to the drawing board I would be OK. I wasn’t expecting a title here. I just wanted to make sure I got my game back where I wanted to be.”

Stephens and the No. 6-seeded Ostapenko, last year’s French Open champion, battled almost exclusivel­y from the baseline, and the quality of play was often ragged. The finalists traded breaks for four games, and Stephens was broken twice more when serving for the first set.

She wobbled again leading 6-2 in the pivotal tiebreaker, committing unforced errors to squander consecutiv­e set points. But Ostapenko dumped an easy backhand into the net to lose the set, and the Latvian appeared to tire after that.

Stephens said she benefited from a pep talk by her coach after the opening set.

“I was a little nervous, and it was showing in my game,” she said. “My feet weren’t moving, and I wasn’t swinging through the ball. I just needed a little bit of a reminder to just go for it if I wanted to take the title.”

Stephens swept the final six games, clinching one with the shot of the match. Ostapenko chased down a drop shot and punched it back, but Stephens stretched near the baseline to hit a forehand volley cross-court for a winner.

That made it 5-1, and on championsh­ip point moments later, Ostapenko sent a forehand wide. Stephens celebrated by pumping both fists to cheers from her hometown crowd.

She enjoyed the support of fans and family and more.

“Half the people I didn’t even know,” she said. “It was amazing they came out and supported me. It makes you feel good.”

Isner vs. Zverev

After John Isner clinched his berth in the Miami Open final, he came over the top one last time, throwing a celebrator­y punch at a speed to match his thunderous serve.

The towering American moved one step closer to the most prestigiou­s title of his 14-year career by beating a weary Juan Martin del Potro 6-1, 7-6 (2) in Friday’s semifinals.

“I’m playing the best tennis I’ve played in a very, very long time,” said Isner, 32. “And I’m so happy to be doing it here.”

Dominating with his serve and aggressive baseline strokes, the 6-foot-10 Isner ended a 15-match winning streak for del Potro, who won Indian Wells two weeks ago by beating Roger Federer in the final. The toll of so many matches showed, and Isner was the better player from start to finish.

Seeded No. 14, Isner is 0-3 in ATP Masters 1000 finals. His opponent today will be No. 4 Alexander Zverev of Germany, who beat No. 16 Pablo Carreno Busta of Spain 7-6 (4), 6-2.

Zverev, 20, has won two Masters 1000 titles, both in 2017.

Isner raced to a 3-0 lead against del Potro, finished with 13 aces, never faced a deuce point on his serve and was at his best when closing out the victory.

He smacked consecutiv­e aces to reach 6-all, and made all four first serves in the tiebreaker, including aces of 138 and 139 mph. He also hit two drop volleys for winners in the tiebreaker, with the second coming on match point.

Del Potro, seeded No. 5, was the fan favorite thanks to South Florida’s large Latin population, and a flagwaving, ole-singing, nearcapaci­ty crowd tried to inspire a rally from the Argentine after he fell behind.

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY/AP ?? “This place is pretty special to me,” Sloane Stephens said of Key Biscayne. “I’m definitely happy I could be the last person to win here.”
LYNNE SLADKY/AP “This place is pretty special to me,” Sloane Stephens said of Key Biscayne. “I’m definitely happy I could be the last person to win here.”

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