Australian Open day one review

Sloane Stephens of the US lost to Zhang Shuai of China at the Australian Open. (REUTERS)
Updated 15 January 2018
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Australian Open day one review

Arab News takes a look at how all the other big names did on day one in Melbourne — who lived to fight another day and who has already been forced to pack their bags?

GREGOR DIMITROV (3) STAYING: Many are predicting this could be the tournament which sees the Bulgarian make his Grand Slam breakthrough. He started the event well enough with a simple 6-3, 6-2, 6-1 victory over Australian qualifier Dennis Novak. Not a bad way to get your title tilt started.

NICK KYRGIOS (17) STAYING: The Aussie ace has been in good form recently and kept the outbursts, for which he in famous, to a minimum. Has all the ability in the world and that was evident during his easy 6-1, 6-2, 6-4 rout of Brazilian Rogerio Dutra Silva.

MARIN CILIC (6) STAYING: The big-serving Croatian had a bit of work to do as needed four sets to see off Canadian qualifier Vasek Pospil 6-2, 6-2, 4-6, 7-6. He has one Grand Slam to his name (the US Open in 2014) but will need to improve if he is to have a chance of adding a second here.

ELINA SVITOLINA (4) STAYING: One of the favorites to win in Melbourne and while any likelihood of he lifting the trophy is hard to gauge from her 6-3, 6-2 win over qualifier Ivan Jorovic, the Ukrainian certainly looked to be in fine form.

JELENA OSTAPENKO (7) STAYING: The French Open winner was a big name not to fall at the first hurdle, she easily beat Francesca Schiavone 6-1, 6-4 on the Rod Laver Arena. The Latvian is definitely one to watch.

KEVIN ANDERSON (11) PACKING HIS BAGS: The big-hitting South African’s last Grand Slam match was the US Open final, however, that counted for little as the 11th seed was given his marching orders by world No. 49 Kyle Edmund, 6-7, 6-3, 3-6 6-3, 6-4.

SLOANE STEPHENS (13) PACKING HER BAGS: The US Open champion had a match to forget as she was sensationally dumped out of the tournament by China’s world No. 34 Zhang Shuai. The American lost 2-6 7-6, 6-2 in one hour and 58 minutes in Melbourne.

COCO VANDEWEGHE (10) PACKING HER BAGS: Last year saw the American go from strength to strength and talked about as a future Grand Slam champion. She will not, however, land that first major in Melbourne as she was shocked Timea Babos 7-6, 6-2. The math will be remember for Vandeweghe’s outburst over a shortage of bananas — all in all it was a bad day for the American.

DOMINIKA CIBULKOVA (24) PACKING HER BAGS: The 2014 Australian Open finalist lost to Kaia Kanep. The Slovak endured a poor 2017 and here year got off to the worst possible start with this first-round exit in Melbourne, losing 6-2, 6-2.


Real Madrid victory in Super Cup semi-final sets up fourth consecutive El Clásico in Saudi Arabia

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Real Madrid victory in Super Cup semi-final sets up fourth consecutive El Clásico in Saudi Arabia

  • Early Valverde rocket set the tone for a physical encounter in front of a packed Al-Inma Stadium
  • 55,651 fans attended the match, topping Barcelona-Athletic Bilbao’s crowd by more than 5,000

JEDDAH: While Wednesday saw a sea of blue and red take over Al-Inma Stadium, Thursday belonged almost entirely to the colour white. The second semi-final of the 2026 Spanish Super Cup pitted Madrid Derby rivals Real Madrid and Atlético Madrid against each other in a fiercely contested encounter that ignited within the opening two minutes and ended with a 2-1 victory to Real Madrid.

In the first minute of the game, Real Madrid won a free kick from a position that appeared harmless, but Federico Valverde had other ideas. The Uruguayan unleashed a thunderous long-range strike that flew into the net, sending the stadium into raptures almost immediately.

Despite the early breakthrough, Real Madrid did not dominate proceedings. Atlético controlled much of the shot count, pushing relentlessly as they attempted to overcome the forged “home” advantage enjoyed by their city rivals in Jeddah.

That advantage was not driven solely by Saudi supporters. Ahead of kick-off, official broadcaster Thmanyah Sports got hold of a Real Madrid fan from Iraq who praised the organisation of the event and thanked Saudi Arabia for providing fans from across the region the opportunity to watch their team live.

Atlético didn’t plan on sending those fans home with a smile. They forced Thibaut Courtois into action on multiple occasions, with his save from a corner mid-way into the first half proving key in preserving Real’s lead.

Real did get close to doubling their advantage in the 27th minute when Rodrygo found himself through on goal, executing a trademark Ronaldo chop to beat his marker before being denied by Jan Oblak.

Atlético resumed their push after the break. In the 49th minute, they looked to find Julián Álvarez with a dangerous cross, but Antonio Rüdiger reacted sharply to step in and clear.

Once again, it was Real Madrid’s individual quality that made the difference. Valverde split the defence with a perfectly weighted through ball, releasing Rodrygo, who calmly slotted past Oblak in the 55th minute.

Atlético responded with increased vigour almost immediately. A slick move down the right flank culminated in a cross from Giuliano Simeone, which Alexander Sørloth powered home beyond Raúl Asencio in the 58th minute to bring the contest back to life.

As Atlético pushed for an equaliser, the Real Madrid fans rallied behind their team with chants familiar to Jeddah. Borrowing from one of Al-Ahli’s most popular anthems — one that engulfed Middle Eastern football in recent years — the crowd sang in unison: “For Real we came, from every city.”

Atlético were not fazed, as they came agonisingly close to levelling soon after. Antoine Griezmann produced a spectacular overhead kick from close range, only for Courtois to make another vital save. Moments later, Marcos Llorente broke through on the right once more, but his effort drifted wide.

Llorente continued to threaten, curling another attempt — this time from outside the box — but once again failed to find the target as Atlético searched desperately for a way back into the game.

Ultimately, Real Madrid managed to emerge unscathed, as they held on for the 2-1 victory.

Sunday will see the Al-Inma Stadium host once again, as Barcelona and Real Madrid face off in the fourth consecutive El Clásico Spanish Super Cup final in Saudi Arabia. Barcelona won the first encounter in 2023, followed by a 4-1 victory by Real in 2024, before Barcelona rallied to a 5-2 victory in the 2025 edition.