Medvedev dominates Opelka to win ATP Toronto Masters

Daniil Medvedev with the trophy after defeating Reilly Opelka in the finals of the National Bank Open at Aviva Centre. (Dan Hamilton-USA TODAY Sports)
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Updated 16 August 2021
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Medvedev dominates Opelka to win ATP Toronto Masters

  • Medvedev became the first Russian to win a Canadian trophy since Marat Safin 21 years ago

TORONTO, Canada: Daniil Medvedev neutralized the attack of American serving giant Reilly Opelka on Sunday, dominating 6-4, 6-3 to win the ATP Toronto Masters.
The world number two Russian needed just 87 minutes, limiting his 2.11m opponent to just eight aces and breaking him three times while saving all four break points he faced.
Medvedev, aided by 34 unforced errors from Opelka, became the first Russian to win a Canadian trophy since Marat Safin 21 years ago.
The winner was playing a fifth career final at the Masters 1000 level.
“When I was starting I could barely have dreamed of a Masters final,” he said. Now I’ve played five of them and won four.
“I’m just happy,” he added. “I want to achieve more, I want to play better.”
Medvedev, who will be the top seed at next week’s Cincinnati Masters, the final major tuneup for the US Open that starts August 30, had praise for Opelka, the US number one who is ranked 32nd in the world.
“It was a great week for him, he fought to the end,” Medvedev said. Playing a first Masters final is never easy. My first was in Canada (Montreal, 2019) and I won just three games,” he recalled of a title tilt against Rafael Nadal.

 


MESIF 2026 lands in Riyadh, driving future of sports investment

Updated 8 sec ago
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MESIF 2026 lands in Riyadh, driving future of sports investment

  • Senior sports leaders to gather in capital as 2-day Middle East Sports Investment Forum focuses on performance, football, long-term sporting legacy

RIYADH: Riyadh will host the Middle East Sports Investment Forum on Jan. 27-28, bringing together senior decision-makers from across football, major events, infrastructure, media and investment as the region sharpens its focus on high-performance sport and long-term legacy.

The forum will examine how the Middle East’s rapidly expanding sports sector is shifting from headline events to sustainable systems, with discussions set to cover elite facilities, athlete pathways, commercial growth and fan engagement.

Confirmed speakers include Abdullah Al-Rasheed, director of investment enablement at the Saudi Ministry of Sport; Hani Ballan, CEO of the Qatar Stars League; Nader Nasser Hamood Al-Rawahy, operations excellence lead at Oman Vision 2040; Nasser Al‑Khori, executive director of the Generation Amazing Foundation; Haya Sawan, managing partner at Motion Academy; and Marwan Albazie, deputy CEO of the Islamic Solidarity Games Local Organizing Committee.

These leaders bring expertise in government policy, league development, social impact, and investment strategy, offering insights into both the commercial and societal potential of sport across the Middle East.

Football is expected to feature prominently, with a dedicated session on the future of the game in the region exploring performance, engagement and commercial strategy as Saudi Arabia continues to build its global sporting profile.

Infrastructure and major events will also be in focus, as industry leaders assess how world-class venues and international competitions can drive economic impact while supporting athlete development and community participation.

The forum concludes with a tour of Kingdom Arena, underlining Riyadh’s ambition to position its venues as year-round performance hubs rather than event-only destinations.