Teens oust defending champ Osaka, No. 3 Tsitsipas at US Open

1 / 2
Leylah Annie Fernandez of Canada serves against Naomi Osaka of Japan on day five of the 2021 US Open tennis tournament. (Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports)
2 / 2
Carlos Alcaraz (front) celebrates after beating Stefanos Tsitsipas during the third round of the US Open on Sept. 3, 2021, in New York. (AP)
Short Url
Updated 04 September 2021
Follow

Teens oust defending champ Osaka, No. 3 Tsitsipas at US Open

  • Canadian left-hander Leylah Fernandez beat Osaka 5-7, 7-6 (7/2), 6-4
  • Alcaraz became the youngest man to beat a top-3 player at the US Open since the rankings began in 1973

NEW YORK: Defending champion Naomi Osaka of Japan and Greek third seed Stefanos Tsitsipas were both ousted from the US Open by 18-year-olds in epic stunners on Friday at Arthur Ashe Stadium.
Four-time Grand Slam champion Osaka was shocked by Canadian left-hander Leylah Fernandez 5-7, 7-6 (7/2), 6-4 after Spain’s Carlos Alcaraz upset French Open runner-up Tsitsipas 6-3, 4-6, 7-6 (7/2), 0-6, 7-6 (7/5).
“Honestly the Alcaraz match gave me motivation and gave me the energy to do the same,” Fernandez said. “I saw his match and I saw the way he won and I’m like ‘I’m going to do that next now.’“
Alcaraz is the youngest man in the US Open fourth round since 17-year-old American Michael Chang in 1989 and at any Slam since Ukraine’s Andrei Medvedev in the 1992 French Open.
“Incredible. Incredible feeling for me,” Alcaraz said. “This victory means a lot to me. It’s the best match of my career, the best win.
“To beat Stefanos Tsitsipas is a dream come true and to win here is even more special for me.”
Osaka, who had won her prior 16 Grand Slam matches, was foiled in a bid for her third US Open crown in four years and the first back-to-back titles since Serena Williams in 2014.
She also had a major meltdown on court during the final moments of the second set after she was unable to hold serve for the victory.
“From the very beginning, right before the match, I knew I was able to win,” Fernandez said. “Thanks to New York fans. They helped me get the win.”
Osaka, who hadn’t played since Monday thanks to a second-round walkover, took the first set in 37 minutes on her sixth ace.
But Osaka was broken in the 12th game of the second set, an errant forehand sending her to a tie-breaker.
That began a sequence of repeated racquet smashing by Osaka as she was humbled in the tie-break to force a third set.
“I wanted to stay on court a little longer,” Fernandez said. “One hour was just not enough for me.”
Fernandez, the daughter of an Ecuadoran father and Filipino-Canadian mother who turns 19 on Monday, hit a forehand winner to break Osaka to start the third set.
Osaka saved two break points to hold in the third game and from there both held to the finish, which came after two hours and four minutes, sending Fernandez against German 16th seed Angelique Kerber in her first Grand Slam fourth round appearance.
“It’ll be a battle,” Fernandez said. “We’re just going to have fun. I’ll put on a show like I did tonight.”
Fernandez, who won her first WTA title in March at Monterrey, had never beaten so high-ranked a rival as third-rated Osaka and the same was true for Alcaraz when he sent home the men’s world number three.

Alcaraz became the youngest man to beat a top-3 player at the US Open since the rankings began in 1973.
World number 55 Alcaraz next faces 141st-ranked German qualifier Peter Gojowczyk, who ousted Swiss Henri Laaksonen 3-6, 6-3, 6-1, 6-4.
Alcaraz won his first ATP title at Umag in July, becoming the tour’s youngest champion since 18-year-old Kei Nishikori in 2008 at Delray Beach.
The teen nicknamed “Next Nadal” was the crowd darling at Arthur Ashe Stadium, roars erupting when he blasted 33 winners past Tsitsipas.
“Without this crowd I haven’t the possibility to win the match,” Alcaraz said. “I was down at the beginning of the fourth set so thank you to the crowd for pushing me up in the fifth.”
Tsitsipas opened the final tie-break with an ace but Alcaraz jumped ahead 5-2 and 6-3 before finishing matters after four hours and seven minutes with a forehand winner. He collapsed to the court on his back to celebrate.
“It’s one of those matches where you feel like you’re in control and it doesn’t go your way,” Tsitsipas said. “It’s kind of bitter.”
Russian second seed Daniil Medvedev, the 2019 US Open and 2021 Australian Open runner-up, beat Spain’s 74th-ranked Pablo Andujar 6-0, 6-4, 6-3. He’s next face British 24th seed Daniel Evans.
“I was playing good and really happy with my level,” Medvedev said. “The main positive was to win in three sets.”
 


Al-Ahli confirm Asian Champions League Elite progress with emphatic 5-0 win over Al-Shorta

Updated 23 December 2025
Follow

Al-Ahli confirm Asian Champions League Elite progress with emphatic 5-0 win over Al-Shorta

  • Al-Ahli are joined in the next round by Tractor, who claimed ‌a 2-1 win over Qatar’s Al-Duhail ‍through a late goal by ‍Amirhossein Hosseinzadeh
  • The first eight finishers in the league phases in east and west Asia advance to the round of ‌16, which will be played in March, with the quarterfinals, semifinals and final in Saudi Arabia in April

BAGHDAD: Defending champions Al-Ahli cruised to a 5-0 win over Al-Shorta in Baghdad on Monday as the Saudi Pro League side confirmed their progress to the knockout rounds ​of the Asian Champions League Elite alongside Iran’s Tractor FC.

Goals from Roger Ibanez, Ivan Toney, Galeno, Saleh Abu Al-Shamat and Ziyad Al-Johani sealed a comfortable win for Matthias Jaissle’s side, who moved on to 13 points from six matches to guarantee a top-eight finish in the 12-team standings.

“We did well today and we go home with three points,” ‌Ibanez said. “That’s ‌the important part.”

Ibanez gave Al-Ahli the ‌lead ⁠when ​he converted ‌Toney’s cut-back in the 30th minute and the former Brentford striker doubled the lead when he raced onto a pass through the middle by Galeno soon after the restart.

Galeno converted from a tight angle and Al-Shamat and Al-Johani netted in the closing stages as Al-Ahli bounced back from a surprise loss to Sharjah ⁠FC last month.

Al-Ahli are joined in the next round by Tractor, who claimed ‌a 2-1 win over Qatar’s Al-Duhail ‍through a late goal by ‍Amirhossein Hosseinzadeh.

Benjamin Bourigeaud had given Al-Duhail a 35th-minute lead from ‍the penalty spot but Shojae Khalilzadeh levelled the scores and Hosseinzadeh hit the winner two minutes into stoppage time.

Tractor moved on to 14 points and second in the table behind Al-Hilal who recorded ​a sixth consecutive win in the competition with a 1-0 victory over Sharjah in the UAE.

Simone ⁠Inzaghi’s side had already confirmed their place in the next phase and picked up another three points when Malcom struck with nine minutes remaining.

Al-Gharafa kept their qualification hopes alive through a 1-0 win over Al-Wahda from the UAE with Seydou Sano scoring an 87th-minute winner for the Qatari side.

Al-Gharafa climbed to six points and ninth in the table while Al-Wahda, who have qualified, dropped to fourth.

The first eight finishers in the league phases in east and west Asia advance to the round of ‌16, which will be played in March, with the quarteRfinals, semifinals and final in Saudi Arabia in April.