Collins and Alexandrova set up semifinal showdown at WTA Miami Open

Ekaterina Alexandrova of Russia serves to Jessica Pegula during the Miami Open tennis tournament Wednesday in Miami Gardens, Fla. (AP)
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Updated 28 March 2024
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Collins and Alexandrova set up semifinal showdown at WTA Miami Open

  • Collins reached the semifinals of Miami six years ago as a qualifier and at 53rd is the lowest ranked semifinalist in the tournament
  • Thursday will see the opening semifinal with three-time Miami winner Victoria Azarenka up against fourth-seeded Elena Rybakina

MIAMI: Danielle Collins and Ekaterina Alexandrova will meet in the semifinals of the WTA Miami Open after victories in the last eight on Wednesday.

Collins powered into the last four with an emphatic 6-3, 6-2 win over France’s Caroline Garcia before Alexandrova emerged triumphant from a near two-hour three set battle with American fifth seed Jessica Pegula.

Thursday will see the opening semifinal with three-time Miami winner Victoria Azarenka up against fourth-seeded Elena Rybakina, the highest ranked player left in the tournament.

Garcia went into the match against Collins on the back of an upset win over third-seeded American Coco Gauff but was unable to get a foothold against the Floridian.

Garcia still appeared to be troubled by an injury to her right shoulder and received some treatment early in the second set.

Collins broke to go 5-3 up in the first set and then held serve for the set, then in the second set broke in the third game and never looked back as she wrapped up the win in one hour and 19 minutes.

Collins reached the semifinals of Miami six years ago as a qualifier and at 53rd is the lowest ranked semifinalist in the tournament.

The 30-year-old American is now 4-0 against Garcia and has yet to lose a set to the Frenchwoman but said the numbers didn’t tell the true story.

“I think against someone like Caro, it forces me to be more concentrated. I know I don’t want to give her an inch or she can get in there,” Collins said.

Garcia said she had felt the pace of back-to-back tournaments.

“It’s been a long two weeks for the body for me, between the back at the beginning and then the she shoulder which came back,” she told reporters, adding that the shoulder issue was a recurrence of a previous injury.

“I think it’s nothing too serious but (shoulder) is always quite problematic for a tennis player,” she said, before adding that Collins had played “an amazing match.”

Collins intends to retire at the end of the year but while she agreed she had a relaxed look to her play, she rejected the idea that it was a result of her impending departure from the sport.

“I think I feel pretty relaxed, but that could be due to a number of things. I’ve got a new hobby. I’m playing some more golf, running more, Pilates, all of these different things,” she said.

“My dog is here. I’m feeling relaxed because I get to be with him at night. I don’t know,” she said with a smile.

Alexandrova beat home favorite Pegula 3-6, 6-4, 6-4, showing plenty of grit in a third set where both players showed signs of fatigue.

Pegula broke to go 4-3 up in the first and broke again to clinch the set but the Russian fought back, breaking in the first game of the second set.

Again 14th seed Alexandrova broke early in the third but she let Pegula back into the set when she double-faulted on break point to leave the set balanced at 3-3.

The pair produced a fantastic rally in the subsequent game which Pegula was able to hold, but at 4-4, Alexandrova struck the decisive blow with Pegula going long on a back-hand return on the second break point.

The Russian held to grab the win and fell to her knees in joy at the result.

Alexandrova, who upset world number one Iga Swiatek in the previous round, said it was tough to break down Pegula’s gritty defense.

“I couldn’t understand how it was possible to return that ball it was always back. She was everywhere so I needed to do something,” she said. “I tried to wait and use any opportunities that I got.”

The win was Alexandrova’s third against a top five player this year and she said her success was the result of developing patience.

“You have to wait and wait and something is going to come — and then you have to use it,” she said.


Medvedev continues march towards landmark title, but faces top seed Auger-Aliassime in Friday’s final-four

Updated 26 February 2026
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Medvedev continues march towards landmark title, but faces top seed Auger-Aliassime in Friday’s final-four

  • Daniil Medvedev, 2023 Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships winner, has 22 career titles but all in different cities; the No. 3 seed is aiming to break that run this week
  • Top seed Felix Auger-Aliassime is just two wins away from avenging last year’s final defeat after hitting 16 aces to overcome No. 8 seed Jiri Lehecka in straight sets

DUBAI: Daniil Medvedev is a familiar figure chasing an unfamiliar milestone at this week’s Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships. The former World No. 1 is making his sixth appearance in the emirate, has 22 titles to his name, and a career built on consistency at the highest level. Yet he has never won an individual tournament twice.

That anomaly edged closer to ending on Thursday as the 30-year-old, attempting to repeat his 2023 title win, progressed to the semi-finals with remarkable ease. The No3 seed needed just 57 minutes to see off American Jenson Brooksby in straight sets 6-2, 6-1 in what will go down as one of the tournament’s most one-sided quarterfinals in recent memory.

Brooksby, ranked World No. 49, looked static at times as the former US Open champion overpowered him with raking forehands from the baseline and booming backhands that appeared laser-like in precision. It was only the second time the two have met, yet the first since Miami nearly four years ago when Medvedev also progressed in straight sets.

In Dubai, under a blazing afternoon sun on Centre Court, a pair of breaks saw the Russian close out the first set inside half-an-hour and after breaking again immediately in the second, he swept to victory without facing a single break point.

“I’m really happy with my level and feel I’m getting better and better every match,” said Medvedev, who will now compete in his 53rd hard-court semi-final – a record unmatched by any active player aside from another anomalous achiever, Novak Djokovic. “I feel like I play well in Dubai. I remember making semis one time here when, a little bit like Jenson today, I was not serving too well and had an issue with my shoulder. But I like to play here, I like the court, it plays pretty fast, which is not so common on the Tour right now, so it feels great and I’m looking forward to the semis.”

A second title of the season, to add to his Brisbane crown, is within reach, but more importantly perhaps is a second title in Dubai and the chance to finally break his run of never having successfully defended a trophy, despite the pile he has accumulated. Next in his path, however, is top seed Felix Auger-Aliassime, who was pushed to a second-set tiebreak before progressing past No. 8 seed Jiri Lehecka 6-3, 7-6 (2) with a pair of aces.

Hitting 16 aces in total, winning 83 per cent of points on his first serve, and facing – and saving – only two breakpoints throughout the match, the Canadian can now look forward to a third consecutive semi-final after reaching finals in Montpellier and Rotterdam already this month.

The 25-year-old stands just two wins away from avenging last year’s final defeat here to Stefanos Tsitsipas.

“It was difficult with the shade and the wind at the start of the match, but I think the second set was a very high level; Jiri stayed very tough,” he said. “He served great and I had to dig deep in that tiebreak to stay sharp, stay precise, and then, you know, be clinical.”

Auger-Aliassime has faced Medvedev nine times and, despite holding a 2-7 record, he has not lost since the 2024 Australian Open. That said, having spent some of the off-season training together, he knows very well what he is likely to face on Friday night.

“He's gotten the better of me many times,” said Auger-Aliassime. “You know, he was No. 1 in the world, a Grand Slam champion, it's not by accident. He's one of the greatest players of our generation. At times he never misses, so I'm going to need to try to find a way to make him miss a few balls…

“We both live in Monaco and trained together there. I felt that he was playing really well in the off-season, and I told my coach he’s going to have a great year. Maybe he didn’t get the results exactly that he wanted, but he’s here and we’re both in the semi-finals, playing good tennis. He’s yet to drop a set this week too, so it’s going to be tough.”