Anisimova thrashes Gauff to reach China Open final

Amanda Anisimova said she was surprised to be back in another final so soon, having taken time off after the US Open and removing a tooth the day of her flight. (AP)
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Updated 04 October 2025
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Anisimova thrashes Gauff to reach China Open final

  • The 21-year-old reigning French Open winner double-faulted twice to give Anisimova two set points before finally getting herself on the scoreboard

BEIJING: US Open runner-up Amanda Anisimova crushed defending champion Coco Gauff 6-1, 6-2 in 58 minutes on Saturday to reach the China Open final and will face Linda Noskova.

The 26th-seeded Noskova of the Czech Republic saved three match points in her semifinal to stun fifth seed Jessica Pegula in three sets.

“I felt really good throughout the whole match,” third-seeded American Anisimova, beaten in the final in New York by Aryna Sabalenka a month ago, said.

“All my shots were working today, which is my favorite way to play.

“Coco’s a really tough player, so I knew I was gonna really have to step it up.”

Anisimova said she was surprised to be back in another final so soon, having taken time off after the US Open and removing a tooth the day of her flight.

“I didn’t really feel like I was match fit ahead of the tournament,” said the 24-year-old, who is one win away from a fourth career title.

“I was like, is it a mistake that I’m flying there (Beijing) and everything’s just off to a bad start?

“But I think I learned ... when I’m not feeling my best physically or I’m facing a challenge, I actually play better because I don’t have as much pressure.”

Anisimova stormed into a 5-0 first-set lead in 15 minutes as an uncharacteristically shaky Gauff hit a slew of shots long and into the net.

The 21-year-old reigning French Open winner double-faulted twice to give Anisimova two set points before finally getting herself on the scoreboard. But it was far too little, far too late.

Gauff’s nightmare continued in the second set as Anisimova again raced into a 5-0 lead over her compatriot.

Gauff managed to close that deficit by two games but a commanding Anisimova closed out in less than an hour.

It was Anisimova’s quickest win yet in the Chinese capital, where she pulled off two three-set comebacks.

“She’s definitely one of the best,” Gauff said.

“Today I would have liked to perform better and I need to step up my game.”

Gauff’s only previous loss on Beijing’s center Diamond Court had been to Poland’s world No. 2 Iga Swiatek in 2023, also in the semifinals.

“It’s been a great year for me,” Anisimova, who qualified for the WTA Finals this week in Beijing, added.

Noskova surprised the more fancied American Pegula 6-3, 1-6, 7-6 (8/6) to pull through in 2h 28min and will contest the biggest match of her career on Sunday.

“(Pegula) played incredible,” Noskova, 20, said.

“It was just two points away from a win or a lose.

“I’m just too happy that I would win.”

The two played smart over intense rallies, moving each other around the court.

The deciding set was a nail-biter, with the more experienced Pegula double-faulting on match point, before they went to a tiebreak.

“It was quite a tough match mentally and physically and everything else, so I’m just gonna cherish this win,” Noskova said.

She is after the second title of her career and first at the 1000 level.


Tuwaiq Cup winner Scotland Yard returns to racing at King Abdulaziz Racecourse

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Tuwaiq Cup winner Scotland Yard returns to racing at King Abdulaziz Racecourse

  • Nicolas Bachalard’s star lines up in Race 6 on Saturday

RIYADH: Tuwaiq Cup winner Scotland Yard (USA) makes his eagerly-awaited return to action this Saturday on a packed weekend of racing at King Abdulaziz Racecourse, which includes the $400,000 (SR1.5 million) UAE President Cup.

The latter is for Purebred Arabian Horses on Friday, but all eyes will be on Saturday’s sixth race in which Scotland Yard faces 15 rivals on his first outing since The Saudi Cup weekend when he blitzed the field to win by over five lengths.

Champion jockey Adel Alfouraidi’s mount won three of this four outings last season and bigger targets will surely await the six-year-old, who ran eighth in the 2024 renewal of The Saudi Cup.

Saturday’s $32,000 race over 1800m looks to be at his mercy with the White Stable of King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz & Sons’ Bolide Porto (IRE) and the Humoud Mufarrej-trained The King’s General (IRE) probably his main opponents.

The UAE President Cup — staged as Race 10 on Friday — has a full complement of 20 runners chasing the huge prize pot and Abdulaziz Al-Mosa’s Najeeb Al Zaman (FR) tops the ratings.

A winner of nine of his 14 starts including when last seen here in March, the six-year-old has top-class form and finished third to Asfan Al Khalediah (KSA) in the 2024 Group 1 Obaiyah Arabian Classic.

The latter’s trainer, Nasser Mutlaq, relies on Nadem Al Molwk Al Khalediah (KSA), but the winner of three of his four career starts has not been seen since December 2023, while his stablemate Mutwakel Alkhalediah (KSA) also has good form in that year but has only been seen once since and finished fifth on the final day of the Taif season in September.

Also in with a big chance is the mare, Bint Ghaliat Al Khalediah (KSA) who won twice in Taif this summer before chasing home the brilliant Tilal AI Khalediah (KSA) — she will be ridden by Fahad Alfouraidi.

Other Purebred Arabian stars are on show in Saturday’s first race — a 1200m $32,000 open — as recent scorer and Taif Sprint Championship Prep winner Baseq And Bake (USA) renews rivalry with the Sprint Championship winner Jade De Faust (FR) after they finished first and second on Sept. 26.

Also on Saturday, $40,000 is on offer for the Sultan Raei Algudah Cup in which 13 two-year-olds have been declared and the White Stable pair of Galb Alraad (USA) and Walad (USA) take on the Red Stable of Prince Faisal bin Khaled bin Abdulaziz’s Anquod (GB).

There is also domestic Group 3 action on Friday with 11 to go to post for the $44,000 Ministry of Interior Cup, in which the White Stable’s Yaroa (KSA) appears to have a good opportunity after he lost his unbeaten record when third in the Africa Cup last month.

The other race of the same name over 1800m is for three-year-olds and features seven runners headed by Alfouraidi’s mount Badr Alsamawi (KSA) who has his first run since taking third in the Saudi Derby behind Golden Vekoma (USA).